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doors opening. welcome home. The Metro Rider ’s Guide. Every second and fourth Wednesday off the month.

readexpress.com | @wapoexpress APRIL 10, 2014

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Five-Finger Discounts Come With a Few Restrictions Mike Witonis got an email from Apple thanking him for calling customer service about his laptop computer. Problem is, someone had stolen it from his Dover, N.H., home a year earlier. Police eventually arrested Casey Wentworth, 24, who called Apple and used the stolen laptop’s serial number, and charged him with burglary on Monday. Wentworth is set to be arraigned on May 2. (AP) HAVE A COW, MAN

“You might see lipstick from Sephora on the mama cow.” — L AUREL SIBERT, A SPOKESWOMAN FOR A SHOPPING CENTER IN LYNNFIELD, MASS., DESCRIBING TO THE DAILY ITEM HOW MARKETERS MIGHT USE THREE FIBERGLASS COW SCULPTURES THE MALL RECENTLY INSTALLED ON ITS GROUNDS

TECHNOLOGICAL GLITCH

Yes, They Can Hear You Now Minnesota police arrested two burglary suspects after one of them accidentally called 911 and left the line open as the pair discussed the crime. Maplewood police say the calls were made on April 1 using the phone’s emergency-call feature. Officers arrived to see two men leaving a building with objects. Todd Weiss, 32, and Justin Evans, 38, ran, but were caught by police dogs and charged with third-degree burglary. (AP)

DON’T FORGET TO HYDRATE: A tourist is splashed with water by an elephant (you can just see the pachyderm’s trunk on the right) during a water battle Wednesday as people celebrate ahead of the Songkran Festival for the Thai New Year in Ayutthaya, Thailand. The Thai New Year starts Sunday.

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Nation

Teen Stabs 22 at Pa. High School GONE VIRAL

Boy goes on rampage before being tackled by assistant principal SEAN STIPP (TRIBUNE REVIEW/AP)

Murrysville, Pa. Flailing away with two kitchen knives, a 16-year-old with a blank expression stabbed and slashed 21 students and a security guard in the halls of his suburban Pittsburgh high school Wednesday before an assistant principal tackled him. The rampage set off a screaming stampede and left blood on the floor and walls. At least five students were critically wounded, including a boy who was on a ventilator after a knife pierced his liver, missing his heart and aorta by only millimeters. Doctors said all of the victims were expected to survive. The motive was under investigation. The suspect, Alex Hribal, was taken into custody and treated for a minor hand wound. He was brought into court in shackles and a hospi-

In Brief

Parents and students embrace Wednesday near Franklin Regional High School.

tal gown and was charged with four counts of attempted homicide and 21 counts of aggravated assault. The attack unfolded just before the start of classes at Franklin Regional High School. It was over in about five minutes; witnesses said the boy at first tackled a freshman and stabbed him in the belly, then ran wildly down a hallway, slashing away with knives about 8 to 10 inches long, police said.

Someone, possibly a student, pulled a fire alarm after seeing the stabbings, Murrysville Police Chief Thomas Seefeld said. Although that created chaos, it emptied out the school more quickly, and “that was a good thing that that was done.” Nate Moore, 15, said he saw the first attack and was going to try to break it up when the boy got up and slashed his face, requiring 11 stitches. “It was really fast,” he said. “It felt

“Maybe a teen taking a selfie of himself and his bandage isn’t indicative of societal end times. Maybe it’s just a teen taking a selfie of himself and his bandage after living through a horrifying nightmare and nothing more.” —Washington Post writer Mark Berman writing about someone who appears to be a student from Franklin posting a photo of himself on Instagram not long after he was stabbed. The photo quickly went viral — and so did the criticism. Read more at washingtonpost.com.

like he hit me with a wet rag because I felt the blood splash on my face.” As for what set off the attack, Seefeld said investigators were looking into reports of a threatening phone call between the suspect and another student the night before. Seefeld didn’t say whether the suspect received or made the call. JOE MANDAK AND KE VIN BEGOS (AP)

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1 Child Dead, 13 Hurt in Day Care Center Crash A car smashed into an Orlando-area day care Wednesday, killing one child and injuring 13 people, at least 12 of them children, and officers have found the SUV — but not the driver — that started the chain-reaction crash and left the scene, officials said. Several of the injured at the KinderCare building in Winter Park were reported to be in “very, very serious condition,” a highway patrol spokeswoman said. (AP) CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C.

Pentagon: Shooting at Base Likely Accidental A Pentagon spokesman said Wednesday that the fatal shooting of a Marine on guard duty by a colleague at a North Carolina base appears to have been an accident. Indications point to a “negligent discharge” as the cause of Tuesday’s death at the main gate to Camp Lejeune, Department of Defense spokesman Army Col. Steven Warren said. (AP) WASHINGTON

Offering Solace at Fort Hood PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA

The Return of The Wild West Mini-storms of tumbleweed have invaded the drought-stricken prairie of southern Colorado, blocking rural roads and irrigation canals, and briefly barricading homes and a school. The invasion of the tumbleweed, an iconic symbol of both the West’s rugged terrain and the cowboys who helped settle it, has conjured images of the Dust Bowl of 80 years ago, when severe drought unleashed them onto the landscape. (AP)

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and first lady Michelle Obama arrive for a memorial ceremony Wednesday at Fort Hood, Texas, for those killed in a shooting there last week. Three battle crosses, helmet-topped rifles above combat boots, represented the soldiers killed. “We somehow bear what seems unbearable,” Obama said.

The amount of money Florida ophthalmologist Salomon Melgen received from Medicare in 2012, according to an analysis of physician data released Wednesday by the Obama administration. His lawyer said the doctor’s billing conformed with Medicare rules and is a reflection of high drug costs. An analysis found that a small sliver of the more than 825,000 individual physicians in Medicare’s claims data base — just 344 physicians — took in top dollar, at least $3 million apiece for a total of nearly $1.5 billion. (AP)

GOP Derails Gender Pay-Gap Bill in Senate Senate Republicans derailed a Democratic bill Wednesday curbing paycheck discrimination against women. Wednesday’s vote was 53-44 to halt GOP tactics aimed at derailing the legislation, but that fell seven short of the 60 votes Democrats needed to prevail. (AP)

Corrections The attribution of an Eyeopeners quote on Tuesday’s page 2 incorrectly referred to the University of Rochester, the school that accepted an applicant, in part, because of his love of ramen noodles. The sports story “NCAA Final’s Odd Couple” on page 13 in Monday’s edition incorrectly stated when the last team lower than a No. 4 seed won the NCAA men’s basketball championship. It was Kansas as a No. 6 seed in 1988. Spot an error? Let us know at corrections@readexpress.com.


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So far one of the biggest problems for a federal judge overseeing a patent battle between the world’s largest smartphone makers isn’t about stolen ideas. It’s getting the roomful of smartphone devotees to turn off their devices. U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh has become increasingly frustrated during the first few days of the trial pitting Apple against Samsung because the many personal Wi-Fi signals interfere with a network the judge relies on for a realtime transcript of the proceedings. The phones also ring, buzz and jingle, and can be used to take photos, a serious violation of court rules.

The Case Apple and Samsung are accusing each other, once again, of ripping off designs and features. The trial marks the latest round in a longrunning series of lawsuits between the two tech giants and is being tried less than two years after a federal jury found Samsung was infringing on Apple patents. (AP)

In the first five days of trial, Koh has interrupted testimony with a sharp “Phones off!” She’s warned she might force everyone to hand over their phones. She’s threatened to send everyone, except a select few, into an overflow room. And she’s shamed those with phones turned on to “Stand up!” — which a few sheepishly did. The disturbances are unusual for a federal court, which is typi-

cally a quiet space with respect for tradition and decorum. There’s no snacking or chatting, no newspaper rustling or recording. On Tuesday, before the judge or jury had entered the courtroom, unusual shouts of “hey, hey, hey, hey, hey!” rang out as Apple attorney William Lee pointed at Wharton School marketing professor David Reibstein, who was taking photos from the spectator rows. Reibstein was escorted out, questioned by a marshal and required to erase the photos. “I’ve never been in a federal trial before,” Reibstein said after he was allowed to return. “I just didn’t know the court rules.” Smartphone controversies were obviously expected when the fiercest rivalry in the world of phone makers returned to court in the heart of Silicon Valley. Just not this way. MARTHA MENDOZ A (AP)


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Searchers Zero In on Flight 370 Signals still emitting from what is thought to be the black box Perth, Australia

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After a navy ship heard more signals from deep in the Indian Ocean, the head of the search for the missing Malaysian jetliner said Wednesday he believes the hunt is closing in on the “final resting place” of Flight 370. The Australian vessel Ocean Shield picked up two signals Tuesday, and an analysis of two other sounds detected Saturday showed they were consistent with a plane’s flight recorders, or “black boxes,” said Angus Houston, the Australian official coordinating the search for the Malaysian Airlines jet. “I’m now optimistic that we will find the aircraft, or what is left of the aircraft, in the not-too-dis-

Australia’s Ocean Shield vessel has picked up signals thought to be from Flight 370.

tant future,” Houston said. “But we haven’t found it yet, because this is a very challenging business.” Finding the flight data and cockpit voice recorders soon is important because their locator beacons have a battery life of about a month, and Tuesday marked one month since Flight 370 vanished March 8 en

route from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to Beijing with 239 people aboard. If the batteries fail before the recorders are located, finding them in such deep water — about 15,000 feet — would be difficult, if not impossible. “I believe we are searching in the right area, but we need to visu-

KRISTEN GELINEAU AND NICK PERRY (AP)

The number of vehicles Toyota Motor Corp. is recalling, the company said Wednesday. The recall is related to two problems: vehicles with bad electrical connections that could cause the air bags to deactivate, and cars with defective springs that could prevent the front seats from locking in place. (AP)

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Putin Threatens to Pile On Ukraine’s Fiscal Woes Russian President Vladimir Putin threatene d We dne s day to st ar t charging Ukraine in advance for vital gas supPutin plies — a move that could sharply hurt his neighbor, which is already on the verge of bankruptcy. (AP) JERUSALEM

Israel to Cut Off Contact With Palestinian Officials Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered his ministers Wednesday to cut off contact with their Palestinian counterparts, an official said, the latest in a series of troubles plaguing floundering U.S.-brokered peace talks. The move is retaliation for a Palestinian bid to join United Nations agencies, which the official said was a violation of the Palestinians’ commitment in the peace talks. The Palestinians dismissed the Israeli move, saying both sides rarely meet now as it is. (AP)

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ally identify aircraft wreckage before we can confirm with certainty that this is the final resting place of MH370,” Houston said. “For the sake of the 239 families, this is absolutely imperative.” Houston acknowledged searchers were running out of time, noting the last two signals were weaker and briefer than the first pair heard Saturday, suggesting the batteries are failing. One lasted two hours and 20 minutes and the second lasted 13 minutes; those heard Tuesday lasted 5½ minutes and 7 minutes. “So we need to, as we say in Australia, ‘make hay while the sun shines,’ ” Houston said. U.S. Navy Capt. Mark Matthews said the detections indicate the beacon is within about a 12-mile radius, equal to a 500-square-mile chunk of the ocean floor. That’s like trying to find a desktop computer in a city the size of Los Angeles.

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World

Pistorius Recoils From Photo On the stand, athlete refuses to view image of his dead girlfriend Pretoria, South Africa A shaken Oscar Pistorius refused to look at a gruesome photo of his girlfriend’s bloodied head on Wednesday, telling a prosecutor through tears, “I don’t have to look at a picture. I was there.” “It’s time that you look at it,” chief prosecutor Gerrie Nel retorted during a fierce first day of crossexamination in which he doggedly pressed the double-amputee Olympian to “take responsibility” for killing Reeva Steenkamp.

The 27-yearold Pistorius is charged with premeditated murder in the Valentine’s Day 2013 shooting of Steenkamp. PisPistorius torius says he shot the 29-year-old by mistake, thinking she was a dangerous intruder. Gasps could be heard in the courtroom from spectators when the police photo appeared on multiple TV screens showing Steenkamp’s head turned to the side, her blonde hair drenched in blood and a mass of tissue on the back and upper parts of her skull, her eyes closed. Pistorius turned away and

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refused to look at the image. “I will not look at a picture where I’m tormented by what I saw and felt that night,” Pistorius said. “As I picked Reeva up, my fingers touched her head. I remember. I don’t have to look at a picture. I was there.” Wednesday’s questioning began with the showing of a video of the star athlete firing a gun at a watermelon at a shooting range. Pistorius can be heard saying the melon was “softer than brains” as it exploded when the bullet hit, and calling the powerful .50-caliber handgun he was using a “zombie stopper.” “You know the same happened to Reeva’s head,” Nel told Pistorius. “It exploded.” CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA AND GER ALD IMR AY (AP)

Official: Fraud Likely Occurred In Afghan Vote

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Theft Reported in the Afterlife Israeli archaeologists have unearthed a rare sarcophagus and a scarab ring, left, inscribed with the name of an Egyptian pharaoh, Israel’s Antiquities Authority said Wednesday. The mystery man whose skeleton was found inside the sarcophagus was most likely a local Canaanite official in the service of ancient Egypt, Israeli archaeologists believe, shining a light on a period when pharaohs governed the region. (AP)

An Afghan election official said Wednesday that national elections held last weekend were a success in terms of turnout and enthusiasm, but he cautioned that there may have been significant fraud. Widespread fraud marred the 2009 presidential elections and authorities took precautions to prevent that from recurring. Still, the electoral complaints commission said it received more than 3,000 complaints about irregularities and promised to invalidate all votes deemed fraudulent. “Election fraud did take place and it might not have been a small amount,” said Abdul Satar Saadat, the head of the complaints commission. With eight candidates, including three front-runners, it will be hard for anybody to gain a majority of the more than 7 million votes needed for an outright win, and most expect the top two vote-getters to face a runoff in late May. R AHIM FAIEZ (AP)


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Contractor: Silver Line Is Complete Officials have 15 days to verify work before handing it to Metro Washington The contractor building the first phase of the Silver Line will avoid paying thousands of dollars in late fines after filing paperwork on Wednesday saying their work on the $5.6 billion rail line was complete. Officials at the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority now have 15 days to verify that the contractor, Dulles Transit Partners, has made the proper fixes — including ripping out and rein-

stalling hundreds of speakers at five stations on the rail line that did not meet fire codes. Wednesday’s submission is DTP’s second attempt at declaring its work complete. An early try in February was rejected by officials at MWAA who said DTP failed to meet seven of 12 requirements, including securing proper permits and safety certifications for rail stations. Pat Nowakowski, executive director of the rail project, said last month that MWAA was likely to sign off on DTP’s work the second time around. After the initial failed submission, Nowakowski said MWAA would work closely with DTP to

A Major Ride The Silver Line is the first new line to be added to the Metro system in more than two decades. It is also the first addition that was not built by Metro. Work on the second phase, which will have six stops including one at Washington Dulles International Airport, has already begun. (T WP)

ensure that the second time would meet the standards. By filing on Wednesday, DTP will avoid the costly embarrassment of having to pay thousands in fines for delivering the project seven months past the due date. If

DTP had failed to file its paperwork on Wednesday, the company would have faced $25,000 a day in fines. If the delays stretched beyond three months, the fine would escalate. MWAA’s sign-off is only the first step. MWAA must now get Metro officials to agree to take control of the rail line. Once that handoff occurs, Metro will have 90 days to test the system and train its personnel on the new rail line. The Federal Transit Administration and the Tri-State Oversight Committee also will conduct safety reviews. U lt i m at e ly, it w i l l b e up to Metro to determine when t he new ra i l line w i l l open. LORI AR ATANI (THE WASHINGTON POST )

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Local

Candidates Weigh In on School Proposals Catania, Bowser are opposed to citywide high school lotteries Washington Days after Mayor Vincent Gray released proposals to overhaul the District’s school boundaries, the two mayoral candidates in the November election said they would

not support any plan that eliminates neighborhood high schools. D.C. Council member and Democratic nominee for mayor Muriel Bowser said Gray’s proposals contain some “intriguing ideas,” such as replacing traditional neighborhood elementary schools with clusters that students would get into via lottery admissions. But Bowser said she would not support cutting neighborhoods east

of Rock Creek Park out of the feeder patterns for schools west of the park. Nor would she support converting high schools that serve specific neighborhoods into schools that would build their student body through citywide lotteries. “Parents want predictability,” Bowser said. D.C. Council member and mayoral hopeful David Catania went a step further and said if elected in November he would “press pause”

on the effort, arguing that D.C. must first focus on improving schools. Catania said he would not support any plan that would reassign parents into lower-quality schools or that would leave parents with less certainty about which schools their children have a right to attend. Gray’s proposals would not only overhaul school boundaries for the first time in 40 years, but they also could fundamentally change how

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A man who D.C. police said was questioned in the case of a missing 8-year-old girl came to authorities after seeing his picture on the news, voluntarily submitted to an interview and has nothing more to do with the case, D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier said Wednesday. “We knew [he had] some contact” with a homeless shelter janitor believed to have taken the girl, Relisha Rudd, the chief said on WTOP radio. “We wanted to find out what that contact was and what he knew.” Police made the video public a day after ending the weeklong search for Relisha in Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens. She has not been found. The 52-year-old janitor, Kahlil Malik Tatum, was found dead of an apparent suicide in the park on March 31. Lanier said FBI analysts continue to work with D.C. police to find Relisha and understand what

Meanwhile … Mayor Vincent Gray said Wednesday he’d like to close the shelter for homeless families at the D.C. General Hospital campus — home to Relisha Rudd until she went missing — but he said that community concerns would make it difficult to open enough smaller facilities to compensate for its loss. “We need smaller places, but the problem we have is the NIMBYism,” he said. “People will say, ‘Yeah, that’s a great idea; just don’t put it in my neighborhood.’ ” ( T WP)

children are placed in schools, possibly using lottery admissions instead of having a right to attend their neighborhood schools. W hile Gray is slated to announce a final plan in September, it would not become effective until 2015, after his term ends, leaving the real decisions about how to proceed with whoever is elected mayor in November. EMMA BROWN (THE WASHINGTON POST )

In Brief

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Police: Divorced Couple Dead in Murder-Suicide A woman coming home after celebrating her 32nd birthday was gunned down by her ex-husband in the parking lot of a Fort Washington, Md., apartment complex early Wednesday, police said. Detectives are investigating the case as a murder-suicide after the man turned the gun on himself, authorities said. Police said the couple, who had been recently divorced, were pronounced dead on the scene. (THE WASHINGTON POST) ARLINGTON

she was doing with Tatum. Lanier said earlier that police fear Relisha is dead, though she said they still hold out hope that she is alive. Mayor Vincent Gray said on Tuesday that he ordered a review of agencies that had contact with Relisha, such as the school system and the Child and Family Services Agency. PETER HERMANN (THE WASHINGTON POST)

CityCenter Sounds Like a Party A political party, that is. Along with Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., who purchased a $2.7 million unit in the modern complex along H Street NW earlier this year, Attorney General Eric Holder recently closed on a unit for nearly $1.5 million, Washington Business Journal reported. There are still a few of the 50 condos up for sale at CityCenterDC ... If you can afford it, that is. The lowest priced unit is $417,000. (E XPRESS)

First Non-Democrat Wins Arlington Seat Since 1999 John Vihstadt, a Republican running as an independent, upset Democrat Alan Howze in a low-turnout race for the Arlington County Board on Tuesday, becoming the first non-Democrat elected to the board since 1999. Vihstadt, 61, defeated Howze, 39, by more than 3,500 votes, out of about 22,200 cast in the four-way race. (TWP) WASHINGTON

Six Houses Burglarized Near Old Army Campus Six houses were burglarized Monday in the Northwest neighborhood near the campus of the old Walter Reed Army medical center. The burglaries all occurred in the daytime, within eight or nine blocks of each other. (TWP)


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Cover Story What You Need To Know About the Heartbleed Bug

Where the Big Sites Stand Google is so confident it inoculated itself against the bug called “Heartbleed” before any damage could be done that it is telling users they don’t have to change the passwords they use to access Gmail, YouTube and other product accounts.

What is Heartbleed and why is it a big deal? Heartbleed affects the encryption technology designed to protect online accounts for email, instant messaging and e-commerce. It’s unclear whether any information has been stolen as a result of Heartbleed, but security experts are particularly worried about the bug because it went undetected for more than two years.

Facebook believes its social network has purged the threat. But the company encouraged people to “follow good practices” and set up a new password.

Say what? It’s as if your front door has a defective lock. Someone could get in as long as it’s not fixed. But that does not mean they’ve already gained entry.

THINKSTOCK/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

At Yahoo, the repairs have been made on its home page, search engine, email, Flickr service and Tumblr, among others. But it is advising users to “rotate their passwords.”

When You Do Change Them When the sites you use have been fixed, go ahead and change your passwords. Here are some tips: Don’t use a single password across multiple sites. The more passwords you have, the harder it will be for an attacker to use one set to compromise your entire digital life. The best passwords are ones you can’t remember and can’t be guessed by others. Consider using a password manager to keep track of your passwords. LastPass — which developers say is protected from Heartbleed — and 1Password are “lockers” created to contain all of your passwords. You just enter one master password. (Or write your passwords on a piece of paper and put it in a secret place.) (AP/ T WP)

‘Heart’ Attack A bug has made much of the Internet vulnerable. Now? You’re going to want to change your passwords. San Francisco A confounding computer bug called “Heartbleed” is causing major security headaches across the Internet as websites scramble to fix the problem and Web surfers wonder whether they should change their passwords to prevent theft of their email accounts, credit-card numbers and other sensitive information. The breakdown revealed this week affects a widely used encryption technology that is supposed to protect many online accounts. More than half a million websites are vulnerable by some estimates, or two-thirds of the Internet. Security researchers who uncovered the

threat are particularly worried about the lapse because it went undetected for more than two years. They fear the possibility that computer hackers may have been secretly exploiting the problem before its discovery. It’s also possible that no one took advantage of the flaw before its existence was announced late Monday. Although there is now a way to close the security hole, there are still plenty of reasons to be concerned, said David Chartier, CEO of Codenomicon. “I don’t think anyone that had been using this technology is in a position to definitively say they weren’t compromised,” Chartier said. ANICK JESDANUN AND MICHAEL LIEDTKE (AP)

How does it work? Heartbleed creates an opening in SSL/TLS, an encryption technology marked by the small, closed padlock and “https:” on Web browsers to show that traffic is secure. The flaw makes it possible to snoop on Internet traffic even if the padlock is closed. Interlopers can also grab the keys for deciphering encrypted data without the website owners knowing the theft occurred. The problem affects only the variant of SSL/TLS known as OpenSSL, but that happens to be one of the most common on the Internet. So if the problem has been identified, it’s been fixed and I have nothing to worry about. Right? It depends on the website. A fixed version of OpenSSL has been released, but it’s up to the individual website administrators to put it into place. Yahoo Inc., which has more than 800 million users around the world, said Tuesday that most of its popular services — including sports, finance and Tumblr — had been fixed, but work was still being done on other products that it didn’t identify. So what can I do to protect myself? Ultimately, you’ll need to change your passwords, but that won’t do any good until the sites you use adopt the fix. It’s also up to the Internet services affected by the bug to let users know of the potential risks and encourage them to change their passwords. How will I know if a site has been fixed? You can use this tool (filippo.io/Heartbleed/) to see if a website is vulnerable. If it is, don’t log in until the company confirms it has updated its SSL software and changed its security certificates. After that, you can change your password. This list (bit.ly/1jsxroc) shows 1,000 websites that have been tested for Heartbleed. I plan to file my income taxes online. Is that safe considering how much personal information is involved? The IRS released a statement Wednesday saying that it’s not affected by the bug or aware of any related security flaws. (AP/ THE WASHINGTON POST )


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Sports Masters Notes

Who’s the Next First-Timer?

Site: Augusta, Ga. Schedule: Thursday-Sunday Course: Augusta National Golf Club (7,435 yards, par 72)

Tiger Woods won’t be playing in the Masters for the first time in 20 years. While he hasn’t won a major since 2008 — and last won at Augusta National in 2005 — Woods is the favorite to win every time he steps on a golf course. So without him in the field, who’s entering this year’s Masters as the man to beat? Two-time major winner Rory McIlroy and defending Masters champion Adam Scott opened with the best odds, but the better bet may be on someone without a major victory on his résumé. When Jason Dufner won in last year’s PGA Championship, he became the 15th first-time major winner in the last 19 played. Here’s a ranking of five golfers who are primed to win their first major this week at Augusta. JEFFREY TOMIK (E XPRESS)

Purse: TBA ($8 million in 2013) Winner’s share: TBA ($1.44 million in 2013)

MATT SLOCUM (AP)

Television: ESPN (3-7:30 p.m., 8-11 p.m., Thursday-Friday) and CBS (3-7 p.m., Saturday; 2-7 p.m., Sunday)

Last year: Adam Scott, above, became the first Australian champion in tournament history, beating Angel Cabrera with a birdie on the second hole of a playoff.

3

4

5

Jason Day

Dustin Johnson

Matt Kuchar

Lee Westwood

Brandt Snedeker

Best major finish: Second (2011 Masters, 2011 U.S. Open)

Best major finish: Tied for second (2011 British Open)

Best major finish: Tied for third (2012 Masters)

Odds to win: 16-1*

Odds to win: 18-1

Odds to win: 25-1

Best major finish: Second (2010 Masters, 2010 British Open)

Best major finish: Tied for third (2008 Masters, 2012 British Open)

The 26-year-old Australian finished eighth or better in three of the four majors last year and had two second-place major finishes in 2011. But Day is getting over an injured left thumb and hasn’t played a competitive round since he won the Match Play Championship in late February. He had a cortisone shot and will be taping his thumb this week, but he says he feels fine. Six weeks ago he was playing great. Will the time off for his injury hurt his game?

The Masters is the only major that Johnson doesn’t have a top 10 finish at, but he was a career-best 13th last year at Augusta. He isn’t coming off his best performance (he withdrew from the Houston Open after shooting an opening round 80), but he has three top five finishes since February. The 29-year-old is second to Bubba Watson on the PGA Tour in driving distance in 2014. Watson won the green jacket in 2012, so why not Johnson this year?

After back-to-back top 10 Masters finishes, Kuchar seems ready to sport that green jacket. In 2012, he was tied for the lead with three holes to play but ended up finishing tied for third. Right now, there may not be anyone playing better. Kuchar finished second in the Houston Open last weekend and was tied for fourth in the Texas Open the weekend before. To win this weekend, he’ll need a stronger finish than the final-round 73 he posted last year when he was eighth.

Odds to win: 50-1

Odds to win: 35-1

It’s been an ugly year for Westwood. He’s fallen to 37th in the world rankings, and he doesn’t have a top 15 finish this season. But Westwood has been great at Augusta; he just hasn’t won it yet. Since 2010, he’s finished: second, tied for 11th, tied for third and tied for eighth. That’s four straight top 15 Masters finishes. But in that span, he’s broken 70 only once on a Sunday. A low final round would certainly help end his careerlong major drought.

The 33-year-old played really well at last year’s Masters, but a final-round 75 crushed any chance of him winning. He finished tied for sixth — five strokes back of Adam Scott. Snedeker has had an underwhelming season, but his best result was in his last tournament, when he finished tied for eighth at the Arnold Palmer Invitational last month. He’s got a FedEx Cup title under his belt, and maybe this is the year he gets that elusive first major.

LYNNE SLADKY (AP)

2

GETTY IMAGES PHOTOS/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

1

Last week: Matt Jones won the Houston Open for his first PGA Tour title, holing a 42-yard birdie chip on the first hole of a playoff with Matt Kuchar. Jones made a 46-foot birdie putt on the final hole of regulation. The Australian earned the last spot in the Masters.

Other notes: Tiger Woods, above, won the Masters in 1997, 2001, 2002 and 2005, but is sidelined after back surgery. ... Phil Mickelson, the 2004, 2006 and 2010 champion, tied for 12th in Houston after withdrawing during the Texas Open the previous week because of a pulled muscle in his side. ... Bubba Watson won in 2012, beating Louis Oosthuizen with a par on the second hole of a playoff. ... The RBC Heritage is next week at Harbour Town in Hilton Head, S.C. (AP) * ODDS BY KEITH GLANTZ AND RUSSELL CULVER


H I G H L I G H T I N G T H E B E S T I N WA S H I N G T O N - A R E A A R T S A N D E N T E R T A I N M E N T | A P R I L 1 0 - 1 3 , 2 0 1 4

LIV STRONG Singer Liv Warfield was ready to quit music — until Prince came along with the opportunity of a lifetime E6

CHRIS OTTAUNICK

SPRING DANCE CONCERT Agile, Mobile, Tactile American University’s annual main stage concert presents fresh and seasoned perspectives on modern and jazz dance choreographed by AU faculty, students, and guest artists. AMERICAN.TIX.COM | 202-885-ARTS $15 REGULAR ADMISSION, $10 SENIORS


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FRIDAY

The best things to do this weekend

Lewis Black Whether he’s onstage or on “The Daily Show,” Lewis Black is always angry. The comedian goes red over health care, airplanes and bottled water, so it makes sense that his tour is called “The Rant Is Due.” Warner Theatre, 513 13th St.

THURSDAY

Miley Cyrus In Tampa, Fla., she spit water on the first row of the audience. In Milwaukee, she showed up onstage in her underwear. In Las Vegas, she kissed a fan in the middle of a song. There’s no telling what kind of stunt Miley Cyrus will pull when her “Bangerz Tour” stops in D.C. on Thursday. Verizon Center, 601 F St. NW; Thu., 7 p.m.,

NW; Thu. & Fri., 8 p.m., sold out; Sat., 8 p.m., $43-$73; 202-783-4000, warnertheatredc.com. (Metro Center)

After a long, harsh winter, the monthly food truck festival Truckeroo is back for spring at the Half Street Fairgrounds near Nationals Park. While you nosh on treats from more than 20 mobile eateries, enjoy live music, cold beer and games like cornhole. Half Street Fairgrounds,

AFP/GETTY IMAGES

THROUGH SATURDAY

Truckeroo

OPENS THURSDAY

‘Golda’s Balcony’

In this one-woman show, Tony- and Emmy-nominated actress Tovah Feldshuh portrays Golda Meir, above, on her unlikely path from immigrant to schoolteacher to her election as Israel’s fourth prime minister. Theater J, 1529 16th St. NW; Thu. through April 27, various times, $50-$85; 202-777-3210, washingtondcjcc.org. (Dupont Circle)

$22.50-$92.50; 202-628-3200, verizoncenter.com. (Gallery Place)

1299 Half St. SE; Fri., 11 a.m.-11 p.m., free; truckeroodc.com. (Navy Yard)

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

Damaged City Fest The District’s annual DIY celebration of hardcore punk hosts two big shows at the legendary St. Stephen’s Church with sets from Government Issue, Infest, Priests and more. Advance tickets are sold out, but a handful will be available at the door. St. Stephen’s Church, 1525 Newton St. NW; Fri.-Sun., $25-$30; damaged-city .com. (Columbia Heights)

ADVANCED TICKETS & INFORMATION

April 10–13, 2014

Quest for the Best

National Building Museum Washington, DC

www.TheOldTownTheater.com

703/ 549-1025

Not Just a Neighborhood Movie Theater Anymore! SATURDAY 12th SATURDAY -- APRIL APRIL 12th

THE

SmithsonianCraftShow.org SmithsonianAuctions.org

NIGHTHAWKS

FATTY LUMPKIN & THE LOVE HOGS

with Special Guest RON HOLLOWAY FRIDAY - APRIL 18th

WATUSI HORNS SATURDAY - APRIL 19th

NATTY BEAUX World’s World’s Most Most Dangerous Dangerous Swing Swing Band Band SATURDAY - APRIL 26th

THE CHURCH SISTERS COMING IN MAY!

Smithsonian

5/10 DAmON FOWlER 5/16 lEE ROY PARNEll

1200 19TH ST., NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 202-872-8700 TEDDYANDTHEBULLYBAR.COM

Easter Brunch Sunday, April 20th

Adults - $55 per person 12 years & younger - $21 per person *prices do not include tax or gratuity

All children 12 years & younger receive a complimentary Easter Basket. LOCALLY SOURCED

Renee Nielsen Engebretson and Jim Engebretson

NEW SHOWS Being Added Daily!

Path Valley, PA | Pipe Dreams, PA | Free Bird, PA Gorman Farms, MD | Blue Moon Acres, PA


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SATURDAY

GoldLink

JOHN McDONNELL (THE WASHINGTON POST)

SATURDAY

Avicii

Swedish DJ Avicii, above, broke into the mainstream last year with his genre-smashing hit “Wake Me Up.” That song merged folk with EDM beats, so it’ll be interesting to see how much of his live show now has a folktronica vibe. Jiffy Lube Live,

This playroom was designed by Katherine Vernot-Jonas. For more photos of the DC Design House, visit washingtonpost.com/home.

STARTS SATURDAY

DC Design House

7800 Cellar Door Drive, Bristow, Va.; Sat., 7 p.m., $31-$81; 703-754-6400, livenation.com.

The annual DC Design House, in which local designers work together to turn a vast estate into a unique dream home visitors can tour, opens on Saturday with a $50 preview party. Regularly priced $25 tours start on Sunday, and, as always, proceeds from sales benefit Children’s National Health System.

Don’t just drink your drink. Experience it, at these bar events that mix things up. PAGE E11

DC Design House, 4600 Linnean Ave. NW; Sat. through May 11., $25-$50; dcdesignhouse.com.

“Glorious passages of choreography… witty timing and humor”

Virginia rapper GoldLink’s debut, “The God Complex,” may be short — nine songs, 26 minutes — but he’s only just getting started. Given his outthere sound, which owes more to dance than hip-hop, it’s no wonder his album-release show is at U Street Music Hall. U Street Music Hall, 1115 U St. NW; Sat., 7 p.m., $15; 202-588-1880, ustreetmusichall.com. (U Street)

ONGOING

‘The Americans: Fact and Fantasy’ This latest pop culture tie-in exhibit takes props from FX’s Cold War drama “The Americans” and puts them alongside real artifacts. International Spy Museum, 800 F St. NW ; through May, open 9 a.m.7 p.m., $20.96; 202-393-7798, spymuseum.org. (Gallery Place)

American Ballet Theatre

“Rare vitality, sensitivity, and dramatic acumen”

Kevin McKenzie, Artistic Director with the Kennedy Center Opera House Orchestra

THE DREAM (Ashton/Mendelssohn)

$39

stra orchets!* sea

with sopranos Melissa Mino and Jennifer Cherest and the Arlington Children’s Chorus

April 15–20 | Opera House

conductor GIL SHAHAM

violin

korngold Violin Concerto Paloma Herrera in Don Quixote, photo by Gene Schiavone

(Gomes/Tchaikovsky)

JAMES CONLON

Die Seejungfrau (“The Mermaid”)

Choreography by Marius Petipa and Alexander Gorsky Staged by Kevin McKenzie and Susan Jones Music by Ludwig Minkus

AFTEREFFECT

Birchmere, 3701 Mount Vernon Ave., Alexandria; Sun., 7:30 p.m., $20; 703-549-7500, birchmere.com.

zemlinsky

DON QUIXOTE

(Fokine/Chopin)

Tennessee’s Ashley Monroe, above, isn’t your typical Southern girl. As she sings on last year’s “Weed Instead of Roses,” all this country singer wants from her man is a shot of whiskey or a hit of weed — not a Hallmark card, candy or roses. That outlaw style follows in the footsteps of Miranda Lambert, her bandmate in Pistol Annies.

—The Chicago Tribune

(4/17–4/20)

LES SYLPHIDES

Ashley Monroe

Conlon conducts Brahms, Shaham plays Korngold

—The New York Times

(4/15 & 4/16)

SUNDAY

brahms Variations on a Theme by Haydn AfterWords: Thu., Apr. 10 performance followed by a free discussion.

NS BEGI HT G I N O T AT 7!

NOW THRU APRIL 12 CONLON C

CONCERT HALL David and Alice Rubenstein are the Presenting Underwriters of the NSO.

The Blue Series is sponsored by United Technologies Corporation.

The Kennedy Center’s Ballet Season is presented with the support of Elizabeth and Michael Kojaian. T American Ballet Theatre’s engagement is made possible through generous endowment support of The Lee and Juliet Folger Fund. *Offer valid for $39 seats in select orchestra sections Apr. 15, 16, & 18 only. Mention offer code “176507” to receive your discount. Tickets regularly up to $69. Offer subject to availability. Not valid in combination with any other offer. Not valid on previously purchased tickets. Offer may be withdrawn at any time.

Tickets on sale now! (202) 467-4600 kennedy-center.org

Tickets also available at the Box Office | Groups (202) 416-8400


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Weekend Pass | entertainment 1811 14TH ST NW www.blackcatdc.com APRIL SHOWS FRI 11

THEE SILVER MT ZION $15/$18 MEMORIAL ORCHESTRA

FRI 11

DR. WHO HAPPY HOUR

FRI 11

HOTSY TOTSY BURLESQUE PRESENTS:

SAT 12

MIXTAPE $10

SAT 12

CYLON HAPPY HOUR

SAT 12

MOON/BOUNCE DANCING AFFAIR

SUN 13

TRUST

MON 14

ODONIS ODONIS

TUE 15

BLACK LIPS

WED 16

CLOUD NOTHINGS

THU 17

WE ARE SCIENTISTS PAWS $15/$18

FRI 18

DJ REKHA $12

1 EPISODE & DRINK SPECIALS

DOCTOR WHO: BOOBIES IN 21+ THE TARDIS ($12/$15)

1 BSG EP & DRINK SPECIALS

during a break from Grizzly Bear?

ON THE SPOT

The EP was part of the process of writing a new Grizzly Bear record for me. Really, it was part of the same set of songs in a way. The ones that ended up working for the EP were definitely different from what worked for Grizzly Bear. I feel like they’re more self-contained songs. And they do seem to work well in the setting of just performing alone.

Daniel Rossen

Are you avoiding Grizzly Bear songs on this tour?

SINGER-GUITARIST (GRIZZLY BEAR, DEPARTMENT OF EAGLES), STALWART NEW YORKER

I think it makes more sense to just play the other material because it’s had such little exposure. And I’ve never played the EP songs live. The Department of Eagles songs, we did nine shows in 2008-09 and that was it. It makes more sense to focus on all the tunes that never got played. And it feels good for me, too. It’s fresh, in a strange way.

$7

MOZART’S SISTER $SOLD OUT

PRISMS

$12

NATURAL CHILD $15/$18 RYLEY WALKER

You were just in D.C. in January as part of the Gene Clark “No Other” tribute tour. What was that like?

$15

It was like listening to your favorite record and getting to sing along to it at the same time. It was pure joy.

(BIRTHDAY BHANGRA BASH)

ANTHOLOGY OF BOOTY

CLASSIC BURLESQUE

AMELIA BAUER

FRI 18

(21+) $12/$15

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Before setting off on his first solo tour, Grizzly Bear singer-guitarist Daniel Rossen decided to adopt a laid-back attitude. “It’s nice to keep it casual and not worry too much,” says Rossen, who recently wrapped 16 months of touring in support of Grizzly Bear’s fourth album, “Shields.” With no album to promote on the solo tour, Rossen’s only plan was to ditch the Grizzly Bear songs in favor of music from his 2012 solo EP “Silent Hour/Golden Mile,” cuts from his long-dormant other band, Department of Eagles, covers and maybe even some brand-new tunes. “A Grizzly Bear song gets played hundreds and hundreds of times and these are ones that I’ve never played for people,” Rossen says. You posted a photo on Facebook of you rehearsing in Topanga Canyon, Calif., on what looks like a roof.

Basically, there’s a room attached to it, heightening the Topanga affect. My girlfriend and I got rid of our apartment in Brooklyn, [N.Y.,] in the fall, so we’ve been living upstate [in New York and traveling]. I grew up in Los Angeles and I feel much more comfortable on the East Coast now. I’m a stalwart New Yorker now. Is your girlfriend going on tour

with you?

Yeah. It’s just going to be her and I rolling across the country, which I think will be pretty fun. I planned this tour so we would have a lot of time between the shows to make it a road trip, not the slog of touring. Is that something you can’t do on Grizzly Bear tours?

You can’t do that when you have a bunch of guys and a sound person and a lighting person — you don’t have that kind of freedom. But since

I have no overhead whatsoever I’ll just show up with a guitar and we’ll do the show and then we’ll hang out. Is that what led you to this tour?

Grizzly Bear was on the road for over a year touring the last record. We got done last fall and I was getting antsy to plan something new to do. I thought since I never performed alone, it would be a worthy challenge to see if I could do it. Didn’t your solo EP come about

What’s the status of Grizzly Bear in 2014?

We don’t have a clear plan. We tend to like to let the records come together naturally. I think everyone wants a little bit of a break and everyone’s scattered around the globe. I think towards the end of the year, if it feels natural, we’ll start again. Do you plan to release any more solo music soon?

I might work towards doing my own record, a full-length thing, but it’s hard to say. If anything, that’s on the docket next for me. I guess it depends how well any new songs work on this tour.

Whether I like them enough — whether I want to go for it or not fully on my own. But we’ll see. It’s nice to not really have a clear plan right now. RUDI GREENBERG (E XPRESS) Sixth and I Historic Synagogue, 600 I St. NW; Sun., 8 p.m., $25-$27.50; 202-408-3100, sixthandi.org. (Gallery Place)


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entertainment | Weekend Pass

Playing ‘Doctor’ Stage Tassels and pasties aren’t always enough to get people in the door. You gotta get a gimmick, and sometimes that gimmick wears a bow tie and can travel through space and time. That’s the idea behind “Boobies in the TARDIS, ” a “Doctor Who”-themed burlesque show that will slink its way onto the Black Cat stage Friday. Hotsy Totsy Burlesque’s tribute to the long-running BBC series is produced by Cyndi Freeman (who hosts as Cherry Pitz) and Joe the Shark. The evening consists of multiple acts, each its own story; a loose plot, involving the Doctor and Cherry Pitz’s birthday, ties it all together. The Doctor, a humanlooking alien who travels in a ship called the TARDIS and occasionally changes bodies, appears in his 11th incarnation alongside Earth friends Amy and Rory. Freeman and Joe know how to combine nerdy and dirty. The New York-based Hotsy Totsy has done burlesque takes on “The Golden Girls,” “Game of Thrones” and 1978’s “The Star Wars Holiday Special,” to name a few. The approach is a gateway drug of sorts. “There are a number of, for lack of a better term, nerd-themed shows,” Joe says. “A themed show

TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX

STEREO VISION PHOTOGRAPHY

Hotsy Totsy Burlesque lures new audiences with bawdy takes on TV shows

FILM RIFFS

The 11th Doctor (Handsome Brad) and Amy (Cherry Pitz) act up, left. Candy Del Rio, above, is Rory (who’s a man on TV).

brings in people who might not approach burlesque otherwise.” Wary burlesque virgins lured by the theme have nothing to fear. The key to successful nerd burlesque is true affection for the source material coupled with a solid knowledge of the canon. “We blow [fans] away quite often because we’re not just making fun of the show, we really love the show,” Freeman says. “We get to make fun of our favorite characters and use lines from our favorite episodes.” There are, of course, risks to portraying characters whose fans obsess over detail and continuity. “The first time we did ‘Doctor Who’ we had a sonic screwdriver that someone had lent us,” Freeman says of the Doctor’s trademark gadget. “Three people came up to us and were just adamant that we had the wrong sonic screwdriver.” “Now we make sure we have the right things,” Joe says. KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (E XPRESS) Inset: Amy Pond (Karen Gillan) and the 11th Doctor (Matt Smith)

Black Cat, 1811 14th St. NW; Fri., 8:45 & 11 p.m., $12-$15; 202-6674490, blackcatdc.com. (U Street)

Sat. & Sun.

INDIES & ARTIES

‘A Streetcar Named Desire’: The best episode of “The Simpsons” is “A Streetcar Named Marge” and if you don’t agree then too bad. It seems that the musical in which Marge gets the lead is actually based on some movie from 1951 starring someone named Vivien Leigh in the Marge part and this guy Marlon Brando in the Ned Flanders role (“Can’t you hear me yell-aaaaaa? STELLA!”). Sounds like it’s a happy film about how you can always depend on the kindness of strangers. KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (E XPRESS) AFI Silver, 8633 Colesville Road, Silver Spring; Sat. & Sun., 11 a.m., $12; 301-495-6700, afi.com/silver. (Silver Spring)

Meet the Flockers “Rio 2” flies onto screens Friday to continue the story of Blu the macaw. Amazingly, that story does not include biting people and pooping all over the place — proving you never can tell how movie birds will behave. KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)

1 Kevin The bird from 2009’s “Up” has a fondness for tennis balls, chocolate and appearing in movies that will make you cry no matter how many times you see them.

2 Lots of scary birds Never let D.C.’s pigeons see Hitchcock’s 1963 film “The Birds,” as it will only give them ideas. Soon they’ll forget about your hot pretzel and come after your eyeballs instead.

3 Hedwig In 2001’s “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone,” this snowy owl is a birthday present for Harry. Because all boys like presents that can rip your face off and whose preferred food is lemmings. (Really! Snowy owls can eat three to five a day.)

4 Gwaihir et al. The leader of the Great Eagles who appear in “The Hobbit” and the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, Gwaihir is really tired of you asking why they couldn’t just give Frodo a lift to Mount Doom. Eagles have better things to do than carry your ring-bearing butt.

5 Odile This “Swan Lake” character gave Darren Aronofsky’s 2010 film “Black Swan” its title. She also gave Natalie Portman a major case of the crazies.


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Weekend Pass | entertainment

‘UNEXPECTED’

ARRIVAL A fateful meeting with Prince saved singer Liv Warfield’s career and revived her hard-rocking soul sound

“I love heavy guitar riffs, but it got enhanced when I was around Prince.” — LIV WA RFIELD, ON ONE OF THE MANY WAYS HER MENTOR POWER GENERATION) HAS INFLUENCED HER OWN MUSIC

CHRIS OTTAUNICK

(AND BOSS IN NEW

The first time Portland, Ore.-based soul singer Liv Warfield met Prince, he reached out, shook her hand and asked if she was hungry. “No,” she replied. “We have dessert. You sure you don’t want dessert?” Prince asked. “Nope,” she reiterated. Warfield wasn’t hungry for dessert. She was after something sweeter. It had been three years since Warfield independently released her debut album, 2006’s “Embrace Me,” and her career was at a standstill. “Things weren’t happening the way I wanted them to,” says Warfield, who was considering quitting music. “I was patient but my patience was starting to run thin.” Then Prince came calling. In 2009, one of Warfield’s friends heard that Prince was looking for another singer to join his backing band, New Power Generation. Warfield didn’t think she had a shot, but the friend did, so he sent Prince’s people a YouTube clip of her singing The Rolling Stones’ “Gimme Shelter.” Four months later, Warfield was walking through the hallways of Paisley Park Studios near Minneapolis with Prince in front of her, offering dessert and the opportunity of a lifetime. “I kind of describe it like a Spike Lee movie,” Warfield says. “Everything else was moving but me.” She tried to subdue the star-struck fangirl in her head and focus on the task at hand: “OK, straighten up, snap out of it,” she told herself before the audition. “You gotta sing, Liv. Remember why you’re here.” She got the gig and, after five years of Prince tours, her patience has paid off. In February, Warfield, 34, stepped back into the spotlight with the release of her second album, “The Unexpected,” which was executive produced by The Purple One. “He gave me free rein to do what I wanted,” Warfield says, noting that Prince didn’t actually sit in on the sessions. “Anytime I was frustrated and needed help


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E7

Weekend Pass

The Merchant of Venice By William Shakespeare

W W W. T H E H O WA R D T H E AT R E . C O M

Inside Tracks

writing and arranging he was [available] to give input and ideas. He was a mentor.” Warfield and her core band — a guitarist, a bassist, a drummer and two backup singers — recorded the album in Portland with the aid of New Power Generation’s horn section. (Warfield’s show at the Howard on Sunday will feature her band, plus the 11-piece NPG Hornz.) W hile “T he Unexpected” is influenced by Prince — “I love heavy guitar riffs, but it got enhanced when I was around Prince,” she says — the album is a showcase for Warfield’s powerful voice and sound, which has evolved considerably from the jazzy R&B of her 2006 debut. There’s the heavy guitar rock of the Prince-penned title track, the bluesy stomp of “BlackBird,” the retro soul stylings of “Stay — ‘Soul Lifted’ ” and the funkified “Fly.” “I really wanted to make sure it was my sound, it represented [my band] and it represented all the things [Prince] taught me,” she says. “I wanted him to be proud of it.” Between gigs with Prince, Warfield has been promoting the new

April 24–27

202-803-2899

SUNDAY, APRIL 13TH

LIV WARFIELD

Hartke Theatre 202-319-4000 drama.cua.edu

& THE NPG HORNZ FRIDAY, APRIL 11TH

JESSE COOK

CUAdrama

SATURDAY, APRIL 12TH OUT

To request accommodations for individuals with disabilities, please call 202-319-5367.

OLD

S SOUTHERN SOUL ASSEMBLY FOX

“The Unexpected” When Liv Warfield told Prince she wanted to name her album “The Unexpected,” he got to work on this guitar-driven track, which sets the tone for the record. Prince even recorded his own version (with his other backing band, 3rdEyeGirl) that Warfield describes as “quite spectacular.” For her version, she “wanted to take a Tina Turner approach to it.” “Stay — ‘Soul Lifted’ ” This throwback, horn-enhanced soul track was originally written five or six years ago, before Warfield met Prince. It evolved over time, with the NPG Hornz parts being a key addition. “They kind of painted a picture of what I was trying to say,” she says. It’s also the track Warfield most thinks deserves radio play.

Directed by Eleanor Holdridge

620 T ST. NW WASHINGTON DC

As executive producer, Prince reigned over Liv Warfield’s “The Unexpected.”

“Your Show” Warfield and Prince co-wrote this seven-minute epic, which Warfield says was inspired by Isaac Hayes. “I kind of like to keep [the songwriting process] sacred between him and I,” she says, “but just know that it is pretty dope.” R.G.

record with live shows and TV appearances. (After she performed “BlackBird” on “Late Show” last week, an astonished David Letterman remarked, “Cancel show business. It’s over! This is it! This is all you want!”) While Warfield is slowly gaining fans, pop radio play continues to elude her. “That’s kind of my big issue,” she says. “Some [DJs] say there’s no songs that could be played on the radio. [But we] can be played on the radio. Maybe sw itch up the formula a bit — there is a room for us.” Perhaps pop radio just needs to catch up to Warfield? “I like getting people’s respect a fan at a time,” she says. “Not pushing the songs down anybody’s throat. It’s genuinely, naturally happening as it should. “I’m patient,” she adds. “I can wait it out.” After all, it’s gotten her this far. RUDI GREENBERG (E XPRESS)

Howard Theatre, 620 T St. NW; Sun., 8 p.m., $29.50-$32; 202-8032899, thehowardtheatre.com. (Shaw-Howard U)

SATURDAY, APRIL 12TH LATE SHOW

GO GO MICKEY’S BIRTHDAY BASH FEATURING FAMILIAR FACES MONDAY, APRIL 14TH

THE TRILLEST TOUR FEATURING

BUN B & KIRKO BANGZ WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16TH

THE JOHNNY ARTIS BAND

TRIBUTE TO HOWARD THEATRE LEGENDS: JAMES BROWN, SAM COOKE, MARVIN GAYE, & OTIS REDDING

HAITIAN SINGER-SONGWRITER

BÉLO

with Champion Superior Soundsystem

FRIDAY, APRIL 18TH

TANK

SATURDAY, APRIL 19TH

LOS AMIGOS INVISIBLES OCHO DE BASTOS

4/20 WILLIAM FITZSIMMONS BEN SOLLEE 4/23 TECH N9NE & FREDDIE GIBBS W/CYNICAL MINDED & MENTAL STAMINA 4/24 MUSIQ SOULCHILD 4/26 KINDRED THE FAMILY SOUL 4/27 NAPPY ROOTS 4/28 RAUL MIDÓN/AVERY SUNSHINE 4/29 STRUNZ & FARAH 4/30 THE LOX-STYLES P, SHEEK LOUCH & JADAKISS 5/2 THE FOREIGN EXCHANGE (PHONTE + NICOLAY) 5/2 LATE-YOUNG THUG 5/3 SEVENDUST ACOUSTIC 5/7 NOA (ACHINOAM NINI) 5/8 PAUL MOONEY 5/10 BALKAN BEAT BOX 5/13 ROBBEN FORD 5/14 MUMU FRESH 5/16 ROY AYERS 5/16 LATE-THE CHUCK BROWN BAND 5/17 ED MOTTA EVERY SUNDAY

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or Call 800-745-3000

TOMORRO W N

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www.artisphere.com 1101 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22209 Free parking weekedays after 5pm + all day on weekends Two blocks from the Rosslyn Metro Follow us: @Artisphere Like us: ArtisphereVA


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Weekend Pass | entertainment “Beat-ya-feet is the dance equivalent of go-go.” — JOHN PE A RSON, CO-CHOREOGRAPHER OF THE MULTIMEDIA DANCE PIECE

MICHAEL S. WILLIAMSON (THE WASHINGTON POST)

“CREATIVE MINDS”

In “Creative Minds,” Dante Hancock, right, uses a story about zombies and vampires to frame a dance performance.

Local dancers show the Kennedy Center how to beat-ya-feet Dance If Miley Cyrus taught the world to twerk, Dante Hancock would like to do the same with beat-ya-feet, D.C.’s locally grown hip-hop dance. On Friday, Hancock will demonstrate the style on Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage as part of the “One Mic: Hip-Hop Culture

Worldwide” festival. He co-choreographed a multimedia piece called “Creative Minds” with John Pearson, who heads a D.C. dance crew known as Da Originalz. “Beat-ya-feet is the dance equivalent of go-go,” Pearson says. While go-go’s popularity peaked in the ’80s, beat-ya-feet came into vogue in the ’90s. It nearly went mainstream when Hancock and four friends competed on MTV’s “America’s Best Dance Crew” in 2009. After being eliminated in the fourth episode, the Beat Ya Feet

AJANI TRUGH PHOTOGRAPHY (AP)

They’ve Got the Beat

Dante Hancock, far right, competed on MTV’s “America’s Best Dance Crew” in 2009 with the Beat Ya Feet Kings.

Kings returned to D.C. These days, they mostly perform at churches — where many local hip-hop dancers originally found inspiration, Hancock says. “You know how you stomp your feet and shout in church? It’s like that, but we tangle our feet up and twist up our ankles in creative ways,” he says. Beat-ya-feet features frenetic footwork, but it’s looser than you’d see in Los Angeles-style krumping. Upper-body-wise, most people stick with quick, marionette-like movements, but some incorporate fluid motions like you might see in a pop music video, Hancock says. “If you’re good at isolations, you do isolations. If you are good at pop-and-locking, you do that,” he says. The style’s free-form ethos is great for dance battles, but the Kennedy Center stage demands a little more structure, Pearson says. So he and Hancock wrote a story to frame the action: Two children find a book on the street marked “Do Not Read,” and read it, which unleashes armies of zombies

How to Beat-Ya-Feet The Chop: Wiggle your legs and move your hands fluidly, “like a sensei about to break a brick with his hands,” choreographer John Pearson says. The This ’n’ That: Slide your left foot across your right foot, and then vice versa, and make a wave motion with your arms. The Bop Bobiddy: Face forward and point your feet to the right. Balance on your left toe and right heel, then pivot your feet to the left and balance on your right toe and left heel. Repeat while flapping your arms, Funky Chicken-style. The Shakalaka: Walk forward rhythmically, legs akimbo, while puffing out your chest.

and vampires. As you might expect, the supernatural creatures work out their differences via dance. In this case, the vampires prefer straight-up “beat-ya-feet” moves, while the zombies incorporate more modern hip-hop flow, Pearson says. All involved will groove to go-go tunes spliced with dubstep. If this sounds like an updated “Thriller,” Pearson doesn’t mind. “I guarantee you haven’t seen anything like it before,” he says. SADIE DINGFELDER (E XPRESS)

Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW; Fri., 6 p.m., free; 202-467-4600, kennedy-center.org. (Foggy Bottom)

Comedy Club & Restaurant 1140 Connecticut Ave. Washington, DC 20036

ALL SHOWS 18 & OVER KYLE KINANE

DEAN EDWARDS

BILL BELLAMY

RUSSELL HOWARD

KEVIN NEALON

APRIL 10-13

APRIL 17-19

Special Event APRIL 24-26

MAY 1

Special Event MAY 2-4

Comedy Central, Conan MTV’s Guy Code & Late Showtime, Def Comedy Russell Howard's Good Saturday Night Live, & The World Stands Up Show w/ Craig Ferguson Jam & Last Comic Standing News on BBC & Conan Comedy Central & Weeds

FRANK CALIENDO

AARON KARO

ARIES SPEARS

KEVIN POLLAK

MICHAEL MCDONALD

Special Event MAY 8-10

MAY 14

Special Event MAY 15-17

Special Event MAY 23-25

MAY 30 - JUN 1

Comedy Central, TBS, FOX NFL & MADtv

Comedy Central & Late Show w/ Craig Ferguson

Us + dinner at places that make us happy. It’s your

MADtv, Comedy Central Comedy Central, HBO, MADtv, Cougar Town & Def Comedy Jam The Usual Suspects, Casino & Showtime special

Buy tickets @ dcimprov.com or 202.296.7008

WeekendPass

Every Thursday in Express XX0165 3x3


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E9

entertainment | Weekend Pass

Come see ceramics created by celebrated master artists

Contemporary Japanese Ceramics Living National Treasures & Other Masters

April 10 – 29, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily Embassy of Japan Japan Information and Culture Center 1150 18th Street NW

BRANTLEY GUTIERREZ

Begins today!

Singer-guitarist Eric Pulido, front, and the rest of Midlake beefed up their sound for the band’s album “Antiphon.” Now Midlake is stripping things down for an acoustic tour.

CHOPTEETH AFROFUNK BIG BAND April 11

The Art of Traveling Light Midlake pares back on the psychedelia for its acoustic tour Music With last year’s “Antiphon,” Texasbased folk-rock band Midlake went widescreen. You can hear the new direction in the psychedelic swagger of the album’s titular opening track, or the prog-rock synthesizers of “This Weight.” It’s a lusher work than the band’s three previous LPs. It’s an album that begs to be played live with a massive backing band and elaborate set pieces. So, what’s Midlake doing for its current tour? Going acoustic. “Ever y t h i ng’s a lot more exposed and transparent,” singerguitarist Eric Pulido says of the stripped-down renditions, “which is kind of cool, and I think all the songs take on that form.”

The choice to acousti-cize the new album’s tracks came down to logistics, Pulido says: Only half of Midlake’s six members are on the tour, during which the band is opening for singer-songwriter Neil Finn. The downsizing presented the opportunity to tinker with the songs, he says. It’s one of several changes Midlake has undergone in the past few years — in fact, the exploration of the hazy psychedelia of “Antiphon” might not have happened if it weren’t for a major shakeup in the band’s lineup in 2012. Lead singer Tim Smith departed while the group was writing its fourth album, and Pulido stepped into the frontman role. From there, the band started the writing process fresh (and more democratically, when it came to songwriting) for what would become “Antiphon.” The bigger sound blossomed,

giving the band a new lease on life. For the acoustic tour, Midlake is delving into its back catalog, taking on songs not as grand in scope as those on “Antiphon,” but still full of guitars, piano, flutes and percussion. Those performances will be “a little more exposed but more organic or natural,” Pulido says. Here are three tracks audiences can expect to hear when the band opens for Finn at the Lincoln Theatre on Saturday:

‘Provider’ This “Antiphon” track is driven by moody keyboards and flutes that immediately place the listener in a dark forest, probably hanging out with a centaur or something. It gets the unplugged treatment on this tour, but Pulido says acoustic guitar was the song’s original driving force — it was only during the recording process that the proggier layers were added.

‘Aurora Gone’ Though one of the new album’s folkiest tracks, “Aurora Gone” doesn’t waste much time before ascending to musical heights that leave the song’s picked acoustic guitar all the way back down on Earth. But here too, that guitar was the foundation when the song was conceived. “This type of [acoustic] setting really does take it back to the precipice of the idea,” Pulido says.

‘Head Home’ The straight-ahead rock feel of this track from 2006’s “The Trials of Van Occupanther” gets toned down for this tour, Pulido says. The drop in momentum gives the song a darker feel, but the change, Pulido says, makes sense in the grand scheme of the Midlake’s new direction. JON WOLPER (FOR EXPRESS)

Lincoln Theatre, 1215 U St. NW; Sat., 7 p.m., $40; 202-328-6000, thelincolndc.com. (U Street)

DR. HOOK FEAT. RAY SAWYER April 12

SUNDAY BRUNCH W/ THE GOSPEL PERSUADERS April 13

AN EVENING OF JAZZ & SOUL W/ FRANK MCCOMB April 13

JAZZFUNK UNITED: 76 DEGREES WEST & PLUNKY AND ONENESS April 16

7719 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda, MD 20814

(240) 330-4500

www.bethesdabluesjazz.com Facebook.com/Bethesda.Blues.Jazz Follow us on Twitter: @BethesdaBlues Parking available in the building – 2 ½ blocks from Bethesda Metro


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I.M.P. PRESENTS Merriweather Post Pavilion • Columbia, MD JUST ANNOUNCED!

O.A.R. & Phillip Phillips

.............................................................. JULY 19

On Sale Friday, April 11 at 10am

JUST ANNOUNCED!

THIS WEEK’S SHOWS

GLOBAL CITIZEN AND WORLD CHILDHOOD FOUNDATION PRESENT

Flight Facilities w/ Will Eastman .............................................................................. F APR 11 The Sounds w/ Blondfire & Ghost Beach Early Show! 5pm Doors.................................... Sa 12

THANK YOU FESTIVAL FEATURING

Tiesto • Above and Beyond • Krewella • Alvin Risk and more! .............JUNE 26 On Sale Friday, April 11 at 10am

STEEZ PROMO PRESENTS: VIBRATE FEATURING

Bro Safari w/ Des McMahon • RaceCarBed • Massacat Late Show! 10pm Doors......... Sa 12 Pat Green w/ Cory Morrow...................................................................................................... W 16

The Revivalists & Moon Taxi w/ B Side Shuffle .................................................. Sa 19 Galantis (Christian Karlsson of Miike Snow and Linus Eklöw a.k.a. Style of Eye) .... Th 24

Band of Skulls w/ SACCO ........................................................................................................ M 28 MAY

FEATURING

311 • SOJA • Cage the Elephant and more! ...............................................MAY 3 For a full lineup and more info, visit dc101.com Ray LaMontagne w/ Jason Isbell & The Belle Brigade ............................ JUNE 4 Jack Johnson

w/

Amos Lee................................................................... JUNE 5

CAPITAL JAZZ FEST FEATURING

Erykah Badu • John Legend • Chaka Khan and more!............................. JUNE 6-8

The Both (Aimee Mann & Ted Leo) w/ Nick Diamonds of Islands ......................... F 2 Wye Oak w/ Braids .......................................................................................................................... Tu 6 Mogwai w/ Majeure ......................................................................................................................... W 7 ALL GOOD PRESENTS

Papadosio ........................................................................... F 9 - w/ ELM • Sa 10 - w/ The Mantras Mastodon w/ Gojira & Kvelertak ............................................................................................... Tu 13 Reckless Kelly .......................................................................................................................... Th 15 Panda Bear w/ Regal Degal & Geologist (DJ Set) .................................................................. F 16 Animals as Leaders ............................................................................................................ Sa 17 YOU ME AT SIX w/ Deaf Havana • Stars in Stereo • Basic Vacation .............................. Su 18 Augustana w/ Twin Forks (featuring Chris Carrabba) .......................................................... M 19 The Faint ......................................................................................................................................... Tu 20 Conor Oberst w/ Dawes ............................................................................................. F 23 & Sa 24 Yann Tiersen w/ NO ................................................................................................................. W 28 The best thing you could possibly put in your mouth

For more info and full lineup, visit capitaljazz.com

Brad Paisley

w/ Randy Houser • Leah Turner • Charlie Worsham ........... JUNE 12

Willie Nelson & Alison Krauss and Union Station w/ Kacey Musgraves .................. JUNE 14 FALL OUT BOY & PARAMORE w/ New Politics...........................................JULY 18 QUEEN + Adam Lambert .................................................................JULY 20 Neutral Milk Hotel

w/ Circulatory System ................................JULY 25

PHISH .................................................................................................................JULY 26 & 27 • merriweathermusic.com • 930.com

Echostage • Washington D.C.

M.I.A.

w/ A$AP Ferg ............................................................................................APRIL 27

Lindsey Stirling

............................................................................................JUNE 24

Cupcakes by BUZZ... your neighborhood bakery in Alexandria, VA. | www.buzzonslaters.com

2135 Queens Chapel Rd. NE D.C. • echostage.com • Ticketmaster

930.com

MANY MORE SHOWS ON SALE!

9:30 CLUB PRESENTS AT U STREET MUSIC HALL The best thing you could possibly put in your mouth

9:30 CUPCAKES

Kix • Extreme •Tesla

and more! ..................... APRIL 25 & 26 Single-Day tickets on sale now. For a full lineup, visit m3rockfest.com

DC101 KERFUFFLE

APRIL ALL GOOD PRESENTS

9:30 CUPCAKES

feat.

Meyerhoff Symphony Hall • Baltimore, MD

Jeff Tweedy ......................................................................................... JUNE 9 Ticketmaster

Cupcakes by BUZZ... your neighborhood bakery in Alexandria, VA. | www.buzzonslaters.com

GoldLink The God Complex Release Show w/ LAKIM ....................................... Sa APR 12 Black MilkMORE with Nat Turner w/SALE! Ab & DJ Sober....................................................... Tu 15 MANY SHOWS ON 930.com Fanfarlo w/ Lilies on Mars...........................................................................................Sa 26 Hari Kondabolu This is a seated show. .......................................................................... W 30 Broods ..................................................................................................................... F MAY 2 The Ghost of a Saber Tooth Tiger (Sean Lennon & Charlotte Kemp Muhl) w/ Syd Arthur....................................................................................................................M 5 Stu Larsen ..................................................................................................................... W 7 The Haxan Cloak........................................................................................................... F 9 Tobacco w/ Stargazer Lillies........................................................................................Sa 10 Chet Faker ................................................................................................................. Th 15 THE LIVING OUT LOUD TOUR FEATURING

Moosh & Twist w/ Jared Evan .................................................................................... F 23 • Buy advance tickets at the 9:30 Club box office Pimlico Race Course • Baltimore, MD BLACK-EYED SUSAN DAY CONCERT FEATURING

COUNTING CROWS • THE FRAY

Lincoln Theatre • Washington, D.C.

JUST ANNOUNCED!

WOLFMOTHER ..................................................................................... MAY 20

First Night Sold Out! Second Night

Added!

ANDREW BIRD AND HANDS OF GLORY

w/ Tift Merritt .................. JUNE 8 On Sale Friday, April 11 at 10am

THIS FRIDAY!

Emmylou Harris Wrecking Ball Tour with Daniel Lanois, Steven Nistor & Jim Wilson * special opening set by Daniel Lanois ..............................................................................APRIL 11 THIS SATURDAY!

Neil Finn (of Crowded House) w/ Midlake (acoustic) ................................... APRIL 12 Rufus Wainwright w/ Lucy Wainwright Roche...................................................... APRIL 16 DOCTOR DREDD PRESENTS

Stephen “Ragga” Marley w/ Joe Mersa • Wayne Marshall • Zedicus ..........APRIL 17 LA PLUS GRANDE LÉGENDE DU ROCK FRANÇAIS

• Annie Bosko and more! ......... MAY 16

PREAKNESS INFIELDFEST FEATURING

LORDE .................................................................................................................. MAY 17 For more info, visit preakness.com/infield

Johnny Hallyday ...................................................................................................... MAY 8 Morcheeba .................................................................................................................... MAY 14 Ingrid Michaelson w/ Storyman & Sugar + The Hi-Lows ....................................... MAY 24 EELS w/ Chelsea Wolfe .................................................................................................... MAY 31 Patty Griffin w/ Parker Millsap ................................................................................... JUNE 3 GRAMMY WINNER

Peter Frampton ..................................................................................................... JULY 8

AEG LIVE PRESENTS

Jim Jefferies Second Show Added! • thelincolndc.com •

....................................................................... JULY 11

U Street (Green/Yellow) stop across the street!


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E11

Once a month, the bar at DGS Delicatessen is the scene of themed Delicatessen After Dark events.

LEARN THE HARD WAY

New cocktail lounge pop-ups (and one club) cater to the curious Ask people in D.C. if they think there’s a cocktail craze in our midst and they’re likely to respond with something like, “Yeah, sure. Now can you please pass me that burntorange Manhattan?” The city has witnessed an undeniable uptick in cocktail lounges and watering holes where alcohol aficionados can venture way beyond the PBR and Jack Daniels combo. “Some people come to the bar who just want their beers,” says Trevor Frye, a bartender at Jack Rose. “But sitting next to them might be someone with a lot of interesting questions about the cocktails. I really enjoy serving the people who want to learn about what I’m making.” Inquisitive imbibers should consider these new opportunities, where your drink comes served with much more than just a twist of lemon. DELICATESSEN AFTER DARK AT DGS DELICATESSEN 1317 Connecticut Ave. NW; 202-2934400, dgsdelicatessen.com. (Dupont Circle) Last Thursday of every month; the next session is April 24 at 8 p.m.

In March, DGS launched a monthly free-to-enter salon where guests can experience a one-time-only cocktail menu centered on a new style, a particular spirit or a historic era of drinks. Led by beverage director Brian Zipin at the restaurant’s bar (which seats about

50), the event pays homage to a culture of deli drinking that was prevalent in New York in the early 1900s. “The neighborhood deli, at its core, is a convivial gathering place,” says Nick Wiseman, a partner at DGS. “We’re bringing a modern sensibility to something that was shaped in the taverns across New York and hotels in the Catskills.” The next session, scheduled for April 24, will include reinterpretations of infamous cocktails from the 1980s, including the Midori sour and the Cosmopolitan.

THE GIN CLUB AT WISDOM 1432 Pennsylvania Ave. SE; 202-5432323, dcwisdom.com. (Potomac Ave) $25 for a lifetime membership

Since Wisdom owner Erik Holzherr called the Gin Club to order on Feb. 6, he’s amassed 74 members who convene at his underthe-radar bar in Capitol Hill to earn points by trying gins from his impressive collection. (Points can be redeemed for swag like gin-branded hoodies and shakers.) The one-time, $25 membership fee also grants you $1 off

1.5-ounce pours and $2 off martinis, as well as a 50 percent discount on tastings with producers. “This all started because I was carrying all these bottles of gin collecting dust that no one was drinking,” Holzherr says. “The

“I really enjoy serving the people who want to learn about what I’m making.” — TRE VOR FRY E , BARTENDER AND CO-FOUNDER OF DRAM & GRAIN, A WEEKLY COCKTAIL POP-UP IN THE BASEMENT OF JACK ROSE DINING SALOON

only thing that made sense was to get even more and really turn it into a club.” He’s even noticed some friendships budding among club members: “It creates a fun competition. It’s becoming this little mini society.” DRAM & GRAIN AT JACK ROSE DINING SALOON 2007 18th St. NW; 202-607-1572, jackrosediningsaloon.com. Friday and Saturday evenings; 90-minute seatings at 7, 9 and 11 p.m.

In the basement of Jack Rose lies a dimly lit cocktail lounge with

JOSHUA COGAN PHOTOGRAPHY

dining | Weekend Pass worn-in sofas and cafe tables. After snagging one of 20 reservationonly seats via text, guests sip on complementary punch while marveling at the rotating drinks list curated by Frye and co-founder Nick Lowe. Current options include the smoke-infused Ode to Omaha ($17) with Thomas Tew Rum, blackberry cinnamon syrup and bitters, and the Vault ($15), which morphs from a Sazerac into a Vieux Carre as the ice melts. (The cube is made with Dolin Rouge Vermouth, Benedictine and Angostura bitters.) “There’s one bartender for every 10 guests, so we can talk to every single person and answer any questions they have about the ingredients,” Frye says. And there’s sure to be plenty: Many of the mix-ins are steeped in history or are incredibly rare, including vintage whiskeys that were distilled pre-Prohibition. THE GIBSON LABORATORY AT THE GIBSON 2009 14th St. NW; 202-232-2156, thegibsondc.com. (U Street) Wednesdays through Saturdays, 6 p.m.-close

At the Gibson’s second-floor, 16-seat bar (once inaccessible to the public), guests order cocktails by checking off preferences on an “I leave it to you, bartender”-style menu. They start by selecting a base spirit, a flavor profile (sweet, sour, bitter, savory or spicy) and the desired strength of the cocktail. Once it’s prepared, the drink arrives with a detailed explanation from the bartender. The inspiration for this experience stems from general manager Frank Jones’ general aversion to drinks lists, which he finds stifling. “People gravitate toward spirits they’re familiar with, rather than imagining the culmination of the spirits and flavors,” Jones says via email. Still, if you’d prefer having a little more control over your drink order, you can pick from prefab selections like the Cicada Song ($14), with green pepper-infused Plymouth Gin, Salers Aperitif, Dolin Blanc Vermouth, grapefruit liqueur, yellow Chartreuse and creme de violette. KELLY MAGYARICS (FOR E XPRESS)


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“Engrossing.” “A master class in acting.”

“Compelling.” “HHHHH” –Washingtonian

–DC Metro Theater Arts

CAMP DAVID BY LAWRENCE WRIGHT | DIRECTED BY MOLLY SMITH

NOW PLAYING HALLIE FOOTE as Rosalynn Carter

KHALED NABAWY as Anwar Sadat

RON RIFKIN as Menachem Begin

RICHARD THOMAS as Jimmy Carter Photo of Ron Rifkin, Richard Thomas and Khaled Nabawy by Tony Powell.

BY ANN RANDOLPH | DIRECTED BY | JOSHUA TOWNSHEND-ZELLNER

LAST CHANCE! MUST CLOSE APRIL 13 “Totally demented … over-the-top comedy.”

“Very moving ... inappropriate in all the right ways.”

—The Huffington Post

—Washington Post

THE GOLDEN AGE OF ROCK ‘N’ ROLL RETURNS APRIL 25

SMOKEY JOE’S CAFÉ THE SONGS OF LEIBER AND STOLLER WORDS AND MUSIC BY JERRY LEIBER AND MIKE STOLLER DIRECTED BY RANDY JOHNSON | CHOREOGRAPHED BY PARKER ESSE HELEN HAYES WINNER

E. FAYE BUTLER

TONY AWARD WINNER

LEVI KREIS

HELEN HAYES WINNER

NOVA Y. PAYTON

Photos of Levi Kreis, E. Faye Butler, Ashley Blair Fitzgerald and Jay Adriel by Tony Powell.

ORDER TODAY!

202-488-3300 WWW.ARENASTAGE.ORG

Ann Randolph is “A GENIUS.” —Mel Brooks


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E13

dining | Weekend Pass The Kim-Cheese-Steak, $11 | GCDC

OFF COURSE WITH …

1730 Pennsylvania Ave. NW; 202-393-4232, grilledcheesedc.com. (Farragut West)

GCDC, a grilled cheese-centric restaurant run by a local father-son duo, opens Friday with a lunch menu of signature sandwiches like this one. (At night, the menu shifts to cheese plates.)

KEVIN ALLEN

HUNGRY E YES

Brandon Byrd

SHAUNA ALEXANDER

The owner of the Goodies Frozen Custard & Treats truck (@Goodiesdc) hits the road Friday for his second season. New this year: chocolate-covered bacon sundaes. We asked Byrd to coffee, where we learned, among other things, that he doesn’t like coffee.

BREAD GCDC sources its bread (available in white, wheat and rye blend) from D.C.-based Lyon Bakery. A gluten-free version is made locally by Goldilocks Goodies.

ROAST BEEF Chunks of tender roast beef are prepared Korean-style (marinated in bulgogi sauce) and topped with GCDC’s “secret” spicy sauce.

CHEESE The sandwich features a threecheese blend of Tillamook cheddar, Barber’s cheddar and classic American for a creamy consistency.

DISH OF THE WEEK HOLLEY SIMMONS

THE JEFFERSON

2300). Prepared by executive chef Chris Jakubiec, dishes are veggierich, seasonal and full of peas. “He loved peas,” says chef Jakubiec. “Anytime we do something for Jefferson we put peas on it.” HOLLEY SIMMONS (E XPRESS)

What’s the worst job you’ve ever had?

In high school I worked as a stall cleaner for a horse farm. I had to clean all 25 stalls. It sucked, but I got to go horseback riding.

I worked in marketing for XXL magazine, so I’ve met a few. Michael Jordan. Jay Z. 50 Cent. Diddy. Ludacris. What was the first concert you ever attended?

Sir Mix-A-Lot in 1993 in Redding, Calif. I think I still have the ticket stub.

Short Rib Coca Flatbread available at Toro Toro

Thomas Jefferson pioneered the use of asparagus in the U.S. Plume’s five-course menu honors his birthday this weekend with a menu that includes a white asparagus dish.

A banana.

Who’s the biggest celebrity you’ve ever met?

Jefferson: Founding Farmer Though he’s credited for introducing french fries, pasta and ketchup to the U.S., Thomas Jefferson was a bit of a health nut. Judging by detailed diaries he kept at Monticello from 1769 to 1824, Jefferson was infatuated with cultivating little-known fruits and veggies. “I’m surprised he didn’t live to be 200, because his diet was perfect,” says Gabriele Rausse, who tends to Jefferson’s 2-acre garden as Monticello’s director of garden and grounds. Now through Saturday, Plume (the restaurant at the Jefferson Hotel) is offering a five-course, Jefferson-inspired menu in honor of the first foodie’s birthday on Sunday ($115, $200 with wine pairings, 1200 16th St. NW; 202-448-

KIMCHEE The sandwich’s name is a nod to Korean-style fermented cabbage. Prepared by Number 1 Sons in Arlington, the kimchee is tangy and salty. HOLLEY SIMMONS (EXPRESS)

What’d you have for breakfast?

Richard Sandoval’s new Peruvian steakhouse offers a theatrical display of meats carved tableside. Still, this flatbread topped with braised short rib, manchego cheese, arugula and hints of horseradish ($13) stole the show. HOLLEY SIMMONS (E XPRESS) Toro Toro, 1300 I St. NW; 202-682-9500, richardsandoval.com/torotorodc. (McPherson Sq)

Is there anyone people say you look like?

I’ve gotten Harry Belafonte before. HOLLEY SIMMONS (E XPRESS)

NEW & SOON

3.27 After Peacock Room opened at 2622 P St. NW 4.17 TKO Burger will open at 2350 Washington Place NE


E14 | E X P R E S S | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

CHEIE I R L E E N LION ELO GR CE

MAY O Y YOSYMPHON

NAL CHESTRA O I T A N OR

RINGO STARR

& HIS ALL-STARR BAND

H SARAN CHLA A L c M

OBAN R G JOSH

LINCOLN CENTER JAZZ ORCHESTRA WITH WYNTON MARSALIS

DARIUS RUCKER

THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA

PIXAR IN CONCERT

DIANA ROSS

CARMEN

IL VOLO

BEETHOVEN’S 9TH

NEW SHOWS ANNOUNCED APRIL 17!

NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

WOLF TRAP OPERA NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

DISNEY’S BEAUTY AND THE BEAST • ERIC BENÉT • HEART • PAT METHENY STRAIGHT NO CHASER • BONEY JAMES • TREY McINTYRE PROJECT • YANNI DARYL HALL AND JOHN OATES • JOHN BUTLER TRIO • AND MANY MORE! PREMIER SPONSOR 2014 SUMMER SEASON


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E15

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass

►sound

LIVE

Every Sound Is a Winding Road

UPCOMING PERFORMANCES

DAVE

POWERED BY WWW.GOINGOUTGUIDE.COM

BARNES

THURSDAY Birchmere: Jim Brickman, 7:30 p.m. BlackRock Center for the Arts: Peter Mayer, 7:30 p.m. DC Improv: Kyle Kinane, 8 p.m. George Mason University/Patriot Center: Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey, 7 p.m. Jammin’ Java: Pierre Bensusan, 7:30 p.m. Kennedy Center/Concert Hall: National Symphony Orchestra, 7 p.m. Kennedy Center/Millennium Stage: Regional Dance Crews: FootworKINGz, NextLevelSquad, 6 p.m., free. Music Center at Strathmore: Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, 8 p.m. Rams Head On Stage: Iris DeMent, 8 p.m. The Hamilton: Larry Carlton, Lena Seikaly, 7:30 p.m. The Howard Theatre: Gato Barbieri, 8 p.m. Twins Jazz: Kristin Callahan, 8 and 10 p.m. U Street Music Hall: The Hood Internet, Junior Prom, Oscillator Bug, 10 p.m. Warner Theatre: Lewis Black, 8 p.m.

W/ ANDY DAVIS

FRIDAY

APR 11

DIRTY D AOS ZBEA N BR S ND SATURDAY

APR 12

THURSDAY, APRIL 17

HORSE FEATHERS FRI, APRIL 18

AN EVENING WITH

KELLER WILLIAMS

W/ GIBB DROLL AND JEFF SIPE SAT, APRIL 19

CARRIE MANOLAKOS SUN, APRIL 20

10, 12:30, 3

EASTER GOSPEL BRUNCHES THUR, APRIL 24

SPOTTISWOODE & HIS ENEMIES, LAURA TSAGGARIS, AND DJANGO HASKINS (OF THE OLD CEREMONY) FRI, APRIL 25

ANDREA GIBSON

9:30 Club: Flight Facilities, 10:30 p.m.; Flight Facilities, 10 p.m. Birchmere: Iris Dement, 7:30 p.m. Comet Ping Pong: Travis Jackson Memorial Fund Benefit Show with Title

ANNA ROTTY

FRIDAY

SAT, APRIL 26

ALEJANDRO ESCOVEDO W/ AMY COOK

WHITE HINTERLAND — aka Casey Dienel, above — has impressive range on new album “Baby.” Dienel’s music melds

THUR, MAY 1

electronica, opera and jazz, but her best asset is her voice, which she’ll bend and twist at the Rock and Roll Hotel on Sunday.

FEAT. STEUART SMITH & FRIENDS W/ SPECIAL GUEST SHANNON McNALLY

Continued on page E16

RODNEY CROWELL FRI, MAY 2

KATIE HERZIG

➜DAR CONSTITUTION HALL: 18TH AND

➜JAMMIN’ JAVA: 227 MAPLE AVE. E.,

ANNAPOLIS; 410-268-4545,

C STREETS NW; 202-628-4780, DAR.ORG/

VIENNA; 703-255-1566,

RAMSHEADTAVERN.COM.

W/ ELIZABETH & THE CATAPULT

CONTHALL.

JAMMINJAVA.COM.

➜ROCK & ROLL HOTEL: 1353 H ST. NE;

SAT, MAY 3

➜DC9: 1940 NINTH ST. NW; 202-483-5000,

➜KENNEDY CENTER: 2700 F ST. NW;

202-388-7625, ROCKANDROLLHOTELDC

DCNINE.COM.

202-467-4600, 800-444-1324,

.COM.

➜9:30 CLUB: 815 V ST. NW; 202-265-0930,

➜DC IMPROV: 1140 CONNECTICUT AVE.

KENNEDY-CENTER.ORG.

➜STATE THEATRE: 220 N. WASHINGTON

930.COM.

NW; 202-296-7008, DCIMPROV.COM

➜MERRIWEATHER POST PAVILION:

ST., FALLS CHURCH; 703-237-0300,

➜ARLINGTON CINEMA & DRAFTHOUSE:

➜EMPIRE: 6355 ROLLING ROAD,

10475 LITTLE PATUXENT PARKWAY,

THESTATETHEATRE.COM.

2903 COLUMBIA PIKE, ARLINGTON;

SPRINGFIELD, VA.; 703-569-5940,

COLUMBIA, MD.; 410-715-5550,

➜ U STREET MUSIC HALL: 1115 U ST.

703-486-2345,

EMPIRE-NOVA.COM.

MERRIWEATHERMUSIC.COM.

NW; 202-588-1880, USTREETMUSICHALL.

ARLINGTONDRAFTHOUSE.COM.

➜THE FILLMORE: 8656 COLESVILLE

➜ MUSIC CENTER AT STRATHMORE:

COM.

➜BIRCHMERE: 3701 MOUNT VERNON

R0AD, SILVER SPRING; 301-960-9999,

5301 TUCKERMAN LANE,

➜VELVET LOUNGE: 915 U ST. NW;

AVE., ALEXANDRIA; 703-549-7500,

FILLMORESILVERSPRING.COM.

NORTH BETHESDA; 301-581-5100,

202-462-3213, VELVETLOUNGEDC.COM.

BIRCHMERE.COM.

➜THE HAMILTON: 600 14TH ST. NW;

STRATHMORE.ORG.

➜WARNER THEATRE: 13TH AND E

➜BLACK CAT: 1811 14TH ST. NW; 202-667-

202-787-1000, THEHAMILTONDC.COM.

➜PATRIOT CENTER: 4500 PATRIOT

STREETS NW; 202-783-4000,

7960, BLACKCATDC.COM.

➜IOTA CLUB & CAFE: 2832 WILSON

CIRCLE, FAIRFAX; 202-397-7328,

WARNERTHEATREDC.COM.

➜BLUES ALLEY: 1073 WISCONSIN AVE.

BLVD., ARLINGTON; 703-522-8340,

703-993-3000, PATRIOTCENTER.COM.

➜WOLF TRAP: FILENE CENTER:

NW; 202-337-4141, BLUESALLEY.COM.

IOTACLUBANDCAFE.COM.

➜RAMS HEAD TAVERN: 33 WEST ST.,

1551 TRAP ROAD, VIENNA;

venues

PRISCILLA AHN SUN, MAY 4

AN EVENING WITH

NELS CLINE SINGERS FREE

LATE-NIGHT MUSIC IN THE LOFT EVERY FRI & SAT

THEHAMILTONDC.COM


E16 | E X P R E S S | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

GEORGE C. MORVEN OATLANDS

LOUDOUN

Weekend Pass | goingoutguide.com

HISTORIC HOMES

Historic House & Gardens

Continued from page E15

THE HISTORIC ESTATES of Loudoun County Take advantage of a Comfort Suites/Leesburg special discount package and spend a weekend exploring all three homes plus nearby vineyards, outlet shopping, and outstanding restaurants.

Park Governor’s Mansion Visit

LoudounHistoricHomes.org for tour hours and additional information or call 703-669-1650.

Marshall House

Easter Brunch Sunday, April 20th

Prix Fixe Menu Adults - $55 per person 12 years & younger - $21 per person Menu is available a la carte

Family Style Sides Roasted Asparagus Three peppercorn cream

Cheddar Grits Sharp cheddar, locally milled grits

Spring Pastry Basket Assorted breads, pastries, whipped butters, seasonal jams

First Course (choose one of the following)

Second Course

Cape May Scallops

(choose one of the following)

Almond milk gelée, roasted strawberry hearts, basil powder, shaved radishes

Pennsylvania Mushrooms

Maryland Crab Benedict Old bay hollandaise, handpicked crabmeat, poached eggs, buttermilk biscuit, grilled avocado

Roasted mushrooms, frisée, orange balsamic reduction, smoked crème fraiche, candied pistachio crumble, porcini oil pebbles

Pennsylvania Pan Roasted Duck

Tuscarora Beets

Maryland Rock ish

Rhubarb purée, toasted farro, brandy brown sugar reduction, duck skin crackling

Red beet gelée, roasted yellow beet roots, buttercrunch lettuce, honey roasted pecans, whipped goat cheese

Roasted ingerling potatoes, roasted mushrooms, white asparagus, lemon oil, tarragon broth

Bacon & Eggs

Spinach & Mushroom Tofu Quiche

Maple glazed smoked pork belly, paprika dusted potato hash, fried quail egg, hollandaise reduction

Local Carrots & Truf les Warm carrot soup, black truf le peelings, brandy reduction, smoked beech mushrooms

Desserts (choose one of the following)

Coconut Cream Panna Cotta Passionfruit luid gel “yolk”, key lime bubbles, sugar egg

Honey Vanilla Crepe Gateau Blackberry blueberry stuffed crepes, honeycomb candy, honey lavender ice cream

Mud Pie Brown butter fudge cake, mocha custard, caramel ganache, chocolate peeps

Roasted wild mushrooms, wilted spinach, caramelized onions, pea shoots

All Natural Short Rib Hash Chipotle red wine reduction, marbled potatoes, poached eggs, sweet vidalia onions, scallions, horseradish crème

Roasted PA All Natural Chicken Breast Glazed cippolini onions, charred baby leeks, oven roasted baby carrots, thyme pan jus

One beverage included: Mimosa Bloody Mary Orange Juice LINCOLN uses sustainable seafood and certi ied humane meat & poultry. Consuming raw meat, poultry, seafood, or eggs may increase your risk of food-borne illness. Gratuity of 20% will be added to parties of 6 or more.

1110 Vermont Avenue NW 202 386 9200 www.lincolnrestaurant-dc.com

Sticks, and DJs Kim & Sara. DC Improv: Kyle Kinane, 8 and 10:30 p.m. George Mason University/Patriot Center: Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey, 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Jammin’ Java: Willy Porter, 7:30 p.m. Kennedy Center/Terrace Theater: Louis Lortie, 7:30 p.m. Kennedy Center/Concert Hall: National Symphony Orchestra, 8 p.m. Kennedy Center/Millennium Stage: Regional Dance Crews: Da Originalz, Miss Prissy, 6 p.m., free. Rams Head On Stage: The Flamingos, 8 p.m. State Theatre: Matt Kazam, Tim Miller, Marc Sterne, 8:30 p.m. The Howard Theatre: Jesse Cook, 8 p.m. Twins Jazz: Jeff Antoniuk and The Jazz Update, 8 and 10 p.m. Warner Theatre: Lewis Black, 8 p.m.

SATURDAY 9:30 Club: Bro Safari, 10 p.m.; The Sounds, 5 p.m. Birchmere: Hiroshima, 7:30 p.m. DAR Constitution Hall: “Of Thee We Sing,” 7-8:15 p.m. DC Improv: Kyle Kinane, 8 and 10:30 p.m. Empire: Oceano, Broken Hope, Fallujah, Rivers of Nihil, Kublai Khan, 4 p.m. George Mason University/Patriot Center: Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey, 11:30 a.m., 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Jammin’ Java: Disappear Fear, 7 p.m. Kennedy Center/Concert Hall: National Symphony Orchestra, 8 p.m. Kennedy Center/Millennium Stage: Words Beats & Life Presents Top Notch, 6 p.m., free. Music Center at Strathmore: National Philharmonic Chorale and Orchestra, 8 p.m. Rock & Roll Hotel: Wild Child, 8 p.m. The Howard Theatre: Southern Soul Assembly, 8 p.m. Twins Jazz: Jeff Antoniuk and The Jazz Update, 8 and 10 p.m. U Street Music Hall: GoldLink, 7 p.m. Warner Theatre: Lewis Black, 8 p.m.

SUNDAY

XX0164 2x.5

This is

Every Tuesday in Express

His Comedic Voice

Tracks, Passing Phases, Cane & The

Birchmere: Ashley Monroe, 7:30 p.m. DC Improv: Kyle Kinane, 8 p.m. Empire: Oceano, Broken Hope, Fallujah, Rivers Of Nihil, Kublai Khan, 4 p.m. George Mason University/Patriot

COMEDY CENTRAL

Discover ...

STAND-UP KYLE KINANE can be heard daily on Comedy Central (that’s

his gruff voice reading the promos for upcoming shows) but his comedic rants and observations are best served live, like at the DC Improv this weekend.

Center: Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey, 1 and 5 p.m.

Jammin’ Java: Kim Richey, 7 p.m. Kennedy Center/Concert Hall: Zakir Hussain, 4 p.m. Kennedy Center/Millennium Stage: Creative Ecosystem: A Hip-Hop Fusion Drum Call, 6 p.m., free. Music Center at Strathmore: National Philharmonic Chorale and Orchestra, 3 p.m. Rams Head On Stage: Hiroshima, 5 and 8 p.m. Rock & Roll Hotel: S. Carey, White Hinterland 8 p.m. The Fillmore: Carcass, the Black Dahlia Murder, 7 p.m. The Howard Theatre: Harlem Gospel Choir, 1 p.m.

►sight POWERED BY WWW.GOINGOUTGUIDE.COM

Addison/Ripley: “Nancy Sansom Reynolds: Un.Furl,” the sculptor reveals her newest work, through May 10. 1670 Wisconsin Ave. NW; 202-338-5180, addisonripleyfineart.com. American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center: “Champion Divers: American University 1st-Year MFA Exhibition,” an exhibit featuring work by first-year MFA students Ayad Almissouri, Mandy Cooper, Michael Holt, Tim Hoyt, Nathan Mullins, Angel Samudre, Jenny Wu and Robert Yi, through April 20. “Sightlines: Ann Pibal, Jill


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E17

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass Downen, Frank Trankina and Dean

Homework on Display

Flower,” in conjunction with the Wash-

Smith,” a group exhibition curated by

ington Sculptor’s Group, a display

Tim Doud features work by the artists,

of sculptural media will address the

through Wed. “Brink and Boundary,” the

theme of “Flower/to Flower,” with loose

exhibition features site-specific instal-

or literal interpretation using symbol-

lations by four artists in such nontra-

ism, signs, metaphor, narrative or con-

ditional exhibition spaces as the muse-

ceptually based, through May 4. 201

um’s elevator, an emergency stair-

Prince St., Alexandria; 703-548-0035,

well and the exterior of the building, through Aug. 17. “Double Mirror,” curated by Inhee Iris Moon, this group exhibition showcases work by 20 contemporary Korean and Korean-American artists, through June 1. “In Residence Colloquium: The Neighbors,” curated by MICHAEL O’SULLIVAN (THE WASHINGTON POST)

American University art department professors Zoe Charlton and Tim Doud, this group exhibition showcases work by faculty from several other area art schools, through June 1. “Mynd Alive: BK Adams. I Am Art,” the sculpture garden is filled with 3-D works by a Washington artist whose art ranges from the whimsical to the provacative, through Aug. 17. 4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW; 202-8851300, american.edu/cas/katzen. Anacostia Community Museum: “Black Baseball in the District of Columbia,” an examination of the national pastime in the African-American community. “Home Sewn: Quilts From the Lower Mississippi Valley,” an exhibition examining the generational, social and economic fabric of an African-American quilting community in rural Mississippi, through Sept. 21. “Ubuhle Women, Beadwork and the Art of Independence,” this exhibition features a new form of bead art, the ndwango (which translates as “cloth”), developed by a community of women living and working together in rural KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, through Sept. 21. 1901 Fort Place SE; 202-6334820, anacostia.si.edu. Arlington Arts Center: “CSA: Forty Years of Community-Sourced Art,” features veteran artists Ken Ashton, Martha Jackson Jarvis, Soledad Salame, Erik Thor Sandberg and Foon Sham, alongside the more recent arrivals Tariq Tucker, J.J. McCracken, Nikki Painter, Alex Podesta and Dane Winkler, through April 18. “Here and Now,” features the work of the art center’s 12 resident artists, through Sun. 3550 Wilson Blvd., Arlington; 703-248-6800, findyourartist.org. Art Museum of the Americas: “Territories and Subjectivities: Contemporary Art from Argentina,” an exhibition

AMERICAN UNIVERSITY ART STUDENTS, including Robert Yi, whose portraits are shown above, created all the work in this exhibit. “Champion Divers” is an exhibition of pieces by first-year MFA candidates, now showing at the school’s Katzen Arts Center.

nvfaa.org. BlackRock Center for the Arts: “Ric Garcia,” mixed-media pieces by the artist are showcased, through May 3. 12901 Town Commons Drive, Germantown, Md.; 301-528-2260, blackrockcenter.org. LAST CHANCE Capitol Hill Arts Workshop: “Shape of Things,” work by 20 artists in a variety of media that were selected during a region-wide competition, Thu.-Sun. 545 Seventh St. SE; 202547-6839, chaw.org. Connersmith: “Katie Miller: Enduring/ Agniet Snoep: Alive and Present,” realist paintings by local artist Katie Miller and photographic still lifes by Dutch artist Agniet Snoep, opening Sat., through May 31. 1358-60 Florida Ave. NE; 202-588-8750, connersmith.us.com. Continued on page E20

featuring 33 artists explores trends from regions of the country, through July 6. 201 18th St. NW; 202-370-0147, museum.oas.org. Arthur M. Sackler Gallery: “Chigusa and the Art of Tea,” exploring the tea culture of Japan, Korea and China, this exhibition features Chinese calligraphy, Chinese and Korean tea bowls, Japanese stoneware containers and more, through July 27. “Eyes of the World: Ara Guler’s Anatolia,” the photographer’s iconic snapshots of medieval Seljuk and Armenian buildings from 1965, through Aug. 3. “Perspectives: Rina Banerjee,” the contemporary artist draws inspiration from her native of India, creating a sculptural river of glass bottles on the floor of the museum pavilion, through June 8. 1050 Independence Ave. SW; 202-633-1000, asia.si.edu. Artisphere: “Industrial Paradise,” Jessica van Brakle’s art examines the complex relationship between man and nature through conflicting, contrasting and yet coexisting notions of harmony, permanence, strength and ecology, through June 7. 1101 Wilson Blvd., Arlington; 703-875-1100, artisphere.com. Athenaeum: “Loloudi: Flower/to


E18 | E X P R E S S | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

THEATRE DC Metro Area Premiere!

Catch Me If You Can

Apr 24 – 27 Thur, Fri, Sat 7 pm Sat, Sun 2 pm

McLean High School Theatre Company

Cinderella: The Remix

Based on the hit DreamWorks film, this high-flying, splashy musical tells Frank Abagnale Jr.’s real-life story of being young, in love... and in deep, deep trouble!

Opens this weekend! Best for ages 5-10

Cinderella dreams of being a DJ, but girls are not allowed to spin in Hip-Hop Hollywood! Will she get the gig?

April 12, 1pm & 6pm April 13, 12pm & 4:30pm

Two bold and biting one act plays that explore the boundaries of familial love.

5th Annual “Fool for All”

Sunday, April 13, 7:00pm

A DC favorite returns for one-night only benefit performance. Masks, Commedia, surprises, fun for the whole family!

Tovah Feldshuh in

Thu 4/10 at 7:30 Fri 4/11 at 8 Sat 4/12 at 3 & 8 Sun 4/13 at 3 & 7:30

Tony Award-winning playwright William Gibson's riveting portrait of Golda Meir. "Enlightening!" - The New York Times

Children's Theatre Kenopsia Productions & Blind Pug Arts Collective

Fault Lines Faction of Fools

Golda’s Balcony by William Gibson

Living Out

A serious comedy exploring the shared humanity of a Latina nanny and her employer and the differences wrought by race, class and immigration status.

April 24 – May 18 Thurs-Sat at 8 pm Sun at 2 pm

“equally enjoyable and disturbing.” –NY Newsday Present

The Most Happy Fella Shear Madness

The Kennedy Center Theater Lab

Burks Auditorium McLean High School 1633 Davidson Road McLean, VA Tix: mcleandrama.com

$10 – 15

Imagination Stage 4908 Auburn Ave. Bethesda, MD imaginationstage.org Woolly Mammoth Theatre Rehearsal Hall 641 D Street NW Find us on Facebook! Gallaudet University Free parking! 4 blocks from H Street. www.factionoffools.org/tohag Theater J 1529 16th St. NW 800-494-8497 or www.theaterj.org

Filled with music, dance, and girl power! Plays by Michael Free Garcés & Kelsey Hogan “awesome $5 feats of physSugg. ical comedy” donation - DCTS Post show discussion: $50 “Golda and $85 Camp David”

GALA Theatre 3333 14th Street, NW 202-234-7174 www.galatheatre.org

$20-$42

Opens in Two Weeks!

$10+

In English with Spanish surtitles

April 4-19, 2014 Fri & Sat 8PM Sun 2:30PM

Frank Loesser (Guys and Dolls) scored his greatest artistic triumph with this touching, dramatic and intensely personal love story.

Thomas Jefferson Theatre 125 S Old Glebe Rd Arlington, VA 22204 www.thearlingtonplayers.org

$20-$23

703-5491063

Regular Schedule: Tuesday–Friday at 8 Saturday at 6 & 9 Sunday at 3 & 7

It's an ordinary day at the Shear Madness salon, when the lady upstairs gets knocked off. WHOdunit? Catch the killer at this comedy, where "shrieks of laughter night after night" (Washington Post), shake the walls of the Kennedy Center.

The Kennedy Center Theater Lab Student Rush Tickets Available Tickets: 202-467-4600 Groups: 202-416-8400 www.shearmadness.com

Tickets avail. at the Box Office

Added Spring Shows: Mon @ 8 Tue @ 5 Wed @ 5 Thu @ 5

MUSIC - CHAMBER CUA Chamber Choir Concert

“Songkran” g

Thai New Y ear 2014

Friday, April 11, 2014, 7:30 p.m.

Music of Demantius, Vecchi, Brahms, Howells, Murrill, Britten, Lauridsen, and Nestor. Conducted by Leo Nestor.

St. Vincent de Paul Chapel The Catholic Univ. of Am. 620 Michigan Ave, NE 20064 Music.cua.edu

Free

Disability Accommodations: 202319-5407

10-17 April 2014

Thai Restaurant Week Featuring special lunch and dinner menu of noodle dishes at Participating Thai restaurants in DC metro area

For more information and a list of participating restaurants in your area, visit

n o o d l e


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E19

MUSIC - CHAMBER The United States Air Force Band

Chamber Players Series

Thursday, April 17, 2014 8:00 p.m.

Join members of the Concert Band and Ceremonial Brass as they present “A Quartet Celebration: Clarinet Quartet vs. Tuba Quartet”.

The Lyceum 201 S. Washington St. Alexandria, Va. www.usafband.af.mil

Free, no tickets required

Sunday at 2 p.m.

Chamber ensembles from “The President’s Own” will perform Johann Sebastian Bach’s Fantasia in G, BWV 572; Poulenc’s Sextuor; Mandernach’s The One, the Only; Tomasi’s Trois Divertissements; and Beethoven’s Trio in B-flat, Opus 11, Gassenhauer.

John Philip Sousa Band Hall Marine Barracks Annex 7th & K Streets, SE Washington, DC 202-433-4011 www.marineband.marines.mil

Free, no tickets required

Free parking is available under the overpass on 7th Street

Marine Band

Chamber Music Series

First come, first seated.

MUSIC - CONCERTS April 12-13, 8 p.m.

Celebrating the arrival of a new continuo organ, handmade by Henk Klop in the Netherlands, this program features works by Bach and others.

American University Katzen Arts Center american.tix.com

$10; $5 for seniors

202-885ARTS

Saturday at 2 p.m.

A stanch advocate of new music, Oliver Knussen has programmed intriguing works by Peter Lieberson, Elliott Carter, and Gunther Schuller. Balancing these works are selections by Igor Stravinsky and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

Coolidge Auditorium Library of Congress 1st & Independence Avenue, SE Washington, DC 202-433-4011 www.marineband.marines.mil

Free, no tickets required

Street parking is available

Kennedy Center Concert Hall 2700 F Street, NW, Washington 202.467.4600 kennedy-center.org

Tickets start at $15

Tickets also available through Choral Arts: 202.244.3669 choralarts.org

Enrique V. Iglesias Auditorium 1330 New York Ave NW Metro Center (202) 623-1410 iadb.org/cultural @BIDCultura

Free, photo ID required

Musical genius with humble spirits

American University

Chamber Singers Marine Band with Guest Curator

Oliver Knussen

WORLD MUSIC AND DANCE Tango! Soul and Heart A Celebration of Argentine Music and Dance Reggae and Hip-Hop

Meta and the Cornerstones

Sunday, April 27, 2014, 5:00 pm

Thursday, April 10, 2014 at 6:30 p.m.

Choral Arts Chorus’ 170 voices joins with the Pan American Symphony Orchestra to perform choral works by Argentine composers and traditional and folk Tango songs, including works by Astor Piazzolla.The second half features Tango dancers: Andres Bravo and Carolina Jaurena Senegalese singer Meta & 7 piece band of Jamaica & US fuse Reggae, Afro-Pop, Hip-Hop, Rock, & Soul w/ passionate lyrics in English, French, Wolof & Fulan

COMEDY Washington, DC’s Premiere Political Satire Troupe Saturday 7pm!

Of Thee We Sing The Marian Anderson 75th Anniversary Celebration

Saturday, April 12 at 7pm DAR Constitution Hall

Fridays & Saturdays at 7:30pm

A musical, political satire. We put the MOCK in Democracy! www.capsteps.com Info: 202.312.1555

Sunday 4pm!

Zakir Hussain

Thursday April 24 at 8pm Sixth & I

Sunday April 13 at 4pm Kennedy Center Presented by

$36

Discounts available for groups of 10+. 202-312-1427

Brad MOMIX Mehldau Botanica 25-26 Trio April GW Lisner

& Masters of Percussion

Washington Performing Arts Society

Ronald Reagan Building 1300 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Tix available at 202.397.SEAT ticketmaster.com

Auditorium Co-presented with GW Lisner Auditorium and CityDance

WPAS.org • (202) 785-WPAS (9727)

it’s not live art without a live audience.

Adve vertis ve i e in Th The e Gu uid ide e to the th he Li L ve velly Ar Arts ts!! ts 202-3343344-70 7 06 0 | gu guid id idet detoa oa art r s@ @wa wash ash shpo hpo pos st.com st.c om m


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Weekend Pass | goingoutguide.com Made With Love

Continued from page E17

dancing, through June 15. “Sol LeWitt:

Corcoran Gallery of Art: “American Journeys — Visions of Place,” a new installation of the museum’s pre1945 American paintings and sculpture collection organized around the theme of the changing notion of place in the history of American art. “Jennifer Steinkamp and Jimmy Johnson: Loop,” a visual art and sound installation by new-media artist Steinkamp and electronic composer Johnson, through April 20. “Next 2014,” a presentation of work by the Corcoran College of Art and Design’s graduating students provides insight into their curricular experience and future careers as artists, through May 18. “Rineke Dijkstra: The Krazyhouse,” a four-channel video installation by Dijkstra presents a sequence of a group of five young people, singing along to songs they selected and

Wall Drawing #65,” LeWitt’s piece, on

ship, through June 15. 201 E. Capitol St.

loan from the National Gallery of Art,

SE; 202-544-4600, folger.edu. Foundry Gallery: “Double Takes,” re-imagined still lifes and landscapes by Judy Gilbert Levey are shown, through April 27. 1314 18th St. NW; 202-4630203, foundrygallery.org. Freer Gallery of Art: “Chinese Ceramics for Tea in Japan,” a display of Chinese bowls, jars and ceramics acquired by Charles Lang Freer, through Sept. 14. “Japanese Screens: Landscapes and Waterscapes,” a collection of Japanese screens from the 15th to 19th century, through Aug. 24. “Off the Beaten Path: Early Works by James McNeill Whistler,” drawings, etchings and watercolors from the artist that were created while he was traversing the French countryside in the summer of 1858, through Sept. 28. “Promise of Paradise:

on visual art, performance and scholar-

202-639-1700, corcoran.org. Fairfax Art League: “Art-A-Tax,” a collection of art by Larry Oskin and Oscar Vigano includes photographs, paintings and drawings, through April 18. Old Town Hall, 3999 University Drive, Fairfax; 703-273-2377, fairfaxartleague.net. Flashpoint: “Touch Me: Emily Biondo + Bradford Barr,” the two artists collaborate on an interactive light environment, through May 10, noon-6 p.m. 916 G St. NW; 202-315-1305, culturaldc.org. Folger Shakespeare Library: “Shakespeare’s the Thing,” in honor of the Bard’s 450th birthday anniversary, members of the Folger staff selected pieces from the venue’s collection that demonstrate Shakespeare’s influence

GAVIN ASHWORTH (BROOKLYN MUSEUM )

through March 15, 2015. 500 17th St. NW;

IT MAY BE GETTING WARMER OUTSIDE, but it’s the perfect time to

bundle up at the National Museum of Women in the Arts. Its latest exhibit, “Workt by Hand: Hidden Labor and Historical Quilts,” celebrates handmade quilts.

Find your place.

XN0231 5X6

I found a great apartment that accepts Elmer for who he is.

Find it every Friday in express.


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E21

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass Early Chinese Buddhist Sculpture,” a

A Statue Worth Studying

1959 and 1978 explores the force of

collection of stone and gilt bronze Bud-

gravity in artistic production, through

dhist sculptures highlight two flourish-

June 15. Seventh Street and Indepen-

ing ages, the late Six Dynasties and the

dence Avenue SW; 202-633-1000, hirshhorn.si.edu. Honfleur: “Primary Urges,” the work of artists Brad Fesmire, Vanessa Irzyk and Sarah Boyts Yoder, through April 25. 1241 Good Hope Road SE; 202-365-8392, honfleurgallery.com.

High Tang (sixth to eighth century). The exhibition’s dramatic focus is the monumental Cosmological Buddha: a lifesize stone sculpture covered in intricate representations of the earthly realms. It is the only one of its kind on

Koshland Science Museum: “Earth Lab,” provides the latest data models and decision tools to create strategies for mitigating the impacts of climate change. “Life Lab,” contains information about the science of healthy living, how the brain works, and how to plan healthy meals. 525 E St. NW; 202-334-1201, koshland-science-museum.org. Continued on page E22

the world. “Sylvan Sounds: Freer, Dewing and Japan,” American tonalism —

“‘DRAFT DAY’ IS THE #1 PICK.”

shadowy paintings in muted hues — became a gateway to Japanese art for patron Charles Lang Freer. His namesake museum shows the connection, exhibiting works by American artist

Greg Russell, MOVIE SHOW PLUS

Thomas Dewing alongside Japanese

“PURE ENTERTAINMENT.”

pieces that Freer collected in the late

Nancy Jay, DAYBREAK USA

1890s, through May 18. “The Nile and

“EVERY BIT AS GOOD AS ‘BULL DURHAM’ AND ‘FIELD OF DREAMS.’

Ancient Egypt,” high quality artifacts from the collections of Freer Gallery are showcased to illuminate the role and importance of water animals for ancient

Kevin Costner returns to glory in the kind of role that made him a star.”

Egyptian religion and afterlife, indefinitely. “Women in Chinese Painting,” an exhibit featuring 30 works introducing

Pete Hammond, MOVIELINE

goddesses, court ladies, empresses and more examines the role of women in the BENJAMIN C. TANKERSLEY (THE WASHINGTON POST)

art world, through April 27. Jefferson Drive and 12th Street SW; 202-633-1000, asia.si.edu.

Gallery at Convergence: “Syria: Sacred Spaces. Ancient Prayers: A photographic and musical exhibition of pre-war Syria,” an exhibit of music and photography that examines musician and photographer Jason Hamacher’s cultural preservation efforts during his time in Syria, through April 28. 1801 N. Quaker Lane, Alexandria, 703998-6260. Goethe-Institut: “Gute Aussichten: New German Photography 2013-2014,” this exhibit presents a range of diverse ideas, reflections and photographic strategies, forms and media that not only depict the status quo, but also inspires, through April 25. 812 Seventh St. NW; 202-289-1200, goethe.de/ins/us/was. Hemphill: “Cityscapes,” an exhibit featuring street scenes, panoramic vistas and canal portraits by Martin Kotler, opening Fri., through May 23. 1515 14th St. NW; 202-234-5601, hemphillfinearts.com. Hillyer Art Space: “Everitt Clark,” the photographer displays his work, through April 26. “Kimberley Parr-Roenigk,” the local artist displays her hyper-realistic

THE COSMIC BUDDHA STATUE, above, isn’t just a work of art, it’s a

“HIGH-ENERGY CROWD-PLEASER that captures the excitement of the NFL.” Germain Lussier, /FILM

“INCREDIBLY REALISTIC. ‘Draft Day’ delivers on all fronts.”

Jay Crawford, ESPN SPORTSCENTER

“YOU’LL LOVE IT.” Shawn Edwards, FOX-TV

map of the history and tenets of Buddhism, with narratives carefully carved on its surface. The statue is on display at the Freer Gallery of Art.

paintings and landscapes, through April

an exhibit featuring works by the Span-

26. “Michael Havneraas,” the artist’s

ish artists, through May 18. “Damage

graphic, comic-book like drawings are

Control: Art and Destruction Since

displayed, through April 26.

1950,” international art that has risen

9 Hillyer Court NW; 202-338-0680,

since the end of World War II, through

hillyerartspace.org.

May 26. “Directions: Jeremy Deller: Eng-

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: “Barbara Kruger: Belief + Doubt,” the entire museum space — walls, floor, escalator sides — is wrapped in text on vinyl by the artist, immersing visitors in halls of voices that address conflicting perceptions of democracy, power and belief. “Black Box: Santiago Sierra and Jorge Galindo,”

lish Magic,” footage by Deller from the film “English Magic” provides a portrait of Britain and explores how “consumerism, technology and the new monotony of work” have altered experiences with nature, culture and history, through Aug. 31. “Gravity’s Edge,” an installation featuring sculptures, paintings and other pieces on paper created between

SUMMITENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS INASSOCIATIONWITH ODDLOTENTERTAINMENT A MONTECITOPICTURECOMPANY/ODDLOTENTERTAINMENT PRODUCTION AN IVANREITMAN FILM KEVINCOSTNER JENNIFERGARNER “DRAFTDAY” DENISLEARY FRANKLANGELLA SAMELLIOTT WITH ELLENBURSTYN WRITTEN AND CHADWICKBOSEMAN BY RAJIVJOSEPH & SCOTTROTHMAN DIRECTED BY IVANREITMAN

Motion Picture Artwork © 2014 Summit Entertainment, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

STARTS TOMORROW

WASHINGTON, DC AMC Loews Georgetown 14 (888) AMC-4FUN WASHINGTON, DC AMC Mazza Gallerie (888) AMC-4FUN WASHINGTON, DC Regal Gallery Place Stadium 14 (800) FANDANGO #1721 ALEXANDRIA Regal Kingstowne Stadium 16 (703) 822-4956 ALEXANDRIA Regal Potomac Yard Stadium 16 (703) 739-4040 ARLINGTON AMC Courthouse Plaza 8 (888) AMC-4FUN ASHBURN Regal Fox Stadium 16 (703) 957-1035

BELTSVILLE AMC Loews Center Park 8 (888) AMC-4FUN BETHESDA Regal Bethesda 10 (800) FANDANGO #569 BOWIE Regal Bowie Stadium 14 (800) FANDANGO #454 CENTREVILLE Rave Centreville 12 (703) 802-1100 FAIRFAX Cinema Arts Theatre (703) 978-6991 FAIRFAX Rave Fairfax Corner 14 + Xtreme (703) 378-6550 FREDERICKSBURG Marquee Southpoint 9 (540) 710-0401

FREDERICKSBURG Paragon Village 12 (540) 785-7328 GAITHERSBURG AMC Loews Rio Cinemas 18 (888) AMC-4FUN GERMANTOWN Regal Germantown Stadium 14 (800) FANDANGO #455 GREENBELT Academy Stadium Theatres 8 (301) 220-1155 HERNDON Phoenix Worldgate 9 (703) 318-9290 HYATTSVILLE Regal Royale Stadium 14 (301) 864-FILM LARGO AMC Magic Johnson Capital Center 12 (888) AMC-4FUN MANASSAS Regal Manassas Stadium 14 (800) FANDANGO #490

MCLEAN AMC Tysons Corner 16(888) AMC-4FUN RESTON Bow Tie Reston Town Center 11 & BTX Theater (703) 464-0816 ROCKVILLE Regal Rockville Stadium 13 (800) FANDANGO #248 SILVER SPRING Regal Majestic Stadium 20 (800) FANDANGO #4012 STERLING Regal Countryside Stadium 20 (800)FANDANGO #394 WALDORF AMC Loews St. Charles Towne Center 9 (888) AMC-4FUN WOODBRIDGE AMC Potomac Mills 18 (888) AMC-4FUN SORRY NO PASSES ACCEPTED


E22 | E X P R E S S | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

★★★ FREE PERFORMANCES 365 DAYS A YEAR ★★★

EVERY DAY AT 6 P.M. NO TICKETS REQUIRED *Unless noted otherwise

APRIL 10–23 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 11 FRI ★ Da Originalz & Miss Prissy

kennedy-center.org/onemic facebook.com/onemicdc @onemicdc

10 THU ★ FootworKINGz & NextLevelSquad

Two U.S. regional dance street crews, FootworKINGz from Chicago and NextLevelSquad from Brooklyn, showcase their hip-hop prowess.

12 SAT ★ Words Beats &

Life Presents Top Notch – B-boy/B-girl Battle Silver Spring, MD lyricist Trus Real and NY b-boy Kwikstep, host a battle, in which b-boys and b-girls compete for a cash prize. Judges include hip-hop artist Narumi from Japan, DC area b-boy Toyz aRe Us, and pioneering NY b-girl Rokafella, with DJ Fleg on the turntables.

★★★★★★★

Registration for competitors begins at 3 p.m. in the Grand Foyer.

15 TUE ★ Boston Public

18 FRI ★ Vocal Arts DC

Quartet

Comprised of teaching artists Betsy Hinkle, Jason Amos, Marjorie Gere, and Michael Dahlberg, the group plays a concert as part of a day of remembrance for the victims of the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings.

IN THE TERRACE THEATER

16 WED ★ Kennedy Center

American College Theater Festival

The organization presents a collection of talented singers.

19 SAT ★ Comedy at the Kennedy Center: Gary Gulman

Comedian Gary Gulman takes the stage with opener Nik Oldershaw. Gulman has appeared on late night television and Comedy Central, including his own one-hour special Gary Gulman: Boyish Man, in addition to comedy festivals across North America.

The Michael Kanin Playwriting Awards Showcase features scenes from a range of award-winning plays.

5–6 P.M. NIGHTLY ★ GRAND FOYER BARS The Millennium Stage was created and underwritten by James A. Johnson and Maxine Isaacs to make the performing arts accessible to everyone in fulfillment of the Kennedy Center’s mission to its community and the nation. Additional funding for the Millennium Stage is provided by DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, The Isadore and Bertha Gudelsky Family Foundation, Inc., Jaylee M. Mead†, The Meredith Foundation, The Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation, Dr. Deborah Rose and Dr. Jan A.J. Stolwijk, U.S. Department of Education, and the Millennium Stage Endowment Fund.

14 MON ★ Nomadic Wax Presents Native Sun

The London-based duo fuses hip-hop and African rhythms with the aim of promoting a positive message of universal peace, equality, social justice, and environmental change.

spacecraft, from the Wright Brothers’ plane to Charles Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis to the Apollo 11 command module Columbia. The museum also has a planetarium and Imax theater, which for a fee shows educational films on flight and outer space. Sixth Street and Independence Avenue SW; 202-633-1000, nasm.si.edu. National Building Museum: “House and Home,” an ongoing exhibition that explores what it means to live at home. Ongoing exhibits: Learn about the history of buildings and their environmental impact. 401 F St. NW; 202-272-2448, nbm.org. National Gallery of Art, West Building: “Civic Pride: Dutch Group Portraits From Amsterdam,” rare depictions by Govert Flinck and Bartholomeus van der Helst of meetings

Enough Beads for You?

BLUES ALLEY BIG BAND JAM!

20 SUN ★ Blues Alley Youth Orchestra

Accomplished student musicians ages 14-17 offer an evening of big band jazz music.

21 MON ★ USAF Airmen of Note

The premier jazz ensemble of the United States Air Force performs as part of the Blues Alley Big Band Jam!.

22 TUE ★ Northwestern

American College Theater Festival

DAILY FOOD AND DRINK SPECIALS.

Showcasing the international roots of hip-hop music, this program features collaborations and solo creations from drummer Kiran Gandhi (M.I.A., Theivery Corporation); all-female percussion group Batala; and noted beatmakers Asma Maroof, Hezekiah, and Arsonal.

on exhibitions and historic aircraft and

Mexican Cultural Institute: “Man at the Crossroads: Diego Rivera’s Mural at Rockefeller Center,” an examination of the history, creation and ultimate destruction of a controversial New York mural by the great Mexican artist, through May 17. 2829 16th St. NW; 202728-1628, instituteofmexicodc.org. Morton Fine Art: “Sedition of Sound,” features paintings by Andrei Petrov, through April 22. 1781 Florida Ave. NW; 202-628-2787, mortonfineart.com. Mount Vernon: “Gardens and Groves,” more than 40 objects including rarelyseen items from Mount Vernon’s collection, books and letters, 3200 Mount Vernon Memorial Highway, Alexandria; 703-780-2000, mountvernon.org. National Air and Space Museum: Ongoing exhibits: Explore the evolution of flight through displays, hands-

THE CONSERVATORY PROJECT IN THE TERRACE THEATER

17 THU ★ Kennedy Center

National finalists of the KCACTF TenMinute Play Award present their original works, including Bread by Michael Yichao, A’nat Dittni by Tearrance Chisholm, Pass the Lingonberries by Nick Carr, Eskimo Pie by Stephanie Brownell, and a selection from Decision Height by Meredith Dayna Levy.

Family Night: One Mic Creative Ecosystem Presents A HipHop Fusion Drum Call

Continued from page E21

University’s Bienen School of Music Students play works by Schumann, Kovács, Respighi, Mozart, and others.

23 WED ★ Eastman School of Music

SAT 19 ★ GARY GULMAN

Live Internet broadcast, video archive, artist information, and more at

kennedy-center.org/millennium TAKE METRO to the Foggy Bottom/ GWU station and ride the free Kennedy Center shuttle departing every 15 minutes until midnight. FREE TOURS are given daily by the Friends of the Kennedy Center tour guides. Tour hours: Monday thru Friday, 10 a.m.–5 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m.–1 p.m. For information, call (202) 416-8340.

Students play works by Balakirev, Ravel, Puccini, Beethoven, and others.

For more information call: (202) 467-4600 GET CONNECTED! Become a fan of Millennium Stage on Facebook and check out artist photos, upcoming events, and more!

PLEASE NOTE: There is no free parking for free performances.

CONNERSMITH

In collaboration with Hi-ARTS One Mic: Hip-Hop Culture Worldwide, a program of Arts Across America, is made possible through the generosity of the Charles E. Smith Family Foundation.

Da Originalz from Washington, DC and the “Queen of Krump” Miss Prissy, from Los Angeles, present their unique dance styles in an original program.

13 SUN ★

Weekend Pass

The Kennedy Center welcomes persons with disabilities.

“A YOUNG LADY ADORNED WITH BEADS,” by Katie Miller, may

look like a photograph, but it’s a detailed oil painting. It’s one of the pieces on display as part of “Enduring,” an exhibit at Connersmith.


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E23

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass inside the Kloveniersdoelen, the gather-

five decades by George M. and Linda H.

photographs from the World War II era,

pher’s work capturing images of Afri-

ing place of one of Amsterdam’s three

Kaufman. “Modern German Prints and

documents and memorabilia, through

can culture, through Aug. 24. “Visions

militia companies. “Garry Winogrand,”

Drawings From the Kainen Collection,”

Sept. 1. Sixth Street and Constitution

from the Forests: The Art of Liberia and

an exhibit of 160 photographs from

the museum celebrates Ruth Kainen’s

Avenue NW; 202-737-4215, nga.gov.

Sierra Leone,” a collection of artwork

Winogrand’s 25 years of work, through

love for German expressionism with a

June 8. “Masterpieces of American Fur-

display of 123 donated works, includ-

niture From the Kaufman Collection,

ing drawings, lithographs, etchings

1700-1830,” one of the largest collec-

and more, through June 29. “The Mon-

tions of Early American furniture in pri-

uments Men and the National Gallery

vate hands, acquired over the course of

of Art: Behind the History,” a display of

National Museum of African Art: “Africa Re-Viewed: The Photographic Legacy of Eliot Elisofon,” in celebration of the 40th anniversary of the Eliot Elisofon Photographic Archives, an exhibition focused on the photogra-

from Liberia and Sierra Leone includes masks, body ornaments, textiles and more. Approximately 70 pieces will be on display, through Aug. 17. 950 Independence Ave. SW; 202-633-4600,

(!) No Pass/No Discount Ticket

MARYLAND

AMC Loews Georgetown 14

AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Center

Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 12:15-2:30-3:15-5:30-6:30-8:30-9:30Movie Times Rio 2 (G) CC;Digital Presentation: 8:00-10:30 Noah (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 12:30-1:30-3:35-4:35-6:50-10:00 Sabotage (R) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:05-2:45-5:20 300: Rise of an Empire 3D (R) CC;RealD 3D: 12:20-5:20-10:45 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:20-5:05-9:50 Mr. Peabody & Sherman 3D (PG) CC;RealD 3D: (!) 2:40-7:25 Divergent (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 12:30-1:30-3:40-4:35-6:50-10:00 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC;RealD 3D: 12:45-3:45-7:00-10:15 Rio 2 in 3D (G) CC;RealD 3D: 8:00-10:30 Bad Words (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;CC;Digital Presentation: 12:50-3:05-5:20-7:35 Non-Stop (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 2:50-8:10 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) CC;Digital Presentation: 1:45-4:30-7:15-10:00 Oculus (R) CC;Digital Presentation: 10:00 The Grand Budapest Hotel (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;CC;Digital Presentation: 12:00-2:30-5:00-

The Roaring Twenties (1939) (NR) 5:00-9:15 Gunfight at the OK Corral (1957) (NR) 2:30 The Lost Son of Havana (NR) $5.00 show: 7:10 The Grand Budapest Hotel (R) (!) 11:10-12:20-1:30-2:30-4:00-4:45-6:30-7:15-8:45-9:35

3111 K Street N.W.

www.AMCTheatres.com

7:25-10:00

Draft Day (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 8:00-10:35 Captain America: The Winter Soldier An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) IMAX;RealD 3D: 1:15-4:15-7:30-10:45

AMC Loews Uptown 1

3426 Connecticut Avenue N.W. www.AMCTheatres.com Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 3:45-10:15 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC;RealD 3D: (!) 12:30-7:00

AMC Mazza Gallerie 5300 Wisconsin Ave. NW

www.AMCTheatres.com

The Metropolitan Opera: La Boheme ENCORE (NR) AMC INDEPENDENT: (!) 1:00 Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presenta-

tion: (!) 3:10-9:10 Rio 2 (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 8:00 Noah (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:10-3:15-6:20-9:25 Sabotage (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 5:10 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:25-5:20 Mr. Peabody & Sherman 3D (PG) CC;RealD 3D: 2:55 Divergent (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:00-3:20 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: (!) 12:05-6:10 Rio 2 in 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:00-2:40-5:25 The Grand Budapest Hotel (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:30-3:00-5:30-8:00 Draft Day (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-9:30

Avalon

5612 Connecticut Avenue

www.theavalon.org

The Unknown Known (PG-13) New Film from Errol Morris (FOG OF WAR- THIN BLUE LINE): 12:00-2:30-5:00-7:40 Afternoon of a Faun: Tanaquil Le Clercq (NR) 100% Rotten Tomatoes!: 3:15 Particle Fever (NR) 1:00-5:25-8:00

Landmark E Street Cinema 555 11th Street NW

www.landmarktheatres.com

The Raid 2 (R) 1:30-4:45-8:00 The Missing Picture (L'image manquante) (NR) 2:10-7:10 The Lunchbox (Dabba) (PG) 2:05-4:35-7:05-9:35 Particle Fever (NR) 4:40-9:40 The Grand Budapest Hotel (R) 12:45-1:45-2:30-3:15-4:15-5:00-5:45-6:45-7:30-8:15-9:15-9:50 Nymphomaniac: Volume II (NR) 1:00-4:00-7:00-9:30 Anita (NR) 1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15-9:45

Regal Gallery Place Stadium 14 707 Seventh Street NW

www.regalcinemas.com

Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 1:20-2:30-

4:30-6:00-7:40-9:30-10:40 Rio 2 (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:15 Sabotage (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:05-2:40-5:20-10:40 Noah (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:20-1:10-3:50-4:30-7:00-7:45-10:10-10:40 300: Rise of an Empire 3D (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vide;RealD 3D: (!) 4:50-10:25 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:00-2:25-5:05-10:30 Divergent (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:15-3:50-7:20-10:30 Tyler Perry's The Single Moms' Club (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:50-7:50 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 12:502:00-4:00-5:10-7:10-8:10-10:10 Bad Words (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:10-2:35-5:00-7:30-9:45 Non-Stop (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:05-2:45-5:25-10:45 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:50-3:40-6:50 Cesar Chavez (PG-13) 12:00-2:30-5:10-7:35-10:15 Oculus (R) CC: 10:00 Draft Day (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 8:00 Rio 2 in 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00

West End Cinema 2301 M Street NW

http://westendcinema.com/

Nymphomaniac: Volume I (NR) "A pornographic work of art!" David Denby- New Yorker: 7:00-9:30 Bad Words (R) "A tour de force of comic wickedness!" Peter Travers- Rolling Stone: 3:20-5:40-

7:40-9:40

Le Week-end (R) Washington Post Critic's Pick!: 3:00-5:40-7:40-9:40 Ernest & Celestine (Ernest et Celestine) (PG) Four Stars! -- Washington Post: 2:30-4:30

Continued on page E25

africa.si.edu.

Local movie times DISTRICT

National Museum of American History: “American Stories,” a crosssection of the museum’s collection of artifacts shows how stories and history have shaped our national identity. Visitors can view John Coltrane’s “A Love Supreme” manuscript and the Miss Piggy puppet on display in the exhibit through June 17. “Camilla’s Purse,” a display of

8633 Colesville Road

www.afi.com/silver

AMC Loews Center Park 8 4001 Powder Mill Rd.

www.AMCTheatres.com

Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 1:00-4:00-7:00 Rio 2 (G) CC;Digital Presentation: 8:00 Noah (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 1:30-4:30-7:30 Sabotage (R) CC;Digital Presentation: 2:45-5:15 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) CC;Digital Presentation: 4:45 Mr. Peabody & Sherman 3D (PG) CC;RealD 3D: 2:30 Divergent (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 2:00-8:00 Tyler Perry's The Single Moms' Club (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 2:50-5:25 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC;RealD 3D: (!) 2:30-5:30-8:30 Rio 2 in 3D (G) CC;RealD 3D: 8:00 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) Digital Presentation: (!) 1:20-5:15-7:15 Draft Day (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00 Divergent (PG-13) Digital Presentation: (!) 4:10 Oculus (R) Digital Presentation: 10:00

AMC Magic Johnson Capital Center 12 800 Shoppers Way

www.AMCTheatres.com

Frankie and Alice (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:45-1:15-3:45-6:15-9:00 Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!)

12:30-2:30-5:30-8:30 Rio 2 (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:30 Noah (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:45-11:45-1:45-2:45-5:00-6:00-9:15 Sabotage (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 11:40-2:15-5:15-8:15-10:50 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:15-3:00 Mr. Peabody & Sherman 3D (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 5:20 Jinn (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 11:20-2:00-4:45-7:15-9:45 Divergent (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 10:30-1:40-4:40-7:40-10:45 Tyler Perry's The Single Moms' Club (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 11:15-1:50-4:50-7:50-10:30 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: (!) 11:30-3:30-6:30-9:30 Rio 2 in 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:30-1:10-4:00-6:45 Oculus (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:00 Draft Day (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-10:45 Captain America: The Winter Soldier An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) IMAX;RealD 3D: (!) 10:30-1:30-4:30-7:30-10:30

Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema 7235 Woodmont Avenue

www.landmarktheatres.com

The Wind Rises (Kazetachinu) (PG-13) SUBTITLED: 3:55 On My Way (Elle s'en va) (NR) 1:30-4:20-7:20-10:00 The Lunchbox (Dabba) (PG) 1:45-4:40-7:40-10:05 Le Week-end (R) 1:10-4:00-7:00-9:30 The Wind Rises (Kazetachinu) (PG-13) 1:15 The Grand Budapest Hotel (R) 1:00-1:20-1:40-3:50-4:10-4:30-6:50-7:10-7:30-7:50-9:20-9:35-9:55-10:10 Cesar Chavez (PG-13) 1:50-4:50-7:25-9:50

Regal Bethesda 10 7272 Wisconsin Avenue

www.regalcinemas.com

Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 12:40-2:00-

4:00-7:15-8:00

Sabotage (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 4:10 Rio 2 (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:20 Noah (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:50-3:50-7:25 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 2:30-5:00 Divergent (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:10-4:30-7:50 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 1:00-3:30-7:40 Bad Words (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:30-2:40-5:10 Non-Stop (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 5:20 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:50-4:40-6:50 The Raid 2 (R) 12:30-3:50-7:20 Draft Day (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 8:10 Rio 2 in 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00

Regal Hyattsville Royale Stadium 14 6505 America Blvd.

300: Rise of an Empire (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:00 Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 12:501:50-4:00-5:05-7:10-8:30-10:30 Rio 2 (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00-10:25 Noah (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:25-3:45-4:30-6:55-7:35-10:05-10:35 Sabotage (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:30-4:05 Divergent (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:10-4:20-7:15-10:30 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:35-4:15 Tyler Perry's The Single Moms' Club (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:45-4:40 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 1:20-2:20-4:35-5:45-7:45-9:00 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:05-3:50-6:30-9:10 Oculus (R) CC: 10:00 Need for Speed (PG-13) 3:35 Draft Day (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 8:00-10:35 Cesar Chavez (PG-13) 12:55-3:30-7:00 Jinn (PG-13) 1:55-5:30-8:00-10:25 Rio 2 in 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00-9:15

Regal Majestic 20 & IMAX

Oculus (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:00-12:01 The Grand Budapest Hotel (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation:

300: Rise of an Empire (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 7:20-9:55 Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 11:30-12:10-

Draft Day (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-10:45-12:01 Recep Ivedik 4 (NR) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:35-1:25-4:20-7:05-9:50 God's Not Dead (PG) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: 10:25-1:15-6:30 Cesar Chavez (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:20-12:50 Need for Speed 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 4:50 Captain America: The Winter Soldier An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) IMAX;RealD 3D: (!) 11:00-

900 Ellsworth Drive

1:10-2:40-3:30-4:30-5:50-6:45-7:45-9:00-10:00-10:50

Rio 2 (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:15 Sabotage (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:35-4:25-10:45 Noah (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:00-1:50-4:10-7:50-10:25-11:00 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:55-4:20-6:50-9:20 Divergent (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 11:45-12:30-3:00-3:50-6:15-10:25 Tyler Perry's The Single Moms' Club (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 10:35 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 12:55-2:00-

4:00-5:20-7:15-8:30-10:30 Bad Words (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:40-3:00-5:15-7:35-9:50 Non-Stop (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:50-7:55 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:45-4:35-7:15-10:05 The Lego Movie (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:20-4:20 Son of God (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 5:05 Captain America: The Winter Soldier An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Se;IMAX: (!) 1:40-4:50-8:00-11:05 Need for Speed (PG-13) 1:50-5:00-10:30 Jinn (PG-13) 12:15-2:50-5:15-7:50-10:15 God's Not Dead (PG) 12:30-3:25-6:10-9:10 Cesar Chavez (PG-13) 1:15-3:55-6:30-8:50 Noah (PG-13) Spanish Dubbed: 4:50 Oculus (R) CC: 10:00 Draft Day (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 8:00 Rio 2 in 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00

11:35-2:05-4:40-7:10-9:45

2:10-5:15-8:20-11:30

Nfinity Champions League Cheerleading Event (NR) (!) 7:30

Angelika Film Center Mosaic 2911 District Ave

The Players (Les infideles) (R) 10:00AM Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) 10:30-4:30-9:50 Noah (PG-13) 10:10-1:00-4:00-7:00-10:00 Divergent (PG-13) 10:05-1:05-4:10-7:15-10:20 On the Other Side of the Tracks (De l'autre cote du periph) (R) 10:00AM Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) 1:30-7:30-10:40 The Raid 2 (R) 12:25-3:45-7:05-10:25 Bad Words (R) 11:35-1:45-3:55-6:05-8:15-10:30 The Unknown Known (PG-13) 11:40-2:15-4:50-7:25-10:00 The Grand Budapest Hotel (R) 11:05-1:15-3:30-5:45-8:00-10:15 Cesar Chavez (PG-13) 12:20-2:40-5:00-7:10

Arlington Cinema 'N' Drafthouse 2903 Columbia Pike

http://www.arlingtondrafthouse.com/

Xscape 14 Theatres

7710 Matapeake Business Drivewww.xscapetheatres.com

American Hustle (R) 7:00 Her (R) 7:20 12 Years a Slave (R) 9:50

Frankie and Alice (R) Stadium Seating: 12:00-2:40-5:20-8:00-10:35 Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) .. XTREME AUDITORIUM..;Stadium Seating: (!)

Regal Ballston Common 12 671 N. Glebe Road

10:50-1:50-4:50-7:50-10:40 Rio 2 (G) Stadium Seating: (!) 8:00-10:30 Noah (PG-13) Stadium Seating: 10:25-12:45-1:40-4:00-4:50-7:00-7:50-10:00 Sabotage (R) Stadium Seating: (!) 11:00-1:45-4:30-7:10-9:45 Need for Speed (PG-13) Stadium Seating: 9:20 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) Stadium Seating: 10:45-1:15-3:40-6:10 Divergent (PG-13) Stadium Seating: 10:30-1:40-4:45-7:50-10:50 Tyler Perry's The Single Moms' Club (PG-13) Stadium Seating: (!) 10:10-12:40-3:10 Non-Stop (PG-13) Stadium Seating: 10:00-6:40 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) Stadium Seating: 10:00-12:40-3:30-6:30 Oculus (R) Stadium Seating: (!) 10:00 Draft Day (PG-13) Stadium Seating: (!) 8:00-10:30 God's Not Dead (PG) Stadium Seating: 12:00-2:40-5:20-8:00-10:35 300: Rise of an Empire (R) 1:00-9:40 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) ..XTREME AUDITORIUM..;Stadium Seating: (!) 10:20-1:20-4:20-7:20-10:10 Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) Stadium Seating: (!) 11:20-12:50-2:20-3:50-5:206:50-8:20-9:10

VIRGINIA

AMC Courthouse Plaza 8 2150 Clarendon Blvd.

www.AMCTheatres.com

Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital

Presentation;Reserved Seating: (!) 12:30-2:45-3:45-7:00-9:15-10:15 Noah (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 11:00-12:45-4:00-4:30-7:15-10:30 Sabotage (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: (!) 11:15-2:15-5:057:45-10:25 300: Rise of an Empire 3D (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D;Reserved Seating: 10:30 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 1:45-6:45 Mr. Peabody & Sherman 3D (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D;Reserved Seating: 11:00-4:10 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D;Reserved Seating: (!) 10:30-11:30-1:30-4:45-6:00-8:00 The Grand Budapest Hotel (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 11:45-2:00-2:30-5:00-8:00 Draft Day (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: (!) 8:00-9:10

AMC Hoffman Center 22 206 Swamp Fox Rd.

www.AMCTheatres.com

Frankie and Alice (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:00-2:25-4:55-7:35-10:10 300: Rise of an Empire (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 1:55-7:15 Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!)

10:30-11:30-12:10-1:40-3:15-4:45-6:20-7:50-9:30-10:55 Rio 2 (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-10:30-12:01 Noah (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:00-11:25-1:05-2:45-4:25-6:00-7:40-9:15 Sabotage (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:00-2:35-5:25 300: Rise of an Empire 3D (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 4:35-9:55 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 2:30-7:30 Mr. Peabody & Sherman 3D (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 12:05-5:00-10:00 Jinn (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 11:20-2:00-4:30-7:00-9:35 Divergent (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:55-3:25-4:10-6:45-7:25-10:30-11:30 Tyler Perry's The Single Moms' Club (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 11:30-2:15 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: (!) 10:001:10-2:40-4:15-5:45-8:50-10:50-11:55 Rio 2 in 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00-10:30 Bad Words (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 11:10-1:30-3:506:10-8:30-10:45 Non-Stop (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 4:00-9:20 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 10:10-1:00-3:45-6:35-9:25 The Lego Movie (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 11:15-3:20 In The Blood (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:40-5:50-8:35 Afflicted (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 5:30

www.regalcinemas.com

Frozen (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:10-4:00 Rio 2 (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00-10:30 Divergent (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:00-2:30-3:10-4:10-5:50-9:00 Bad Words (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 2:40-5:00-7:30-10:00 Non-Stop (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:05-3:55-6:50-9:40 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:50-1:20-3:40-4:20-7:10 The Lego Movie (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:40-4:30-7:15-9:50 12 Years a Slave (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 7:05-10:05 Son of God (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:40-3:50-7:00-10:15 Oculus (R) CC: 10:00 Jinn (PG-13) 1:30-4:40-7:50-10:20 God's Not Dead (PG) 12:35-3:30-6:40-9:35 Nfinity Champions League Cheerleading Event (NR) 7:30 Rio 2 in 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00-10:30

Regal Kingstowne 16 & RPX 5910 Kingstowne Towne Center

300: Rise of an Empire (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:40-3:50-6:35-9:50 Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 12:0012:30-1:40-3:40-4:50-6:20-6:50-8:00-10:00 Rio 2 (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00-10:25 Noah (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:15-1:20-3:20-4:30-6:40-7:45-9:45-10:45 Sabotage (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:55-4:35-7:15-10:35 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:30-4:05-6:30 Divergent (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:50-3:55-7:05-10:15 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descripti;Dolby Atmos;RPX;RealD 3D: (!) 1:10-4:20-7:30-10:40 Bad Words (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 2:20-5:00 The Lego Movie (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:00-3:30 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 2:25-5:05 Oculus (R) CC: 10:00 The Grand Budapest Hotel (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 2:00-4:40-7:20 Draft Day (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 8:00-10:40 God's Not Dead (PG) 12:55-4:10-7:00-10:20 Cesar Chavez (PG-13) 6:10-9:10 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 2:10-3:10-5:20-8:30-9:30 Rio 2 in 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 9:10

Regal Potomac Yard 16 3575 Jefferson Davis Highway

www.regalcinemas.com

300: Rise of an Empire (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:50-3:20-6:00-9:00 Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 1:00-2:00-3:004:00-5:00-6:00-7:00-8:00-9:00-10:00

Rio 2 (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:15-10:35 Sabotage (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:35-3:10-5:40 Noah (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:40-1:20-3:40-4:40-7:10-8:10-10:20 Mr. Peabody & Sherman (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:40-4:10 Divergent (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:30-3:30-6:50-10:10 Captain America: The Winter Soldier 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 12:30-1:303:30-4:30-6:30-7:30-9:30-10:30

Bad Words (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:55-4:20-7:20-9:40 Non-Stop (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:40-3:20-5:50 Muppets Most Wanted (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:35-3:10-6:10-8:50 Oculus (R) CC: 10:00 Need for Speed (PG-13) 12:50 Draft Day (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 8:00-10:35 Cesar Chavez (PG-13) 3:50 Nfinity Champions League Cheerleading Event (NR) 7:30 God's Not Dead (PG) 1:50-4:50 Rio 2 in 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00-10:20


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T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E25

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass Continued from page E23

A Shared Experience

Holocaust survivor Camilla Gottlieb’s purse and its contents, which include her 1884 birth certificate, through May 4. “Changing America: The Emancipation Proclamation, 1863, and the March on Washington, 1963,” a collecBRENDAN SMIALOWSKI (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

tion of photos and artifacts commemorating two major events in American history, through Sept. 7. “Food: Transforming the American Table, 1950 to 2000,” from food production to who does the cooking to where meals are consumed to what we know about what’s good for us, this exhibit explores how new technologies and social and cultural shifts have influenced major changes in food, wine and eating in America. “Puppetry in America,” artifacts from stage and screen that cover more than 160 years of puppetry,

“BEYOND BOLLYWOOD,” at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History,

explores the experience of Indian Americans and the ways they’ve contributed to United States history.

through Sun. Michelle Obama’s second inaugural gown loan, first lady Michelle Obama’s second inaugural gown tem-

tory: “Beyond Bollywood: Indian Amer-

2015. “Dom Pedro,” the 14-inch obelisk

porarily replaces her first in the First

icans Shape the Nation,” through

is a 10,363-carat aquamarine. “Living

Ladies Room, through Jan. 19. 14th

images, music, visual art and first-per-

on an Ocean Planet,” a new permanent

Street and Constitution Avenue NW;

son narratives, this exhibit explores

exhibit that explores the ocean space

202-633-1000, americanhistory.si.edu.

the influence and experience of Indian

and its relationship to human life.

National Museum of Natural His-

Americans in America, through Aug. 16,

Continued on page E26


E26 | E X P R E S S | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

Weekend Pass Continued from page E25

and Games,” a new permanent exhibi-

“Portraits of Planet Ocean: The Pho-

tion at the museum displays more than

tography of Brian Skerry,” an underwa-

100 objects that show how Native Amer-

ter journey through marine environ-

ican children play. The toys, games and

ments by the award-winning photojour-

clothing in these cases come from all

nalist. “Unintended Journeys,” images

over North, Central and South Amer-

and video by Magnum Photos examine

ica and represent more than 30 tribes.

the plight of those displaced by natu-

“Ceramica de los Ancestros: Cen-

ral disasters and global climate change

tral America’s Past Revealed,” Cen-

within the last decade. This exhibition

tral American ceramics from 1000 B.C.

explores the challenges these people

to the present, through Feb. 1. “Mak-

and communities face, through Aug. 13.

ing Marks: Prints From Crow’s Shadow

“Whales: From Bone to Book,” traces the

Press,” features 18 works by seven

journey of fossil bones from sea cliff to

Native American artists including Rick

museum drawer and illustration in a sci-

Bartow, Phillip John Charette and Joe

ence book, through May 31. 10th Street

Feddersen, through May 26. Fourth

and Constitution Avenue NW; 202-633-

Street and Independence Avenue SW;

1000, mnh.si.edu.

National Museum of the American Indian: “As We Grow: Traditions, Toys

202-633-1000, nmai.si.edu. LAST CHANCE National Museum of

Women in the Arts: “Circa ’75: Judy

DANE WINKLER/ARLINGTON ARTS CENTER

Hide and Seek

DANE WINKLER’S hut-like sculpture is part of “CSA: Forty Years of

Community-Sourced Art” This celebration of local artists is on display at the Arlington Arts Center.


t h u r s d ay | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E x p r e s s | E27

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass

Courtesy Smithsonian American Art Museum

Oh! What a Beautiful Mornin’

ment from 1963 to 1965 with images and

the Rothko Room in 1960. “Made in the

Museum: “Modern American Realism:

the front pages of newspapers and mag-

USA: American Masters From the Phil-

The Sara Roby Foundation Collection,”

azines from the time. “G-Men and Jour-

lips Collection, 1850-1970,” after a four-

71 pieces from the Sara Roby Foun-

nalists,” an exhibit exploring the FBI’s

year world tour, the museum’s collec-

dation explore realism. Featured art-

effort to combat crime features photo-

tion of American masterworks returns.

ists include Will Barnet, Isabel Bishop,

graphs, newspapers and interactive dis-

The exhibit, which features more than

Wolf Kahn, Yasuo Kuniyoshi and oth-

plays, through Jan. 4. 555 Pennsylvania

200 pieces and more than 120 artists,

ers, through Aug. 17. “Pop Art Prints,” 39

Ave. NW; 888-639-7386, newseum.org.

examines American art from the late

rarely displayed prints from the Amer-

Phillips Collection: “Jean Meisel: 50-65 Horizon Line,” more than 50 small watercolors of horizon lines. “Laib Wax Room,” German artist Wolfgang Laib originally created this fragrant, illuminated beeswax chamber for the Phillips family home. It will be the museum’s first permanent installation since

19th century to the mid-20th century,

ican Art Museum’s permanent collec-

through Aug. 31. “The Journals of Dun-

tion include work from the 1960s by

can Phillips,” a display of selections

Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Rausche-

from the museum founder’s journals,

berg, Andy Warhol and others, through

which span 30 years, through Feb. 27,

Aug. 31. Eighth and F streets NW;

2015. 1600 21st St. NW; 202-387-2151,

202-633-1000, americanart.si.edu. Susan Calloway Fine Arts:

phillipscollection.org.

Smithsonian American Art

Edward hopper uses his famous play with light and shadows in the painting “Cape Cod Morning.” See it for yourself at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

Chicago,” features selected works by

of Union Generals,” studio portraits by

Chicago in honor of her 75th birthday.

one of the most famous photographers

Chicago’s work explores female iden-

of the Civil War, through May 31, 2015.

tity and women’s cultural achieve-

“Meade Brothers: Pioneers in American

ments, through Sun. “Equal Exposure:

Photography,” a collection of daguerre-

Anita Steckel’s Fight Against Censor-

otypes from the 19th-century American

ship,” artwork, papers and photographs

photographers and brothers, through

detail the life of Steckel, who created

June 1. “Mr. Lincoln’s Washington: A Civil

the Fight Censorship Group. (Hours for

War Portfolio,” features large-format

this exhibition are Monday through Fri-

reproductions of photographs, drawings

day 10 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.),

and maps that document the Civil War

through May 9. “New York Avenue Sculp-

and its impact on Washington, through

ture Project: Chakaia Booker,” Booker

Jan. 25. “One Life: Martin Luther King

exhibits her rubber-tire-based pieces

Jr.,” a one-room exhibition highlight-

outside the museum along New York

ing the civil rights icon in honor of the

Avenue as part of a series of changing

50th anniversary of the March on Wash-

installations of contemporary works by

ington, features photos and memora-

women artists, through April 27. “Workt

bilia, through June 1. “The Network,”

by Hand: Hidden Labor and Historical

artist Lincoln Schatz recombines inter-

Quilts,” a showcase of 35 18th-to-20th-

views with famous politicians, scholars

century quilts from the Brooklyn Muse-

and other notables into a single-screen

um’s decorative arts collection, through

video. Eighth and F streets NW; 202-

April 27. Ongoing exhibits: works by female artists. 1250 New York Ave. NW; 202-783-5000, nmwa.org. National Portrait Gallery: “Dancing the Dream,” an exhibit featuring choreographers, impresarios and performers such as Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Michael Jackson and Beyonce, through July 13. “Mathew Brady’s Photographs

633-1000, npg.si.edu. Newseum: “Anchorman: The Exhibit,” an exhibition dedicated to the fictional exploits of anchorman Ron Burgundy and the Channel 4 Evening News team features costumes, props and footage from the film, through Aug. 31. “Civil Rights at 50,” a three-year changing exhibit follows the civil rights move-

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Weekend Pass | goingoutguide.com Continued from page E27

made from silk, steel and wood, through

Not Our Kind of Dinner Party

the Great War,” paintings, drawings and

“Interactions,” Rodgers Naylor explores

May 5. The Art League Gallery, Studio 21,

watercolors from the Anne S.K. Brown

the capacity of painting to express or

105 N. Union St., Alexandria; 703-683-

Military Collection at the Brown Univer-

imply a human story while focusing on

1780, theartleague.org.

sity Library depict the first two years of

dark shapes in a composition, through April 26. 1643 Wisconsin Ave. NW; 202965-4601, callowayart.com.

The Old Print Gallery: “Kaleidoscope,” features new original prints by local artist Philip Bennet, opening Fri., through June 14. 1220 31st St. NW; 202965-1818, oldprintgallery.com. Torpedo Factory Art Center/The Art League Gallery: “Pop Art,” in recognition of this art movement, artists were encouraged to use everyday objects, advertising, comic books and cultural references in their work, through May 5. “Sway,” sculptor Natalie Shudt presents a living environment of flowing botanical forms that she

Touchstone: “Earth Blankets and Remnants by Rosemary Luckett,” a solo show by the artist that is part photo collage and cloth, through April 27. “Quotidian: The Art of Interaction by Shelley Lowenstein,” the figure painter displays her work, through April 27. 901 New York Ave. NW; 202-347-2787, touchstonegallery.com. U.S. Botanic Garden: “American Botanicals: Mid-Atlantic Native Plants,” illustrations of the region’s flora, through June 15. “Orchid Symphony,” displays in the conservatory feature orchids from across the world, through April 27. 100 Maryland Ave. SW; 202-2258333, usbg.gov. Woodrow Wilson House: “Images of

World War I, through Aug. 10. 2340 S St. NW; 202-387-4062, woodrowwilsonhouse.org.

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JOHN WATERS ‘This Filthy World’

Arguendo: The 1991 Supreme Court case in which a public nudity ban was challenged by go-go dancers is the inspiration for Elevator Repair Service’s show, through April 27, $40-$77.50. Woolly Mammoth Theatre, 641 D St. NW; 202-393-3939, woollymammoth.net. LAST CHANCE Brief Encounter: Three romances occurring at a train station are the subject of this show that utilizes projections and live acting, through Sun., $30-$75. Lansburgh Theatre, 450 Seventh St. NW; 202-547-1122, 877-4878849, shakespearetheatre.org. Camp David: Diplomacy wonks will be paying close attention to “Camp David,” a dramatic adaptation of 1978’s 13-day Middle East peace summit between U.S. President Jimmy Carter (Richard Thomas), Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin (Ron Rifkin) and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat (Khaled Nabawy). The play, which makes its world premiere at Arena Stage, is written by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Lawrence Wright, currently a staff writer for the New Yorker, through May 4, $55-$110. Arena Stage, 1101 Sixth St. SW; 202-488-3300, arenastage.org. Cinderella: the Remix: Psalmayene 24 puts a hip-hop spin on the Cinderella story. In this version, Cinderella hopes to become a DJ, through May 25. Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda; 301-280-1660, imaginationstage.org. LAST CHANCE Don’t Dress for Dinner: Center for the Arts’ Rooftop Productions presents the comedy of mistaken identity, through Sat., $18, $15 students and seniors. Candy Factory, Kellar Theater, 9419 Battle St., Manassas, Va. SATURDAY ONLY Global Beat: Washington Korean Dance Company: Experience the exquisite grace of Korean culture when this nationally recognized company brings an hour of dance and percussion to the stage,


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E29

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass A Pretty Undesirable Seatmate

spearetheatre.org. LAST CHANCE Loveland: Ann Randolph stars in the one-woman show about passengers on a plane including one dealing with death, through Sun., $15$40. Arena Stage, 1101 Sixth St. SW; 202-488-3300, arenastage.org. Moth: A friendship between two teen outsiders becomes strained when one is bullied, through May 4, $30-$35. Studio Theatre, 1501 14th St. NW; 202-3323300, studiotheatre.org. LAST CHANCE Oh Dad, Poor Dad,

Mama’s Hung You In The Closet and I’m Feeling So Sad: A mother, her son and his father’s corpse go on a vacation in Arthur Kopit’s comedy. Presented by American Century Theater, through Sat., $35-$40, $32-$37 seniors and students. Gunston Arts Center Theater II, 2700 S. Lang St., Arlington; 703998-4555. Once On This Island: A Caribbean community is brought together by a heroine, music, dancing and magic, through Continued on page E31

TERESA WOOD.

Smithsonian American Art Museum

ANN RANDOLPH stars in “Loveland” at Arena Stage’s Kogod Cradle as a woman taking a cross-country flight and coming

to terms with losing the love of her life along the way. Randolph plays multiple characters in this darkly funny comedy.

Cherry Blossom

Family Celebration Saturday, April 12 • 11:30 a.m.–3 p.m. • FREE!

opens Sat. Publick Playhouse, 5445

All Aboard

Landover Road, Cheverly, Md.; 301-277-

Spring has arrived! Celebrate DC’s famous cherry blossoms with floral-themed craft activities, live music, Japanese screen-making, gardening demonstrations, and scavenger hunts.

Full schedule at AmericanArt.si.edu/family. JIM COX

1710, arts.pgparks.com. Golda’s Balcony: The former prime minister of Israel, Golda Meir, is profiled, through April 27, $30-$85, $30-$80 seniors, $30-$40 age 35 and younger. Theater J, 1529 16th St. NW; 800-4948497, theaterj.org. Hair: Set in the 1960s, the rock musical follows young hippies as they pursue peace and love, through April 27, $42, $37 seniors and students. Andrew Keegan Theatre, 1742 Church St. NW; 703-892-0202, keegantheatre.com. Henry IV, Part 1: Stacy Keach had a memorable turn as small-town businessman and occasional thief Ed Pegram in the Best Picture-nominated “Nebraska.” When he isn’t stealing air compressors and threatening legal action against Bruce Dern’s character on film, there’s a good chance he’s acting on stage. He returns to Shakespeare Theatre, where he was last seen starring in 2009’s “King Lear,” to play Falstaff in the Bard’s history play. Part I opens Tuesday; Part II will be performed in repertory, beginning April 1, through June 7, $20-$110. Sidney Harman Hall, 610 F St. NW; 202-547-1122, shake-

“BRIEF ENCOUTNER” at the Shakespeare Theatre Company stars Han-

nah Yelland, above, as Laura and Jim Sturgeon, below, as Alec in this story of love on a train platform.

Smithsonian American Art Museum 8th and G Streets, NW • Gallery Place/Chinatown Metro 11:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily • (202) 633-1000 Photo by Bruce Guthrie


E30 | E X P R E S S | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

meet the filmmaker Satoshi Miki To celebrate the National Cherry Blossom Festival, Japanese director Satoshi Miki presents his latest film and brings back a beloved favorite. This program is cosponsored by Otakorp, Inc. It’s Me, It’s Me Friday, April 11, 7 pm In person: Satoshi Miki J-Pop star Kazuya Kamenashi (of the band KAT-TUN) stars as 33 different characters in this surreal, Kafka-esque comedy. Adrift in Tokyo Sunday, April 13, 2 pm In person: Satoshi Miki, director; Eri Fuse, actress Pre-film gallery talk, 12pm, with Jim Ulak, curator of Kiyochika: Master of the Night What two oddballs discover as they wander through Tokyo makes for a charming, surprising, and hilarious portrait of the city.

Freer Gallery of Art Meyer Auditorium Jefferson Drive at 12th St SW

asia.si.edu

#fsfilms


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E31

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass to retell Tchaikovsky’s ballet, through

Hill Road, McLean, Va.; 703-854-1856,

FRIDAY ONLY Too Much Light Makes

with racism in a Pittsburgh neighbor-

May 4, $31-$63.50, $31-$58.50 children.

May 3, $20, $15 students and seniors.

1ststagetysons.org.

hood, through May 4, $35-$50, $25-$40

Olney Theatre Center, 2001 Olney-Sandy

Flashpoint, 916 G St. NW; 202-315-1305,

Spring Road, Olney, Md.; 301-924-3400,

culturaldc.org.

the Baby Go Blind: The Neo-Futurists cram 30 plays in an hour, opens Fri. McLean Community Center, Alden Theatre, 1234 Ingleside Ave., McLean, Va.; 703-790-0123, aldentheatre.org. SATURDAY ONLY TreeHouse Shakers - Hatched: Opens Sat., $14.00. BlackRock Center for the Arts, 12901 Town Commons Drive, Germantown, Md.; 301528-2260, blackrockcenter.org. Two Trains Running: In August Wilson’s play, a diner owner struggles

Continued from page E29

olneytheatre.org.

One Destiny: Lincoln’s assassination is retold through the eyes of the theater’s owner and an actor, through July 17, $5-$10. Ford’s Theatre, 511 10th St. NW; 202-347-4833, fordstheatre.org. Other Desert Cities: A daughter shakes up her dysfunctional family after writing a memoir that will soon be published and expose their secrets, through April 27, $20, $18 seniors and students. Silver Spring Stage, 10145 Colesville Road, Silver Spring; 301-593-6036, ssstage.org. Shear Madness: The audience plays armchair detective in the comedy, $50. Kennedy Center, Theater Lab, 2700 F St. NW; 800-444-1324, kennedy-center.org. Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You and The Actor’s Nightmare: The two plays are staged by the Chevy Chase Players, through April 19, $15, $13 students and seniors. Chevy Chase Community Center, 5601 Connecticut Ave. NW; 202-282-2204. Sleeping Beauty: A Puppet Ballet: Pointless Theatre Company combines dance, pantomime and puppetry

LAST CHANCE Spring Dance Concert:

Agile, Mobile, Tactile: Fresh and seasoned perspectives on modern and jazz dance choreographed by AU faculty, students, and guest artists, with a post-concert discussion with the choreographers on Fri., opens Fri. through Sat. American University, Harold and Sylvia Greenberg Theatre, 4200 Wisconsin Ave. NW; 202-885-2587, american.edu/cas/greenberg. Tender Napalm: Matthew Gardiner directs Philip Ridley’s play in which a couple struggles with violence and fantasy, through May 11, $40-$87. Signature Theatre, 4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington; 703-820-9771, signature-theatre.org. The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee: Six overachievers compete in this musical, which includes audience participation, through May 17, $25-$67. Ford’s Theatre, 511 10th St. NW; 202-347-4833, fordstheatre.org. The Cripple of Inishmaan: An Irish community is turned upside down when a Hollywood crew films a movie nearby, through April 20, $27, $22 seniors, $15 students. 1st Stage, 1524 Spring

The Great American Trailer Park: The comedy follows a love triangle between a tollbooth collector, his wife and a stripper, through April 20, $18, $16 Gaithersburg residents. Arts Barn, 311 Kent Square Road, Gaithersburg, Md.; 301-258-6394, gaithersburgmd.gov/ artsbarn. The Jungle Book: A young human named Mowgli grows up in the jungle where he is friends with bears and panthers and must avoid the killer tiger Shere Khan, through May 30, $19. Glen Echo Park, Adventure Theatre MTC, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, Md.; 301634-2270, adventuretheatre-mtc.org. The Lieutenant of Inishmore: In this dark comedy, an Irish Liberation Army enforcer goes on a rampage when the one thing he loves — his cat — is killed, through May 4. Maryland Ensemble Theatre, 31 W. Patrick St., Frederick, Md.; 301-694-4744, marylandensemble.org. The Thousandth Night: Set in France in 1943, an actor entertains his captors with a one-man rendition of “The Arabian Nights,” performed by Metrostage, through May 18, $50. MetroStage, 1201 N. Royal St., Alexandria; 800-494-8497, metrostage.org.

Coming Together

seniors and age 30 and younger. Round House Theatre, 4545 East West Highway, Bethesda; 240-644-1100, roundhousetheatre.org. LAST CHANCE Water by the Spoonful: The Pulitzer Prize-winning drama follows a veteran struggling to get back into civilian life who crosses paths with four recovering addicts, through Sun., $39-$75. Studio Theatre, 1501 14th St. NW; 202-332-3300, studiotheatre.org.

Going Glocal Exploring local opportunities emerging from globalization throughout 2014 • Seminars, concerts, fun for kids and more • Glass, photography and linen exhibits open every weekend • Saturdays 11 am - 4 pm & Sundays 12 pm - 5 pm with guided tours

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Visit swedenabroad.com/washington for a full schedule of events Follow us @SwedeninUSA 2900 K Street, NW (Georgetown waterfront) / 202.467.2600

“WATER BY THE SPOONFUL” at the Studio Theatre won the Pulitzer Prize in 2012 for its gripping exploration of the

true meaning of family. The drama stars, from left, Vincent J. Brown, Tim Getman and Gabriela Fernandez-Coffey.


E32 | E X P R E S S | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

MUSEO LARCO, LIMA – PERÚ, JOAQUIN RUBIO

Explore artifacts from Peru’s legendary royal tombs and other ancient splendors.

ngmuseum.org

17th & M Streets NW


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | 13

Sports

Gordon says Collins coming out helped him gain confidence

UMass guard Derrick Gordon hopes his decision to become the first openly gay player in Division I men’s basketball will inspire others. “There are a lot of kids out there in my situation, probably far worse situations,” he said in a phone interview with The Associated Press. “Maybe I can give a lot of kids that confidence that they need to get over that hump.” Earlier Wednesday, Gordon made the announcement in interviews with ESPN and Outsports. He said he gained confidence by seeing an NBA team sign Jason Collins, who became the league’s first openly gay player when he joined the Brooklyn Nets this season. “Right now I’m happy. I’m free just to live my life,” Gordon told the AP. The sophomore was the Minutemen’s fourth-leading scorer with

TY WRIGHT (AP)

College Basketball

UMass guard Derrick Gordon averaged 9.4 points a games last season.

9.4 points per game last season. UMass reached the NCAA tournament for the first time since 1998 and lost in its first game to Tennessee. He sat out the previous season after transferring from Western Kentucky to be closer to his family in New Jersey, where he played at

high school powerhouse St. Patrick. Gordon said he told his parents he was gay March 30, informed UMass coach Derek Kellogg the next day and told his teammates two days later, which was last Wednesday. He said some of them probably have known since last summer.

“They could sense it because I kind of separated myself from the team,” Gordon said. “I didn’t really hang out with them as far as going to parties and stuff. I really kind of kept to myself, kept quiet. We went on road trips — I’d sit by myself and they were always wondering why. I did it because I didn’t want to put myself in a situation where maybe something happens and they end up finding out. Then what? I’m not going to know how to handle the situation.” He said he appreciated the support he’s received from his teammates since making his announcement. “They’re ready to get back in the gym just as much as I am,” Gordon said. “I can’t wait to get back with them and get ready for this upcoming season.” Gordon said Wednesday that he had talked several times with Collins, who made a trailblazing announcement last April when he came out in an interview with Sports Illustrated. Collins tweeted that he was “so proud” of Gordon. HOWARD ULMAN (AP)

Terps’ Cleare Takes the Blame

BASKETBALL

Embiid Going Pro Kansas freshman Joel Embiid is entering the NBA draft after a breakthrough season that ended with a stress fracture in his back that kept the 7-footer out of the NCAA tournament. Embiid said during a news conference Wednesday at Allen Fieldhouse that he reached his decision Sunday. (AP)

Shaquille Cleare looked around the bustling food court inside the University of Maryland student union and thought about everything he will soon leave behind. The decision to transfer from the men’s basketball program had lingered in his mind for months, through disappointing games that ushered sleepless nights. Now, at the end of his sophomore season, he felt ready to accept reality. “I’m not blaming anyone but myself,” Cleare said. “I’ll apologize to the fans.” Cleare was one of three players — Nick Faust and Roddy Peters were the others — to receive their

STREETER LECKA (GETTY IMAGES)

College Basketball

Shaquille Cleare averaged 3.4 points per game in two years at Maryland.

release from Maryland on Tuesday. Ranked as a four-star prospect exiting high school two years ago, the prize catch of coach Mark Turgeon’s first full recruiting class, Cleare met for an interview over

lunch Wednesday afternoon. “Sometimes you just got to see what’s out there,” he said. “I don’t know what’s going to happen. I don’t know where I’m going to go.” A s a freshman, he played behind Alex Len, a future top five NBA draft pick. As a sophomore, he started 20 out of 32 games but never found a groove. He scored 3.4 points and grabbed 2.6 rebounds per game at Maryland. “I love Shaq,” Turgeon said by phone Tuesday night. “I’ve known Shaq since he was a freshman in high school. Really going to miss him. Enjoyed coaching him and he gave me everything he had. I’m just sad it’s not going to work out.” ALE X PREWIT T (THE WASHINGTON POST )

KEVIN C. COX (GETTY IMAGES)

UMass Hoops Player: I’m Gay The Redskins will open the preseason against Tom Brady and the Patriots.

Preseason Matchups Announced Redskins The Redskins will open the presea son at home aga i nst t he New England Patriots, the NFL announced Wednesday afternoon. The Redskins will then host the Cleveland Browns on ESPN’s “Monday Night Football” on Aug. 18. That game will represent a meeting with former offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan. The final two preseason games take place on the road, at Baltimore and Tampa Bay. Dates and times for the first, third and fourth games have yet to be determined. The Redsk ins went undefeated in the preseason last year — beating the Titans, Steelers, Bills and Buccaneers — before going 3-13 in the regular season. MIKE JONES (THE WASHINGTON POST )

TV Lineup CAPITALS (7 P.M., CSN) Washington is coming off one of its best games of the season, a 4-1 win over the Blues, but it’s probably too late to save its playoff hopes. The Capitals are at Carolina tonight before ending the season vs. Chicago and Tampa Bay.


14 | E X P R E S S | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

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AN EXTRAORDINARY YOU! Radians College can prepare you to enter the growing field of nursing.

Apply in person 7 days from 11-6pm 1825 Connecticut avenue N.W. Washington DC 20009 SECURITY Armed & Unarmed Security Officers for prestigious D.C & NO. VA. locations. Must possess DC SPO comm or DCJS reg & 2 yrs exp, good work history, salary commensurate w/ exp. Call Mon-Fri 9am-3pm 202-293-8011 or 703-824-0742 or fax resume to: 202-293-1095 DC#SAB0444. DCJS#11-2468

Contact us at 202.334.6732 or ads@readexpress.com

XX195 1x.75

Sell out the show!

Make a difference in: • Nursing homes • Hospitals • Urgent care facilities • Physicians’ offices Our programs include: • Practical nursing • Registered nursing

1025 Vermont Avenue N.W., Suite 200 Washington, D.C. 20005

Now approved for federal financial aid for those who qualify.

Call Now: 1-888-445-6223

radianscollege.edu

NE- Huntwood Crt. Under new management. 1BR $860+. 2BR $920+. 5000 Hunt St NE. 202-399-1665 NMI Prop Mgmt.

1 Bedrooms: $825 NE

Jetu Apartments • FREE UTILITIES • Wall-to-Wall Carpet • On-Site Laundry & Playgrounds • 24-hr. Emergency Maintenance • Steps away from Café, Shopping & Metro www.wcsmith.com

869 21st Street • Washington, DC

877.814.0692 XX740 1x.25

RESTAURANT

Buca di Beppo Now Hiring: Servers, Bartenders, Host, Line cook, Drivers

XX653 1x10.5

Financial aid*

DC RENTALS

202-334-6200.

Credit cards accepted.

www.DoctorsHelp.org

JOB FAIR Tuesday, 4/15 and Wednesday, 4/16 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm Tortilla Coast, 1460 P Street, NW, WDC Apply NOW: www.cafedeluxe.com

An Extraordinary Career,

202-334-4100.

Training workshops 301-567-5422

GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES - AKC, Very Adorable. $350 - $400. Call 540-820-0967

To place a classified, call

To advertise a job, call

PHLEBOTOMY

Trainees Needed Now!

Now Hiring All Positions Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner and Banquets

JOBS • RENTALS • HOUSES • WHEELS • STUFF • AND MUCH MORE...

In 10 Weeks

1-800-417-8954

DENTAL ASSISTANT Dental Offices now hiring. No experience? Job Training & Placement Assistance Available. 1-800-678-6350

Baltimore • Beltsville • Towson

Restaurant

PHLEBOTOMY

BETHESDA, MD. - Moving sale, 4/12, 10-2pm, 4517 Chase Ave. Furn, rugs, lamps, cribs, mirrors, artwork & much more!

25 South Quaker Lane, Alexandria, VA 22314 SCHEV Certified, ACICS Accredited, PN ACEN Accredited

JUST MONTHS TO A BRAND NEW YOU!

To apply, call 202-334-6100 (Please press “0” once connected.)

Registered Nurse (RN) Practical Nurse (PN) Nurse Aide (NA)

GLOBAL HEALTH COLLEGE

ENROLL TODAY!

1-866-294-0466

Med Tech/CPR 19 Days CNA to GNA 240-770-8251 OR 301-333-6254

MEDICAL OFFICE ASSISTANT Call TLC! (202) 223-3500

in DC, MD and VA areas.

Trainees Needed Now

Medical Offices now hiring. No experience? Job Training & Placement Assistance Available.

CALL NOW FOR A CAREER INFORMATION SESSION

Classes Start April 25!

ENROLL TODAY!

CTO SCHEV

NURSE ASSISTANT

JOIN THE EXPANDING MEDICAL FIELD (For those who qualify)

In 10 Weeks

1-800-460-4138

CTO SCHEV

Training can be completed Morning, Afternoon or Evenings! For consumer information please visit www.careertechnical.edu\disclosure

Training available Morning, Afternoon or Evenings!

career education

marketplace

CAREER TRAINING

XX740 1x.25

Reach over 300,000 readers daily

JOBS


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | 15

DC RENTALS

The New

FAIRWAY PARK A P A R T M E N T S NE

$

2BR Special 1150 No Application Fee! Available for Immediate Move In!!!!

• Energy-efficient systems • Stainless steel appliances • Microwave • Dishwasher • Kitchen Breakfast Bars • Washer & Dryer

• Brushed Nickel Accents • Large Closets • Central Air Conditioning • On-site Management • On-site Maintenance

Professionally Managed by

www.wcsmith.com

DC RENTALS

Southeast

EHO

1 BRs fr. $860/mo 2 BRs fr. $985/mo

SOUTHWEST/Metro Convenient!

EAGLES CROSSING

116 Irvington Street SW

202-969-2563

Meadow Green Courts! $20 APPLICATION FEE! Convenient to shops, schools, Dishwasher. Walk-in closets., w-w carpet 5% DISCOUNT: METRO & DC GOVT employees

Call for details

(877) 464-9774 3539 A St. SE

2100 Maryland Ave., NE • Washington, DC 20002

Mon.-Fri. 9-5. Sat. 10-4

Housing Choice Vouchers welcome where rents are within voucher program limits.

888.659.5771

CAPITOL PARK PLAZA

• All Utilities Included • Fitness Center/Swimming Pool

PARADISE AT PARKSIDE

Max. Income Qualifications: 1 pers. $45,180 • 2 pers. $51,600

M-F 9-6 Sat. 10-5 Sun. 12-4

* Tax Credit Studio applicants only • Restrictions Apply*

1 Bedrooms @ $750

1.877.870.0243

5 minute walk from the Minnesota Ave Metro Controlled access entry • Laundromat facilities on-site Free summer camp • Community Center Gas heat & cooking • Central A/C and much, much more!

201 I Street, SW • Washington, DC 20024 Located NearThe S.W. Waterfront

Application Fee $25.00 3551 Jay Street NE, Washington DC 20019

202-388-0274

OPEN HOUSE

SE

M-F 9am-4pm Saturday 10am-2pm

Move-in April and get $500 Off!*

New Extended hours on Wednesdays 9am-7pm

Call for details

CARVER TERRACE

• • • • •

Fitness Center Business Center Community Center Spacious Floorplans Individually Controlled Heat & A/C Balconies & Patios Controlled Access Sparkling Swimming Pool Fabulous Views of the City

ALL NEW GATED COMMUNITY with AFFORDABLE RENTS & Unbelievable Views • 24 hr. concierge service • Moments to the Metro rail • Metrobus at your doorstop • Computer, Fitness, Business & Community Center • A Salon, and much, much more

*Income Limits Apply

Family Size Maximum Income 1

$45,180

2

$51,600

3

$58,080

4

$64,500

**Only 1 & 2 BRs available.

All found at THE OVERLOOK

Come to

Banneker Place Where Our Apartments are Like Finding a Pot of Gold

1 BR $849

$0 Application fee • $99 Security deposit* *apply and be approved by end of Feb.

Metro Accessible Controlled Entry Free Parking

(202) 584-1688

2629 Douglas Rd., SE • Washington, DC

3738 D St. SE 20019

1-877-801-4266

Professionally Managed By CIH Properties, Inc.

YOU’LL BE THE LUCKY ONE HERE AT

FRIENDSHIP CROSSING APTS.

1, 2 and 3 Bedrooms for move-in in May

River Hill Apartments!

Minutes to 295, 395, 495 and Downtown DC.

1 Bedroom Handicap Accessible Available NOW Hurry Limited Time Only

• FREE HEAT • GAS • WATER • W/W Carpet • Modern Kitchens/ Breakfast Bar • Gated Community • Laundry Facility in every bldg

*on approved credit *Income restrictions apply

2003 Maryland Avenue #101, Washington DC 20002

$

888.891.8472

15 0 0

Application $ fee

1 Bedrooms @ $799 Individually Controlled Heat & Air Wall to Wall Carpet Laundry Room In Every Building

Deposit 99 0 0 Security Special

Call TODAY For Deposit Specials!

202-562-5060

Professionally Managed By CIH Properties, Inc.

866.759.0564

EHO

NW DC - Gorgeous new 1 BR condo, marble foyer, hwrd flrs, SS appls, granite, W/D. A must see! $1450 Avail now. Call 571-432-6339

XX740 1x.25

SE - 1759 W St. 2BR, 2 full bath, starting at $1,325. Hrwd flrs, granite countertops, stainless steel, W/D, brand new. Delwin Realty, LLC 301-577-7917 SE - 1-2 BR on Greenline, Secure, Quiet. Great Floors. Approved Voucher. Avail Immed. From $950. Call 703-912-4885 SE - Furnished room, w2w carpet, CAC/heat, near bus. $165/week. SPECIAL - utilities included. 202-399-0396 or 202-207-5569 SE - Newly renovated, 1, 2 & 3 bedrooms. Central air and heat. W/D in unit. Section 8 welcome. Starting @ $1200. Call Jerome 202-321-5596

SE

Skyland Village APARTMENTS

OPEN HOUSE

Saturday, April 5th & Saturday, April 12th, 2014

1 Bedrooms on Special for $875

• Reduced Application Fee • $100 Holding Deposit Waived • $300 Off First Month’s Rent • $99 Deposit for Qualified Applicants

www.wcsmith.com William C. Smith & Co./EHO

2333 SKYLAND PLACE, SE • Washington, DC 20020

1-888-252-9887

305 37th Street SE

202.575.2990

2942 2nd St., SE, Wash, DC 20032

Professionally Managed By CIH Properties, Inc. SE

Friendship Court

OPEN HOUSE

Saturday, April 12th 10am - 2pm

$10 Application Fee and Refreshments

1 Bedrooms 2 Bedrooms STARTING @ $729* STARTING @ $829*

Mon.-Fri. 9-5pm, Call for Saturday appointments *Limited Time Only

MD RENTALS

4632 Livingston Rd SE

Spacious Modern Floorplans Pool, Fitness, Tennis and so much more ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED *for a small fee

Efficiencies from $777! 1 BRs from $939! 2 BRs from $1169! Convenient Location

Call Now (888) 831-6315 www.oakcresttowers.com

CHEVERLY CROSSING APARTMENTS

Some restrictions apply

3839 64th Ave Hyattsville MD 20784

Cypress Creek

• Renovated Kitchens • CloseTo 295, 495 & RTE 50 • Spacious Floorplans • Central HVAC

1 Bedrooms from the $1000’s 2 Bedrooms from the $1300’s

3 Bedrooms @ $1199 per month *Vouchers Welcome

• Spacious Floorplans • Fully equipped contemporary kitchen • Washer and Dryer in each home • Fitness center, clubhouse and pool

(202) 553-3814 www.novodev.com

Immediate move-in specials

888-217-1901 College Park/University Gardens Apartments1BR & 2BR Garden style apts. Located in Old Town section of College Park. Walking distance to UMD & College Park Metro. All utilities included. On site parking. Rent specials available for Early Move-ins. Call rental office for details 202-582-2473 www.jesapts.com District Hts.

CypressCreekApts.com Hyattsville

Summer Ridge * w/approved credit **Limited Availability

WOODLAND SPRINGS

*Income Qualifications

4 Bedrooms for $1530

Spacious Floorplans Renovated Laundry Rooms On-Site After Care/Summer Camp MD Food Bank Donations Minutes from Addison Rd Metro Station Housing Vouchers Welcome

# Occupants

Maximum Income

1

$41,180

2

$51,600

3

$58,080

4

$64,500

Performance. People. Pride.

• Computer Lab • Metro Accessible • After school programs

866.507.2283

1829 Belle Haven Drive, Hyattsville, MD 20785

www.summerridgeapartments.net

HYATTSVILLE

CASTLE MANOR APARTMENTS

BEDROOM Apts.

from $825

2

BEDROOM Apts.

from $950

• Ceiling Fans • Lovely Setting • Near the New ARTS DISTRICT • Close to Shopping & Metro

6617 Atwood Street

301-735-2104

SPRING SAVINGS EVENT Great Location 1525 Elkwood Lane Capitol Heights, MD 20742

MOVE-IN SPECIAL! 1ST MONTH RENT ONLY $599 (WITH A 12 MO. LEASE)

866.464.0993

GARFIELD COURT 599

Hyattsville

(866) 574-7408

Arts District

1 BR from $869 2 BR from $999

ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED for a small fee Prices subject to verification

INSTANT PRE-APPROVAL www.addisonchapel.com

MOVE-IN SPECIAL

$

price is for 1st Mo. Rent/ 1 BR only

(when you sign a 12 mo. lease).

1 BR at $800 • 2 BR at $875 On residential street next to DeMatha HS Off-st parking • Ceiling Fans

202.563.6968 Professionally Managed By CIH Properties, Inc.

SPRING IS IN THE AIR At

OAKCREST TOWERS

Let us find you the perfect home!

202-969-3032

www.wcsmith.com William C. Smith & Co./EHO

Large Apartment Homes

0 app fee

$

SW-Madison Ct. Under New Management. Starting at 1BR $845+, 2BR $945+. 32 Chesapeake St. SW 202-561-7368 NMI Property Management

Housing Choice Vouchers Welcome where rents are within voucher limits

2BRs as low as $1075

• • • •

Spring is Here

NW - 1BR $969 - $ 1019 incl utils. Laundry on-site, Lead Safe!! Ms. Mitchell 301-316-4590

Friday, April 11th, 2014 8-4pm

1 & 2 Bedroom Available

EFFICIENCY $700 1BR fr. $775 2BR fr. $870

www.theoverlookdc.com

Washington View

Rents Starting at $780

WDC ONE a p a r t m e n t s

professionally managed by

for one adult 18yrs and older or two adults $35

MD RENTALS

W/W carpet, CAC/1 Air/Heat, Dishwasher, Laundry facility, fee

M-F 9-5 • Sat 10-4

Perfect Price at The Perfect Location Select Studios starting at $1000*

DC RENTALS

XX740 1x.50

DC RENTALS

(tenant pays electric • carpet extra)

301-779-1734


16 | E X P R E S S | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

MD RENTALS

MD RENTALS

HYATTSVILLE

Spring Specials! at University City Apartments

Hyattsville’s BEST KEPT SECRET! 1 BEDROOM’S FROM $899 2 BEDROOM’S FROM $1174 PERFECT FLOOR PLANS! PERFECT LOCATION! LET US FIND YOU THE PERFECT HOME!

MD RENTALS

HILLBROOK

TOWERS

APARTMENTS

1 & 3 Brs • Move in by 4/1/14 We will waive the remainder of March’s Pro Rate

MOVE-IN SPECIAL

• Largest Apts., in Oxon Hill Bring in this • Newly Renovated Apts. coupon up to receive • Across from United Medical $ $35 Center w/ New Children’s Hospital Wing rent cr credit If Approved vedd • Housing Vouchers Welcome (MD) • ALL CREDIT CONSIDERED

*Call about our move-in specials

www.universitycityapts.com

888.480.1693

(866) 405-6986 SOME RESTRICTIONS MAY APPLY

WINDSOR COURT AND TOWER APTS

• Enormous Floor Plans • Noise Dampening Floors • Close to Shopping • Pet Friendly • Washer & Dryers in all 3 BR units

(when you sign a 12 mo. lease).

1 BR’s are $1050

Central Air • Elevator Off St. Parking • Mid-Rise Apts All Utilities Included

Save $100 off monthly rent for 2 & 3 Br Ask about our rental coupon special!

301-637-0723

Windsor@zuckermangravely.com

: 1 and Dens : 2 Bedrooms : 2 and Dens : 3 Bedrooms

866.914.9712 MT. RAINIER 1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only $

599

(when you sign a 12mo. lease) Super Convenient Location Close to shops & rec. ctr

888-583-3047 LANDOVER

GATED COMMUNITY

• Free gas and water • State-of-the-art fitness center • Right across from the NEW WEGMANS • Remodeled w/brand new Kitchens • Licensed daycare on premises

*Select units only

CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS!

KINGS SQUARE

MAPLE RIDGE

3402 Dodge Park Rd. • Landover, MD 20785

www.mapleridgeapartments.com

XX740 1x.25

301-277-6202

• Granite Countertops*

CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS

888-583-3045

Utilities & Carpet Included! (A/C Extra)

• Minutes to the NEW WEGMANS • Stainless Steel Appliances*

2252 Brightseat Road • Landover, MD 20785

1BR $825 • 2BR $925

XX740 1x.50

XX740 1x.50

XX740 1x.50

• Walk to Elementary School

908 Marcy Ave. • Oxon Hill, MD 20745

11658 South Laurel Drive Laurel, MD 20708

FREE UTILITIES

• Walk to Metro

COLONIAL VILLAGE

The Villages At Montpelier

MOVE IN SPECIAL

• FREE UTILITIES • Swimming Pool • Private balconies and patios • Minutes to The National Harbor & Brand New TANGER Outlets

CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS!

Present this ad and receive a free application fee

Arundel A PA R T M E N T S

LANDOVER

OXON HILL

877-898-6958 www.kingssquareapartments.com

Close to the Forest Glen Metro Off-Str. Parking/Controlled Access Ceiling Fans Housing Vouchers Welcome UTILITIES INCLUDED

t

TAK PK—New Hamp. Ave.

$599 price is for 1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only (on a 12 mo. lease)

RIVERDALE

GATED COMMUNITY

• • • • • • •

Move In Special Forest Glen Apts. 888-887-6793

LANHAM- Ruxton Dr. 1 Unfurn room in SFH, AC, quiet, no-smoking. $550 + dep. incl utils. Call 240-645-2380

Our Sizzling Prices Will Make You Shiver Stop in Today

SILVER SPR/Forest Glen Metro $599 price is for 1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only. (on a 12 mo. lease) 1-BR $1050 | 2-BR $1150

1 BR Special- $949 2 BR Special- $1400* 3 BR Special- $1750*

$599 price is for 1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only

1439 Southern Ave.

MD RENTALS

Silver Spring

Silver Spring

FOREST FORES E T HILLS L

UNIVERSITY CITY

MD RENTALS

FREE Internet & Cable* (*1-BR only) State of the Art Fitness Center Stainless Steel Appliances** Granite Countertops** Washer & Dryer** Free Gas (cooking & heat) & Water Outdoor & Indoor Pools (**Select Units) *Subject to change.

CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS!

PARKVIEW GARDENS

6400 Riverdale Road • Riverdale, MD 20737

888-251-1872

www.parkviewgardensapartments.com Mon.-Fri. 8-5, Sat. 10-4, Sun. 12-4

RIVERDALE

ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED (a/c extra)

t

TAK PK—New Hamp. Ave.

$599 price is for 1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only (on a 12 mo. lease)

1, 2 & 3 BR APTS. HUGE 2 BR TOWNHOMES

• Roomy, modern apts. • Private balconies/patios • Cathedral ceiling

ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED (a/c extra)

CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS!

RIVERDALE VILLAGE

5409 Riverdale Road • Riverdale, MD 20737

800-767-2189

Free 6-Week Summer Camp

Come Visit Us: Mon. thru Fri. 8 am - 5 pm • Sat. 10 am to 4 pm • Sun. 12 pm - 4 pm

Park your browser here.

THE WOODS OF MARLTON

UPPER MARLBORO

Up to 1.5 Months

Adams Morgan

Concerts, movies, events, restaurants and more.

Look for site highlights in today’s Express. XX740 4x2.5

FREE!! 1 BRs from $1100’s • 2 BRs from $1200’s

• Spacious apt homes conveniently located near AAFB & FedEx Field • Large closets • Pool & Exercise Room • Indoor racquetball court • Washer/Dryers in each unit • Fireplace* *On select units

Woodsofmarlton.com

301-955-1479


T H U R S D AY | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | 17

Studios from the $1000s* 1BRs from the $1200s* 2BRs from the $1700s*

Spring is in the Air... LLOYD Apartments Awesome Location Spacious Floorplans

COME IN FOR GREAT RENT SPECIALS

• All utilities paid • No Security Deposit or move-in fees • Metrobus at front door to Pentagon & Van Dorn Metro • Free parking • Convenient to Pentagon, Shopping & I-395

MON, TUE, WED, THU 9-7 • FRI, SAT 9-5 • SUN 11-5

(888) 450-3292

• 2 Playgrounds • Five Minutes for 95 South & North

Come on in and take a tour. CALL TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT!!!

XX740 1x.25

99 South Bragg St, Alexandria, VA 22312 703-354-6300 www.BraggTowers.com

METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.

LUSTINE DODGE

SHEEHY HONDA

WOODBRIDGE, VA 1-800-879-4701 ALEXANDRIA, VA 14211 JEFFERSON DAVIS HWY. LUSTINEONLINE.COM 7434 RICHMOND HWY

e i g g o D e r a c Day

Removed from Credit Report. Guaranteed or your money back. 202-775-6932

DARCARS NISSAN

703-660-0100 SILVER SPRING, MD 1-800-266-4874 ROCKVILLE, MD WWW.SHEEHYHONDA.COM 2505 PROSPERITY TER. LEXUSOFSILVERSPRING.COM 15911 INDIANOLA DRIVE

Adopti on Ag Breede encies rs Walker s & Si tters Pet Supplies

IN PRINT.

BAD/NEGATIVE CREDIT

703-221-3146

LEXUS OF SILVER SPRING

METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.

RESORT PROPERTIES

LINDEN PARK APARTMENTS 3600 Jurgensen Drive Triangle, VA 22172

XX740 1x.25

Furnished Efficiencies: $399 Wk $1470 Mo Cable Internet Utilities Housekeeping

XX609 1x1

DC Rider

EXTENDED STAY HOTEL

DC Rider

Level, mountain top parcels w/ park-like hardwoods & sweeping mtn/valley views. Enjoy easy access to boating, skiing, fishing, shopping, more. Includes all minerals rights & warranty deed. Just in time for spring outdoor enjoyment! Little down financing, great rates. CALL NOW TO SEE 1-800-888-1262.

GYM, Lounge and Business Center

www.lloydapartments.com

NEED A VEHICLE? Over 1,000 Cars, Trucks, SUV’s! You need 2 Paystubs & 1 Bill - Laurel, MD. Gross income must be $2k mo+. Jason 202.704.8213

SPRING LAND SALE! 2+AC only $21,900 PUBLIC WATER 14 AC JUST $59,900 RIVER ACCESS

• Central A/C & Heating

Don’t Wait! Call now 703.683.0950

If you need a car, $500 down, you can ride. Everyone is 100% approved. Fill out a credit app at www.madinahauto.com or call 301-862-6878 JUNK VEHICLES REMOVED FREE CASH PAY FOR ALL 202-714-9835

LOTS & ACREAGE FOR SALE

Limited Time Only

Alexandria

BRAGG TOWERS

Apartments • Renovated Apartments Available

ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED!!!

Fairfax County—$750, 2 bedrm, 2 ba, 2 1/2ba, 7202 Tanworth Drive, 571-533-4111 NE/Ft Totten Metro- N/S. unfurn BR. in 3BR, 2.5BA in SFH. & Bsmnt Rm avail. $935-$985. W/D, Cbl, int, maid svc. utils incl 202-494-3692

Starting at $800

1 Bedrooms $1250 2 Bedrooms $1450

*All Prices & Specials Subject to change without notice.

OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK MON-FRI 8:30-5:30 • SAT 10-4PM

CARS

XX609 1x1

SOUTHERN TOWERS

Arlington

ROOMMATES

XX740 1x.25

4901 Seminary Rd., ALEXANDRIA, VA

VA RENTALS

Still the best way to kill time during your commute. XX133 1x1 XX740 1x.25

VA RENTALS

XX740 1x.25

VA RENTALS

355 TOYOTA

301-309-2200 ROCKVILLE, MD WWW.DARCARS.COM 15625 FREDERICK ROAD

301-309-3917 WWW.DARCARS.COM

Pets Marketplace Tuesday, May 13, 2014

A special advertising opportunity in Express for Pet people and businesses Reach an audience with income to spend on pets, pet products and pet services of all kinds. Place your ad in Pets Marketplace, coming to Express and make someone (mammal or otherwise) happy! Color included.

For more information or to place your ad, please contact

Nicole Giddens 202-334-4351 Nicole.Giddens@washpost.com

Sources: Scarborough 2013, Release 2 - DMA

XX0371-5x5.5


18 | E X P R E S S | 0 4 . 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

His Future Cabinet? Prince George has a playdate with his fellow babies in New Zealand 23

Putting on a Brave Face

Broadcast Muse

Scarlett Johansson says fear guides her and her character in ‘Under the Skin’

There Was Blood “Game of Thrones” is back. On Sunday, more than 8 million viewers watched the fantasy drama’s fourth season premiere and subsequent replays. So many people tried to watch it on HBO Go that they crashed the subscriber-based online streaming service! If you don’t subscribe to HBO or fell victim to the crash, let me fill you in on what happened. Everyone stabbed everyone else in By Marc every place you could Silver possibly be stabbed. There was full frontal female nudity and there was talk of a four-orfive way, but I kind of dozed off for a second so I can’t tell you if it actually happened. A pretty lady was stroking a docile dragon, only the dragon got distracted by other dragons and a dead goat. So the dragon turned on her briefly, which is a reminder that you can just never trust a dragon. People used the “F” word, which is odd because “Game of Thrones” seems to take place in a magical universe where there wouldn’t even be an “F” word, but there it was. As they’d say in the show’s madeup language Dothraki, “Ki fin yeni!” (Or “WTF.”) Read Marc’s previous columns at: www.washingtonpost.com/muse

Scarlett Johansson admits that her character — an otherworldly creature sent to Earth to possess young men’s souls — was not what initially attracted her to her role in “Under the Skin.” It was the opportunity to work with Jonathan Glazer, who hasn’t made a film since 2004’s “Birth,” that was the main draw. The creature she plays was a little harder to get on board with. “It took me several weeks of shooting to figure out what I was playing. I think it was impossible to get a handle on that character without having like three weeks of footage under our belt. Just to know, what has she experienced? What’s her reaction?” Johansson says. Johansson often uses the word “meditative” to describe the experience of playing this creature. “Staying in a sort of meditative state of keeping a really clear and present mind, that challenge was really intriguing, but it wasn’t until I was in production that I realized that would be a possibility.” During filming, improvisation was key. In a film in which dialogue is not the most essential element, Johansson and Glazer found inspiration outside the script. “Two weeks before we were wrapping production in Scotland, Jonathan came in with dark circles

A24 FILMS

HBO

Film

Scarlett Johansson picked up real people on the streets of Glasgow, Scotland, when playing her otherworldly character.

“It took me several weeks of shooting to figure out what I was playing. … What has she experienced?” under his eyes, as usual, and said, ‘I thought of this great idea where you could drive around and pick up actual people,’ ” Johansson says. She was horrified by the idea at the time. It didn’t seem safe and she hated the idea of not being in control, though she later discovered it was liberating to surrender herself to the film. “I guess that’s how life works,” she says with a sly smile.

She reluctantly went along, driving the van wearing a cheap wig and fur coat with Glazer and the crew stuffed in the back. He began suggesting people for her to pull up to. One she noticed was talking to himself; another had a knife. She began looking for people who wouldn’t pose a threat and didn’t look like they were going home to their families. “That looks like a lonely drifter. There’s a possibility. Then I realized I know how to do this better than Jonathan does, and I can just let him witness it happening.” The creature within her started to emerge. Her fear, which Glazer shared, acted as the driving force for authenticity. “I don’t like knowing

what might happen or if someone’s going to be embarrassed.” As for playing otherworldly characters, the process for Johansson is the same. “I don’t think there’s a different way to prepare for them,” she says. “Once that crack becomes a fissure and then a crevasse — that first thrill of the identity [the creature’s] discovering [in ‘Under the Skin’], looking at it now, is very similar to the thrill Samantha [her intelligent operating system character] has in ‘Her.’ There’s a similar hunger there to experience, and that is something that can be applied … no matter what species you’re playing.” C H R I S T O P H E R K O M PA N E K (THE WASHINGTON POST )

The Golden Globes Were a Warm-Up: Comedians and BFFs Tina Fey, far left, and Amy Poehler, will star in a new movie as sisters who get kicked out of their parents’ house and move in together, according to Showbiz 411. The film’s script is based on an idea from “Saturday Night Live” writer Paula Pell. “The Nest” will be the first film Fey and Poehler have co-starred in since 2008’s “Baby Mama.” (E XPRESS)


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entertainment lookout

A New Generation Learns to ‘Lean In’ It’s been a year since Sheryl Sandberg came out with “Lean In,” her best-selling manifesto for working women. Since then, more than 1.75 million copies have been sold; the book’s out in 28 languages, and will be in eight more by the end of 2014. Sandberg says she’s found that graduating students are craving more age-specific content than the book provided. And so, “Lean In: For Graduates,” out now ($25, Knopf), includes the original text enhanced with new chapters, many containing concrete advice for graduates. How receptive has this new gen-

eration been to your message?

tech. I love how we connect people. And I love “Lean In!”

I’ve found this generation very receptive, and really hungry for specifics. Which is why we got these chapters written. About the smallest things, like don’t make typos on your résumé! It’s a shocking thing how many great graduates from great schools make mistakes.

Let’s talk about the word “bossy.” You’ve launched a campaign to ban the word, when talking about girls.

SHIZUO KAMBAYASHI (AP)

Q&A

Are male graduates interested in supporting women?

A bunch of the surveys show that millennial men are much more interested in work-life balance, much more interested in having lives that are meaningful. The real question is, is that going to translate into doing more diapers, doing the laundry? Because that’s what this takes.

Sheryl Sandberg’s book “Lean In” has sold more than 1.75 million copies.

Rumors persist about your interest in political office in California.

I’m not running for office. Listen, I love Facebook. I really do. I love

The goal of Ban Bossy is to make people awa re of how deeply entrenched our stereotypes are about women in leadership. It’s a program with the Girl Scouts, designed to address a problem, which is that by middle school, more boys than girls want to lead, and that continues into adulthood. My daughter has been called bossy. Lots of little girls are. My son has never been called bossy. And those patterns continue. JOCELYN NOVECK (AP)

AWARDS

One of the ‘Royals’ Lorde, above, and Imagine Dragons are the top contenders, with 12 nominations each, at next month’s Billboard Music Awards. Lorde’s hit “Royals” and Imagine Dragons’ “Radioactive” are nominated for top Hot 100 song against Robin Thicke’s “Blurred Lines,” Katy Perry’s “Roar” and Miley Cyrus’ “Wrecking Ball.” The ceremony will air on ABC on May 18. (AP)

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ERIC RISBERG (AP)

lookout online

“My cat treats me like property, I serve her whims. If only I could get her to read this article might she treat me as an equal.” — COMMENTER FORENSIC_SCUBA AT WIRED.COM reacts jokingly to a

serious article about whether pets should be considered property or be granted “personhood.” The latter would grant pets basic human rights under the law. “Citizen Canine” author David Grimm suggests a category in between — “living property.” This would grant pets some rights under the law, but not necessarily constitutional or inalienable rights.

“He also got to ride in something that looks like a Lamborghini. Not bad.” — COMMENTER SHAWN LEWIS AT SFIST.COM chronicles the latest

adventure of Batkid, aka Miles Scott, the Northern California boy with leukemia who got to “save” San Francisco last November thanks to the Make-A-Wish Foundation. On Tuesday, Batkid got one more wish — he threw out the opening pitch at a San Francisco Giants’ home game. He arrived on the field in a Lamborghini with Batman decals.

“Nothing says ‘our wedding is [a] union based on mutual trust and respect’ than slomo sauntering through a smokey club filled with gyrating hotties.” — REBECCA ROSE AT JEZEBEL .COM watches what she calls

an insane “Save the Date” video. Made by a soon-to-be power couple made up of two San Francisco attorneys, the video, which features helicopters and flashy cars, looks more like a trailer for a Kim and Kanye biopic than a wedding announcement.

“Hope he’s up there shaking the ropes right now.” — @BOOKERT5X, the Twitter handle of WWE superstar and commentator Booker T. Huffman, references the in-ring antics of one of the biggest pro-wrestling superstars of all time, Ultimate Warrior, after hearing about his untimely death. Warrior died late Tuesday at the age of 54, just days after he was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame, and appeared at both WrestleMania and on Monday Night Raw.

“Do you have a favorite chair in your home? Consider cursing it after you die so no one else can sit on it without dying.” — ROB BRICKEN AT IO9.COM describes

what a man named Thomas Busby did in 1702 before he was executed for strangling his father-in-law for sitting in his chair. Apparently the curse stuck. Urban legend says 63 people died unexpectedly after resting their haunches in the chair, which today hangs from the ceiling of the Thirsk Museum in North Yorkshire, England.

If ad space were real estate, this would be a new town center in Fairfax County. The secret of great advertising: location, location, location. And the place to be is right here in Express, where you’ll be seen by more than 580,000 local readers every Monday through Friday.

express

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To advertise: 202-334-6732 or ads@readexpress.com


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puzzles lookout Scrabble Grams

HOROSCOPE

PAR SCORE 155-165, BEST SCORE 217

Sudoku

DIFFICULT

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You’re likely to get many different answers to even the simplest and most direct questions. Perhaps it’s the way you’re asking? TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You want to get on the road with enough time to spare, so that if anything goes wrong, you will not miss a key rendezvous. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) What happens without your knowledge is likely to have a big effect on your day. You’ll want to be ready to react appropriately. CANCER (June 21-July 22) You may be wondering how it is possible to prepare yourself for something you cannot see, hear or anticipate, but you’ll find a way.

Wednesday’s Solution

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Now is no time to whine about things you cannot control. Instead, do everything possible to control those things you can, and go from there. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your display of knowledge is sure to be impressive, but you mustn’t think that you know it all! Be ready to learn at least one lesson. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Your interest in how others live will serve you well throughout the day, particularly as you start a project that involves them directly. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Putting yourself in another’s shoes and seeing things from his or her perspective will enable you to answer the hard questions.

Wednesday’s Solution

FOUR RACK TOTAL Make a 2-7-letter word from the letters in each row. Add points of each word using scoring directions at right. Seven-letter words get a 50-point bonus. Blank tiles used as any letter have no point value. Scrabble is a trademark of Hasbro in the U.S. and Canada.

Comics

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) A change of scenery can lift your spirits and prove quite inspirational. You can find motivation in the most basic of circumstances. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You may have to tread lightly in and around the workplace after unintentionally offending someone in charge.

DAILY CODE

GP

Forecast

70 53

POOCH CAFE | PAUL GILLIGAN

Today: Sunny much of the time today. Increasing cloudiness tonight.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You may be trying to navigate some dangerous territory. See if you can’t diminish risk by taking on less personal responsibility. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You’re not usually one to suggest doing what has already been done, but today you’ll find that a repeat performance can be beneficial.

Need more Sudoku? Find another puzzle in the Comics section of The Post every Sunday and in the Style section Monday through Saturday.

75 54 Tomorrow: Mainly cloudy tomorrow and tomorrow night with a shower.

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS

Looking Ahead

SAT

SUN

MON

74 55 77 57 81 52 Sun and Moon Sunrise today: 6:39 a.m. Sunset today: 7:40 p.m. Moonrise today: 3:25 p.m. Moonset today: 3:59 a.m.

Almanac Normal high: 65 Record high: 90 Normal low: 45 Record low: 28

FORECAST BY ACCUWEATHER.COM ©2014


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Have you had Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery? You may be eligible for a clinical study Doctors at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) are conducting a clinical study of the effects of non-nutritive sweeteners among those who have had Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery. You may be eligible for this study if: • You are between the ages of 18-45 years • You have had Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery Location: • NIH Clinical Center in Bethesda, Maryland is easily accessible via the Metro Red Line (Medical Center Stop) Compensation is provided. For more information please call: 301-594-0601 TTY: 1-866-411-1010

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lookout puzzles Crossword

LOST IN TRANSLATION

ACROSS 1 Oktoberfest instrument 5 Oscar presenter’s take 9 Rye grass disease 14 Burden 15 Diamond Head locale 16 New Zealand native 17 What “if tree falls in forest” has 20 Parthenon’s site 21 Made a memo 22 They’re put in food 23 Sign for the superstitious 25 No, in a circle 28 Hardly ordinary 29 Brass or bronze, e.g. 31 Campus VIP, slangily 33 Like fairy-tale dragons, eventually 34 “But will it play in ___?” 35 No longer in existence 38 “Play something else!” 39 Broadcast 40 Colors crudely 41 Middle ear bone 42 Bagpiper’s headwear 45 It may be spotted in a tree 46 Excessive criticism 47 Make a silhouette 49 The best 52 Marinara and bechamel 53 They’re cast over the ocean? 57 Overly full 58 Floor 59 VIP in the UAE 60 Door fasteners 61 Piquant flavor 62 Baglike structures in animals

DOWN 1 Beefsteak or cherry 2 One way to stand 3 Plumb tuckered out 4 Positive attribute 5 Some deliveries 6 Shake one’s tail

EDITED BY TIMOTHY E. PARKER

7 “Caught you!” 8 Ambulance item 9 Discharge 10 One may be on its last leg 11 Comedian Whoopi 12 Valuable find 13 “Whether ___ nobler ...” 18 Asthmatics’ needs 19 Huge amount of bricks 23 Gallimaufry 24 Western state 26 X or Y, in math 27 Swedish rug 30 How workaholics often work 31 Place for a statue or a hero

32 Large crucifix 33 Arrogant one 34 Land of the alpaca 35 Chew like a rat 36 Some eye doctors 37 Many a “Li’l Abner” character 38 Tokyo, pre-Tokyo 41 Greenest around the gills 42 Port on Commencement Bay 43 Acid found in vinegar 44 Partners of Mmes. 46 ___ Tuesday (Mardi Gras) 48 Game essentials 50 Hard to comprehend 51 Front and back

52 53 54 55 56

Belted out a tune Burning remnant Living Nativity sound Airport stat. Woman’s hairstyle

Wednesday’s Solution

• Scholarships available

Open House, April 23, 2014 6–7:30 p.m. On the Red Line, Brookland-CUA stop CUA School of Architecture and Planning R.s.v.p. at architecture.cua.edu or 202-319-5188

THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA

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If you need accommodations for a disability, please contact us. The Catholic University of America admits students of any race, color, national or ethnic origin, sex, age, or disability.

It’s your WeekendPass

Every Thursday in Express

TODAY IN HISTORY

1947

Brooklyn Dodgers president Branch Rickey purchases the contract of Jackie Robinson from the Montreal Royals.

1998

The Northern Ireland peace talks conclude as negotiators reach a landmark settlement to end 30 years of bitter rivalries and bloody attacks.

2010

Polish President Lech Kaczynski, 60, is killed in a plane crash in western Russia.

Who We Are: Published by Express Publications LLC, 1150 15th St. NW, Washington, DC 20071, a subsidiary of WP Company, LLC

How to Reach Us: To place a display ad: Call 202-334-6732 or email ads@readexpress.com. To place a classified ad: Call 202-334-6200. To nominate a hawker as Star Distributor: Email circulation@readexpress.com. For circulation: Call 202-334-6992 or email circulation@readexpress.com. Spot a mistake? Let us know at corrections@readexpress.com. The newsroom: Call 202-334-6800, fax 202-334-9777 or reach out to us on Twitter @WaPoExpress.

Publisher: Arnie Applebaum Executive editor: Dan Caccavaro General manager: Ron Ulrich Circulation manager: Charles Love Managing editor, features: Holly J. Morris Managing editor, news: Lori Kelley Creative director: Jon Benedict Features editor: Jennifer Barger Senior news editor: Diana D’Abruzzo Story editor: Adam Sapiro Deputy creative director: Adam Griffiths Senior editors: Sadie Dingfelder, Vicky Hallett, Beth Marlowe, Kristen Page-Kirby Section editors: Michael Cunniff, Rudi Greenberg, Lori McCue, Marissa Payne, Rachel Sadon, Holley Simmons, Jeffrey Tomik Art director: Allie Ghaman Copy editors: Samantha Dean, Sean Gossard Designer: Rachel Orr Production supervisor: Matthew Liddi

Founding publisher: Christopher Ma, 1950-2011


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people lookout STR ATEGY

Amazon Secures Valuable ‘People Who Kept Watching “The O.C.” After Season 2’ Demographic

BECAUSE THE Y’RE BABIES

Subjects Weep, Crawl In Presence Of Royalty

Adam Brody has landed his first role as a series regular since he played Seth on “The O.C.,” E! News reported. Brody will star in “The Cosmopolitans,” an Amazon Instant Video series about Americans in Paris. Once the show premieres, Amazon customer feedback will determine whether it gets a full season. (EXPRESS)

Prince William, his wife, Kate, and their baby son, George, interacted with first-time New Zealand parents and their babies on Wednesday. The informal meeting with 10 parents was held at Government House in Wellington. According to local media, all of the babies were born within a week or two of Prince George, who was born last July. (AP)

ACCESSIBILIT Y

Finally, Thong Bikinis and Sheer Tops All Can Afford!

Punishment POOL (WPA/GETTY IMAGES)

Adam Levine’s new clothing and accessories line for women has debuted at Kmart, People magazine reported. “The best thing about designing a women’s collection is that I was able to create pieces that I would like to see a woman wear,” Levine said in a statement. The items range in price from $13 to $30 and are also available on shopyourway.com. (EXPRESS)

The baby in the foreground honors her future king by shoving a toy in her mouth.

FREDERICK M. BROWN (GETTY IMAGES)

Uh Oh, TMZ Lost A Few Page Views!

Get out of the picture, Blake Shelton. You’re making Adam look balding.

Giuliana Rancic says she supports boycotting publications that feature paparazzi photos of celebrity children taken without consent. Rancic said Tuesday at NBC’s summer TV presentation that she feels violated by photos taken of her and her husband leaving a doctor’s office with their 1-year-old son. (AP)

REPRODUCTION

That’s Not Really How Heredity Wor — Oh, Nevermind, We Give Up Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi told Us Weekly that she and fiance Jionni LaValle want their second child to be a boy, although they’ll be happy with either sex. “I’m not ready to have a miniature me,” Polizzi explained. “I don’t need a diva telling me what to do. I’m not ready for that.” (EXPRESS)

“No, don’t run out, there’s photographers, you just made this so much more dramatic!” — A NNE H ATH AWAY, TELLING JIMMY FALLON THAT PHOTOS FROM HER JANUARY “DROWNING SCARE” WERE MISINTERPRETED — SHE WASN’T SCREAMING FOR HELP, SHE WAS YELLING AT HER HUSBAND TO NOT SWIM OUT TO HER

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