A PUBLICATION OF
Thursday 08.07.14
| READEXPRESS.COM | @WAPOEXPRESS
No minor threat Williams says sending slumping Harper down isn’t the solution 14
Pot on the ballot Legalization advocates applaud D.C.’s decision to let voters weigh in 4
Don’t be blue
What to watch for in the Redskins’ preseason opener as Jay Gruden’s new offense takes center stage 13
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Don’theMiss the Excitement! T B WASHINGTON POST AND THINKSTOCK/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION
You’re on, coach
We’ve got the cure for bummersummeritis as the season slips away 25
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2 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY JENS MEYER (AP)
eyeopeners JOB PERKS
Austrian police forces report rise in volunteers for traffic duty Even in non-prudish Austria, nudity in public has its price. A woman faces a fine of up to $1,340 for taking a ride in only a pair of white tennis shoes. Police spokesman Johann Baumschlager says the young woman was stopped by police Tuesday after cycling past officers at a radar trap on a highway. Baumschlager said Wednesday the woman was identified and told to go home and get dressed. (AP) LITERALLY
Fortunately for everyone, it was the last leg of the flight A July 30 flight from Tunisia to Edinburgh, Scotland, was diverted to London after a drunk woman ripped off her prosthetic leg and attacked the cabin crew with it, according to the Edinburgh Evening News. The newspaper reported that the 48-year-old woman also demanded “cigarettes and a parachute,” a fellow passenger said. (EXPRESS) PUNS
Cat-alytic converter really made the engine purr ... and chase mice A man in England who heard funny noises while driving was surprised to find a kitten under the hood, according to the Macclesfield Express. The paper reported that Steven Goldstraw said he drove more than 2 miles before stopping because he heard cries from the engine. The kitten was dubbed “Lucky,” for obvious reasons. (EXPRESS)
DUMBO CAN FLY, THIS GUY CAN DO THIS: An elephant takes a dive at his indoor pool Tuesday at the Leipzig zoo in Leipzig, Germany. The big-boned animal can be seen by zoo-goers when it’s in the pool through a glass window.
August
Re
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 3
page three
ws. Local ne y tl h g Sli askew.
TRANSIT
If you can’t spell ‘Lyft’ or ‘Uber,’ you’ll love Curb
PETS
‘King of Adams Morgan’ abdicates The Internet has Grumpy Cat; D.C. has Romo. The effortlessly cool bull mastiff/pit bull mix is famous for hanging out the window of a Calvert Street NW rowhouse, serenely observing the world go by. Known to fans as “The King of Adams Morgan,” Romo’s been featured in a book of must-photograph D.C. sites and at least one couple’s engagement photos. So when WTOP reported that Romo and his owners are moving to Arlington, D.C. took to Twitter to mourn. R.S. ”Wait, but I’m actually feeling really sad that a stranger’s dog is moving from DC.” — @katiepark “Area Dog Moving to Suburbs in Search of Better Puppy Schools” — @GrahamDavidA “Sick: D.C. is losing its best dog.” — @willsommer
Today’s Page 3 was written by Sadie Dingfelder, Rachel Sadon and Holly J. Morris
SCAN CODE AND SAVETOYOUR SMARTPHONE REDEEM AT FESTIVAL FOR PRIZE*
*While supplies last
STEVE HELBER (AP)
Who Said What? As the corruption trial of former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell and his wife, Maureen, stretches into its second week, the torrent of bizarre revelations and salacious details has yet to slow. Can you tell who uttered a few of the trial’s strangest quotes? R.S. THE CHARACTERS 1
William Burck Maureen McDonnell’s lead defense attorney
2
3
Mary-Shea Sutherland Maureen’s former chief of staff
4
John Brownlee One of Bob McDonnell’s lead defense attorneys
Phil Cox A former political advisor to Bob McDonnell
5
Jonnie Williams A businessman and the star witness for the prosecution
Meet Curb, the app, and company, formerly known as Taxi Magic. The Alexandria tech firm changed its name Wednesday, because Curb can hail both black car and livery services in many cities (though only taxis in D.C. for now), CEO Patrick Lashinsky says. Why the four-letter name, reminiscent of competitors Uber and Lyft? “Because we stopped teaching spelling in school, and we needed something people can easily spell,” he says. The rebranding coincided with a deal Virginia reached with Curb’s competitors, allowing Uber and Lyft to operate legally in Virginia as long as they start vetting drivers more rigorously. S.D.
CYNICAL SUMMARY THE QUOTES A
D
“Do you know if the governor enjoyed wearing women’s clothing?”
“She was the mother of five — I don’t know how lonely she could be.”
B “Bob McDonnell eats Virginia ham. He drinks Virginia wine. And my guess is, if the man smoked, he’d smoke Virginia cigarettes.”
E “I was horrified. I thought it was a train wreck. I thought it was improper that Maureen would try to push this product on Ann Romney.”
C “I’m in Florida, and I’m gonna fly all the way to Virginia for a tool party?”
Answers, and context, on page 6.
GET FRESH FESTIVAL
On Wednesday, Forbes declared D.C. America’s coolest city because: 20-somethings eat at non-chain restaurants and have many fun places to go where they are likely to meet 20-somethings of other races or ethnicities. H.J.M
WIC AND SENIOR FARMERS’ MARKET NUTRITION PROGRAM’S
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4 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
local
District voters to decide on pot Board of Elections OKs ballot initiative to legalize marijuana WASHINGTON D.C. residents will vote in November on whether to legalize marijuana use after elections officials voted Wednesday to place the question on the ballot. The three-member D.C. Board of Elections voted unanimously Wednesday morning to approve the ballot initiative, certifying that activists gathered the tens of thousands of voter signatures
expressline
necessary to qualify for the ballot. Several of those activists attended Wednesday’s meeting and cheered the vote, which puts D.C. further down the path of joining Colorado and Washington as the only places in the nation where marijuana possession and cultivation is legal. “In a democracy, the voice of the people should be heard,” said Malik Burnett, a doctor and leader of the D.C. Cannabis Coalition, an umbrella activist group. Tamara Robinson, a board spokeswoman, said the petition had 27,688 valid signatures. To
What could be ... The ballot initiative, if enacted, would legalize the possession of up to 2 ounces of marijuana for personal use. Residents could grow up to six cannabis plants within their residences and give up to 1 ounce of marijuana to another adult. It would also legalize the sale of drug paraphernalia. Malik Burnett, leader of the D.C. Cannabis Coalition, noted it wouldn’t legalize the sale of marijuana, but he said he expected the D.C. Council to step in if voters approve the measure and pass legislation to regulate sales. (TWP)
Prince William County, Va., police seek man who rode bike to drive-thru, tried to rob bank
qualify for the November ballot, 22,600 signatures were required. A Washington Post poll taken this year showed high rates of support for marijuana legalization among D.C. residents. But the legalization effort could be complicated by efforts in Congress to forestall the city’s moves to liberalize its marijuana laws. A House budget bill passed last month included a provision to block not only a legalization effort but a decriminalization bill passed by the D.C. Council this year that is now in effect.
verbatim
“A number of people who heard about the issue called and offered to pay the balance.” MARION BARRY, D.C. Council
member and former mayor, announcing Wednesday he had settled a total of $2,824 in fines, late penalties and fees with the D.C. Department of Motor Vehicles. Barry paid $1,779, with the remaining $1,045 waived by a DMV hearing examiner.
MIKE DeBONIS (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Maryland commission rules ride-share service Uber must be regulated.
Metrobus routes 32 & 36 are changing for the better. Effective August 24, 2014. Metrobus makes 400,000+ trips every day. As you can imagine, we do a lot of work to keep things running smoothly. In this case, we’ve restructured routes 32 & 36 to improve reliability and frequency along Pennsylvania and Wisconsin Avenues. Want the full details? Visit wmata.com/betterbus or call 202.637.7000.
Las líneas 32 y 36 del Metrobús están cambiando para bien. A partir del 24 de agosto de 2014. El Metrobús hace más de 400,000 recorridos todos los días. Como podrá imaginarse, nos esforzamos muchísimo porque las cosas marchen sin contratiempos. En este caso, hemos reestructurado las líneas 32 y 36 para mejorar la confiabilidad y la frecuencia de los recorridos a lo largo de las avenidas Pennsylvania y Wisconsin. ¿Quiere conocer todos los detalles? Visite wmata.com/betterbus o llame al 202.637.7000.
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 5
WHERE
STARS THE STARS ARE UNDER
WHERE THE STORES ARE THE FRESH ARTIST
CONCERT SERIES ON THE PLAZA LAUNCHED BY INTELSAT AUGUST - Lindsey Stirling AJ Smith opening
AUGUST - Be er Than Ezra Stewart Lewis opening
AUGUST - Andy Grammer AUGUST - Jacquie Lee Concerts begin at PM. Artists subject to change. Tickets are free and available on the day of each concert, starting at 10:00 AM from the Concierge Desk. Space is limited on a first-come, first-serve basis.
MOVIES ON THE GREEN AUGUST - Spy Kids 2 AUGUST - Jaws AUGUST - Man of Steel AUGUST - The Blind Side Movies begin at 8PM. Picnics are encouraged, but no alcohol is permi ed on The Plaza. Lawn seating available on a first-come first-serve basis. Lawn chairs available for use on a first-come first-serve basis, or bring your own chair or blanket.
COMING SOON - SHAKE SHACK For details visit TysonsCornerCenter.com
On Metro’s Silver Line
where HIP meets HOP
6 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
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THE DISTRICT
Teen dies of injuries from dirt-bike crash
TWO INFORMATION SESSIONS: Thursday, August 7th
5:30p.m.and6:30p.m. YU WU (THE WASHINGTON POST)
R.s.v.p.: http://metro.cua.edu/RSVP/ or call 202-319-5256 Location: Pangborn Hall 323A (Brookland-CUA Metrorail stop) Location
Catholic University admits students of any race, color, national or ethnic origin, sex, age, or disability. If you need accommodations for a disability, contact us at the phone number listed above.
The owner’s asking price for Museum Square was $250 million.
Residents unite to save their building Low-income building on edge of Chinatown gets a 1-year reprieve THE DISTRICT Saving the D.C. apartment building seemed impossible, but the tenants association president resolved to try. So Kevin Rogers and fellow board member Vera Watson set out to knock on every door in Museum Square. The problem: More than 70 percent of their neighbors were Chinese. Most were elderly and spoke little English. Rogers and Watson needed to convey the urgency of the matter. In June, the residents received notices that the building’s owners would stop accepting a government subsidy to house low-income residents. Residents would receive vouchers to use someplace else. It would disperse the building’s 291 households, which includes nearly half of the Chinese immigrant population left around Chinatown. But there was a chance to stop it. City law mandates that the residents and the District each get a chance to make a reasonable offer to buy the building. The owner’s asking price:
“If I moved to another neighborhood, I would not leave my house.” XINNONG YI, 82, a retired literature teacher who has lived in the U.S. for 16 years. “I would be too scared.”
$250 million. The struggle at Fourth and K streets NW illustrates how increasingly difficult it can be to preserve low-income housing, even in a city desperate for it. Rogers enlisted the help of nonprofit housing lawyers and found interpreters. There were 291 occupied units. They got signatures from 202 showing their interest in buying the building. On Monday evening, he found out the property owners sent a letter saying they would slow down the process — residents could stay for another year, with a longer period to make their case. “The bad news is one day we might still be kicked out,” Rogers said. ROBERT SAMUELS (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Judge hears arguments on Corcoran Gallery merger
A 17-year-old who was fatally injured Monday when a dirt bike he was riding hit a tree in Southeast had been fleeing from Prince George’s County, Md., police, his family and authorities said. The teen, Amir Brooks of Prince George’s, and his cousin were on a green Kawasaki dirt bike when they crashed. Amir’s mother said her son died at 12:12 a.m. Wednesday and that Amir’s cousin, who was injured, remains in the hospital. (THE WASHINGTON POST)
TRANSPORTATION
Uber and Lyft get OK to operate in Virginia Virginia officials said Wednesday that they have reached an agreement with Uber and Lyft that allows the ride-sharing services to continue operating in the state. The deal comes after months of escalating tension between the state and the two companies. (TWP)
Answers, from Page 3 A William Burck, pointing out that Bob McDonnell wasn’t required to report gifts to his wife, Maureen, a private citizen B John Brownlee, saying that his client had intended only to promote a Virginia company C Jonnie Williams, saying he wasn’t interested in attending a tool party (the “guy’s equivalent” of a bridal shower) for the McDonnells’ future son-in-law. He looked into buying them a generator but settled instead on a $10,000 check D Mary-Shea Sutherland, responding to questions that implied Maureen McDonnell was a lonely, anxious woman who found friendship with Williams E Phil Cox, testifying that he witnessed Maureen trying to pitch Ann Romney on a diet supplement produced by Williams’ company
Two held without bond after Md. tattoo attack
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 7
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8 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
nation+world HEALTH
TECHNOLOGY
Another faulty gene linked to breast cancer
Like we need more places to use phones Are you going to eat that … placenta? For too long, the placenta has been simply an afterthought, er, afterbirth. For 40 weeks, it nourishes and protects the unborn, only to be cast off the moment its work is done. Well, no longer. ELLEN McCARTHY (THE WASHINGTON POST)
The trend Over the past several years, there’s been a dramatic rise in women choosing to ingest their placentas after giving birth, supported by midwives who tout the practice’s healing benefits. Some women make smoothies with raw placenta, fruit and yogurt. Others brown it on the stove to make tacos or spaghetti. Most women take it in pill form.
The reasoning
But wait, there’s more Placentas aren’t just for eating. Some make placenta art, using food coloring to create an imprint of it. The crafting website Etsy offers lotus-birth placenta bags in a variety of colors so women can tote their placentas around in style.
NAVDY
D.C. midwife Claudia Booker steams, dries, grinds into powder form and encapsulates placentas for the women who delivered them. She says the pill can help make breast milk come in and trigger the production of estrogen, perhaps helping ward off post-partum depression. Doctors warn that there have been no scientific studies proving the benefits of it.
SHAH MARAI (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)
When you focus on your phone, you can’t focus on the road. A startup company wants you to be able to do both by bringing Google Glass to your windshield. Navdy, a San Francisco-based company, aims to let drivers access information on their smartphones while keeping their eyes on the road. The Navdy HUD (Head-Up Display), announced Tuesday, combines a projection display with voice and gesture controls (example: give a thumbs up above the steering wheel to answer). The system will project a transparent image that appears to float 6 feet in front of the windshield. You’ll be able to answer phone calls and have texts read to you, but probably won’t be able to surf Facebook. (THE WASHINGTON POST)
It’s long been known faulty BRCA genes greatly raise the risk for breast cancer. Now scientists say a newly identified gene — called PALB2 — can do the same. Mutations in the gene can make breast cancer up to nine times more likely to develop, making it the most dangerous in terms of breast cancer after the BRCA, an international team of researchers reports in this week’s New England Journal of Medicine. (AP) SRI RACHA, THAILAND
The killing of a U.S. general revealed flaws in the Afghan army, analysts said.
Afghan military exposed by attack KABUL, AFGHANISTAN Maj. Gen. Harold J. Greene, the highest-ranking U.S. military officer killed in a war zone in four decades, died not at the hand of a sworn enemy but from a burst of gunfire by a soldier in an allied army who had been largely paid, trained and equipped with American and NATO support. The shooter, identified as Rafiqullah, a man in his 20s, hid in a bathroom at a military training base near the capital Tuesday, then opened fire on a delegation of visiting American and European military officers, before being shot dead himself. The fatal attack was an acute embarrassment to the Afghan military leadership, since it occurred inside the Afghan equivalent of the U.S. military academy at West Point. Several analysts in Kabul said the attack
220%
Missouri executes man who killed woman in 1995
exposed deep flaws in the control and competence of Afghan military leaders, who had apparently not prepared adequate security for the foreign visit. “This sad event is a major blow to our international alliances and it shows that we cannot build trustworthy and credible military institutions,” said Javed Kohistani, a military analyst, former Afghan army officer and former national intelligence officer. Insider attacks in Afghanistan rose sharply in the past few years. On Wednesday, two attacks by Afghan police officers claimed the lives of 11 police officers in southern Afghanistan. In one attack, an Afghan policeman poisoned his colleagues’ food, then shot at least seven of them before fleeing in a police truck, officials said. PAMELA CONSTABLE (THE WASHINGTON POST/AP)
Report: Dad in surrogate saga is a sex offender A Thai surrogate mother raising a Down syndrome baby she claims was abandoned by his Australian biological parents said Tuesday she would be happy to have the boy’s healthy twin returned to her after hearing reports in Australian media that the father is a convicted sex offender. Pattaramon Chanbua, 21, has been bringing up baby boy Gammy since December. (AP)
GONE VIRAL
‘Benghazi’ THE USE: It appears that some conservatives are changing the middle names on their Facebook profiles to the Libyan city’s name, The Huffington Post reports. THE REASON: The move calls attention to the 2012 attack on the American embassy in Benghazi — and various theories surrounding it — by reminding all of their Facebook friends about it every time they “like” one of their posts. (EXPRESS)
THAT’S JUST NUTS
The amount that U.S. almond consumption has grown since 2005, faster than any other nut. Experts say marketing and studies touting the nut’s health benefits led to the boom. Americans now eat more than 2 pounds of almonds a year. (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Army begins questioning Bergdahl about capture by Taliban
DHS workers’ information may be at risk after security breach
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 9
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10 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
nation+world MEDIA
SCIENCE
Report: New government leaks not from Snowden
Space probe reaches comet after 10-year, 4B-mile trip
Three New York City subway trains have been taken out of service this week after bed bugs were found on them, according to the New York Daily News. The newspaper reports that two “N” line trains, which run in Queens, Manhattan and Brooklyn, were taken out of service on Sunday, and another was taken out on Tuesday after the parasites were found on them. The trains were taken to Coney Island to be fumigated, according to the Daily News. WABC-TV reported that the Metro Transit Authority said they were isolated incidents and that no crew members or passengers reported being bitten. (EXPRESS)
The federal government appears to have a new leaker, as the latest national security leaks use documents taken after former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden could have obtained them, government officials told CNN. The latest leaks, which appear in a story on The Intercept, a website launched by Glenn Greenwald, revealed the growth of the United States’ terrorist watchlist, and rely on documents from August 2013, which is after Snowden left the U.S. Greenwald, who first published Snowden’s leaks, has said that “it seems clear” that there is another leaker, CNN reported. (EXPRESS)
Turning what seemed like a science fiction tale into reality, an unmanned probe swung alongside a comet on Wednesday after a 4-billion mile chase through outer space over the course of a decade. Europe’s Rosetta probe will orbit and study the giant ball of dust and ice as it hurtles toward the sun and, if all goes according to plan, drop a lander onto the comet in the coming months. The incredible trip, launched in 2004, marks a milestone in mankind’s effort to understand the mysterious shooting stars that periodically flash past Earth. No spacecraft has yet gotten so close to a comet. (AP)
MPS FOR OSIRIS TEAM/ROSETTA/AP
NEW YORK
Report: Bed bugs found on 3 NYC subway trains
The Rosetta space probe took this photo on Wednesday of a comet from about 75 miles away.
Rand Paul: Iowa video shows him leaving for an interview, not running from DREAMers
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Dr. Jesse Steinfeld, a Nixon-era surgeon general who fought Big Tobacco, dies at 87
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THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 11
12 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
nation+world Joining in the fight? In the face of the Islamic State’s onslaught, Shiites elsewhere in the world have watched as some of the holiest shrines in their brand of Islam risk coming under attack. In recent weeks in India, thousands of Shiites have reportedly signed up to volunteer their services in Iraq, pledging to protect the Iraqi cities of Najaf and Karbala, which receive millions of pilgrims every year. (TWP)
WASHINGTONPOST.COM WONKBLOG
Good news, taxpayers: federal spending on the Senate’s barbershop has decreased more than 50 percent in the past three years. Also, the Senate has a barbershop. Wait, what? The Sunlight Foundation recently digitized three years’ worth of Senate expense reports, and the data show spending for such things as a child-care center and “Senate Hair Care Services,” aka the Senate hair salon. The Senate barbershop has existed since the 19th century, and it’s open to the public. But it has been a long-time money loser, leading to repeated calls for privatization. The House used to have a taxpayer-subsidized barbershop, too, but it went private in 1994 (thanks, Newt). Sequestration provided the necessary political cover to begin privatization of the barbershop in earnest. Spending has dropped precipitously; at $137,000, semi-annual spending on the barbershop now stands at less than half of 2011 spending levels. The Senate barbershop adds charm to an institution otherwise lacking in those qualities. But taxpayer-funded haircuts for lawmakers at a time when we can’t/won’t pay for things like long-term unemployment benefits? CHRISTOPHER INGRAHAM
Excerpted from washington post.com/blogs/wonkblog.
SAFIN HAMED (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)
$137K for what?! Senate salon raises eyebrows Iraqi Yazidi women who fled the violence in the Iraqi town of Sinjar take shelter Tuesday at a school in Dohuk.
‘There are children dying’ on mountain Thousands of Iraqis driven away by militants are stranded without water BAGHDAD Stranded on a barren mountaintop, thousands of minority Iraqis are faced with a bleak choice: descend and risk slaughter at the hands of the encircled Sunni extremists or sit tight and risk dying of thirst. Humanitarian agencies said Tuesday that between 10,000 and 40,000 civilians remain trapped on Mount Sinjar since being driven out of surrounding villages and the town of Sinjar days earlier. But the mountain that had
looked like a refuge is becoming a graveyard for children. Unable to dig deep into the rocky mountainside, displaced families said they have buried victims of the harsh conditions in shallow graves, their bodies covered with stones. Most had run out of battery life on their cellphones by Tuesday and can’t communicate with those below. Iraqi government planes attempted to airdrop bottled water to the mountain Monday night but reached few of those marooned.
“There are children dying on the mountain, on the roads,” said Marzio Babille of the United Nations Children’s Fund. “There is no water, there is no vegetation, they are completely cut off and surrounded by Islamic State. It’s a disaster, a total disaster.” Most of those who fled Sinjar are from the minority Yazidi sect, which melds parts of ancient Zoroastrianism with Christianity and Islam. They are considered by the al-Qaedainspired Islamic State to be devil
worshippers and apostates. The Islamic State’s takeover of Sinjar on Sunday, the first major setback for Kurdish forces protecting the country’s north, sent about 200,000 people fleeing, according to the United Nations. Some 147,000 have arrived in the semi-autonomous Kurdish region, flooding refugee camps. UNICEF said that 40 children had died after being displaced from their homes in the 48 hours ending Monday, including an unknown number on the mountain. “Children have died because of dehydration and lack of food,” said Vian Dakheel, a parliamentarian from Sinjar. “My people are being slaughtered,” she said, referring to the mass killings of those who had stayed behind. Babille said U.N. agencies have offered the Iraqi government assistance with airdrops but have yet to be asked for help. At least 15 to 20 flights would be needed to provide those stranded with enough water and supplies to survive for a week, he said. “We need to get them out,” he said. “If we don’t, it would be catastrophic.” LOVEDAY MORRIS (THE WASHINGTON POST)
RIDERS TO THE RESCUE
He didn’t mind the gap
As a rush-hour crowd of commuters packed into a train bound for Perth, Australia, early Wednesday, a man’s leg slipped through the small gap between the train and the platform. Passengers and crew members tried and failed for several minutes to pull him free, but he remained stuck. Then someone came up with a plan: Transit staff got everyone off the train and organized passengers to push the train away from the platform. After a few failed tries, the man was freed (he wasn’t seriously hurt) and applause broke out. (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Egypt mediates indirect Israeli-Palestinian talks
Growing threat of Russia invasion into Ukraine, Hagel warns
Dutch contractor to conduct deep-sea search for Flight 370
sports
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 13
PLAYER TO WATCH
Colt McCoy
RICK SNIDER | SPORTS GURU
Gruden at first glance
Redskins backup QB
THE JAY GRUDEN ERA BEGINS AS THE REDSKINS HOST THE NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS (7:30 p.m., today, NBC) in their
preseason opener. After seven months of talk, fans will get a glimpse of the new coach’s offense under finally healthy quarterback Robert Griffin III. Starters won’t play long, but at least they’ll face a top team for a quick reality check. Meanwhile, defensive coordinator Jim Haslett is supposedly unchained for a more aggressive unit. Special teams
1 Griffin vs. the Patriots’ pass rush How well can a remade offensive line protect Robert Griffin III and how well can he play as a pocket passer? The thirdyear quarterback tends to think he can always make the pass no matter how much pressure he’s under. Will Griffin learn that not every play is manageable? And will he run freely without his brace? His speed was intoxicating during camp.
2
3
4
5
Redskins secondary
Special teams
Murphy’s luck
Gruden’s play-calling
Patriots quarterback Tom Brady shredded the Redskins during the joint practices this week, but he was under limited pressure. The Redskins’ secondary will face Brady for only a series or two, but Washington will see if second-year cornerback David Amerson is ready to start and whether the safeties can be trusted. The secondary’s play this season will largely decide the Redskins’ fate.
Was there ever a worse unit than last year’s special teams? They couldn’t return, cover or kick. The Redskins invested in special teamers over the offseason and hired a new coach, but they need some smackdowns on coverage to gain confidence. Andre Roberts appears a big upgrade at kick returner, but punt returner appears uncertain. Watch rookie kicker Zach Hocker’s long kickoffs.
Rookie linebacker Trent Murphy has been overlooked during camp, but the Redskins’ top draft pick has looked good. His spin move isn’t predictable, and he has good strength and speed to reach the backfield. But we’ll have to see his passrushing moves in a game (or 10) before we know if he’s effective. Murphy tends to go better inside than outside. The Redskins need to find him snaps.
With only two new starters, this may be Jay Gruden’s offense but it’s still predecessor Mike Shanahan’s roster. Can Gruden put his stamp on the offense? And how different will it really be? Has he altered RGIII’s style? Sadly, tonight will provide few answers. But it’s Gruden’s first chance as a head coach, so look for the little things like timeouts, challenges and half-time adjustments.
AP PHOTOS
must be better, right? Here are five things to watch.
McCoy is trying to keep his career alive with the Redskins. At the ripe old age of 27, the former University of Texas star is the oldest QB on Washington’s roster, and he hasn’t seen much playing time since 2011, spending the past few years as a backup with the Browns and 49ers. Now, at No. 3 on the Redskins’ depth chart, McCoy likely will be on the field for the most snaps today against the Patriots, but he’s not looking at it as an audition for the Redskins or any other team. “When the games get here, you go out there, compete and lead the guys who are on the field with you,” he said. “I chose to come here. I like the offense. My focus is one day at a time.” (E.S.)
REDSKINS
Waiting to see WR tandem
Wide receivers Pierre Garcon, left, and DeSean Jackson likely won’t play tonight. Garcon is dealing with a minor hamstring injury and Jackson twisted his ankle Wednesday during practice. “There’s a possibility [for Jackson],” coach Jay Gruden said. “Pierre — definitely not playing.” That opens the door for the bottom of the receiver depth chart to make an impression. ELLIOT SMITH (FOR EXPRESS)
Brian Hoyer, not Johnny Manziel, will start Browns preseason opener
AP reports Padres hire A.J. Preller as GM
Steve Stricker selected as assistant captain for Ryder Cup
14 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
sports
Vote would let big conferences set own rules The NCAA board of directors will vote today on a proposal that would give the five wealthiest college football conferences the ability to make rules without the approval of the rest of Division I schools. The autonomy proposal is expected to pass. (AP) What do the big conferences want? The schools in the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC want to be allowed to spend their growing revenues on things such as scholarships that cover the full cost of attending college beyond tuition, room and board, and books. They also want to invest more in long-term health care.
GOLF
Woods ready to tee it up Barely able to tie his shoes three days ago, Tiger Woods plans to play in the PGA Championship. Woods finally arrived at Valhalla on Wednesday, leaving him enough time to play nine holes on a golf course he has not seen since he won the PGA Championship 14 years ago. He says the back injury that caused him to withdraw Sunday at the Bridgestone Invitational was not related to the pain that required surgery on March 31. He says his trainer was able to fix the problem, and once he felt he had full range of motion, he was ready to tackle the final major of the year. (AP)
Why do those conferences need autonomy to do that? In the past, schools in conferences that don’t have the billions of dollars in TV revenues that the Big Five have stood in the way of the NCAA passing legislation that would provide some of those extra benefits to athletes. Will other conferences try to do what the Big Five want to do? The leaders of the other five conferences that play at the highest level of college football, FBS, have all said their members are prepared to do their best to provide the same additional benefits to student-athletes. Why is this likely to pass? The Big Five generate millions in revenue for all NCAA members, so they’ll get what they want. When would it go into effect? The formal start would be in January 2015.
LYNNE SLADKY (AP)
NC A A Q& A
Entering Wednesday’s game, Nationals outfielder Bryce Harper hadn’t hit a home run since July 18.
‘Not fair’ to think about sending Harper down NATIONALS Nationals manager Matt Williams lashed out at reporters Wednesday after being asked if he was considering sending slumping Bryce Harper to the minor leagues. Harper, the 2012 NL rookie of the year, has struggled at the plate since missing 57 games with a left thumb injury. The 21-year-old outfielder has only three homers and 14 RBIs in 53 games. After Harper went 0-for-4 with three strikeouts Tuesday night against the Mets, Williams was asked Wednesday morning on radio station 106.7 The Fan if it
was a bad idea to option Harper to the minors. “Generally, if you have young players, that’s what you do,” Williams replied. “But this guy is a special young player.” On Wednesday afternoon, before Washington faced the Mets, Williams was asked: “Is sending Bryce to the minors even in the realm of possibility right now?” The reply was to the point. “I would caution everybody in this room: The minute you think you can read my freaking mind, you’re sorely mistaken,” Williams said. “It [ticks] me off to even think about, that somebody
would take a comment I made on the radio and infer I am thinking one way or another. I’ve had it. Don’t do it anymore. “Bryce Harper is one of the guys on our team, he’s a very important part of our team. Just like everybody else is. Do we understand each other? “It’s not fair to the kid, it’s not fair to the rest of the guys in that clubhouse to even think about sending Bryce Harper to the minor leagues, or to cause a stir. It’s unacceptable. It won’t happen.” That brought an end to his pregame session with reporters. DAVID GINSBURG (AP)
verbatim
“I feel confident that [Bradley Beal] will be part of [USA Basketball’s] future because he’s an outstanding talent. This was strictly a numbers situation with him.” USA BASKETBALL DIRECTOR JERRY COLANGELO, on why the Wizards’ Bradley Beal, right, was cut. In a conference
call, Colangelo said he believes the Wizards’ John Wall will have a role in USA Basketball in the future as well.
Sharks, Kings to play game at 49ers’ new stadium
MLB Commissioner Bud Selig expects vote next week on his successor
Wizards hire Roy Rogers on coaching staff
08.07.14
weekendpass SUMMERTIME SADNESS? WE’VE GOT THE CURE.
THINKSTOCK IMAGES (EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION)
The season’s flying by way too fast, but September’s not here yet. Get outside and make the most of the last weeks of summer. 25
Gorgeous ‘George’
Blackout drinking
A, B, C or 1D?
A masterpiece inspires the set for Signature’s ‘Sunday in the Park’ 19
Activated charcoal?! It’s the dark secret in two Zentan cocktails 20
Test your One Direction IQ with our best quiz ever 21
16 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
upfront
ass A quick p at what’s going on
VOCABULARY
JUST ANNOUNCED!
‘zine’
Comedy and concerts Because we can’t all be last-minute planners, here are some recently announced shows coming up this fall that you can buy tickets to now (or soon.) Plan accordingly. R.G.
THE DEFINITION: Shorthand for
self-published magazine (or, fanzine) with limited circulation; often (but not always) with a focus on punk music. WHY YOU SHOULD CARE: This
weekend is the fourth annual D.C. Zinefest (St. Stephen’s, 1525 Newton St. NW; Sat., 11 a.m.5 p.m., free), featuring works from more than 50 zinesters of varying levels of experience. Zines represented include the wrestling zine “Hug It Out,” lit zine “Quail Bell Magazine” and one called “Poop Matters.” RUDI GREENBERG (EXPRESS)
Library of Congress Concerts
The Bentzen Ball
The Library of Congress announced its fall concert series at the Coolidge Auditorium, a slate of free concerts (which require tickets that are “on sale” via Ticketmaster beginning Sept. 3). Performances include gospel legend Mavis Staples, left, (Oct. 11) and Belgian ensemble Vox Luminis (Oct. 29) making its D.C. debut.
Tig Notaro and Brightest Young Things’ comedy festival is back at the Lincoln Theatre on Oct. 1. Tickets ($30) are on sale now via Ticketfly for an opening night showcase starring Notaro, Jeff Garlin and Kyle Kinane. More shows — with comics like Rosie O’Donnell, John Hodgman and Retta — will be announced soon.
hit us up! Send us your arts- and events-related photos and tweets and you might see them in print! Contact us via Facebook (facebook.com/ washingtonpostexpress), Twitter (@rudigreenberg, @wapoexpress), email (rudi.greenberg@wpost.com) or carrier pigeon.
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THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 17
upfront The entertainment enjoyment matrix
The Post’s Going Out Guide (goingoutguide.com) recommends free or low-cost things to do. ARLINGTON COUNTY FAIR: Indoor and outdoor activities include pony rides and racing piglets. (Thomas Jefferson Community Center, 3501 Second St. South, Arlington; Thu.-Fri.) MONTGOMERY COUNTY AGRICULTURAL FAIR: More pig
racing, a chainsaw demo and baby animals. (Montgomery County Fairgrounds, 16 Chestnut St., Gaithersburg, Md.; Fri.-Aug. 16, $10, free for kids under 11.)
Storytelling shows Pay money to hear your friends tell the same old story they tell strangers in bars for free.
An author reading Just sign our books so we can leave.
Improv comedy The actors always look like they’re having way more fun than we are.
Stand-up comedy Even with amateurs, the comedy is generally rehearsed and well thought out. Cat videos
DIY house shows It’s hot, it’s cramped, the music’s loud and you have to bring your own booze.
Strip clubs Anyone who tells you otherwise is lying.
LOW ARTIST ENJOYMENT
HIGH AUDIENCE ENJOYMENT
$10 or less: Fairs edition
LOW AUDIENCE ENJOYMENT
HIGH ARTIST ENJOYMENT
BARDO BREWPUB
Not all performances are fun — even for the stars of the show. Here’s a chart to entertain you as you sit through yet another political poetry reading. SADIE DINGFELDER (EXPRESS)
BEER!
$3.45
The cost of a pint at Bardo Brewpub (1200 Bladensburg Road NE) starting Friday, when the brewery taps its IPA, stout, ginger beer and pale ale, the first beers it has brewed since 2000. The limited 1994-era pricing honors the 20th anniversary of Bardo’s first brew. R.G.
Season Opening Ball Concert Christoph Eschenbach, conductor Steven Reineke, conductor Joshua Bell, violin Kelli O’Hara, soprano
This year’s concert is the Kennedy Center’s official welcome for incoming President Deborah F. Rutter.
SEP. 30--OCT. 19 | OPERA HOUSE
BERNSTEIN Candide—Overture
FLAHERTY/AHRENS “Something Beautiful”
SAINT-SAËNS Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso
KOSMA/MANILOW/MERCER/REINEKE “Autumn Leaves/When October Goes”
RAVEL Tzigane
MONNOT/GUGLIELMI/REINEKE “La Vie en rose”
BERNSTEIN “Glitter and Be Gay” from Candide
RAVEL La Valse
Musical Theater at the Kennedy Center is made possible through the generosity of the Adrienne Arsht Musical Theater Fund. The Kennedy Center Theater Season is sponsored by Altria.
SUN., SEP. 21 AT 7 | CONCERT HALL David and Alice Rubenstein are the Presenting Underwriters of the NSO. The NSO Music Director Chair is generously endowed by Roger and Vicki Sant.
Tickets on sale now! (202) 467-4600 kennedy-center.org
Tickets also available at the Box Office | Groups (202) 416-8400
18 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
weekendpass
Comedy Club & Restaurant 1140 Connecticut Ave. Washington, DC 20036
ALL SHOWS 18 & OVER ERIK GRIFFIN
GIRL CODE COMEDY TOUR
Special Event AUGUST 14-17 AUGUST 22 & 23
Make the fest decision
DAN CUMMINS
AUGUST 7-10
AUGUST 13
HBO, Comedy Central, Showtime & Letterman
Chris Coccia hosts new comedy school grads
Workaholics & The Arsenio Hall Show
Featuring Jessimae Peluso & Carly Aquilino
The Tonight Show & The Late Late Show
LAVELL CRAWFORD
GODFREY
TONY ROCK
BOBBY LEE
JERROD CARMICHAEL
Special Event SEPT 5-7
SEPT 11-14
SEPT 18-21
SEPT 26-28
OCT 3-5
Chelsea Lately & Last Comic Standing
Comedy Central, Louie, 30 Rock & Soul Plane
Appolo Live & Comedy Central
MADtv, Comedy Central & "The Tonight Show"
Neighbors w/ Seth Rogan, Comedy Central, HBO
Two of the summer’s most anticipated local festivals — Snallygaster and All Things Go Fall Classic — fall on Sept. 13. While it’s possible to experience a little bit of both, you’re better off picking one and sticking with it. Here’s how they compare. HOLLE Y SIMMONS (E XPRES S)
AUGUST 28-31
Buy tickets @ dcimprov.com or 202.296.7008
2033 M Street, NW | 202 530 3621 | www.MStreetDC.com
Your Neighborhood Destination Restaurant Winner OpenTable.com 2014 “Diners Choice” Award
Restaurant Week August 11 - 17 Your Table Is Waiting! Enjoy A Three Course Lunch or Dinner Lunch $20.14 - Dinner $35.14 Select Any Entrée, Any Appetizer, Any Dessert From Our Entire Menu & Glass of Wine From Any Featured By The Glass
How Perfect! Free Flowing Champagne Brunch Weekends Saturdays $24.95 Sundays $28.95 Three Courses — A-La-Carte Celebration Parties Welcome Wine & Dine Wednesdays: 50% All Wines By The Bottle
MIKE VORASSI
GRADUATION SHOWCASE
THEUPPER (FLICKR CREATIVE COMMONS)
JAKE JOHANNSEN
Snallygaster The Yards, First St. SE and N St. SE; Sept. 13, 1-6 p.m.; snallygasterdc.com.
Private Rooms for Events & Celebrations Call Or Visit Our Website Or OpenTable.com 2033 M Street, NW | 202 530 3621 WWW.MStreetDC.com
Union Market, 1309 Fifth St. NE; Sept. 13, noon-10 p.m.; allthingsgofallclassic.com.
MUSIC
Tunes are boss here: Future Islands, above, star, while Tove Lo, HAERTS and others will perform
Come thirsty: There will be more than 250 beers available from brewers around the world
BOOZE
Expect All Things Go- and Future Islands-themed drinks from local and national brands
Bites provided by Red Apron Butcher, GBD, Hill Country, Rappahannock River Oysters, TaKorean and Red Hook Lobster Pound
GRUB
Toki Underground, TaKorean (pulling double duty!), The Bespoke Kitchen supper club, Dolcezza and Crunkcakes will be in attendance
WHO TO BRING
Mature audiences only, please: You must be 18 to enter
WHAT’S IN A NAME?
All Things Go, a local indie music blog, is organizing the festival, its first ever. Be a part of history!
Leave Fido at home, but kiddies are welcome: There will be face-painting, temporary tattoo stations and more activities for tykes So-called for the mythical half-bird, half-dragon beast rumored to inhabit the D.C. area in the 1700s. This is the festival’s third year.
COST
$50 general admission; $60 at the door
Yes they canned
EXPANSIONS When it comes to building a pickle empire, Sarah Gordon and Sheila Fain found, all you need is love. The pair behind Gordy’s Pickle Jar made their first batch of sweet chips as favors for their best friend’s wedding in 2011. Last Friday, almost three years to the day later, they signed a lease for a production facility in Petworth to accommodate their business’ rapid growth.
JUSTIN T. GELLERSON
21
All Things Go Fall Classic
The Sacramento, Calif.-based punk band !!! (Chk Chk Chk) is headlining, and DJs will be spinning
$30 for entry at 1 p.m. and $25 in food/beer credit; $50 for 11:30 a.m. entry and $25 credit
All-Night Happy Hour Menu Premium Drinks & Small Plates—Priced $5 - $12
EVENT
“We took over the space after being picked up by Fresh Markets and had an immediate need to up our production,” Gordon says of a recent partnership with the nationwide grocer. T h e 1 , 2 0 0 - s q u a r e - fo o t
production facility is a step up from the increasingly cramped kitchen they previously shared at Montserrat House. Though the two have no plans to sell jars of pickles at the distribution center, Gordon and Fain do plan to teach pickling classes and hope to partner with local chefs to host supper clubs once the space opens, possibly in October. “Our kitchen is fully outfitted for more than just pickling,” Gordon says. “To have our own space to work and to do a lot of things we’ve been wanting to do in terms of collaboration is so exciting.” HOLLEY SIMMONS (EXPRESS)
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 19
weekendpass Artist Carolyn Hampton helped turn a classic painting into a set.
1811 14TH ST NW www.blackcatdc.com
f il m r i f fs
JASON HORNICK PHOTOS (FOR EXPRESS)
Cool as ice
Brush with greatness
MANY MANY MANY SNAKES:
Much of Indiana Jones’ appeal is that he’s a regular guy — well, one who’s awesome with a whip. He even gets scared, like in 1981’s “Raiders of the Lost Ark” when he gets plunged into a pit with so many snakes we can’t even think about it anymore because snakes.
The ‘Sunday in the Park’ scene team at Signature paints a (disposable) masterpiece of its own STAGE charge artist, took the scenic deGeorges Seurat was in no rush signer’s renderings and brought with “A Sunday on La Grande them to life. Cheating was necesJatte,” his most famous painting sary: While Seurat used a tech(it’s the one Cameron stares at nique called pointillism, which in “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off”). involves about a zillion tiny dots It took him five years from start that, when viewed at a distance, to finish, and it is now blend together to form the permanently enshrined image, “in the theater we in the Art Institute of Through ain’t got time for that,” 09.21 Chicago. Carolyn HampHampton says. Signature ton’s life-size version took The “Sunday” scene Theatre a couple of weeks and 4200 Campbell team “Frankensteined” will get trashed once Sig- Ave., Arlington paint rollers, she says, by $40-$95 nature Theatre’s run of gouging them with knives “Sunday in the Park With to create a textured surface. “When you roll the George,” Stephen Sondheim’s musical inspired by the paint, it will read like pointillism painting, finishes next month. to the audience,” Hampton says. The set of “Sunday” — which “But for things that are more tells a heavily fictionalized story visible or closer to the audience, of Seurat’s life as he’s working we are going in and layering dots on his masterpiece — is designed and dots for days. It’s so insane.” to mirror the painting. They took other liberties with “We are cheating a little bit,” the painting. Seurat used oil, but says Hampton, who, as the show’s that “would take forever to dry,”
The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles come ninja turtleing back onto the big screen Friday. Leonardo, Donatello, Michelangelo and Raphael are cool, thanks to the fact that they are reptiles and literally cold-blooded. Just like these slippery stars.
Hampton used a doctored paint roller to create a pointillistic effect.
Hampton says. “We use a scenic paint [that’s] casein-based. It smells really bad but has these really vibrant colors.” Hampton, a classically trained artist, says working on “Sunday” has been a treat. “Sometimes we have jobs that are very by-thebook, like ‘here, paint this wood grain,’ ” she says. “This is more creative and fun.” Alas, her work for “Sunday” isn’t meant to last. “One of the beautiful things about the theater is it’s a temporary art form,” she says. “Afterwards we tear it down with no mercy and throw it in the dumpster and move on to the next show. There’s always another one coming.” KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)
RANGO: A Western that just happens to be animated and just happens to star a chameleon, 2011’s “Rango” is a study in genre, allusion and Johnny Depp’s pretty voice. DUCKY ET AL: Scientists now
think dinosaurs may have been neither warm- nor cold-blooded, but somewhere in the middle. But anyone who was a kid in 1988 and saw “The Land Before Time” can certainly say that the plucky group of orphaned dinosaurs at the center of the film were very cool. THE ANACONDA: Making snakes more terrifying is easy — just make them bigger and faster and capable of eating Jon Voight, like in 1997’s “Anaconda.” KAA: The sibilant villain from 1967’s “The Jungle Book” had one neat power we should pray snakes never actually figure out: He could hypnotize people before killing them. Actually, that would have been better for Jon Voight.
ILM/PARAMOUNT PICTURES
AUGUST SHOWS FRI 8
THE 9 $10
FRI 8
TEN FORWARD
FRI 8
8X8
SONGWRITER SERIES HAPPY HOUR & SPECIALS 1 EPISODE. STAR TREK: TNG
8 PERFORMERS 8 MINUTES EACH
$10
SAT 9
MIXTAPE $10
SAT 9
CYLON HAPPY HOUR
SAT 9
MOON/BOUNCE DANCING AFFAIR
1 BSG EP & DRINK SPECIALS
$7
MON 11
MUGGLE MONDAYS VI
WED 13
AV ARCHIVES NIGHT
THU 14
BEVERLY
FRI 15
DELOREAN
FRI 15
SHOW ME * DC
SAT 16
$FREE
EXPERT ALTERATIONS $10 $15
BURLESQUE (21+) $12/$15
THROWING SHADE $20
ERIN GIBSON & BRYAN SAFI
UPCOMING SHOWS 8/17-SKA REVIVAL TOUR 8/20-X 8/21-SHABAZZ PALACES
8/22-SIERRA
LEONE’S REFUGEE ALL-STARS/HARPER SIMON
8/23-BISHOP ALLEN 8/28-THE POLYPHONIC SPREE 9/4-BUZZCOCKS 9/9-MINERAL 9/11-PINBACK 9/14-MAN...OR ASTRO-MAN? 9/19-YACHT 9/20-THE GROWLERS
9/21-THE DANDY WARHOLS WE ARE 3 BLOCKS FROM THE U STREET / CARDOZO METRO STATION TICKETS: www.TICKETFLY.com 1-877-987-6487
20 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
weekendpass
You can make a difference in the life of a foster youth! Volunteer as a Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) and give abused and neglected youth in the DC foster care system a voice in court. Tobecome a CASA, contact Ashley: (202) 887-0007 volunteer@casadc.org www.casadc.org Please inquire about our summer and fall training sessions.
Art of darkness
LIVE
UPCOMING PERFORMANCES
CARBON
Zentan, 1155 14th St. NW; 202-379-4366, zentanrestaurant.com.
Jon Harris, the bar manager at Zentan, was developing a new cocktail with black sesame syrup when he realized something was off. “It ended up this weird gray color, so I added activated charcoal to make it black,” Harris says. In addition to giving cocktails a mysterious look, this flavorless supplement makes for a surprise. “It doesn’t say on the menu that the cocktails are black, so most people are bewildered when it comes.” Try one of the two currently available. HOLLE Y SIMMONS (E XPRES S)
LEAF W/ CHRISTIAN LOPEZ
AUG 9
SATURDAY
SOLD OUT
SOJA
TUESDAY
AUG 12
THUR, AUG 14
DONAVON FRANKENREITER W/ TOM CURREN
STEPHANIE BREIJO PHOTOS
Rated Top Ten Brunches By OpenTable.com Subscribers
SAT, AUG 16
FLOW TRIBE MON, AUG 18
JOHNNYSWIM
BEACON BAR & GRILL
TUES, AUG 19
MORELAND & ARBUCKLE
Black Eye
W/ SCOTT KURT & MEMPHIS 59 SAT, AUG 23
RED WANTING BLUE / THE ALTERNATE ROUTES WED, AUG 27
SWEAR & SHAKE
W/ PAUL PFAU
FRI, AUG 29
Art Soiree Presents:
JACKOPIERCE
Restaurant Week
Thursday: Sunset Series Performances Friday: Stardust Music & Videos Saturday: Live Art RoofTop Fusion
Our Way!
Wednesday Nights
“Mucho Bueno”
Guest DJ’s Setting 202.872.1126 bbgwdc.com Just the Right Mood 17 th &to Rhode Island Ave, NW 6PM 9PM 202-872-1126 BBGWDC.com 17th & Rhode Island Ave. NW
W/ EMILY HEARN
TUES, SEPT 2
August 11-17
YOU ME & APOLLO
W/ ELIZABETH & THE CATAPULT
Lunch $20.14 - Dinner $35.14 Three Courses: Full Run of Our Entire Menu With Your Choice Of A Glass of Wine with Your Lunch or Dinner!
FRUITION
WED, SEPT 10
AN EVENING WITH TERRY
di sh of the week
BOZZIO
SAT. SEPT 13
SHEMEKIA COPELAND
Saturday Champagne Brunch $28.95 “Tastes From South of the Border”
BROWNOUT PRESENTS:
BROWN SABBATH WED, SEPT 17
GEORGE PORTER, JR. & RUNNIN’ PARDNERS FREE
XX0165 2x1.5
THEHAMILTONDC.COM
HOLLEY SIMMONS (EXPRESS)
EVERY FRI & SAT
WeekendPass
Seared Maine Diver Scallop Food Wine & Co., 7272 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda; 301-652-8008, foodwineandco.com.
Chef Michael Harr uses corn in three ways for his scallop appetizer special ($13): charred, blended into a vinaigrette and covered in mold. Wait, what? It’s not as bad as it sounds. The edible fungus (called huitlacoche) is a Mexican delicacy and tastes earthy and woody. HOLLEY SIMMONS (EXPRESS)
SUN, SEPT 14
Sunday Champagne Flowing Brunch Buffet $35.95 “No Other Brunch Stacks Up To Ours”
Every Thursday in Express
This Manhattan with a Hong Kong twist is made with Wild Turkey rye whiskey, sake aged in cedar barrels, activated charcoal and house-made “opium den” bitters, which includes a zesty mix of Chinese five spice, Szechuan peppers, fennel seed, clove, Indonesian long peppers, poppy seeds and black tea. “It’s an homage to Hong Kong’s seedy underbelly in the 1900s, when people were doing opium,” Harris says. “It’s really spicy and powerful.”
TUES, SEPT 9
LATE-NIGHT MUSIC IN THE LOFT
It’s your
Back Alley $13
$13
You wouldn’t know it to look at it, but this cocktail (made with gin, sake, lemon juice, black sesame syrup, strawberry essence and a pinch of activated charcoal) is refreshingly light. “The black is a contrast to what’s in the glass,” Harris says. “It’s a very Asian-style drink: You have your sweet and sour and your bitter.” It’s garnished with purple orchids, which alludes to the fact that the drink is on the more delicate side.
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 21
weekendpass
Need some Direction? Take our quiz to see. Mon. 7 p.m.
Nationals Park 1500 S. Capitol St. SE $59.50-$95.50
If you hear unearthly keening coming from Nationals Park on Monday, don’t be alarmed. That’s just the sound of a few thousand girls melting down at the sight of the British boy band One Direction. And though the five guys in One Direction are reportedly on their way to earning $1 billion from touring this year, most people outside their target market could pass them on the street without noticing. Of course, your preteen daughter would never forgive you if that happened. Here’s a quiz to help get you get up to speed. SADIE DINGELDER (EXPRESS)
W W W. T H E H O W A R D T H E AT R E . C O M 620 T ST. NW WASHINGTON DC
2 0 2 - 8 0 3 - 2 8 9 9
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY AUGUST 6TH & 7TH
BERES HAMMOND DJ INFERNO
FRIDAY AUGUST 8TH
KENNY “BABYFACE” EDMONDS FRIDAY AUGUST 8TH-LATE SHOW
THE PRINCE & MICHAEL JACKSON EXPERIENCE
SATURDAY AUGUST 9TH
PAN JAZZ LEGEND: KEN “PROFESSOR” PHILMORE
SATURDAY AUGUST 9TH-LATE SHOW
PROJECTPAT& THE BACKYARD BAND
1 Which of these is NOT a member of One Direction?
THURSDAY AUGUST 14TH MAJIC 102.3 PRESENTS
RnB REVUE
WITH JEFF REDD, GLENN JONES, FORCE MD’S & CHRISTOPHER WILLIANS
A. 2 Which of these One Direction-related statements is false? A. Five trained pygmy goats named after the members of One Direction entertain visitors at a farm outside of London with their acrobatics. B. Hashtag #dieloki briefly trended when jealous fans Tweeted death threats to Liam Payne’s dog. C. Payne also has two pet turtles, which he had to separate after one tried to eat the other alive. D. German customs’ agents confiscated Harry Style’s pet capuchin monkey in Munich and then fined him $8,000 to cover the animal’s care.
B
C.
D.
3 Which one of the below statements was not tweeted by a One Direction member? A. “I’ve seen the slums right in front of me! This is no joke! They really need your help! Poverty is real!” — @NiallOfficial B. “@williebosshog huge love to
you/your family huge respect for your business prosperities and the family values you still all behold. big fan” — @Real_Liam_Payne (tweeting his support to the “Duck Dynasty” patriarch) C. “Watching these dictated countries implode is just crushing.” — @Louis_Tomlinson D. “#FreePalestine” — @zaynmalik
E.
F.
4 Which of the below lyrics is not taken from a One Direction song? A. “Your love is like a river, peaceful and deep/ Your soul is like a secret, that I could never keep/ When I look into your eyes, I know that it’s true/ God must have spent a little more time on you” B. “Oh, I just wanna show you off to all of my friends/ Making them drool down their chinny-chin-chins” C. “Baby you light up my world like nobody else/ The way that you flip your hair gets me overwhelmed” D. “You can’t go to bed without a cup of tea/ And maybe that’s the reason that you talk in your sleep”
1. B. That’s actually Keaton Stromberg, of American boy band Emblem3. 2. D. That was actually Justin Bieber. 3. C. That one was tweeted by Ashton Kutcher. 4. A. That one is by *NSYNC. MARK THIESSEN (NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC)
in dies a r t i es
+
‘DeepSea Challenge 3D’ Opens Friday in area cinemas
This documentary chronicles director James Cameron’s, left, quest to become the first person to complete a solo dive to the Mariana Trench — almost 7 miles below the ocean surface. The film establishes Cameron as an explorer, and the rides the audience gets to take with him are better than “Titanic.” The use of 3-D in the confined space of his sub is so immersive that anyone with more than mild claustrophobia might have difficulty breathing, and there are moments so tension-filled you actually forget that you know Cameron doesn’t die. KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)
FRIDAY AUGUST 15TH
ERIC ROBERSON FRIDAY AUGUST 15TH- LATESHOW
TROUBLE FUNK JUNKYARD BAND SATURDAY AUGUST 16TH
ERIC ROBERSON SUNDAY AUGUST 17TH A DRAG SALUTE TO THE DIVAS 2ND ANNIVERSARY SHOW WEDNESDAY AUGUST 20TH
MAXI PRIEST THURSDAY AUGUST 21TH JAZZ AT THE HOWARD:
DAVE WECKL BAND 8/22 THE CHUCK BROWN BAND 8/23, 24 & 25 SAVION GLOVER 8/26 HTR & AARP PRESENTS: THIRD WORLD 9/5 MARY MARY -7:30PM, 10PM 9/6 &7 COMEDY AT THE HOWARD: CHARLIE MURPHY - 7PM, 9:30PM 9/10 BIG SAM'S FUNKY NATION 9/11 JAZZ AT THE HOWARD: BILLY COBHAM, SPECTRUM 40 9/11 LATE-BASS NATION DC FEAT. PENDULUM 9/12 HIP HOP LIVS PRESENTS: EPMD 9/13 SYLVAN ESSO / DOE PAORA 9/14 JAZZ AT THE HOWARD: YOUN SUN NAH & ULF WAKENIUS DUO 9/16 PUYA 9/17 RUTHIE FOSTER 9/19 RARE ESSENCE 9/20 AVANT 9/21 HARD WORKING AMERICANS 9/26 TWEET 9/27 JENNIFER HOLLIDAY : THE ORIGINAL DREAMGIRL 9/27 LATE- WPGC 95.5 PRESENTS: DJ PREMIER VS. PETE ROCK (P VS. P THE ULTIMATE DJ BATTLE) 9/28 RON POPE 10/1 DRU HILL (SISQ, NOKIO, JAZZ & TAO) 10/4 POINT BREAK LIVE 10/7 JAZZ AT THE HOWARD: JUSTIN NOZUKA
THE WORLD FAMOUS HARLEM GOSPEL CHOIR
EVERY SUNDAY !
ALL YOU CAN EAT SOUTHERN BUFFET PURCHASE TICKETS AT WWW.TICKETMASTER.COM
or Call 800-745-3000
22 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
EVERY DAY AT 6 P.M. NO TICKETS REQUIRED *Unless noted otherwise
AUGUST 7–20 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 7 THU ★ Charanjit Singh
15 FRI ★ Quraishi
8 FRI ★ César Orozco & Kamarata
16 SAT ★ Charles Covington,
The Indian multi-instrumentalist, composer, and arranger pairs raga with a disco beat, offering several variations on Indian classical music.
The group fuses jazz with music from Cuba and Venezuela.
9 SAT ★ Berklee College
of Music presents The Giorgi Mikadze Quartet
The Betty Carter’s Jazz Ahead piano alum from Tblisi, Georgia leads a group of fellow Berklee graduates in a performance that would make Dr. Billy Taylor proud.
10 SUN ★
Family Night: Philadelphia Jazz Orchestra
The orchestra presents a concert by some of the best high school and college jazz musicians in the Greater Philadelphia and New Jersey regions.
The world-class Afghan American rubab player plays original compositions dedicated to his native country’s artistic tradition.
Steve Abshire, & Ken Kimery
The trio offers a performance of jazz standards.
IN THE TERRACE THEATER
17 SUN ★ Comedy at the Kennedy Center: Kyle Dunnigan
The writer/performer for Comedy Central’s Inside Amy Schumer, YouTube entertainer, and co-host of the weekly podcast Professor Blastoff takes the stage with D.C. comic and writer Jenn Tisdale. This program contains mature themes and strong language.
18 MON ★ Ezekiel’s Wheels
11 MON ★ Cardinal Sons
The internationally recognized klezmer ensemble blends the intimacy of chamber music with the rowdiness of a dance band.
The New Orleans band of brothers balances indie rock with folk and pop.
19 TUE ★ Carlos Núñez
Young Artist Piano Competition
The Galician multi-instrumentalist and world-famous gaita (bagpipe) player plays expressive Celtic traditional music.
The competition’s 2014 winner offers a recital.
20 WED ★ The Quebe
13 WED ★ Synetic Theater’s
The trio brings three-part harmony and Texas-style fiddling to a refreshing blend of swing, vintage country, bluegrass, and jazz.
12 TUE ★ International
Summer Camp
The campers perform an original adaptation of The Wizard of Oz using mime, pantomime, acrobatics, song, and dance.
14 THU ★ Theatre Lab
School of Dramatic Arts Summer Teen Program
Participants perform scenes from Evita and West Side Story.
DAILY FOOD AND DRINK SPECIALS. 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.
THU 7 ★ CHARANJIT SINGH
Sisters Band
FRI 8 ★ CÉSAR OROZCO
SUN 17 ★ KYLE DUNNIGAN
ALL PERFORMERS AND PROGRAMS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE.
★★★★★★★★★ SCAN TO VIEW THE SCHEDULE
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.
Look up, down and all around Alexandra Horowitz explains how to better experience the world BOOKS One spring morning in 2012, Alexandra Horowitz pushed open the heavy door of her Manhattan apartment building and noticed something she’d never seen before: A 300 million-year-old piece of ocean floor, preserved in her building’s limestone facade. “I saw seashells and crinoids Alexandra Horowitz with her dog Finn. and all these distinctive animal fossils that I had walked past Look up a thousand times and missed,” Pedestrians mostly look ahead she says. and down. If you look up, you Horowitz, like most of us, had might see insects swarming been so narrowly focused on a street light, flocks of birds where she was heading, she’d in perfect formation or lovely missed the wonders right flourishes on familiar around her. That is, until buildings. “The most inshe took a walk with a geteresting architectural ologist, one of 11 treks that details aren’t on the first 7 p.m. the Barnard College profloor, they’re above you,” Politics and Prose fessor chronicled in her Horowitz says. 5015 new book, “On Looking.” Connecticut Ave. NW “Take a walk around Take a whiff any block, and there are When we hold our breath FREE a thousand different ways to avoid the city’s gross you can see it,” she says. smells, we miss the glo“The whole block is repainted if rious ones. “It’s not all urine you’re coming at it with a differ- out there,” Horowitz says. “You ent perceptual strategy.” might smell a bakery or a cofHorowitz’s experts include a fee shop or just even notice that sound designer, a doctor, an art- when you get in an elevator you ist and a dog. If you don’t have can smell the person who was in any such creatures handy, here the elevator before you.” are some other strategies she recommends for seeing your Seek out cracks and crevices world with fresh eyes. A menagerie of animals live in the margins of the city. Look in the tiny space between two row Slow down Instead of being caught up in the houses or in the “U” of a Five rush of pedestrians on a busy Guys sign, and you might find a street, hang to the side and no- clutch of baby birds. tice the invisible rules in play. Effortlessly channeling around Explore public spaces obstacles, “crowds of people move Poke your head into office lobat lot like schooling fish,” she says. bies, churches and community Unlike fish, we don’t fall in line centers, just like you would do directly behind other people — we if you were a tourist. “You can hover a little to the left or right so be a visitor to your own city,” we can peer over their shoulders. she says. SADIE DINGFELDER (EXPRESS)
Thu.
Part of the Homegrown: The Music of America concert series.
★★★★★★★★★
weekendpass
VEGAR ABELNES
★★★ FREE PERFORMANCES 365 DAYS A YEAR ★★★
MON 18 ★ EZEKIEL’S WHEELS
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.
The Kennedy Center welcomes persons with disabilities.
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 23
I.M.P. PRESENTS Pimlico Race Course • Baltimore, MD THIS WEEKEND!
STEEZ PROMO & GLOW DC PRESENT
MoonriseFestival feat. Kaskade•Bassnectar & more! .......................AUGUST 9 & 10 For more info and a full list of acts, visit moonrisefestival.com
THIS WEEK’S SHOWS
Presidents of the United States of America w/ In The Whale......................... F 8 The Deadmen & Vandaveer w/ Tomás Pagán Motta .................................................... Sa 9
Merriweather Post Pavilion • Columbia, MD
THIS THURSDAY!
David Gray.................................................................................................... AUGUST 7 ZZ TOP & J EFF B ECK w/ Gary Clark Jr. w/ Tyler Bryant ........................ SEPTEMBER 3 I.M.P. & AEG LIVE PRESENT
AUGUST
Agnes Obel w/ Gem Club This is a seated show. ....................................................................... W 13 Feed Me’s Psychedelic Journey With Teeth w/ Delta Heavy.............................. F 15 The Strypes w/ The Skins ............................................................................................................ Tu 19 Hot In Herre: 2000’s Dance Party with DJs Will Eastman and Brian Billion......................................................................... F 22 Big Star’s Third: An Orchestrated Live Performance of the Legendary Album, featuring Jody Stephens, Mike Mills (R.E.M.), Mitch Easter (Let’s Active), Chris Stamey (the dB’s), Gary Louris (the Jayhawks), Pat Sansone (Wilco), Skylar Gudasz and more! .................................................................................... Sa 23
George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic w/ Yo Mama’s Big Fat Booty Band .................................................................................................... Su 24
MJ Day 2014 - 5th Annual Michael Jackson Dance Party ................................... F 29 BRINDLEY BROTHERS PRESENT
Ed Sheeran w/ Rudimental ................................................................SEPTEMBER 6
HONDA CIVIC TOUR WITH
GROUPLOVE & Portugal. The Man w/ Typhoon ...............................SEPTEMBER 12 I.M.P. & ALL GOOD PRESENT ROUTE 29 REVUE FEATURING
Trampled by Turtles • Trombone Shorty • Iron and Wine • The Devil Makes Three • Guster • Hurray for the Riff Raff ..... SEPTEMBER 13
JACK WHITE .............................................................................................. SEPTEMBER 14 SFX-LIC & GLOW DC PRESENT
Life in Color - World’s Largest Paint Party featuring W&W
• Nervo • Borgore and more! .......................... SEPTEMBER 20
For a full lineup and more info, visit lifeincolor.com - 16+ to enter.
WPOC SATURDAY IN THE COUNTRY FEATURING
Jake Owen • Eli Young Band • Thompson Square • Love and Theft • The Cadillac 3 .......................................................OCTOBER 4
M.H. and His Orchestra • The Walking Sticks • Black Masala ......... Sa 30 SEPTEMBER Added! First Night Sold Out! Second Night
• merriweathermusic.com • 930.com
Echostage • Washington D.C.
JUST ANNOUNCED!
Bleachers w/ Misterwives ............................................................................................................... Tu 2 Heffron Drive ................................................................................................................................... Th 4
LITTLE DRAGON
U STREET MUSIC HALL PRESENTS
Jamie xx ............................................................................................................................................... F 5 Bob Mould w/ Cymbals Eat Guitars ............................................................................................... Sa 6 Josh Abbott Band ......................................................................................................................... F 12 Parachute w/ Matt Wertz............................................................................................................... Sa 13 TWLOHA PRESENTS THE HOPE REVOLUTION TOUR FEATURING
w/ Famous Last Words & Senick..................................................................................................... Su 14 Ty Segall w/ Wand ............................................................................................................................ M 15 OK Go .................................................................................................................................................... Tu 16 The Drums w/ Beverly Early Show! 6pm Doors ......................................................................... W 17 Metronomy w/ Dawn Golden Late Show! 10pm Doors ............................................................. W 17 Clean Bandit w/ Lizzo ................................................................................................................... Th 18 THE VIOLET FLAME TOUR
ERASURE w/ Nina .......................................................................................................................... Sa 20 Shovels and Rope w/ John Fullbright .................................................................................... Su 21 MØ w/ HOLYCHILD ................................................................................................................................ M 22 The best thing you could possibly put in your mouth Cupcakes by BUZZ... your neighborhood bakery in Alexandria, VA. | www.buzzbakery.com
MANY MORE SHOWS ON SALE!
On Sale Friday, August 8 at 10am
Die Antwoord ..................................................................SEPTEMBER 10 STEEZ PROMO & I.M.P. PRESENT: BEATS ANTIQUE CREATURE CARNIVAL TOUR FEATURING
BEATS ANTIQUE w/ Shpongle (Simon Posford DJ Set) • Emancipator • Lafa Taylor ................ OCTOBER 22
Hawthorne Heights & The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus
9:30 CUPCAKES
w/ Shy Girls....................................................................OCTOBER 15
930.com
w/ The M Machine & Chrome Sparks .......................NOVEMBER 2
THE 1975............................................................................................ DECEMBER 2 2135 Queens Chapel Rd. NE D.C. • echostage.com • Ticketmaster
Lincoln Theatre • Washington, D.C. Night Added! First Two Nights Sold Out! Third
SPOON JUST ANNOUNCED!
w/ Hamilton Leithauser ......................................................... SEPTEMBER 4 On Sale Friday, August 8 at 10am
BRIGHTESTYOUNGTHINGS.COM PRESENTS THE BENTZEN BALL COMEDY FESTIVAL OPENING NIGHT FEAT.
Tig Notaro • Jeff Garlin • Kyle Kinane • Ben Kronberg and more! ........................................................................... OCTOBER 1 On Sale Now
Paolo Nutini........................................................................................... SEPTEMBER 17 9:30 CLUB PRESENTS AT U STREET MUSIC HALL The best thing you could possibly put in your mouth
9:30 CUPCAKES
BRYAN FERRY ....................................................................................... SEPTEMBER 29 U STREET MUSIC HALL PRESENTS
Cupcakes by BUZZ... your neighborhood bakery in Alexandria, VA. | www.buzzonslaters.com
w/ Thundercat.............................................................OCTOBER 13
BOMBAY KNOX PRESENTS
Yung Gleesh MANY MORE SHOWS ON SALE!
930.com
w/ Grande Marshall • Mista Selecta • Sir EU • Uno Hype • Mike of Doom...................... F 8 Sir Sly & Wolf Gang............................................................................................... M SEP 8 Rubblebucket w/ Body Language ................................................................................ F 19 How to Dress Well .....................................................................................................Sa 20
• Buy advance tickets at the 9:30 Club box office
IN COLLABORATION:
Milk Carton Kids & Sarah Jarosz
featuring Alex Hargreaves, Paul Kowert, and Nathaniel Smith ...................OCTOBER 24
SBTRKT ..............................................................................................................OCTOBER 25 The Best of Jethro Tull performed by Ian Anderson..............................NOVEMBER 6
James Vincent McMorrow .......................................................................NOVEMBER 8 • thelincolndc.com •
U Street (Green/Yellow) stop across the street!
G.M.U. Patriot Center • Fairfax, VA
BASTILLE........................................................................................................... OCTOBER 11 Ticketmaster
24 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
ENTS MS LIVE PRES CL ASSIC ALBU
— P IN K F LOY D DA R K S ID E N O F TH E M OO AUGUST 8
AW G AV IN D E G R TH A N SON M AT T N AAH ON
M ANDREW MC RNESS DE IL W E IN TH
AUGUST 10
BONEY JAMES ERIC BENÉT AUGUST 14
L AM ENCA N O C H E F IO
RR SOLEDAD BA menco fla te Passiona nce da d an ic us m
ROBYN + RÖYKSOPP ZHALA
AUGUST 21
AUGUST 15
ABBA—THE CONCERT AUGUST 16
AUGUST 13
AUGUST 12
Do It Again Tour 2014
YANNI
EK N IC K E L C R E R J O S H R IT T E
LYLE LOVETT
& HIS LARGE BAND AUGUST 22
SUMMER HAS NEVER SOUNDED BETTER
GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY!
SING-A-LONG
SOUND OF MUSIC Full Film & Lyrics!
AUGUST 23
JOSH GROBAN
BAND OF HORSES
AUGUST 19 & 20
PACIFIC NORTHWEST BALLET OREGON BALLET THEATRE
With Wolf Trap Orchestra
Live Acoustic Set
AUGUST 27
PLUS THE BAND PERRY 8/28 • PRINCE ROYCE 8/29 • THE FRESH BEAT BAND 8/30 GEORGE BENSON 8/31 • GIPSY KINGS 9/4 • CIRQUE DREAMS 9/5–6 • COLBIE CAILLAT 9/7 PREMIER SPONSOR 2014 SUMMER SEASON
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 25
weekendpass
Last dose of summer
IS THE CALENDAR MOVING FASTER THAN YOU CAN HANDLE? Did you wake up last week and cry out in agony at the realization that it was already
August? Are you spending too much time inside? Then you might have the summertime sadness! There’s no way to stop summer from slipping away, but there are still four more August weekends to keep the dream of sunshine and good times alive. If you’re suffering from any of the following (totally real) symptoms, you could consult a doctor, or you could follow our (totally unlicensed) diagnoses. RUDI GREENBERG (EXPRESS)
Feeling anxious?
Feeling unfulfilled?
Symptom: You wake up in the middle of the night and shout “SUUUUUUMMMERRRR!” like you’re Marlon Brando in “A Streetcar Named Desire.”
Symptom: You’re hungry, but nothing fills your appetite.
Diagnosis: Bummersummeritis Cure: Head to the beach.
Drive up the East Coast to one of Delmarva’s many beaches. En route, stop at a brewery — like Evolution Craft Brewing Company (201 E. Vine St., Salisbury, Md.) — for a drink, then hit the beach and dip your toes. Once it gets dark, head to a restaurant — we’re fans of Dogfish Head’s Rehoboth Beach brewpub (320 Rehoboth Ave., Rehoboth Beach, Del.) — and try to forget that you’ve wasted spent the past two months at something called “work.”
Feeling caged in? Symptom: The only time you get to enjoy the weather is during your trips to and from work. Diagnosis: Stuckinthecityaphyxiation Cure: Go outside — for fun!
Nothing will make you forget about work faster than a short trip to the great outdoors. The scenic and peaceful Great Falls Park (9200 Old Dominion Drive, McLean, Va., or 11710 MacArthur Blvd., Potomac, Md.) is easily accessible from both Maryland and Virginia and offers hiking trails for beginners and veterans. Ride a bike around the Tidal Basin (rent one from Capital Bikeshare if you don’t own one).
Feeling dehydrated? Symptom: Your skin is dry and your Vitamin D count is low. Diagnosis: Sunemia
THINKSTOCK IMAGES (EXPRESS ILLUSTRATIONS)
Cure: Hit the pool or head to Splash Yards.
The easy cure: Head to your local pool for some fun in the sun. For a list of D.C. pools, visit dpr.dc.gov/page/ aquatic-facilities.
Diagnosis: Restless stomach syndrome Cure: Dine out, al fresco.
Here are three picks for outdoor eating (and drinking): Vinoteca (1940 11th St. NW): This wine bar has a peaceful patio out front, a sophisticated menu meant for sharing and an extensive wine list. The draw for those in need of outdoor eating is the plaza in the back, with its outdoor bar, picnic-style seating and a bocce ball court. Republic (6939 Laurel Ave., Takoma Park, Md.): The restaurant has a patio just big enough to feature live music. Bonus: Locals who remember when Video Americain occupied Republic’s space will appreciate the video store’s restored neon sign, which helps light the intimate outdoor area. Garden District (1801 14th St. NW): The popular beer garden formerly known as Standard gets a bit less crowded in August, leaving room for you to sip on liter mugs of beer while eating smoked meats. Pro tip: Grab a doughnut — baked in a doughnut robot — for dessert.
Feeling zombified? Symptom: You haven’t left your home in a month because you got caught up binge-watching “Ghost Whisperer.” Diagnosis: Screendinitis Cure: Go see a movie outdoors
Here are our suggestions for your open-air movie viewing pleasure: Catch a classic — “Casablanca” — by the water in Reston, Va. (Lake Anne Plaza, 1609 Washington Plaza, Reston, Va.; Sunday, sundown, free). Belt your heart out with the “Frozen” sing-along in Fairfax while enjoying $3 Dolcezza push pops in the park. (Strawberry Park, 2910 District Ave., Fairfax; Aug. 22, 7 p.m., free.)
Or, you could nip this in the bud Saturday by heading to Splash Yards at Yards Park (355 Water St. SE, Sat., 2-6 p.m., free). The adults-only (21 and up) pool party turns Yards Park into an outdoor water festival complete with two pools, a giant waterslide and a water battle. Frozen drinks and Bluejacket beer will be for sale, and all-’90s cover band White Ford Bronco will soundtrack the day.
Consider this a slow binge: Each Sunday from now till Aug. 31, you can watch a different James Bond film (all with Sean Connery as 007) at National Harbor’s plaza. First up is “Goldfinger,” followed by “From Russia With Love,” “Dr. No” and “You Only Live Twice.” (165 Waterfront St., National Harbor, Md.; Sundays, 6 p.m., free.)
26 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
top stops
The best t of the nex s y a d 7
Thu.
FRIDAY
Jerry Garcia Symphonic Celebration
MUSIC
Tiny Ruins Hear the delicate voice of New Zealand-based singer-songwriter Tiny Ruins. DC9, 1940 Ninth St.
Pier Six Pavilion, 731 Eastern Ave., Baltimore; Fri. 8 p.m., $35-$85.
NW, Thu. 9 p.m., $12.
Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia, right, would have turned 72 last week. To celebrate, Gov’t Mule’s Warren Haynes leads the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra through a selection of the late singer’s tunes for the Jerry Garcia Symphonic Celebration, an orchestral reimagining of the Dead’s eclectic canon. Last summer, the inaugural edition of the tour united Deadheads and classical music buffs alike at Wolf Trap. Despite the buttoned-up orchestral flair, there was still plenty of exploratory jamming.
ART & DRINKS
Phillips After 5 Collect an “American Bounty” at the latest Phillips After 5 event, which includes a digital foodbased scavenger hunt, bluegrass and a bourbon tasting. Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW; Thu. 5 p.m., $12. MUSIC
Beres Hammond Underrated Jamaican reggae singer Beres Hammond brings songs from his 2012 album “One Love, One Life” to D.C. Howard
Backyard Barbecue. National Building Museum, 401 F St. NW; Fri., 5:30 p.m., free.
Theatre, 620 T St. NW; Thu. 8 p.m., $45.
COMEDY
Fri.
Moshe Kasher Up-and-coming Los Angeles comic Moshe Kasher cracks up Arlington audiences for two nights, starting Friday. Arlington Cinema &
STAGE
Mika Singh
Drafthouse, 2903 Columbia Pike, Arlington; Fri. & Sat., 10 p.m., $20.
Indian pop star Mika Singh teams up with porn star-turned Bollywood actress Sunny Leone for what we think is a concert.
Sat.
Patriot Center, 4500 Patriot Circle, Fairfax; Fri., 8 p.m. $39-$259.
‘Between Fact and Fiction’ D.C.-based artist Adam Hager wants you to play with his work in “Between Fact and Fiction,” an interactive sculpture exhibit where you can do things like operate music boxes built into a spinal cord. Flashpoint Gallery, 916 G St NW; Fri. through Sept. 6, Wednesdays through Saturdays, noon-6 p.m., free. ROCK
Quincy Mumford Fun-loving rocker Quincy Mumford (who, despite his surname, is not in Mumford & Sons) brings his band the Reason Why to Hill Country’s
BEATS
GETTY IMAGES
ART
Martyn
ONGOING
Cirque du Soleil’s ‘Amaluna’ The Plateau at Downtown National Harbor, 300 Waterfront St., National Harbor; through Sept. 21, various times and prices.
Cirque du Soleil’s latest spectacle, “Amaluna,” is set on a mysterious island that’s guided by the cycles of the moon. When the island’s queen, Prospera, causes a storm, a group of young men crash-land, setting the wheels in motion for a love story between the queen’s daughter and one of the men. But you’re not going to a Cirque du Soleil show for a love story — you want elaborate acrobatics, crazy costumes and trippy visuals that make you go “whoa.” Don’t worry, that’s all included in the price of admission.
Dutch DJ Martyn calls D.C. home, so we’ll call this a homecoming. U Street Music Hall, 1115 U St. NW; Sat., 10 p.m., $10 (free before midnight for ages 21 and up). BEER
3 Stars Brewing D.C.’s own 3 Stars Brewing is turning 2, and it’s celebrating with a party at Meridian Pint featuring 12 drafts (such as Southern Bell and Winter Barrel Madness) and an outdoor barbecue. Meridian Pint, 3400 11th St. NW, Sat., 4 p.m., free.
FRIDAY + SATURDAY
Jerry Seinfeld Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW; Fri., 7 p.m., Sat., 7 & 9:30 p.m., $75-$155.
Contrary to what his popular Web series would suggest, Jerry Seinfeld, doesn’t spend all his time getting coffee in classic cars with other comedians. No, Seinfeld — whose eponymous sitcom celebrated the 25th anniversary of its premiere last month — is still a working stand-up comic. And, by most accounts, he hasn’t lost a step. This weekend, you can see for yourself.
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 27
weekendpass Wed.
COMEDY
‘Monty Python Live (Mostly)’ If you can’t fly out to London for legendary comedy troupe Monty Python’s reunion show, wake up early for the next best thing: “Monty Python Live (Mostly),” a big-screen simulcast of one of their 02 Arena shows. Landmark
MUSIC
Nickel Creek If you missed the reunion of Americana act Nickel Creek at 9:30 Club in May, here’s a second chance. Wolf Trap, Filene Center,
E Street Cinema, 555 11th St. NW; Sat., 11 a.m., $15.
1551 Trap Road, Vienna; Wed., 7:30 p.m., $35-$125.
Sun.
Linkin Park, Thirty Seconds to Mars and AFI
ROCK
Admit it, at some point you listened to Linkin Park, Thirty Seconds to Mars or AFI, so there’s no shame in seeing all three bands play a concert together. Unless someone you know sees you there. Jiffy Lube Live, 7800 Cellar
MUSIC
Gavin DeGraw and Matt Nathanson
GETTY IMAGES
It’s a double-dose of sensitive singer-songwriters when Gavin DeGraw and Matt Nathanson share a bill. Wolf Trap, Filene Center, 1551 Trap Road, Vienna; Sun., 7 p.m., $30-$100.
Tues.
SATURDAY + SUNDAY
Moonrise Festival Pimlico Race Course, 5201 Park Heights Ave., Baltimore; Sat. & Sun., 11 a.m., $95-$150 (single day), $149.50-$249.50 (two-day pass).
SURF ROCK
Dick Dale Guitarist Dick Dale, 77, practically invented surf rock with his 1962 album “Surfers’ Choice.” The breakneck speed at which he played his axe also helped lead to heavy metal. Birchmere, 3701 Mount Vernon Ave., Alexandria; Tues., 7:30 p.m., $29.50.
Beats and big bass drops descend on Baltimore’s Pimlico Race Course for the Moonrise Festival, a two-day megaconcert that’s making its debut after it was prematurely canceled last year. The celebration of all things EDM features sets from untz-happy acts like Bro Safari, STS9, Kaskade, above, and Bassnectar, along with performances from rappers A$AP Ferg and Waka Flocka Flame. Bring glowsticks and an appetite for booming bass drops.
Door Drive, Bristow, Va.; Wed., 6:30 p.m., $36-$90.
TUESDAY
MKTO Fillmore, 8656 Colesville Road, Silver Spring; Tues., 7 p.m., $20.
Pop duo MKTO — Malcolm Kelley, below right, and Tony Oller, below left, — met when they co-starred on the short-lived TeenNick sitcom “Gigantic.” But the pair are only just gaining steam from their catchy single “Classic,” despite the fact that it was released a year ago. It’s a soulful throwback that sounds like The Jackson 5 and features claims as audacious as: “I wanna thrill you like Michael/ I wanna kiss you like Prince/ Let’s get it on like Marvin Gaye.”
UKULELE
UkeFest 2014 Pretend you’re in Hawaii (or inside Zooey Deschanel’s brain) at Strathmore’s annual outdoor celebration of the ukulele UkeFest 2014, which features free performances from Cathy Fink, Marcy Marxer, James Hill and many more. Music Center at Strathmore, 5301 Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda; Wed., 7 p.m., free.
s EASY ADVENTURES CLOSE TO DC! k c a Fun P ll Ages WHITEWATER & A KAYAK TOURS RAFT For & RENTALS
Near Historic Harpers Ferry
& ZIP
RiverTrail.com • 301-834-9950
Save 10% with Code: GXS
28 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
THEATRE Up to $40
Broadway World: “Immensely Entertaining”
Toby’s Dinner Theatre Columbia 410.730.8311 Tobysdinnertheatre.com
See Website
Wacky, Irreverent and Entertaining!
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 Box Office
Aug. 1,2,8,9 at 7:30 Aug. 2,3,9,10 at 2:00
Ogres, a 26 FT. Dragon & Fun. It’s a magical summer in Fairfax, VA
Chantilly High School 4201 Stringfellow Rd. www.thealliancetheatre.org
Through August 16
HH Award winner Brian Childers in a tribute to one of Broadway & Hollywood’s greatest showmen. NYTimes: “Delightful!”. Wash Post: “Magnetic”
AmericanCentury.org 703-998-4555
NOW-August 31st
Don't miss this updated version of Gilbert and Sullivan's most popular musical comedy!
The Kennedy Center Theater Lab
The Alliance Theatre
An Evening with Danny Kaye Toby's Dinner Theatre
Pirates of Penzance
Shear Madness
Great Group Rates Available
$16
703.220.8101 A Family Adventure
Free, no tickets
Outdoor concerts are subject to weather cancellation. Call 202-7675658 for info.
PERFORMANCES Summer Concert Series
Friday, Aug. 8 Tuesday, Aug. 12 Wednesday, Aug. 13 All concerts at 8 p.m.
Join the official chorus of the U.S. Air Force, The Singing Sergeants, as they present a special program entitled “How Can I Keep from Singing.”
A.F. Memorial - Friday Capitol Steps - Tuesday Sylvan Theater – Wed. For more concert info, see ‘Events Calendar’ at: www.usafband.af.mil
MUSIC - CONCERTS Concert Band & Chorus Stars and Stripes Forever!
Tonight and Tomorrow! Thurs, Aug 7 at 8pm Fri, Aug 8 at 8pm
The Concert Band joins forces with the men of the Army Chorus in a special concert celebrating one of our Nation’s singular symbols. It goes by many names like the Star Spangled Banner, the Stars and Stripes, and Old Glory. Join us as we honor the flag with music by George M. Cohan and many more!
Fridays & Saturdays at 7:30pm
A musical, political satire. We put the MOCK in Democracy! www.capsteps.com Info: 202.312.1555
West Steps of U.S. Capitol Washington, DC See details at: usarmyband.com facebook.com/usarmyband youtube.com/usarmyband
Free No Tickets Req.
See the full summer concert schedule online!
COMEDY How To Succeed in Congress Without Really Lying
Ronald Reagan Building 1300 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Tix available at 202.397.SEAT ticketmaster.com
$36
Discounts available for groups of 10+. 202-312-1427
Enrique V. Iglesias Auditorium 1330 New York Ave NW Metro Center (202) 623-1410 iadb.org/cultural @BIDCultura
Free, photo ID required
The film will be introduced by dir. Patricia Pérez
$12+
“A savory treat for all ages!” –The Wash. Post
$12+
“Ridiculously adorable!” –Our Kids
FILMS EVENTS US Film Premiere
Finding Gastón
Thursday, August 7, 2014 at 6:30 p.m.
A magical journey into the heart and soul of the Peruvian food revolution following the dreams of world famous chef Gastón Acurio.
CHILDREN'S THEATRE By Roald Dahl
Final Weekend! Best for ages 5+
Sophie befriends the world’s ONLY big friendly giant. Join their adventure to save the children of England!
Mouse on the Move
Final Weekend! Best for ages 1-5
Two daring mice set out to explore the moon, since it’s made of cheese! Join the adventure in this interactive play.
The BFG
Imagination Stage 4908 Auburn Ave. Bethesda, MD imaginationstage.org Imagination Stage 4908 Auburn Ave. Bethesda, MD imaginationstage.org
The Guide to the Lively Arts appears: • Sunday in Arts & Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Monday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon • Tuesday in Style. deadline: Mon., 12 noon • Wednesday in Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Thursday in Style. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Thursday in Express. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Friday in Weekend. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Saturday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon For information about advertising, call: Raymond Boyer or Rachel Williams 202-334-7006 | FAX 202-496-3814 | guidetoarts@washpost.com
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 rts@ s@ @wa ash shpo hpo pos st.com st.c om m
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 29
going out guide Selected listings from goingoutguide.com. Head online for more events and activities!
Sight American Painting: “Images of Washington,” works that capture parts of Washington by Lani Browning, Marietje Chamberlain, Hui Lai Chong, Barbara Nuss and other member artists, through Sept. 27. 5118 MacArthur Blvd. NW; 202244-3244, classicamericanpainting.com.
of the Field: Jess, Robert Duncan and Their Circle,” the exhibition examines artist Jess Collins (known as Jess) and his relationship with his partner/collaborator, poet Robert Duncan, through Aug. 17. “Brink and Boundary,” the exhibition features site-specific installations by four artists in such nontraditional exhibition spaces as the museum’s elevator, an emergency stairwell and the exterior of the building, through Aug. 17. “Continental Drift,” an exhibition exploring the work of artist Judy Byron, through Aug. 17. “Mynd Alive: BK Adams. I Am Art,” the sculpture garden is filled with 3-D works by a Washington artist whose art includes the whimsical
KIDS ARE FREE!
ALI SERADGE (COURTESY OF CONNERSMITH GALLERY)
American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center: “An Opening
Connersmith: “Academy 2014,” works by MFA and BFA students in the Washington and Baltimore areas, through Aug. 16. 1358-60 Florida Ave. NE; 202-588-8750, connersmith.us.com.
PARKING IS FREE!
and the provocative, through Aug. 17. “Passion Collectors: The Washington Print Club at 50,” nearly 150 prints from Washington collections include works by Pablo Picasso, Anthony van Dyck, Chuck Close and others, through Aug. 17. “Syzygy,” artist William Newman’s series of 19 oil paintings and digital images, and two metal sculptures, through Aug. 17. “The Franz and Virginia Bader Fund: Second Act,” an exhibition of paintings, sculptures and works on paper by Richard Cleaver, Emilie Brzezinski, Fred Folsom and other artists who received grants from the Bader Fund, through Aug. 17. 4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW; 202-885-1300, 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, indefinitely. “Home Sewn: Quilts From the Lower Mississippi Valley,” an exhibition examining the generational, social and economic fabric of an AfricanAmerican quilting community in rural Mississippi, through Sept. 21. “Ubuhle Women, Beadwork and the Art of CONTINUED ON PAGE 30
The BFG
Creativity Today Innovation Tomorrow
! …hilarious,
clever, and vivacious!”
“Fun puppet adventure... savory treat for all ages!” –The Washington Post
ETS TICK T AT STAR
$10!
Sat & Sun, August 9th & 10th, 10am-4pm
Dulles Expo Center 4320 Chantilly Shopping Center, Chantilly, VA 20151 Adults $8 • KIDS Under 12 FREE! FREE Parking!
For More Information Visit: www.GreenbergShows.com
12
Guitar Legend
DICK DALE 13 VICTOR WOOTEN BAND 14 THE ZOMBIES 16 MARTY STUART & His Fabulous Superlatives W/Angaleena Presley (of The Pistol Annies) 17
TRIGGER HIPPY
feat. Joan Osborne, Jackie Greene, Steve Gorman, Tom Bukovac, Nick Govrik Cris 19 Jacobs
STURGILL SIMPSON Jenny BRUCE COCKBURN Scheinman 22 KIM WATERS 23 Mary Bridget Davies 21
‘
The Star of Broadway’s A NIGHT WITH
Janis Joplin’
& Graham LARRY GRAHAM Central Station 28 CHRIS HILLMAN & HERB PEDERSEN and CARLENE CARTER 29 NOEL GOURDIN & AVERY*SUNSHINE 30 BILL KIRCHEN & TOO MUCH FUN AND JASON D. WILLIAMS Sept 5 EUGE GROOVE 6 THE SELDOM SCENE & JONATHAN EDWARDS Seth 7 ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL Walker 9&10 CHRIS ISAAK Ellie 11 AMY GRANT Holcomb Natalia 12 MELISSA FERRICK Zukerman
27
Spend an evening in concert with
KNIGHT
–DCMetroTheaterArts
30,000 Sqft N-Trak Convention Layout! ♦ Huge Operating Model Railroads! ♦ Over 450 Tables of Trains! ♦ Trains Kids Can Run! ♦ Riding Train For Kids!
JAY HAYDEN & V.RICH (aka DAVID 8 BUSTER POINDEXTER JOHANSEN) 9 PURE PRAIRIE LEAGUE & FIREFALL 10 KENNY G (Band)
FINAL WEEKEND! GLADYS “
♦
3701 Mount Vernon Ave. Alexandria, VA • 703-549-7500 For entire schedule go to Birchmere.com Find us on Facebook/Twitter! Tix @ Ticketmaster.com 800-745-3000 Aug 7
www.imaginationstage.org l 301-280-1660
Sat. Oct. 25, 8pm Warner Theatre, Wash DC Tickets on sale Now through Ticketmaster.com, The Warner Theatre Box Ofc, or call 800-745-3000.
30 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29 Independence,” this exhibition features a new form of bead art, 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; 202-633-4820, anacostia.si.edu.
Arlington Arts Center: “Reprise: 40 to the Fore,” in celebration of its 40th anniversary, the Arlington Arts Center
offers remixed versions of four shows from its history, through Oct. 5. 3550 Wilson Blvd., Arlington; 703-248-6800, findyourartist.org.
Art Museum of the Americas: “Small Guide to Homeownership,” photographs from Alejandro Cartagena’s “Mexicana Suburbia” series are on display, through Sept. 7. 201 18th St. NW; 202-370-0147, museum.oas.org. Arthur M. Sackler Gallery: “An
Local movie times DISTRICT
AMC Loews Georgetown 14 3111 K Street N.W.
www.AMCTheatres.com
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) CC, Digital Presentation: (!) 7:00-9:45Movie Times Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC, Digital Presentation: 4:00 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC, Digital Presentation: 12:00-3:00-6:00 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) CC, RealD 3D: (!) 7:00-9:45 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC, RealD 3D: 1:00 Hercules (PG-13) CC, Digital Presentation: (!) 1:30-4:00-6:30-9:10 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC, Real D 3D: (!) 2:00-5:00-8:00-9:00-10:45 A Most Wanted Man (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;CC, Digital Presentation: 1:45-4:45-7:45-9:30-10:35 22 Jump Street (R) CC, Digital Presentation: 2:40-10:35 The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) CC, Digital Presentation: (!) 7:00-10:00 Begin Again (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;CC, Digital Presentation: 1:25-4:00 Get On Up (PG-13) CC, Digital Presentation: 12:00-3:10-6:20-9:00 Hercules 3D (PG-13) CC, Real D 3D: (!) 12:00-2:30-5:00 Into the Storm (PG-13) CC, Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-10:20 The Purge: Anarchy (R) CC, Digital Presentation: 12:15-2:45-5:15 Lucy (R) CC, Digital Presentation: (!) 12:00-1:30-2:15-4:00-4:30-6:15 Step Up All In (PG-13) CC, Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00 Step Up All In 3D (PG-13) CC, Real D 3D: (!) 8:00-10:35 Boyhood (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 2:25-6:00-9:30 And So It Goes (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:00-5:20 Guardians of the Galaxy: An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) IMAX;RealD 3D: 1:00-4:00-7:00-10:00
AMC Loews Uptown 1 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC, Digital Presentation: 5:00 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC, Real D 3D: 2:00-8:00
www.AMCTheatres.com
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-10:25
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 2:55
Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:00
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Real D 3D: (!) 7:00
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 12:00
Hercules (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 3:50 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Real D 3D: (!) 3:00-5:50-8:40
A Most Wanted Man (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;CC, Digital Presentation: (!) 12:10-3:05-6:15-9:00 The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 7:00-9:50
Planes: Fire & Rescue (PG) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:10 Chef (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 2:20 Get On Up (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 1:10-4:20-9:30 Hercules 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Real D 3D: (!) 1:20 Into the Storm (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-10:15 Lucy (R) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:50-3:10-5:30 DCI 2014: Big, Loud & Live 11 (NR) AMC INDEPENDENT: (!) 6:30
5612 Connecticut Avenue
www.theavalon.org
Alive Inside: A Story of Music and Memory (NR) One Week Only!: 12:00-2:00-6:15 A Five Star Life (Viaggio sola) (NR) Starring Margherita Buy: 11:00-1:15-3:30-5:45-8:00 Ida (PG-13) 4:00-8:15
Landmark E Street Cinema 555 11th Street NW
www.landmarktheatres.com
Mood Indigo (L'ecume des jours) (NR) 1:10-3:20-5:30-7:40-9:50 A Most Wanted Man (R) 1:00-4:00-5:15-7:00-8:15-9:40 Begin Again (R) 2:10-7:10 I Origins (R) 2:15 Wish I Was Here (R) 4:40-9:40 Boyhood (R) 12:45-3:00-4:30-6:30-8:00 Magic in the Moonlight (PG-13) 1:30-2:30-4:15-5:00-6:45-7:30-9:15-9:45
Regal Gallery Place Stadium 14 707 Seventh Street NW
Artisphere: “E11: CODA,”
in its 11th year, the gallery’s Emerging Artists program puts on a show working with the discipline of sound art. Selected artists include Alex Braden, Emily
www.regalcinemas.com
Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 11:45AM Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) CC/DVS7:45-10:30 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS1:30-4:30-7:50-10:50 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 1:10-4:00-7:00-10:00 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 12:40-3:40 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 7:00-9:40 Hercules (PG-13) CC/DVS1:20-4:20-7:15-10:10 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 12:00-1:50-3:00-6:20-9:10 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS9:55 Sex Tape (R) CC/DVS3:30-6:10-9:00 The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) CC/DVS7:10-10:10 Planes: Fire & Rescue (PG) CC/DVS12:30-2:50-5:10-7:30 Get On Up (PG-13) CC/DVS11:40-1:00-2:50-4:10-7:10-10:10 Hercules 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 12:20-3:10 Into the Storm (PG-13) CC/DVS8:00-10:40 The Purge: Anarchy (R) CC/DVS12:10-2:40-5:20-8:00-10:50 Lucy (R) CC/DVS11:50-12:50-2:20-3:20-4:50-7:20-9:50 Step Up All In 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 8:00-10:45
Francisco, E. Jane and Ian McDermott, through Sun. “Fermata,” Artisphere’s first exhibition dedicated entirely to sound, through Sun. 1101 Wilson Blvd., Arlington; 703-875-1100, artisphere.com.
Athenaeum: “Influence and Inspiration in Alexandria,” the exhibition highlights the Art League’s finest work during the past 40 years, through Sept. 21. 201 Prince St., Alexandria; 703-548-0035, nvfaa.org.
BlackRock Center for the Arts: “It’s Abstract!,” 12 artists including Fran Abrams, Laurie Breen, Sabine Carlson, Laurence Chandler, Felisa Federman, Gordana Gerskovic, Kristin Herzog, Ronald Komara, Hester Ohbi, Lynette Reed, Lynn Rybicki and Bridget Z. Sullivan display their abstract works, through Sept. 5. “Still Life Paintings,” still life paintings by artist Rulei Bu are exhibited, through Sept. 5. 12901 Town Commons Drive, Germantown; 301-528-2260,
(!) No Pass/No Discount Ticket West End Cinema 2301 M Street NW
http://westendcinema.com/
Alive Inside: A Story of Music and Memory (NR) Washington Post Critic's Pick!: 2:00 A Five Star Life (Viaggio sola) (NR) "A frequently sumptuous pleasure to watch!" -- The Dissolve;English Subtitles: 3:40-5:30-7:20 Chef (R) Washington Post Critic's Pick!: 4:20-9:35 Happy Christmas (R) "Sweetly funny- utterly enjoyable!" - -Indiewire: 2:40-4:40-8:20 Obvious Child (R) New York Times Critic's Pick!: 6:30-9:55 Snowpiercer (Seolguk-yeolcha) (R) "Full of brilliant surprises!" - The New Yorker: 1:40-7:00-9:30
MARYLAND
AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Center 8633 Colesville Road
www.afi.com/silver
Willow (NR) 7:00 The Card (1952) (NR) 5:15 Ladyhawke (PG-13) 9:30 Snowpiercer (Seolguk-yeolcha) (R) 11:45-7:05 Belle (PG) 12:00 I Origins (R) (!) 2:20-4:45-9:30 Boyhood (R) (!) 2:05-5:15-8:30
AMC Magic Johnson Capital Center 12 800 Shoppers Way
www.AMCTheatres.com
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Real D 3D: (!) 7:00-9:30 Into the Storm (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-10:15 Step Up All In 3D (PG-13) Real D 3D: (!) 8:00-10:45
Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema
AMC Mazza Gallerie
Avalon
LAST CHANCE
(!) 8:00-10:30
3426 Connecticut Avenue N.W. www.AMCTheatres.com
5300 Wisconsin Ave. NW
American in London: Whistler and the Thames,” this is the first major exhibition to examine paintings from James McNeill Whistler’s early period in London, through Aug. 17. 1050 Independence Ave. SW; 202-633-1000, asia.si.edu.
7235 Woodmont Avenue
www.landmarktheatres.com
A Most Wanted Man (R) 1:10-4:10-7:30-9:40-10:10 Chef (R) 1:40-4:20-6:50 Begin Again (R) 1:20-3:50-6:40-9:55 I Origins (R) 10:00 Wish I Was Here (R) 1:50-4:30-7:15 Boyhood (R) 1:30-3:05-4:00-6:30-7:00-9:00-9:30 Magic in the Moonlight (PG-13) 12:55-2:00-4:40-5:00-7:10-7:40-9:35-10:20
Regal Bethesda 10 7272 Wisconsin Avenue
www.regalcinemas.com
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) CC/DVS7:30 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS1:05-4:00-10:05 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 12:45-3:30-8:15-10:15 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC-Closed Captions: (!) 1:30-4:10 Hercules (PG-13) CC/DVS1:40 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 7:00 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 1:00-2:45-6:35-9:20 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS1:50-4:35 Planes: Fire & Rescue (PG) CC/DVS12:50-4:30 Hercules 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 4:25-9:40 Get On Up (PG-13) CC/DVS1:10-4:20-7:40-10:00 The Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) CC/DVS9:50 The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) CC/DVS7:20 Lucy (R) CC/DVS2:00-4:50-7:15-10:10 And So It Goes (PG-13) 1:20-4:40-7:10 Into the Storm (PG-13) CC/DVS8:00 Step Up All In 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 8:10
Regal Hyattsville Royale Stadium 14 6505 America Blvd.
Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 12:40 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) CC/DVS7:30-10:30 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS12:30-3:45-6:55-10:05 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 12:45-2:35-3:35-5:20-6:30-8:00-9:15 Hercules (PG-13) CC/DVS2:05-4:30-7:10-10:25 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 7:00-10:00 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 1:30-4:25-7:15-10:10-10:40 Sex Tape (R) CC/DVS2:00 Planes: Fire & Rescue (PG) CC/DVS1:20-3:30 Get On Up (PG-13) CC/DVS1:00-3:25-4:10-7:25-10:30 The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) CC/DVS7:00-9:55 Hercules 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 1:10-3:40 The Purge: Anarchy (R) CC/DVS1:15-3:50-7:20-9:55 Lucy (R) CC/DVS12:55-2:15-3:10-4:35-5:30-7:00-8:10-9:20-10:20 Into the Storm (PG-13) CC/DVS8:00-10:30 Step Up All In 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 8:00-10:40
Regal Majestic 20 & IMAX
Get On Up (PG-13) CC/DVS11:40-12:40-3:20-4:00-6:40-7:10-10:00-10:30 Hercules 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 11:25-2:00-4:30 The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) CC/DVS7:00-9:50 The Purge: Anarchy (R) CC/DVS11:50-2:15-4:45-7:25-10:05 Lucy (R) CC/DVS11:00-11:35-1:20-2:00-3:50-4:20-7:20-10:05 Wish I Was Here (R) CC/DVS4:55-10:45 Guardians of the Galaxy: An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 1:20-4:10-7:00-9:50 Into the Storm (PG-13) CC/DVS8:00-10:30 And So It Goes (PG-13) 12:05-2:25-5:10-7:40-10:00 The Fluffy Movie (PG-13) 12:05-2:35-5:05-7:45-10:15
Xscape 14 Theatres 7710 Matapeake Business Drive
www.xscapetheatres.com
Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) XTREME SCREEN: 10:30-4:30-10:20 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) XTREME SCREEN: 1:30-7:30 Get On Up (PG-13) XRTEME SCREEN: 10:50-1:50-4:40-7:50-10:50 Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) 11:50AM Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) 7:40-10:10 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) 12:20-3:30 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) 12:10-1:00-3:10-3:50-5:30-6:50-9:40 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) 7:00-9:30 Hercules (PG-13) 12:00-2:10-2:40-4:40-8:05-10:30 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) 11:30-2:30 Think Like A Man Too (PG-13) 4:15 Sex Tape (R) 7:05-9:30 Tammy (R) 1:35 Planes: Fire & Rescue (PG) 12:50-3:00-3:40-5:10 Get On Up (PG-13) 1:10-4:10-7:10-10:10 Hercules 3D (PG-13) 5:10 The Purge: Anarchy (R) 1:40-4:20-6:30-9:30 Lucy (R) 1:20-4:00-7:00-9:15 Step Up All In (PG-13) 10:45 Step Up All In 3D (PG-13) 8:00
VIRGINIA
AMC Courthouse Plaza 8 2150 Clarendon Blvd.
www.AMCTheatres.com
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: (!) 8:00-10:30
Maleficent 3D (PG) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D;Reserved Seating: (!) 11:15-1:45 Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 4:15-10:10
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Real D 3D;Reserved Seating: (!) 7:00-9:30
Hercules (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 11:45-5:00-7:10
Edge of Tomorrow 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Real D 3D;Reserved
Seating: 7:15
22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 11:30-2:10-4:50 Sex Tape (R) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 11:35-2:00-4:45 The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: (!) 7:00-9:50-10:20 Hercules 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Real D 3D;Reserved Seating: 2:30 Into the Storm (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: (!) 8:00-10:20 The Purge: Anarchy (R) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 1:45-4:30 Lucy (R) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 11:30-12:301:50-3:00-4:30-5:30-8:00-9:45 Step Up All In 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Real D 3D;Reserved Seating: (!) 8:00-10:30 Wish I Was Here (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: (!) 12:00-2:30-5:00
AMC Hoffman Center 22 206 Swamp Fox Rd.
www.AMCTheatres.com
Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:10
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 7:00-8:30-10:00-11:00
4 Minute Mile (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 2:25-7:30 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 1:35-7:25
Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!)
12:00-2:50-5:40-8:30-9:45-11:20
How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:10-5:10 How to Train Your Dragon 2 3D (PG) DVS-Descriptive Video Service;RealD 3D: 2:40 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Real D 3D: (!) 7:00-7:45-9:30-10:30-12:01
900 Ellsworth Drive
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;RealD
Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 11:55-3:25-10:25 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) CC/DVS7:30-10:00 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS1:15-4:15-7:45-10:55 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 11:30-12:50-2:10-3:40-7:30-8:00-9:30 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC-Closed Captions: (!) 11:05-1:35-4:05 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 7:15-10:15 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 7:00-9:30 Hercules (PG-13) CC/DVS11:05-1:45-4:15-7:15 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 11:00-1:50-4:40-5:10-10:20-10:50 Earth to Echo (PG) CC-Closed Captions: 1:10-3:35-6:05-8:30 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS1:55-7:55 Sex Tape (R) CC/DVS11:15-2:05-4:55-7:05-9:45 Planes: Fire & Rescue (PG) CC/DVS12:20-2:35-4:45
Hercules (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 11:40-2:10-4:40-7:10-9:40 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Real D 3D: (!) 11:30-
3D: 4:30-10:25
1:20-2:20-4:10-5:10-7:00-8:00
A Most Wanted Man (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: 11:00-1:45-4:30-7:20-10:05 Sex Tape (R) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:45-3:15-5:45 The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 7:00-10:00-12:01
Planes: Fire & Rescue (PG) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 11:05-3:25 Planes: Fire & Rescue 3D (PG) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 1:15-5:35 Louder Than Words (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 2:10 Get On Up (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 11:30-1:05-1:502:35-4:10-4:55-7:15-8:00-10:20 Hercules 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Real D 3D: 12:50-3:20-5:50
Into the Storm (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-10:30-12:01 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video: 3:45 The Purge: Anarchy (R) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:15-2:455:15-7:45-10:15
Lucy (R) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 11:15-12:15-1:30-2:30-3:454:45-6:00-8:15-10:30
Step Up All In (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-11:30 Step Up All In 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive Video;Real D 3D: (!) 8:00-10:45-12:01 Wish I Was Here (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: 11:45-4:50-9:55 Boyhood (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: 12:05-3:35 And So It Goes (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: 11:45-4:35 The Fluffy Movie (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: 5:05-10:25 Guardians of the Galaxy: An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) IMAX;RealD 3D: (!) 11:00-1:50-4:40-7:30-10:20 DCI 2014: Big, Loud & Live 11 (NR) AMC INDEPENDENT: (!) 6:30 She's Dating the Gangster (NR) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: 11:40-2:25-7:35
Angelika Film Center Mosaic 2911 District Ave
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC-Closed Captions: 10:15-1:20-4:10 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC-Closed Captions: (!) 11:00-7:30-10:20 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC-Closed Captions: (!) 2:00-4:45 What If (PG-13) Closed Caption: 9:30 A Most Wanted Man (R) CC-Closed Captions: (!) 11:45-2:15-4:45-7:45-10:15 Chef (R) CC-Closed Captions: 1:30-4:00-7:00-9:30 Begin Again (R) CC-Closed Captions: 2:50-5:05-7:20 Get On Up (PG-13) CC-Closed Captions: (!) 10:05-1:00-4:00-7:15-10:05 I Origins (R) CC-Closed Captions: (!) 4:30 Wish I Was Here (R) CC-Closed Captions: (!) 11:05AM Magic in the Moonlight (PG-13) CC-Closed Captions: (!) 9:45-10:40-12:00-1:00-2:15-3:20-5:40-7:00-8:00-9:15-10:20 The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) Closed Caption: (!) 7:00-9:35
Arlington Cinema 'N' Drafthouse 2903 Columbia Pike
http://www.arlingtondrafthouse.com/
Captain America: The Winter Soldier (PG-13) 7:10
Regal Ballston Common 12 671 N. Glebe Road
www.regalcinemas.com
Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 1:05 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS1:15-7:20 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 12:30-1:30-3:30-4:30-5:00-6:30-7:30-8:00-9:10-10:10 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC-Closed Captions: (!) 12:55-3:20 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 4:20 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 1:00-2:00-4:00-7:00-9:55-10:40 A Most Wanted Man (R) CC/DVS1:10-4:10-7:10-10:20 Planes: Fire & Rescue (PG) CC/DVS12:40-3:00-5:20-7:50 Get On Up (PG-13) CC/DVS12:30-3:40-6:50-10:00 Boyhood (R) 1:40-5:15-5:50-9:00-9:30 And So It Goes (PG-13) 10:30 Kick (Hindi) (NR) 2:40-6:00-9:20 DCI 2014: Big, Loud & Live 11 (NR) 6:30
Regal Kingstowne 16 & RPX 5910 Kingstowne Towne Center
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) CC/DVS7:45-10:15 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS12:30-3:25-6:30-9:40 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descripti;Dolby Atmos;RPX: (!) 11:20-5:00-10:40 Hercules (PG-13) CC/DVS10:55-2:00-4:45-7:40 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descripti;Dolby Atmos;RPX: (!) 2:10-7:50 A Most Wanted Man (R) CC/DVS12:00-3:50-7:05-10:35 Sex Tape (R) CC/DVS10:45-1:10-4:00 The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) CC/DVS7:00-9:55 Planes: Fire & Rescue (PG) CC/DVS11:10-1:20-4:05 Get On Up (PG-13) CC/DVS11:30-1:00-4:10-7:30-10:40 Hercules 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 12:50-3:40-10:20 Into the Storm (PG-13) CC/DVS8:00-10:20 The Purge: Anarchy (R) CC/DVS2:40-5:15-8:10-10:40 Lucy (R) CC/DVS10:50-12:10-1:50-2:50-4:15-5:30-8:05-10:25 Boyhood (R) 11:00-3:00-6:40-10:15 Step Up All In 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 8:00-10:45 And So It Goes (PG-13) 12:40 The Fluffy Movie (PG-13) 3:45 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 10:45-12:20-1:35-3:10-4:25-6:00-7:15-10:05 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 12:45-3:35-6:25-9:00-9:30 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 7:00-9:35
Regal Potomac Yard 16 3575 Jefferson Davis Highway
www.regalcinemas.com
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) CC/DVS7:00-9:40 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS12:00-3:20-6:30-9:25 Guardians of the Galaxy (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 12:25-1:10-3:10-4:10-6:10-7:10-8:00-9:10-10:10 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 7:30-10:25 Hercules (PG-13) CC/DVS11:00-11:30-1:30-2:10-4:00-6:20-9:00 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 11:10-12:50-2:00-3:50-5:00-6:45-9:40-10:40 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS11:30-2:30-5:10 Sex Tape (R) CC/DVS1:40-4:30 The Hundred-Foot Journey (PG) CC/DVS7:15-10:05 Planes: Fire & Rescue (PG) CC/DVS11:30-1:50-4:20 Get On Up (PG-13) CC/DVS11:40-12:20-3:00-3:40-6:00-7:00-9:10-10:20 Hercules 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 4:40 Into the Storm (PG-13) CC/DVS8:00-10:30 The Purge: Anarchy (R) CC/DVS12:55-3:30-6:15-8:45 Lucy (R) CC/DVS11:50-12:30-2:20-2:50-5:10-5:30-7:50-10:30 Step Up All In 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS(!) 8:15-10:45 And So It Goes (PG-13) 11:10-1:50 DCI 2014: Big, Loud & Live 11 (NR) 6:30
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 31
goingoutguide.com a life-size stone sculpture covered in intricate representations of the earthly realms. It is the only one of its kind in the world, indefinitely. “Style in Chinese Landscape Painting: The Song Legacy,” features landscape paintings from the Song dynasty period, 907-1279, and later works that show an evolution of six different styles, through Oct. 26. “The Nile and Ancient Egypt,” high-quality artifacts from the collections of Freer Gallery are showcased to illuminate the role and importance of water animals for ancient Egyptian religion and afterlife, indefinitely. Jefferson Drive and 12th Street SW; 202-633-1000, asia.si.edu.
blackrockcenter.org.
Carroll Square Gallery: “Real Beauty,” Mariella Bisson, Ashlynn Browning, Amber Robles-Gordon and Deborah Zlotsky display their latest works as four different elemental aspects of contemporary abstraction, through Aug. 29. 975 F St. NW; 202-624-8643.
Flashpoint: “Between Fact and Fiction,” Adam Hager collects, disassembles and reassembles mechanical objects that he collects, opening Fri., through Sept. 6. 916 G St. NW; 202-315-1305, culturaldc.org. Foundry Gallery: “Hot Glass in the City,” local premier glass artists display stained, fused, blown and flamework glass art, through Aug. 31. 1314 18th St. NW; 202-463-0203, foundrygallery.org.
Hillyer Art Space: “In Lieu of Longing,” Dane Winkler’s sculptural works contrast work and play, through Aug. 30. “Jettison to Collection,” Casey Snyder’s paintings explore the illusion of memory, through Aug. 30. “Platforms,” sculptures by Evan Reed blend architecture influenced by literature, through Aug. 30. 9 Hillyer Ct. NW; 202-338-0680, hillyerartspace.org.
Waters: Aquatic Life in Japanese Art,” an exhibition of ceramics, paintings, prints and illustrated books that depict Japan’s appreciation for the beauty and variety of fish and other species, through Sept. 14. “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 the artist created while he was traversing the French countryside in the summer of 1858, through Sept. 28. “Promise of Paradise: Early Chinese Buddhist Sculpture,” a collection of stone and gilt bronze Buddhist sculptures highlight two flourishing ages, the late Six Dynasties and the High Tang (6th to 8th century). The exhibition’s dramatic focus is the monumental Cosmological Buddha:
COURTESY OF PALEY STUDIOS ARCHIVE
Freer Gallery of Art: “Bountiful
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: “Barbara Kruger: Belief +
Corcoran Gallery of Art: “American Journeys — Visions of Place,” a new installation of the museum’s pre-1945 American paintings and sculpture collection organized around the theme of the changing notion of place in the history of American art, indefinitely. “American Metal: The Art of Albert Paley,” an exhibition covering Paley’s 50-year career, from his time as a jeweler to his recent large-scale sculptural projects, through Sept. 28. “Mark Tribe: Plein Air,” this exhibition features works by Tribe that explore aerial landscape photography through computer simulation, through Sept. 28. “Sol LeWitt: Wall Drawing #65,” LeWitt’s piece, on loan from the National Gallery of Art, is displayed, through March 15. “Terra Firma: Landscapes From the Photography and Media Arts Collection,” a collection of 40 photographs and one video work related to landscape, through Sept. 28. 500 17th St. NW; 202-639-1700, corcoran.org.
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, indefinitely. “Black Box: Oliver Laric,” a video installation by the artist explores the concept of authenticity by examining the history of bootleg, remixes and hybrid, through Oct. 5. “Directions: Jeremy Deller: English 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. “Salvatore Scarpitta: Traveler,” an CONTINUED ON PAGE 32
doors opening. welcome home. The Metro Rider ’s Guide. Every second and fourth Wednesday of the month. t 0185 1X1
TO DAY
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FARMERS MARKET +LUNCHTIME CONCERTS THURSDAYS / OAK ST NEAR WILSON /11AM-2PM
TO M O R ROW
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MUSIC IN-STORE
FRIDAY NIGHTS ROSSLYN OUTDOOR FILM FESTIVAL GATEWAY PARK/ DUSK
/YAPPYHOUR
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32 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
goingoutguide.com CONTINUED FROM PAGE 31 exhibition representing Scarpitta’s career features paintings by the artist that incorporate bandages and automobile parts and his full-scale race car sculptures, through Jan. 11. “Speculative Forms,” drawn from the museum’s permanent collection, this sculpture exhibition examines trends in modernist sculpture since the early 20th century, through Sept. 30, 2015. Seventh Street and Independence Avenue SW; 202-6331000, hirshhorn.si.edu.
Honfleur Gallery: “Seventh Annual East of the River Exhibit,” a juried exhibition open to artists who live, work or have roots in wards 7 and 8, through Aug. 29. “The Invisible Wall: Photographs From East of the River,” photographs by Susana Raab, a photographer at the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, through Aug. 29. 1241 Good Hope Road SE; 202-365-8392, honfleurgallery.com.
Jane Haslem: “A Look at the Past:
The Real American Print Innovators and Their Followers,” a group show featuring printmakers Josef Albers, Boris Margo, Nancy McIntyre and others, through Aug. 16. 2025 Hillyer Place NW; 202-232-4644.
Koshland Science Museum: “Idea Lab,” a new space at the museum created to explore new ideas and resources includes video, websites and maps, puzzles and other multimedia, indefinitely. Ongoing exhibits, “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, indefinitely. 525 E St. NW; 202-334-1201, koshland-science-museum.org.
National Air and Space Museum: “Hawaii by Air,” an exhibition examining how flying to Hawaii has changed through the years, through July 25. Ongoing exhibits: explore the evolution of flight through displays, hands-on
Imagine Hope Community Charter School LAMOND CAMPUS 6200 KANSAS AVE., NE Washington, D.C. 20011
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exhibitions and historic aircraft and 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, indefinitely. Sixth Street and Independence Avenue SW; 202-6331000, nasm.si.edu.
Europe and modern American corn mazes, this large-scale maze made of birch plywood features several twists and turns for visitors, through Sept. 1. Ongoing exhibits: learn about the history of buildings and their environmental impact, indefinitely. 401 F St. NW; 202272-2448, nbm.org.
National Building Museum: “Cool and Collected: Recent Acquisitions,” new pieces in the museum’s collection include a salesman’s kit from the Underground Home company, pieces of terra cotta from buildings in Chicago and New York, and more, through May 25. “Designing for Disaster,” an exhibition featuring objects, graphics and multimedia examines how society determines and responds to natural hazards, through Aug. 2. “House and Home,” an ongoing exhibition that explores what it means to live at home, “The BIG Maze,” inspired by ancient labyrinths, garden and hedge mazes from 17th- and 18-century
Loss and Preservation of Art and Architecture during the Second World War,” images from the Department of Image Collections at the National Gallery of Art Library reflect the dangers and loss of cultural patrimony during wars, through Sept. 26. Fourth Street and Constitution Avenue NW; 202-737-4215, nga.gov.
TH 7 Luther re-Lives Concert Tour F 8 Doc Scantlin & His Imperial Palms Orchestra SA 9 DANCE NIGHT: The VI-Kings Ladies Night $1 SU 10 Rita Coolidge TH 14 Jon Carroll (solo) FR 15 Jr. Cline & the Recliners SA 16 Ellis Marsalis and Delfeayo Marsalis, “The Last Southern Gentlemen” Tour SU 17 Leonard, Coleman and Blunt FR 22 Friday Night Funnies w/Joe Clair & Friends SA 23 The WannaBeatles
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National Gallery of Art, East Building: “In the Library: Documenting
National Gallery of Art, West Building: “Andrew Wyeth: Looking Out, Looking In,” works by the artist including watercolors, drawings and tempera paintings are featured, through Nov. 30. “Civic Pride: Dutch Group Portraits From Amsterdam,” rare depictions by Govert Flinck and Bartholomeus van der Helst of meetings inside the Kloveniersdoelen, the gathering place of one of Amsterdam’s three militia companies, “Degas/Cassatt,” an exhibition featuring about 70 pieces in a variety of media reveals the artistic connection between Edgar Degas and Mary Cassatt, through Oct. 5. “Masterpieces of American Furniture From the Kaufman Collection, 1700-1830,” one of the largest collections of Early American furniture in private hands, acquired over the course of five decades by George M. and Linda H. Kaufman, is on display, indefinitely. “The Monuments Men and the National Gallery of Art: Behind the History,” a display of photographs from the World War II era, documents and memorabilia, through Sept. 1. Sixth Street and Constitution Avenue NW; 202-737-4215, nga.gov.
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 photographer’s work capturing images of African culture, through Aug. 24. “Visions From the Forests: The Art of Liberia and Sierra Leone,” a collection of artwork includes masks, body ornaments, textiles and more, through Aug. 17. 950 Independence Ave. SW; 202-633-4600, africa.si.edu.
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. For a limited time, visitors can view John
Coltrane’s “A Love Supreme” manuscript and the Miss Piggy puppet on display in the exhibit through June 17, indefinitely. “Changing America: The Emancipation Proclamation, 1863, and the March on Washington, 1963,” a collection of photos and artifacts commemorating two major events in American history, through Sept. 7. “Continuity and Change: Fifty Years of Museum History,” modern digital photographic prints reveal the museum’s change of focus from history and technology to 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, indefinitely. “The Early Sixties: American Culture,” a display celebrating American culture in the 1960s, indefinitely. “The Quest for a Modern Museum: Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the National Museum of American History,” for the 50th anniversary of the museum, an exhibition documenting its past, present and future, with a focus on the museum circa 1964, through Sept. 7. John Coltrane’s tenor saxophone, in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the recording of “A Love Supreme,” the jazz legend’s saxophone is on view, indefinitely. Michelle Obama’s second inaugural gown loan, the first lady’s second inaugural gown temporarily replaces her first in the First Ladies Room, through Jan. 19. Renee Fleming’s Super Bowl gown, the opera singer’s gown from the 2014 Super Bowl will be on view, indefinitely. 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW; 202-633-1000, americanhistory.si.edu.
National Museum of Natural History: “Augmented Reality Dinosaurs,” an exhibition allowing guests to interact with virtual dinosaurs, including Tyrannosaurus rex, through Sept. 1. “Beyond Bollywood: Indian Americans Shape the Nation,” through images, music, visual art and first-person narratives, this exhibition explores the influence and experience of Indian Americans in America, through Aug. 16, 2015. “Dom Pedro,” the 14-inch obelisk is a 10,363-carat aquamarine, indefinitely. “Living on an Ocean Planet,” a new permanent exhibit that explores the ocean space and its relationship to human life, indefinitely. “Once There Were Billions: Vanished Birds of North America,” examining the story of the last passenger pigeon, this exhibition features illustrations from the Biodiversity Heritage Library, through Oct. 31, 2015. “Portraits of Planet Ocean: The Photography of Brian Skerry,” an underwater journey through marine
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 33
goingoutguide.com environments by the award-winning photojournalist, “The Rex Room,” in a conservation room, visitors can observe, through one of two doorways, as scientists prepare the Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton that will go on display in 2019, through Oct. 20. “Unintended Journeys,” images and video by Magnum Photos examine the plight of those displaced by natural disasters and global climate change within the past decade, exploring the challenges these people and communities face, through Wed. 10th Street and Constitution Avenue NW; 202633-1000, mnh.si.edu.
and Games,” a new permanent exhibition at the museum displays more than 100 objects that show how Native American children play. The toys, games and clothing in these cases come from all over North, Central and South America and represent more than 30 tribes, indefinitely. “Ceramica de los Ancestros: Central America’s Past Revealed,” Central American ceramics from 1000 B.C. to the present, through Feb. 1. “Indelible: The Platinum Photographs of Larry McNeil and Will Wilson,” an exhibition of work by the artists, who challenge the idea that North American Indians are a “vanishing race,” through Jan. 5. Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW; 202-6331000, nmai.si.edu.
National Museum of Women in the Arts: “Meret Oppenheim: Tender Friendships,” featuring more than 20 pieces and archival papers, this exhibition includes work by Oppenheim that explores the idea of friendship as a source of inspiration and support, through Sept. 14. “Total Art: Contemporary Video,” Dara Birnbaum, Kimsooja, Mariko Mori and Alex Prager are a few of the artists featured in this exhibition, which highlights video art by women from the 1970s to present, through Oct. 12. Ongoing exhibits: works by female artists, indefinitely. 1250 New York Ave. NW; 202-783-5000, nmwa.org.
National Portrait Gallery: “Face Value: Portraiture in the Age of Abstraction,” this group exhibition spotlights the work of such painters as Chuck Close, whose mid-20th-century portraits bucked the trend of abstraction. More than 50 paintings, drawings, prints and sculptures from around 1945 to 1975 by artists Alice Neel, Elaine de Kooning, Robert Rauschenberg, Beauford Delaney, Romare Bearden, Andy Warhol, Fairfield Porter, Alex Katz and Jamie Wyeth, through Jan. 11. “Mathew Brady’s Photographs of Union Generals,” studio portraits by one of the most famous photographers of the Civil War, through May 31. “Mr. Lincoln’s
U.S. Botanic Garden: “Amber Waves of Grain,” an exhibition about wheat, the work of Dr. Norman Borlaug and ongoing research into curing wheat disease, through Oct. 13. 100 Maryland Ave. SW; 202-225-8333, usbg.gov. LAST CHANCE Woodrow Wilson House: “Images of the Great War,”
MARGOT SCHULMAN
National Museum of the American Indian: “As We Grow: Traditions, Toys
displayed, through Aug. 28. “MiniSolos@ Touchstone,” works by 38 guest artists, including Joshua Akery, Steve Alderton, Lisa Allen, Leni Berliner, Ray Bogle, Dana Brotman and others, through Aug. 28. 901 New York Ave. NW; 202-347-2787, touchstonegallery.com.
LAST CHANCE The BFG: With their fantastical characters and witty dialogue, Roald Dahl’s books are ripe for adaptations that are crowdpleasers for kids and their chaperones. The BFG, which stands for Big Friendly Giant, is not your typical monster. Not only does the BFG have a distinctly granola vibe, but he also befriends an orphaned girl, whom the not-so-friendly giants (NSFGs?) would probably like for a snack. Together the unlikely pair sets out to save kids from the BFG’s more unsavory brethren, through Sun., $10-$25. Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda; 301-280-1660, imaginationstage.org.
Washington: A Civil War Portfolio,” the exhibition features large-format reproductions of photographs, drawings and maps that document the Civil War and its impact on Washington, through Jan. 25. “One Life: Grant and Lee: 18641865,” an installation exploring the lives of Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee during the Civil War, through May 25. “The Network,” artist Lincoln Schatz recombines interviews with famous politicians, scholars and other notables into a single-screen video, indefinitely. Eighth and F streets NW; 202-633-1000, npg.si.edu.
Newseum: “G-Men and Journalists,”
an exhibition exploring the FBI’s effort to combat crime features photographs, newspapers and interactive displays, through Jan. 4. “One Nation With News for All,” a historical exhibition exploring how immigrants and minority groups used the press to fight for their rights in America. Freedom’s Journal, the first black newspaper, and the Cherokee Phoenix, the first Native American newspaper, will be displayed, through Jan. 4. “Pictures of the Year,” images of people, events and issues that shaped the world in 2013, including the best news images from Pictures of the Year International will be featured,
through Sept. 1. 555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW; 888-639-7386, newseum.org. Phillips Collection: “The Journals of Duncan Phillips,” a display of selections from the museum founder’s journals, which span 30 years, through Feb. 27. 1600 21st St. NW; 202-387-2151, phillipscollection.org. LAST CHANCE S. Dillon Ripley Center: “YoungArts: An Exhibition of
Works,” features artwork, readings and screenings by the 2014 U.S. Presidential Scholars in the Arts, Thu. 1100 Jefferson Dive. SW; 202-633-1000, si.edu/ museums/ripley-center.
Smithsonian American Art Museum: “Modern American Realism: The Sara Roby Foundation Collection,” 71 pieces from the Sara Roby Foundation explore realism. Featured artists include Will Barnet, Isabel Bishop, Wolf Kahn, Yasuo Kuniyoshi and others, through Aug. 17. “Pop Art Prints,” 39 rarely displayed prints from the museum’s permanent collection include work from the 1960s by Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol and others, through Aug. 31. Eighth and F streets NW; 202-633-1000, americanart.si.edu.
Touchstone: “Members’ Summer Sampler,” exhibited in the back room of the gallery, a variety of works across all media by 45 gallery members are
paintings, drawings and watercolors from the Anne S.K. Brown Military Collection at the Brown University Library depict the first two years of World War I, Thu.Sun. 2340 S St. NW; 202-387-4062, woodrowwilsonhouse.org.
Stage
An Evening with Danny Kaye: Brian Childers stars in the musical tribute presented by American Century Theater, through Aug. 16, $35-$40, $32-$37 seniors and students. Gunston Arts Center Theater II, 2700 S. Lang St., Arlington; 703-998-4555. LAST CHANCE Dani Girl: After she loses her hair to leukemia, a 9-year-old girl, her imaginary friend and another patient go on an adventure to find it again. Presented by Unexpected Stage Company, through Sun., $10-$25. Randolph Road Theatre, 4010 Randolph Road, Silver Spring; 240-777-6820.
Disney’s Peter Pan Jr.: Peter Pan leads three siblings to Never Land, where children can stay young, through Aug. 24, $20, $15 students and seniors. Laurel Mill Playhouse, 508 Main St., Laurel; 301-6179906, laurelmillplayhouse.org. Disney’s The Lion King: Turning movies into musicals can be a pretty unimaginative endeavor, but this production is an exception. Innovative puppets and impressive dance blend with the touching story and soaring score that made the 1994 movie beloved. That may help explain how the musical landed six Tony Awards when it debuted on Broadway in 1997, through Aug. 17, $40-$195. Kennedy Center, Opera House, 2700 F St. NW; 202-467-4600, kennedy-center.org. LAST CHANCE Good Good Trouble on Bad Bad Island: In NextStop Theatre
Company’s play, a girl is mistakenly sent to Bad Bad Island, where she defies its inhabitants’ expectations and teaches them about family and goodness, through Sun., $10. Industrial Strength Theatre, 269 Sunset Park Drive,
Herndon; 703-481-5930.
Investigation: Detective McDevitt: The theatrical walking tour follows the detective as he reviews the facts of Lincoln’s assassination, through Nov. 1, $15. Ford’s Theatre, 511 10th St. NW; 202347-4833, fordstheatre.org.
Monty Python’s Spamalot: King Arthur and Camelot are spoofed in this musical, through Aug. 23, $25$30. Little Theatre of Alexandria, 600 Wolfe St., Alexandria; 703-683-0496, thelittletheatre.com. LAST CHANCE
Mouse on the Move:
The moon is cheesy and cat-free, which is exactly why two young mice, Nellie and Amelia, decide to travel there, through Sun., $12. Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda; 301-280-1660, imaginationstage.org. LAST CHANCE Patience, Bunthorne’s Bride: Gilbert & Sullivan’s operetta is
staged, through Sat., $10-$20. Capitol Hill Arts Workshop, 545 Seventh St. SE; 202-547-6839, chaw.org.
Pinkalicious: What’s better than wearing pink dresses and eating pink cupcakes? Turning your skin pink! In this play based on a book of the same name by sisters Victoria and Elizabeth Kann, that’s what happens when a girl eats too many pink cupcakes. A trip to the doctor confirms “pinkititis,” and the only cure is lots of healthful healthy greens. Will she adopt the new diet, through Aug. 31, $19. Glen Echo Park, Adventure Theatre MTC, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo; 301634-2270, adventuretheatre-mtc.org. LAST CHANCE Shear Madness: The audience plays armchair detective in the comedy, through Fri., $50. Kennedy Center, Theater Lab, 2700 F St. NW; 800-444-1324, kennedy-center.org.
Shining City: In Scena’s staging of Conor McPherson’s play, a therapist’s first patient might be haunted by his wife’s ghost, opens Sat. through Sept. 21. Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-7993, atlasarts.org. Stupid F—ing Bird: Aaron Posner’s loose update of Anton Chekhov’s “The Seagull” gets another turn on the stage with the same cast and creative team from its 2013 run, through Aug. 17, $20$68. Woolly Mammoth Theatre, 641 D St. NW; 202-393-3939, woollymammoth .net.
Sunday in the Park with George: Georges Seurat’s painting “A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte” provided the inspiration for Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine’s play, through Sept. 21, $29-$98. Signature Theatre, 4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington; 703-820-9771, signaturetheatre.org.
34 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
entertainment
SO FUNNY, IT’S CRIMINAL.
WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY MORRIS PANYCH
BEGINS SEPTEMBER 5
TICKETS START AT $45
GETTY IMAGES PHOTOS/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION
THE SHOPLIFTERS
WASHINGTONPOST.COM | STYLE BLOG
From left, Vince Vaughn, Elisabeth Moss, Colin Farrell and Taylor Kitsch.
Sniffing out the truth in ‘True Detective’ rumors So far, we know the second season of HBO’s hit crime noir “True Detective” is going to be completely different: New cast, new location, new storyline. There’s been no announcement about what to expect, but a few details have leaked out. Allow us to separate fact and fiction (for now). EMILY YAHR
Facts
Rumors
It’s set in California Creator Nic Pizzolatto confirmed on a public radio show that the second season will head to some “lesser known venues of California.” There will be four leads. The Daily Beast asked if that meant a woman would star, but Pizzolatto would not confirm.
Colin Farrell is involved. Deadline reports the bad-boy actor is “deep in negotiations” to join.
It has a transportation theme. Pizzolatto told HitFix that the new season will deal with “the secret occult history of the United States transportation system.” Sure.
Taylor Kitsch? Elisabeth Moss? TheWrap says “Friday Night Lights’ ” Kitsch and “Mad Men’s” Moss are being eyed for lead roles.
Excerpted from washingtonpost .com/blogs/style-blog/
TELEVISION
FEATURING
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CELEBRATING
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For its new issue celebrating the 25 best characters on TV, Entertainment Weekly asked television’s two veepsturned-presidents to swap places. “House of Cards’ ” Kevin Spacey, above left, dons a wig and pearls and Julia Louis-Dreyfus of “Veep” perches on the Lincoln Memorial to try on each other’s Emmy-nominated roles. (EXPRESS) Disney Channel renews “Girl Meets World” for a second season
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 35
entertainment
LEADING PEOPLE
LEADING PEOPLE AFRICAN AMERICAN FEDERAL EXECUTIVE ASSOCIATION, INC.
TELEVISION
‘Glee’ to add five cast members next season
RUDI GREENBERG | INSIDE JOKES
‘Garfunkel and Oates’: Proving girls rule on TV This is shaping up to be a stellar year for funny women on TV. Thus far, three hilarious new sitcoms have premiered that were created by and star women: Comedy Central’s “Broad City,” starring Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson; USA’s “Playing House,” starring Lennon Parham and Jessica St. Clair; and IFC’s “Garfunkel and Oates,” starring Kate Micucci and Riki Lindhome. All three center on strong friendships between comedy duos who have worked together at the Upright Citizens Brigade, and all three are among the funniest new shows this year. The latest is “Garfunkel and Oates,” which premieres today at 10 p.m., and is loosely based on Micucci and Lindhome’s lives in their real-life comedy
band, Garfunkel and Oates. Micucci and Lindhome derive much of their humor from the fact that their seemingly innocuous, twee folk songs tend to have dirty, unexpected twists. (Like HBO’s “Flight of the Conchords,” each episode makes use of fully produced music videos inside a somewhat traditional sitcom structure.) In the preview episode IFC made available for free online last week, Micucci and Lindhome decide to test a theory on a blind-double-date: What would happen if two women went through an entire evening without speaking to their dates? The results may surprise you. What shouldn’t surprise you is that it produces comedy gold. For more of Rudi’s comedy musings, follow him on Twitter: @rudigreenberg.
September 8 - 9, 2014
Washington, DC
Register for this two-day event focusing on the core subjects critical for becoming a member of the SES. Topics include Mentoring, Preparing for the Executive Interview, and Creating Parity for Women. Featured speakers include the Honorable Charles Bolden (M/General, retired), former astronaut and Administrator of NASA; and the Honorable Katherine Archuleta, Director (OPM). Join the more than 200 federal employees from over fifteen federal agencies in grades GS 13, 14, 15 and the SES expected to attend. Visit www.aafea.org for more information or contact us at 866-600-4894.
MUSIC
‘Lazaretto’ is best-selling vinyl in two decades According to Billboard, Jack White’s latest album, “Lazaretto,” has sold 60,000 vinyl copies (238,000 overall), making it the year’s biggest selling vinyl LP. It is the top-selling vinyl of any year since Pearl Jam’s “Vitalogy” in 1994. The sales of “Lazaretto” far eclipse last year’s top-selling album, Daft Punk’s “Random Access Memories.” (EXPRESS)
Smithsonian National Museum of African Art
COMMUNITY DAY AUGUST 9, 2014, 12:30–4:30 P.M.
SIGNATURES
15.5K
Emcees: Victorious Hall and Alfred Duncan Guest Host: JoJo Fide Join us for an afternoon of mural painting, dance, music, selfies, and henna and face painting as we celebrate our 50th anniversary and Connecting the Gems of the Indian Ocean: From Oman to East Africa project.
The number of signatures as of Wednesday afternoon on a Change.org petition asking that “Weird Al” Yankovic headline the 2015 Superbowl halftime show. Ed Ball, who posted the petition, says he just doesn’t “want to sit through another Black Eyed Peas disaster.”
Free and open to the public
(THE WASHINGTON POST)
verbatim
“I now live in a world where some of my most ardent fans don’t own televisions.”
COURTESY THE ARTISTS
IFC
Kate Micucci, far left, and Riki Lindhome aren’t afraid to get dirty in “Garfunkel and Oates.”
TVLine reported on Wednesday that “Glee” will add five new characters for its final season. They include a gay football star, twin cheerleaders, an ambitious female Glee club member and a new underdog “with a voice like Otis Redding.” No new cast members have been announced. “Glee’s” sixth season is set to premiere in early 2015. (EXPRESS)
2014 AAFEA Training Workshop
950 Independence Avenue, SW Washington, D.C. Take Metro’s blue or orange line to Smithsonian station africa.si.edu
CONAN O’BRIEN, telling attendees at Variety’s TV Summit on Tuesday that he has
“a much more intimate experience” with his online fans
“The Fault in Our Stars” will get a Bollywood remake
Carrie Brownstein will pen “Lost in Austen” film
#Africanartat50, #Connecting the Gems
36 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
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EAGLES CROSSING
116 Irvington Street SW
1 & 2 BEDROOM APTS STARTING AT $1,019 2 BR DUPLEXES STARTING AT $1,322 • Central A/C & Heating • Free Heat & Gas • Community Center • Controlled Building Access • Renovated Apartments • Patios/Balconies
W/W carpet, CAC/1 Air/Heat, Dishwasher, Laundry facility, fee
EFFICIENCY $700 1BR fr. $775 2BR fr. $870
202-969-8564
M-F 9-5 • Sat 10-4
2562 Naylor Rd., SE Washington, DC 20020 8:30am - 5:30pm M-F
Housing Choice Vouchers Welcome where rents are within voucher limits
GAS HEAT, GAS COOKING FREE & WATER $ 2 BRS 895
202-969-2563
Central A/C, Convenient to Green Line Metro, Onsite Laundry, Parking, Vouchers Welcome
SW 150 Joliet St. Large 2 bedroomapartment, SPECIAL DEAL $925/month+ utilities. Delwin Realty 202-561-4675 SW- 4742 S Capital Terr. 2BR Newly Renov, Pvt Entrance, Hw Flrs, Nr Metro. $875 + gas/elec. 301-608-3703 X119 Delwin Realty
SW-Madison Ct. Under New Management. Starting at 1BR $845+, 2BR $945+. 32 Chesapeake St. SW 202-561-7368 NMI Property Management
GREENWOOD MANOR
UPPER NW-3 blks from Metro & exiting downtown Silver Spring. Cute studio, fpl, W/D, pvt yard. All credit considered. $895, utils inc. 202-487-6143
Apartments
M-F 8:30 - 5 PM SAT. by appt only
MD RENTALS
202.678.2548
2343 Green Street SE • Wash. DC 20020
WWW.DELWIN-REALTY.COM
DC RENTALS
CARVER
The New
FAIRWAY PARK A P A R T M E N T S
2BR Special $1095 If You Move In By 8/15/14
No Application Fee! Available for Immediate Move In!!!! • Energy-efficient systems • Brushed Nickel Accents • Stainless steel appliances • Large Closets • Microwave • Dishwasher • Central Air Conditioning • Kitchen Breakfast Bars • On-site Management • Washer & Dryer • On-site Maintenance
1, 2 and 3 Large Bedrooms Move-in the month of Aug and get
Professionally Managed by
www.wcsmith.com
888.659.5771
on 1 Bedrooms
SE - 13th St. 2 mins to metro, 2 BR. $875 + utilities. Section 8 okay . 202-388-3900 x12 202-438-3499
SE - 2 BR apts on Greenline, utilities included w/ Vouchers Approved. Secure, quiet. Great floors. Available Immediately. Call 703-912-4885 SE DANBURY ST - Attractive1BR $805. 1st monthsrent free.Good creditreq. Metro Bus at corner.Call 202-563-1791
1 Bedrooms: $850 2 Bedrooms: $950 NE
Jetu Apartments
SE-Hanover Court. Under new mgmt. 1BR $775+. 2BR $850. $50 app fee 2412 Hartford St. #202 SE. 202-506-6416 NMI Property Management
WDC 1 APARTMENTS 780
1 $ bedrooms
www.wcsmith.com
$
877.814.0692
XX740 1x.25
XX740 1x.50
202.561.4675
3839 64th Ave Hyattsville MD 20784
EHO
1 BRs fr. $860/mo 2 BRs fr. $985/mo Meadow Green Courts! $20 APPLICATION FEE!
Convenient to shops, schools, Dishwasher. Walk-in closets., w-w carpet 5% DISCOUNT: METRO & DC GOVT employees
(877) 464-9774 Mon.-Fri. 9-5. Sat. 10-4
Housing Choice Vouchers welcome where rents are within voucher program limits.
• Pair of Redskins/ Giants Tickets w/August move-in
• Renovated Kitchens • CloseTo 295, 495 & RTE 50 • Spacious Floorplans • Central HVAC 1 Bedrooms @ $850 per month (202) 553-3814 www.novodev.com
1
DC Rider METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.
Great Location
1525 Elkwood Lane Capitol Heights, MD 20742
(866) 574-7408
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
Rosecroft Mews
Move In Special 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Apartments Starting @ $980 We Offer Second Chance Program With $0 Security Deposit • Clubhouse & Fitness Center • Washer & Dryer In Unit • Renovated Apartments Available • Less than Five Minutes from 495 • Swimming Pool • Central A\C & Heat • Spacious Closets
301-630-1300
2428 Corning Ave. Fort Washington, MD 20744 Call today to schedule an appointment tour!
HYATTSVILLE
Summer Is In The Air at
UNIVERSITY CITY APARTMENTS
CAPITOL HEIGHTS EHO
CHEVERLY CROSSING APARTMENTS
202-575-2990 XX740 1x.25
305 37th Street SE
914
2 $ bedrooms
0 application fee
869 21st Street • Washington, DC
*limited time offer. Ask for details
SPECIAL! • $200 OFF 1st Months Rent
3539 A St. SE
SUMMER SAVINGS EVENT
888.240.4569
Call for details
SE - NEWCOMB ST 2BR/3BR. $875-$1661 + electric.Section 8 ok. 202-388-3900 x12 or 202-438-3499
• FREE UTILITIES • Wall-to-Wall Carpet • On-Site Laundry & Playgrounds • 24-hr. Emergency Maintenance • Steps away from Café, Shopping & Metro
875
Min. To National Harbor, Mins. from I295, I395, I495, On-site Laundry/Parking, Vouchers Welcome
Southeast
SE: 1341 29th St SE. 1BR apt, hdwd flrs, secure bldg, mins from downtown. $750/mo + gas & elec. Delwin Realty 202-561-4675
Hurry Limited Time Only *on approved credit* *income restrictions apply* 888.891.8472
Call For Information on Specials! 2 BRs $ Starting @
4200 S. Capitol St. Wash. DC 20032 Delwin-realty.com
2100 Maryland Ave., NE Washington, DC 20002
1 MONTH FREE
Ask about our specials* Community Center Pets Welcome Walking Distance to Bus & Metro
XX740 1x.50
Lease Today
Apartment homes from $935*
XX740 1x.25
TERRACE
NE
HIGHLAND RIDGE
XX609 1x1
DC RENTALS
MD RENTALS
BEDROOMS ONLY $765/MONTH!
Water and Heat Included
• Hardwood floors • Near Minn Ave Metro Station • On Site Laundry Facilities • Close to Safeway/shopping • 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance
Showing apts. 7 days a week! Call 202-459-9830 for an appt. TODAY! *credit checks performed
3533 Ames St. NE Wash, DC 20019
AMES STREET APTS.
Hyattsville’s BEST KEPT SECRET!
1 BEDROOM’S FROM $949 2 BEDROOM’S FROM $1204 PERFECT FLOOR PLANS! PERFECT LOCATION! LET US FIND YOU THE PERFECT HOME!
CALL NOW
(866) 405-6986 31-7065 SOME RESTRICTIONS MAY APPLY/EHO
WWW.UNIVERSITYCITYAPTS.COM Hyattsville
Summer Ridge
$300 off 2 BRs. Must move in by August 1, 2014. *Income Qualifications # Occupants
Maximum Income
1
$45,180
2
$51,600
3
$58,080
4
$64,000
5
$69,660
6
$74,820
• Computer Lab & Classes • Metro Accessible • After school and Summer program for the kids • Easy access to 495/295, Metro and Shopping
Contact Jackie or Paula at 301-773-8484
866.507.2283 1829 Belle Haven Drive, Hyattsville, MD 20785
Performance. People. Pride.
www.summerridgeapartments.net
DC Rider METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.
XX609 1x1
DC RENTALS
38 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
MD RENTALS
MD RENTALS
(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 (tenant pays electric • carpet extra)
HYATTSVILLE
CASTLE MANOR APARTMENTS BEDROOM Apts.
*with no carpet
*with carpet
from $850*
from $910*
599
(when you sign a 12mo. lease) Super Convenient Location Close to shops & rec. ctr
1BR
$
825 • 2BR 925
2
BEDROOM Apts.
from $950
• Ceiling Fans • Lovely Setting • Near the New ARTS DISTRICT • Close to Shopping & Metro
MOVE-IN SPECIAL! 1ST MONTH RENT ONLY $599 (WITH A 12 MO. LEASE)
866.464.0993
GATED COMMUNITY
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.
Utilities & Carpet Included! (A/C Extra)
FOREST HILLS
PARKVIEW GARDENS 888-251-1872
www.parkviewgardensapartments.com Mon.-Fri. 8-5, Sat. 10-4, Sun. 12-4
RIVERDALE
1 BR $1021 All Utilities Included 1 BR + Den $1132 2 BR $1255 2 BR + Den $1522 3 BR 1599 3 BR + Den $1746
1, 2 & 3 BR APTS. HUGE 2 BR TOWNHOMES
*Call about our move-in specials
1439 Southern Ave.
888.480.1693 STUNNING NEW LUXURY APARTMENTS IN SILVER SPRING!
*
Call for details
301-289-9577
Walk to Metro, Shopping and Dining
CALL TODAY!
(301) 955-1197
METRO 710
710 Roeder Rd., Silver Spring, MD 20910
MOVE-IN SPECIAL
$599 price is for 1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only (when you sign a 12 mo. lease).
1 BR’s are $1050
Central Air • Elevator Off St. Parking • Mid-Rise Apts All Utilities Included
Silver Spring
WINDSOR COURT AND TOWER APTS
301-289-9590 3301 Chillum Rd. 20712
www.queenstownapts.com
LANDOVER • Gated community • State - of - the - art Fitness Center • Free gas and water • Walk to Walmart
CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS! CALVERT HALL
888-583-3045
3817 64th Avenue • Landover Hills, MD 20784
www.mapleridgeapartments.com
301-773-5228
Come Visit Us: Mon. thru Fri. 8 am - 5 pm • Sat. 10 am to 4 pm • Sun. 12 pm - 4 pm
MD RENTALS
Huge closets, balcony, granite counter and all utilities included!
TOWERS
1 block to West Hyattsvile Metro Newly Renovated Apt Homes* FREE after school program Swimming Pool Oasis Fitness/Business Center Hablamos Español
877-898-6958
www.kingssquareapartments.com
• Remodeled w/brand new Kitchens
2252 Brightseat Road • Landover, MD 20785
800-767-2189
1 Bedroom from $1599 2 Bedrooms from $1899
HILLBROOK
• • • • • •
3402 Dodge Park Rd. • Landover, MD 20785
Free 6-Week Summer Camp
Silver Spring
1 and 2 BRs available
KINGS SQUARE
• Right across from the NEW WEGMANS
MAPLE RIDGE
5409 Riverdale Road • Riverdale, MD 20737
• Enormous Floor Plans • Noise Dampening Floors • Close to Shopping • Pet Friendly • Washer & Dryers in all 3 BR units
1 BR Special- $1168 2 BR Special- $1300 3 BR Special- $1650 $100 off per month OR $500 worth of coupons that can be used over a 12 month time frame. Price subject to change.
301-637-0723
Windsor@zuckermangravely.com
SILVER SPR/Forest Glen Metro
Move In Special
$599 price is for 1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only. (on a 12 mo. lease) 1-BR $1100 | 2-BR $1225
Forest Glen Apts. 888-887-6793
Close to the Forest Glen Metro Off-Str. Parking/Controlled Access Ceiling Fans Housing Vouchers Welcome UTILITIES INCLUDED SILVER SPRING: BRAND NEW APARATMENTS! Now Accepting Applications! 814 Thayer Avenue, 1 & 2 Bedrooms. Limited Garage Parking, Granite, A/C, D/W, W/D, Hardwood. Starting at $1093- $1297, Avail. Oct. Visit Temp Office @ 911 Silver Spring Ave Suite 101, 301-588-2221
WELCOME TO
Spacious Floor Plans • Huge Walk-In Closets Pet Friendly • Pool & Fitness Center Dishwasher/Washer & Dryer • Near Metro
CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS!
CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS!
CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS! RIVERDALE VILLAGE
ASHTON HEIGHTS APARTMENTS
Suitland’s Best Kept Secret
BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL all credit considered
Under New Management 1BR, 1BA Newly Renovated Apartments 2BR, 1BA 3BR, 1.5BA SPACIOUS FLOOR PLANS Dishwasher • Wall-to-Wall Carpet • Cable Ready Central Heat • Building Control Access Sparkling Swimming Pool • Fitness Center Laundry Facility • Metro Accessible
CALL FOR
One Month Free!
FREE UTILITIES
Walk to Metro Walk to Elementary School Minutes to the NEW WEGMANS Granite Countertops* Stainless Steel Appliances* *Select Units Only
• Licensed daycare on premises
• Roomy, modern apts. • Private balconies/patios • Cathedral ceiling
Landover, MD
1, 2, and 3 BRs Starting at $980 *
• State-of-the-art fitness center
6400 Riverdale Road • Riverdale, MD 20737
APARTMENTS
• • • • •
• Free gas and water
CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS!
$
301-277-6202
301-779-1734
BEDROOM Apts.
MOVE IN SPECIAL
GATED COMMUNITY
• • • • • • •
LANDOVER
301.568.5600 Summer Specials
3901 Suitland Rd. Suitland, MD 20746
Conveniently located near Beltway (495, 95, 295) Pennsylvania Ave.
MD RENTALS
MD RENTALS
Suitland
Andrew’s Ridge
301-850-0045
3415 Parkway Terr. Dr. Suitland, Md. Mon.-Fri. 9am-5pm • Sat. by appt. only
t
TAK PK—New Hamp. Ave.
MOVE-IN SPECIAL!
Limited Time Offer, Certain Restrictions Apply!
$599
Move in ASAP & pay no rent until September 1, 2014. 3 Bedroom Starting At
$1,550
301-825-9162 www.morgan-properties.com 3400 Pearl Drive, Suitland, MD 20746
$599 price is for 1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only (on a 12 mo. lease)
BR’s starting at $899 and
HILLWOOD MANOR
202-499-2082
Offered on select 1 & 2 Bedrooms all utilities included and a chance to win a 60” HDTV
$1,205
1020
301-735-5200
*Limited time offer on select apartments
$1,075
$
• Walk to Metro • Wall to wall carpet • Secure Buildings • Parklike setting w/picnic tbls & grills • All credit considered
5601 Regency Park Court • Suitland, MD 20746
2 Bedroom Starting At
920
2 BRs fr
$30 Application Fee 1/2 off Application Fee w/Ad
• Classic & Renovated apartments available • Spacious bedrooms • Ample closet space • Exciting community renovations underway!
1 Bedroom Starting At
$
PARKWAY TERRACE
Rents from $1004
Station Square Apartments
1 BRs fr
SUITLAND
t t t ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED (a/c extra) XX740 1x.25
price is for 1st Mo. Rent/ 1 BR only
$
LANDOVER
XX740 1x.25
MOVE-IN SPECIAL
$
Arundel A PA R T M E N T S
RIVERDALE
XX740 1x.25
Arts District
1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only
MD RENTALS
XX740 1x.25
Hyattsville
MT. RAINIER
MD RENTALS
REJUVENATE Your Lifestyle
GARFIELD COURT 599
MD RENTALS
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 39
MD RENTALS
VA RENTALS
SOUTH POINTE APARTMENT HOMES 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments Rents Starting at $885*
4901 Seminary Rd., ALEXANDRIA, VA
SOUTHERN TOWERS Studios from the $1000s* 1BRs from the $1200s* 2BRs from the $1700s*
VA RENTALS
VA RENTALS
VA RENTALS
Everything Except You! ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED Choose Between High-Rise and Garden Style Apartments Pets Adored Modern Apartment Homes Brand New State of the Art Fitness Center and Community Room Minutes to Restaurants, Shopping, Dunn Loring/ Vienna/Tysons Corner/ Washington DC
COME IN FOR GREAT RENT SPECIALS
ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED free application upon approval with this ad
• Walk to Metro • Immediate Move-In
Call Now! 855.694.6498 www.southpointemd.com
• 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 *All Prices & Specials Subject to change without notice.
MON, TUE, WED, THU 9-7 • FRI, SAT 9-5 • SUN 11-5
*Restrictions apply, prices subject to change daily. Please ask a Leasing Consultant for more info.
(888) 450-3292
Temple Hills 1brs from $951*
FREE APPLICATION FEE w/ this ad. ALL credit considered.
• Spacious closets • Lots of windows • Walk to shopping & community center • Minutes to 2 Metro stations • Access to swimming pool
♦ Marlow Heights
BEST SUMMER VALUE IN TOWN! All Utilities Included!!! Awesome Location Spacious Floorplans
Don’t Wait! Call now (888) 293-2494 www.lloydapartments.com
301.289.7565 THE WOODS OF MARLTON
UPPER MARLBORO
7409 EASTMORELAND RD ANNANDALE, VA 22003 VISIT US ONLINE AT PARLIAMENTS.NET • A SOUTHERN MANAGEMENT COMMUNITY
Call to hear about our
current specials! 1 BRs from $1100’s • 2 BRs from $1200’s
1, 2 BRs Starting at $1269
805 S. Walter Reed Drive, Arlington, VA 22204
• Spacious apt homes conveniently located near AAFB & FedEx Field • Large closets • Pool & Exercise Room • Indoor racquetball court • Washer/Dryers in each unit • Fireplace*
An affordable community nestled among tranquil trees and in the heart of Arlington. • Close to cutting edge restaurants, lively clubs and quick access anywhere in DC • Spacious units with lots of light • Free utilities
*On select units
301-955-1479
877.496.4782 fillmoregardenapts.com
Arlington/Colonial Village - Must see, lovely furn efficiency, 650 sqft, walk to metro, bicycle to university, $1600/ mo, util incl. 703919-9361
VA RENTALS
Parliaments APARTMENT HOMES ROOMMATES
HOUSES FOR SALE
BOATS & AVIATION
FORESTVILLE, MD- Unfurnished room for rent. Female pref. Metro accessible. No smoking, no pets. $500. Call 240-274-3557
RENT WITH OPTIONS TO OWN. USE YOUR TAX REFUND WISELY. CALL IKE, METRO RE 301-335-4447 / 301-982-1284
PADDLE BOAT FOR SALE CALL X AT 202-435-763!
FORT WASHINGTON, MD - Pref male to share house. Furnished BR $150/week includes all utilities. Call Larry after 3pm 240-441-8675
RESORT PROPERTIES BAD/NEGATIVE CREDIT
FORT WASHINGTON, MD - Pref male to share house. Furnished BR $150/week includes all utilities. Call Larry after 3pm 240-441-8675
Removed from Credit Report. Guaranteed or your money back. 202-775-6932
Mitchellville—$1,000, 2 bedrm, 1 ba, Woodview Drive, 301-925-4239, WD, Nr Pub Transp, pkg, Pool
CARS
BRAGG TOWERS EXTENDED STAY HOTEL
Fairfax County—$1450, 1 bedrm, 1 ba, 1 1/2ba, 3 Fls, 11834 Larry Road, 703-868-5358, Deck, DW, EIK, Fpl, Form LR, new carpet, Newly Ren, WW Carpet, WD, HSI, Nr Pub Transp, AC, garbage, Heat, water
NE/Ft Totten Metro/Red Line- Female Pref $935 unfurn BR shrd Single Family Home in 3BR, 2.5BA. W/D, Cbl, int, maid svc. utils incld 202-494-3692
PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION EVERY SAT Over 500+ Cars, Trucks, Boats, RV's www. CapitalAutoAuction.com 301-563-9571
Furnished Efficiencies: $399 Wk $1470 Mo Cable Internet Utilities Housekeeping
MANASSAS - 3 level TH, 4BR, 3.5BA, new carpet & paint, finished w-o basement, deck, fpl, W/D. $2,000. 703-498-5765 or 703-330-2717
Petworth- 2 blocks from Metro, large rooms in very clean and quiet house. All utils included. $650 + 1 month dep and $50 app fee. Call 240-643-1818
JUNK VEHICLES REMOVED FREE CASH PAY FOR ALL 202-714-9835
ROOMMATES
Silver Spring, 1 room, close to shopping and bus. No smoking. $600/mo utils included. Call 202-817-1722
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
SUITLAND - Share SFH. Fully furnished room with refrigerator, microwave, CATV & wireless internet. $150/week. Call 301-310-5663
TOP CA$H FOR ANY CAR FAST, FREE PICK-UP 202-517-2579 CA$H ON THE SPOT
Contact us at 202.334.6732 or ads@readexpress.com
LUSTINE DODGE
XX195 1x.75
Sell out the show!
BELTSVILLE, MD- 1 room w/ separate BA. $600 everything included, internet & cable. Call 301-254-5536
Dale City—$700, private bedroom and bath in large home, Cherrydale Drive, 717-439-5849, pets welcome. Fenced in back yard.
SHEEHY HONDA
WOODBRIDGE, VA 1-800-879-4701 ALEXANDRIA, VA 14211 JEFFERSON DAVIS HWY. LUSTINEONLINE.COM 7434 RICHMOND HWY
LEXUS OF SILVER SPRING
Concerts, movies, events, restaurants and more.
XX740 1x2
DC Rider METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.
XX740 1x.25
99 South Bragg St, Alexandria, VA 22312 703-354-6300 www.BraggTowers.com
XX740 1x.25
Alexandria
Park your browser here.
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
355 TOYOTA
301-309-2200 ROCKVILLE, MD WWW.DARCARS.COM 15625 FREDERICK ROAD
XX609 1x1
*limited time offer
Woodsofmarlton.com
866.913.8090
1 Bedrooms $1250 ARLINGTON 2 Bedrooms $1450 LLOYD APARTMENTS
301-309-3917 WWW.DARCARS.COM
40 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
WASHINGTON FOUNTAIN PEN SUPERSHOW LARGEST PEN EVENT IN THE WORLD, RIGHT HERE ONCE A YEAR
CO-SPONSOR: PEN WORLD
10:00AM – 5:00PM
SHERATON PREMIERE AT TYSON’S CORNER
“That’s the glory of Gilmore Girls. It didn’t have to say explicitly that it was basically all about fabulous women doing fabulous things to better their lives; it simply practiced what it silently preached.”
Largest fountain pen show in the world. Meet over 200 dealers, and over 2,000 collectors from around the world. Buy/sell/trade fountain pens, calligraphy supplies, ballpoints, desk sets, inkwells and related items. Retailers will display the largest selection of writing instruments in the world. • Free educational seminars. Supplies available. Open bottles of over 250 inks for testing and evaluation. Expert on-site repairs and free pen evaluations. • Daily admission $7, free parking. (I-495, Exit 47-A, 2 miles on left). For more information: Http://www.pencentral.com The largest selection of Vintage and Modern Writing Instruments in the World.
SAMI MAIN AT BUZZFEED.COM outlines how “Gilmore Girls” — the popular 2000s television series that starred Lauren Graham and Alexis Bledel, left — sparked her own feminist awakening. Her first reason: “It allowed the ‘nerdy’ girl to be the main character instead of the goofy sidekick.”
“The supply of [music] festivals is at an all-time high, but no one knows if that’s necessarily true of demand. If demand hasn’t actually increased, higher ticket prices violate one of the most elementary rules of economics.” GRAYSON HAVER CURRIN AT WONDERINGSOUND.COM wonders
if the surge of summer music festivals in North America is creating a bubble in danger of wiping out the experience altogether.
RACHELLE BLIDNER (AP)
AUGUST 10TH – 11TH
“It takes her about six hours to complete a painting, though she said her biggest problem is interruptions – cars, rain or inquisitive members of the public or the NYPD.” NICK KIRKPATRICK AT WASHINGTONPOST.COM’S MORNING-MIX BLOG explains some challenges that faced artist Trina Merry’s latest
project. Merry posed nude models in New York City and painted their bodies to seamlessly blend them into the details of landmarks like Central Park or the Manhattan Bridge, above.
“It’s 3:00AM. You’re hungry. Your buds are hungry. The Cool Ranch Doritos bag is long past empty.”
“Who will speak for the monkey?” ANDY CUSH AT GAWKER.COM
ELLIS HAMBURGER AT THEVERGE .COM identifies the exact moment
that new mobile app Push for Pizza was designed for. The app lets you order a pizza with the tap of one button using your saved credit card and location information as well as your favorite pre-selected
WILD MACAQUE/DAVID SLATER
2013 THEME PEN: STIPULA’S ISRAEL 65
blog log
considers the obvious as photographer David Slater sues Wikipedia after the organization denied requests to take this photo out of its public Wikimedia Commons. The selfie was taken by a macaque that got ahold of Slater’s equipment while he was in Indonesia. Wikipedia argues that since the monkey took the photo, no human can claim the copyright.
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 41
fun+games Horoscopes
Scrabble Grams
PAR SCORE 145-155, BEST SCORE 206
Sudoku
MEDIUM
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You may find yourself cleaning up other’s messes for much of the day, but this makes you feel as though much is being done! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You may not agree with how something is being managed, but you must come to terms with the fact that it’s not your job to step in and fix it. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You’ve missed being with someone in particular over the past day or two, but that problem may be solved in a clever way. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) A reunion of sorts has you thinking that a situation that did not previously give you pleasure really isn’t all that bad after all.
WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) It’s
the little things that count, especially when it comes to friendly gestures and gifts. Do what you can, when you can.
WEDNESDAY’S SOLUTION
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You have been making rules for yourself that you cannot follow completely. Some adjustments must be made. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You’re going to want to get certain things done as early as you can in order to clear your docket for more important endeavors. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) With
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
Forecast Capital Weather Gang
POOCH CAFE | PAUL GILLIGAN
85 | 65
some creativity, you can zip through much that you have to do at a quick pace, but be sure that you’re following the rules.
TODAY: It’s back to weather that’s way more pleasant than you’d expect for early August. The cold front is gone and leaves behind a terrific work day. Expect mostly sunny skies, low humidity and a nice breeze around 10 mph from the north throughout the day. This evening continues the trend of nice nights we’ve been having.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) You haven’t been keeping up with the news around town, perhaps. Today you’ll have the chance to update yourself. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You mustn’t try too hard to deliver the goods, for by doing so, you may actually make one or two errors that can otherwise be avoided.
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS
AVG. HIGH: 87 RECORD HIGH: 104 AVG. LOW: 71 RECORD LOW: 58 SUNRISE: 6:15 a.m. SUNSET: 8:12 p.m.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You may
be fearing the collapse of something that you’ve been working some time to build — but that’s a mistaken notion. CANCER (June 21-July 22) You’re spending too much time worrying about your suitability for a certain task, when you must instead focus on getting it performed!
DAILY CODE
today in histor y
Need more Sudoku? Find another puzzle in the Comics section of The Post every Sunday and in the Style section Monday through Saturday.
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
85 | 66
81 | 68
SUNDAY
MONDAY
81 | 65
82 | 63
GG
1782: Gen. George Washington creates the Order of the Purple Heart, a decoration to recognize merit in enlisted men and noncommissioned officers.
1882: The famous feud between the Hatfields of West Virginia and the McCoys of Kentucky erupts into full-scale violence that would leave multiple men from both sides dead.
1959: The United States launches the Explorer 6 satellite, which would send back the first photos of Earth from space. The image depicts a crescent shape of the planet in sunlight.
Get more news and forecasts at washingtonpost.com/weather or follow @capitalweather on Twitter.
42 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
fun+games Crossword
17 19 20 21 23 27 29 30 33 34 35 36 37 38
Enjoy a hot tub? More than angry Part of a semi Lateral to the keel Acid type Musketeer motto word They work with your dough Slugger Gehrig Much baby talk Irene in a Sherlock Holmes tale Leaves no doubt about Spawn, as offspring They may be pulled up To an extent Makes even Legendary Bette Bird of the Outback Diana with the voice It may precede “four” Small brown singer
DOWN 1 2 3
You might stand a round here Human blood classification system ___ Aviv
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 18 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 30 31 32
Holbrook of Hollywood Defectors Nigerian metropolis Rascally tots Dinner hour for Caesar? Business with staying power? Amounts to take Do a homeroom chore Burn-soothing plant Hazy vision Contrary-minded answers Early moisture From the stars Swimmer’s choice Pastry sold at pizzerias Hilo instruments Ox, sheep or goat Give off or send forth Fabric for a bride Single-celled critters (Var.) Specialists with forks
34 Bus stop 37 Prerequisite for gain? 38 NBA great Chamberlain 40 Three-card monte shill 41 Reporter’s item 43 Ventnor or Vermont, e.g. 44 Queen who founded Carthage 46 Like some statistics or organs
47 Fishing traps 48 Golden Rule word 49 Mrs. Alfred Hitchcock 52 Tribute with stanzas 53 Tripod part 54 Just-passing grade 55 Make a misplay 56 Bro, to Sis 57 Good thing to sing in
Wednesday’s solution
DO YOU DRINK A LOT OF ALCOHOL? This project (NIH Study #14-AA-0042) aims to study a trial drug which may decrease alcohol use. We would like to determine whether this drug is safe and acceptable when given along with alcohol. Successful volunteers will be: - In good health and drug free - Between the ages of 21 and 65 - Willing to come for two outpatient visits and three inpatient visits (each inpatient visit includes four overnight stays at the NIH Clinical Center). Participants will have a free medical evaluation and be compensated for doing the study. Transportation to and from all visits will be provided. Study enrollment will be limited to 12 participants. For more details, email cpnresearch@mail.nih.gov
or call 301-496-5055
You’ll find us in the finest locations. FW is Washington’s fashion and lifestyle magazine. We’re not to be missed. Find us wherever style and fashion happen. JEWELERS
B & C Jewelers 3652 King St. Alexandria, VA 703.379.6010 Boone & Sons, DC 1025 Connecticut Ave., NW Washington, DC 202.785.4653 Boone & Sons, MD 5550 The Hills Plaza Chevy Chase, MD 301.657.2144 Boone & Sons, VA 1320 Old Chain Bridge Rd. McLean, VA 703.734.3997 Charles Schwartz 5300 Wisconsin Ave., NW Washington, DC 202.363.5432 Fink’s 21100 Dulles Town Circle Dulles, VA 571.434.6540 Mystique 211 The Strand Waterfront Alexandria, VA 703.836.1401
Pampillonia 5300 Wisconsin Ave., NW Washington, DC 202.363.6305
The Ritz-Carlton, VA 1700 Tysons Blvd. McLean, VA 703.506.4300
HOTELS
RESTAURANTS, SALONS & SPAS
Beacon Hotel 1615 Rhode Island Ave., NW Washington, DC 202.296.2100 Mandarin Oriental 1330 Maryland Ave., SW Washington, DC 202.554.8588 Park Hyatt 24th & M Streets, NW Washington, D.C. 202.789.1234 The Ritz-Carlton, DC 3100 South St., NW Washington, DC 202.912.4100 The Ritz-Carlton, DC 1150 22nd St., NW Washington, DC 202.835.0500 The Ritz-Carlton, VA 1250 South Hayes St. Arlington, VA 703.415.5000
Andre Chreky 1604 K St., NW Washington, DC 202.293.9393 Art and Chemistry 5234 Nicholson Ln. Kensington, MD 301.468.6900 Blu Water Day Spa 5224 Nicholson Ln. Kensington, MD 301.984.6245 George Bacchus Salon & Spa 10118 River Rd. Potomac, MD 301.983.5544 Georgetown Nails 1800 Wisconsin Ave., NW Washington, DC 202.965.2715
Napoleon Bistro Lounge 1847 Columbia Road, NW Washington, DC 202.299.9630 Okyo 2903 M St., NW Washington, DC 202.342.2675 one80 1275 K St., NW Washington, DC 202.842.9113 Roche 3000 K St., NW Washington, DC 202.775.0775 Toka, Downtown 801 Pennsylvania Ave., NW Washington, DC 202.628.5133 Toka, Georgetown 3251 Prospect St., NW Washington, DC 202.333.5133 Ury & Associates 3109 M St., NW Washington, DC 202.342.0944
RETAIL
Alchimie Forever 1010 Wisconsin Ave. #201, NW Washington, DC 202.530.3930 Appleseed Maternity 115 S. Columbus St. Alexandria, VA 703.535.5446 Babette 3307 Cady’s Alley, NW Washington, DC 202.339.9885 Bellacara 924 King St. Alexandria, VA 703.299.9652 Betsy Fisher 1224 Connecticut Ave., NW Washington, DC 202.785.1975 Carol Mitchell 1748 International Dr. McLean, VA 703.506.8963 Rizik Brothers Inc. 1100 Connecticut Ave. NW Washington, DC 202.223.4050
Subscribe to FW. Please e-mail Sandra.Ballentine@washpost.com. A PUBLICATION OF
XPN0329 3x5
1 6 11 14 15 16
BOWL ELIGIBLE 39 Abbr. on a rap sheet 40 Tasty 41 Weeper of myth 42 Envoy’s assignment 44 Single in a wallet 45 Main or blessed thing 46 Chow 47 Food processor setting 49 Underling 50 She married a rock star 51 Slatted furniture item 58 Final amt. 59 Tomato plant swelling 60 Osprey’s abode 61 Costa del ___ 62 Befitting a queen 63 Hat or race
EDITED BY TIMOTHY E. PARKER
ACROSS
THURSDAY | 08.07.2014 | EXPRESS | 43
people
STYLE TIPS
Who doesn’t nurse in haute couture?
People who’ve never heard of Miley are mad The Federal Communications Commission is investigating complaints over NBC’s July 6 special of Miley Cyrus’ Bangerz tour, TMZ reported. The network received complaints over Cyrus’ antics, including grinding against a man dressed as Abe Lincoln and rolling on a bed with halfnaked dancers. NBC could be fined for violating the FCC’s rules against showing sexual activity. (EXPRESS)
In a photo in Glamour’s September issue, Olivia Wilde appears in a Roberto Cavalli dress breast feeding her son, Otis. “Now it feels like Otis should always be on my breast,” she told the magazine. “It felt like we were capturing that multifaceted woman … You can be someone who is at once maternal and professional and sexy and self-possessed. [But] I mean, I certainly don’t really look like that when I’m [typically] breast-feeding.” Wilde tweeted the photo on Monday, writing, “Otis ordered milkshakes. Luckily I had some on me. Then he peed on my dress.” (EXPRESS)
SO CLOSE
Dude with awesome CD collection says ‘No fair!’
Tyra Banks said Tuesday on “Watch What Happens Live” that she isn’t sure she would consider a reunion with fellow Victoria’s Secret models Gisele Bundchen and Heidi Klum. She said she has “a bone to pick” with the company after it “promised me a lifetime supply of Victoria’s Secret products. … But … only let me have it for a year.” (EXPRESS)
In an interview with Rolling Stone, Katy Perry said she’s not interested in dating men who aren’t famous. “There’s a level of understanding when they’re in the same business, you know?” she said. “They know all the ins and outs, so you can just walk in to the house with a certain face and they understand.” Perry also noted that she is attracted to “anybody that understands the power of music.” (EXPRESS)
CHLOE RICE (GETTY IMAGES)
CHEAP
Tyra also swipes mini shampoo from hotels
Katy is only attracted to famous men. Or mice. Same difference.
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GETTY IMAGES
ALL FOUR OF THEM
CARRIED AWAY
He’s already planning a big speech on the Mall TMZ obtained Kanye West’s deposition in the case of his alleged beating of a photographer in July 2013. West compared celebrities who deal with paparazzi to 1960s civil rights pioneers, saying: “I equate it to discrimination.” He also noted, “I’m the smartest celebrity you’ve ever f---ing dealt with. I’m not Britney Spears.” (EXPRESS)
verbatim
“Butts are yesterday, I’m not about butts anymore. I’m on to the next.”
JASON DERULO, telling Rolling Stone that he’s not going to sing about butts anymore, despite the success of his song “Wiggle”
WHO WE ARE PUBLISHER | Arnie Applebaum EXECUTIVE EDITOR | Dan Caccavaro GENERAL MANAGER | Ron Ulrich CIRCULATION MANAGER | Charles Love MARKETING MANAGER | Joselyn Jang MANAGING EDITOR, FEATURES | Holly J. Morris MANAGING EDITOR, NEWS | Lori Kelley CREATIVE DIRECTOR | Jon Benedict SENIOR NEWS EDITOR | Diana D’Abruzzo STORY EDITOR | Adam Sapiro DEPUTY CREATIVE DIRECTOR | Adam Griffiths SENIOR EDITOR | Beth Marlowe
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44 | EXPRESS | 08.07.2014 | THURSDAY
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©COPYRIGHT 2014 MATTRESS WAREHOUSE, INC. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS. SOME ADVERTISED ITEMS ARE PRICED AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICES, WHILE OTHERS ARE SALE PRICES. *WE GUARANTEE YOUR NEW MATTRESS WILL BE DELIVERED WITHIN A DESIGNATED 3-HOUR DELIVERY WINDOW, PROVIDED BY OUR DELIVERY SERVICES TEAM ON THE MORNING OF DELIVERY, OR YOUR DELIVERY IS FREE. IF YOUR DELIVERY IS LATE, SIMPLY CONTACT OUR CUSTOMER SERVICE DEPARTMENT AFTER SIGNING THE DELIVERY MANIFEST WITH THE DELIVERY TIME STAMP AND WE WILL CREDIT YOUR ACCOUNT OR MAIL A REFUND CHECK FOR THE PRICE OF YOUR DELIVERY FEE WITHIN THREE WEEKS. PHOTOGRAPHS ARE FOR ILLUSTRATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY, FINAL PRODUCTS MAY VARY. 0% INTEREST FINANCING AVAILABLE FOR UP TO 60 MONTHS, FOR WELL QUALIFIED BUYERS. MINIMUM PAYMENTS REQUIRED, OTHER TERMS AND CONDITIONS APPLY. SEE STORE FOR DETAILS. **FIND A BETTER PRICE? WE’LL MATCH IT, PLUS 50% OF THE DIFFERENCE, PRICE MATCH VALID FOR ONE YEAR AFTER PURCHASE. SEE STORE FOR DETAILS.