EXPRESS_06202013

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Tonight 6:30pm readexpress.com | @wapoexpress JUNE 20, 2013

Thursday

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EXPLOSIVE ACCUSATION

TWA Flight 800 film claims a missile downed the airliner 4

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During Heist, He Realized He Really Needed Some Lilies Pennsylvania State Police are hoping to catch a bandit with a green thumb red-handed. Troopers say the man robbed the Amenity Farm and Greenhouse in Mount Pleasant Township on Tuesday. They say he flashed a gun and demanded money before also taking some plants. As of Wednesday, he had not been found. (AP) RECOMMENDATIONS

“Marijuana makes me a better and more creative parent.” — JA NUA RY THOM A S, A CALIFORNIA MOM WHO SAYS SHE SMOKES POT UP TO FIVE TIMES A DAY WHILE LOOKING AFTER HER 2-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER. THOMAS IS PART OF A GROUP OF MOMS WHO MEET UP FOR LEGAL MEDICINAL MARIJUANA LUNCHES, THE U.K. WEBSITE ORANGE NEWS REPORTED WEDNESDAY.

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After 45 Days, He’ll Have to Clean and Dry His Car Again He was drying off his freshly washed car. That’s what the Canadian man told the Mounties when they stopped him doing 112 miles per hour on Highway 22 south of Black Diamond, Alberta, in western Canada. The driver, a 67-year-old who lives in the area, was in court Monday. The judge fined him $800 and suspended him from driving for 45 days, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said Tuesday. (AP)

‘I HATE WHEN SHE DOES THIS’ Zita, a liger — half lioness, half tiger — carries her 1-month-old cub Tuesday in her enclosure at the Novosibirsk Zoo in Russia. The cub is a liliger — a big-cat breed in which the father is a lion and the mother is a liger. The first liliger was born in the zoo last year, and now there’s a second litter of three, all of them females.

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Nation

3rd GOP Senator Airs Gay-Marriage Support Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski on Wednesday said she supports gay marriage, making her the third Senate Republican to do so. Murkowski’s announcement comes with the Supreme Court days away from issuing a decision on two cases related to gay marriage. The high court is considering both California’s gay marriage ban and the federal Defense of Marriage Act. “I am a life-long Republican because I believe in promoting freedom and limiting the reach of government,” Murkowski wrote in an opinion piece posted on her Senate website. “When government does act, I believe it should encourage family values. I support the right of all Americans to marry the person they love and choose because I believe doing so promotes both values: it keeps politicians out of the most private and personal aspects of peoples’ lives — while also encouraging more families to form and more adults to make a lifetime com-

Study: HPV Vaccine Cuts Infections in Girls by Half Researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Wednesday that a vaccine for a sexually spread virus has cut infections in teen girls by half. This is the first evidence of how well the HPV vaccine works since it came on the market seven years ago. For girls ages 14 to 19, the study found a 56 percent reduction in the types of HPV virus targeted by the shots. Vaccination campaigns focus on girls ages 11 and 12. (AP)

54

“I support marriage equality and support the government getting out of the way to let that happen.”

Washington

ATLANTA

The number of senators who have publicly announced their support for gay marriage. Aside from Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski, there are two other GOP senators, 49 Democratic senators and two independent senators who have announced their support. (AP)

— SEN. LISA MURKOWSK I,

R-A L A SK A , IN A COLUMN SUPPORTING GAY MARRIAGE

mitment to one another.” Murkowski had previously said her views on same-sex marriage were “evolving” and cited the looming Supreme Court ruling as one reason she announced her decision now. Murkowski cited her own experience. She said she had recently nominated a same-sex couple from Alas-

ka as “Angels in Adoption” and ate lunch with the family, which included four adopted children. It bothered her, she wrote, that, “despite signing up and volunteering to give themselves fully to these four adorable children, our government does not meet this family halfway and allow them to be legally recognized as spouses.” Groups supporting same-sex marriage quickly praised Murkowski’s shift. “Senator Murkowski’s courageous and principled announcement today sends a clear message that marriage equality must come to all 50 states in this country,” said Chad Griffin, president of the Human Rights Campaign.

Investigators wrap up a search Wednesday in Oakland Township, Mich., to find the remains of Jimmy Hoffa.

ANNAPOLIS

OAKLAND TOWNSHIP, MICH.

3 Navy Football Players Charged in Sex Assault

FBI Ends Search for Jimmy Hoffa’s Remains

The U.S. Naval Academy has charged three Navy football players with sexually assaulting a female midshipman more than a year ago. The academy said Wednesday that the male midshipmen are being charged with rape, sexual assault or other sexual misconduct, and making a false official statement. Cmdr. John Schofield says the case is still in the pre-trial phase and didn’t comment. (AP)

Beneath a swimming pool, under a horse farm and now a weed-grown field north of Detroit. For at least the third time in a decade, FBI agents searched for the remains of former Teamsters boss Jimmy Hoffa, and once again, the search was futile. “Certainly, we’re disappointed,” Detroit FBI chief Robert Foley said Wednesday. Hoffa has been missing since 1975. (AP)

Nothing’s Guaranteed Men’s Wearhouse said Wednesday that it fired its founder and executive chairman, George Zimmer, 64, who often said, “You’re going to like the way you look. I guarantee it” in commercials. Zimmer said in a statement that he and the board disagreed about the company’s direction. (AP)

HENRY C. JACKSON (AP)

What to do.

CARLOS OSORIO (AP)

Alaskan lawmaker notes stance ahead of high-court rulings

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Former investigators filed a petition Wednesday to reopen the probe into the 1996 crash of TWA Flight 800 off the coast of New York, saying new evidence points to the often-discounted theory that a missile strike may have downed the jumbo jet. The New York-to-Paris flight crashed July 17, 1996, just minutes after the jetliner took off from John F. Kennedy Airport, killing all 230 people aboard. The effort to reopen the probe is being made in tandem with the release of “TWA Flight 800,” a documentary that will be released on the 17th anniversary of the crash. It features the testimony of former investigators who raise doubts about the National Transportation Safety Board’s conclusion that the crash was caused by a fuel-tank explosion. “We don’t know who fired the missile,” said Jim Speer, an accident investigator for the Air Line Pilots

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Partially reconstructed in 1999, the side of TWA Flight 800 is shown where the center fuel tank reportedly exploded in 1996, causing the plane to crash and killing 230.

Association, one of those seeking a new review of the probe. “But we have a lot more confidence that it was a missile.” The NTSB issued a statement Wednesday morning saying it is aware of the upcoming documentary, and spokeswoman Kelly Nan-

IRS Draws New Criticism Over $70M in Bonuses Washington Already reeling from a pair of scandals, the Internal Revenue Service is drawing new criticism over plans to hand out millions of dollars in employee bonuses. The Obama administration has ordered agencies to cancel discretionary bonuses because of automatic spending cuts, but the IRS says it’s merely following legal obligations under a union contract. The agency is about to pay $70 million in employee bonuses, said Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, a senior Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, which has jurisdiction over the IRS. Grassley says his office learned that the IRS was to execute an agreement with the employees’ union Wednesday to pay the bonuses. Grassley says the bonuses should

tel noted that the TWA Flight 800 investigation lasted four years. “Investigators took great care reviewing, documenting and analyzing facts and data … before determining the probable cause of the accident during a two-day board meeting.” FR ANK ELTMAN (AP)

Hearsay

$3,500 The amount Internal Revenue Service employees can get under individual performance bonuses each year, under a union contract. (AP)

be canceled under an April directive from the White House budget office. The directive was written by Danny Werfel, a former budget official who has since been appointed acting IRS commissioner. “The IRS always claims to be short on resources,” Grassley said. “But it appears to have $70 million for union bonuses.” The IRS said it is negotiating with the National Treasury Employees Union over the matter but did not dispute Grassley’s claim that the bonuses are imminent. (AP)

“If we are to prevent terrorist attacks, we have to know and be in their communications.” — FBI DIREC TOR ROBERT MUELLER, IN AN APPEARANCE BEFORE THE SENATE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE ON WEDNESDAY. HE URGED CONGRESS TO MOVE CAREFULLY BEFORE MAKING ANY CHANGES THAT MIGHT RESTRICT THE NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY’S PROGRAMS FOR MASS COLLECTION OF PEOPLE’S PHONE RECORDS AND INFORMATION FROM THE INTERNET.


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World In Brief

MOGADISHU, SOMALIA

20 Dead After Militants Storm U.N. Compound Seven al-Qaeda-linked militants on a suicide mission detonated a pickup rigged with explosives at the gate of the U.N. compound in Somalia’s capital Wednesday, launching a bombs-andgunfire assault that saw militants pour into the complex. At least 20 people were killed, including three foreigners and the attackers, officials said. (AP)

Riled Karzai Rejects Taliban Talks Afghan president also halts security negotiations with U.S. Kabul, Afghanistan Hopes dimmed for talks aimed at ending the Afghan war when an angry President Hamid Karzai on Wednesday suspended security negotiations with the U.S. and scuttled a peace delegation to the Taliban, sending American officials

scrambling to preserve the possibility of dialogue with the militants. What provoked Karzai was a move by the Taliban to cast their new office in Qatar as a rival embassy. The Taliban held a ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday in which they hoisted their flag and a banner with the name they used while in power more than a decade ago: “Political Office of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.” The militants’ attempt at a publicity coup played to Karzai’s long-

Meanwhile … Afghan President Hamid Karzai insisted that the Taliban halt their attacks on the ground before negotiations can begin. The Taliban claimed responsibility for a rocket attack on Bagram Air Base outside Kabul that killed four American service members late Tuesday. (AP)

standing distrust of both the Taliban and the United States, who had announced Tuesday that they would pursue negotiations in the Qatari capital of Doha — at least initially without the Afghan government. In a statement, Karzai lashed out at the U.S., suspending negotiations over what presence the U.S. will keep in Afghanistan after 2014. He said his High Peace Council would not enter talks with the Taliban until the negotiations were “completely Afghan.” AMIR SHAH AND DAVID RISING (AP)

MILAN

Dolce and Gabbana Convicted of Tax Evasion

Middle-Class Anger Boils Over in Brazil

Hearsay

A Milan court on Wednesday convicted designers Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana of tax evasion for failing to declare $268 million in income. They received a suspended jail sentence of one year and eight months and were ordered to pay $670,000 to tax authorities, which the defense plans to appeal. The court acquitted them on another charge. (AP)

“These actions are directed against all of us, not just me. … But I think the response that the country gives is important.”

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Swiss Lawmakers Reject Deal on Banking Secrecy

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ANDRE PENNER (AP)

Switzerland’s lower house of parliament has rejected a government proposal on relaxing Swiss banking secrecy laws. It would have helped the country’s banks avoid facing U.S. criminal charges for shielding tax cheats. (AP)

ITALY’S FIRST MINISTER, ON WEDNESDAY AFTER SHE RECEIVED INTERNET DEATH THREATS BEFORE A

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President Barack Obama spoke to a crowd of about 4,500 on Wednesday in Berlin.

Obama Calls for Russia, U.S. to Draw Down Nukes Berlin Appealing for a new citizen activism in the free world, President Barack Obama renewed his call Wednesday to reduce U.S. and Russian nuclear stockpiles, calling for a onethird reduction of deployed nukes between the countries. In a wide-ranging speech that enumerated a litany of challenges facing the world, Obama said he wanted to reignite the spirit that Berlin displayed when it fought to reunite itself during the Cold War. Obama spoke repeatedly of seeking “peace with justice” around the world by confronting intolerance, poverty, conflicts and economic inequality. But even before Obama’s speech, White House aides cast his call for nuclear reductions as the centerpiece of his address. “Peace with justice means pursuing the security of a world without nuclear weapons, no matter how distant that dream may be,” Obama said. Obama is likely to face objections from NATO countries where many

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World

Conjuring Kennedy President Barack Obama’s address came nearly 50 years after John F. Kennedy’s famous speech in this once-divided city in which he denounced communism, declaring “Ich bin ein Berliner” (I am a Berliner). Obama asked his audience to heed that message. “If we lift our eyes as President Kennedy calls us to do, then we’ll recognize that our work is not yet done,” he said. “So we are not only citizens of America or Germany, we are also citizens of the world.” (AP)

strongly oppose removing U.S. nuclear weapons because they worry the Russians have a far greater number of tactical nuclear weapons within range of their territory. JULIE PACE (AP)

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Pope John Paul II has moved a step closer to sainthood. A commission of theologians approved a miracle attributed to his intercession, clearing a key hurdle and putting him on track for canonization this fall near the 35th anniversary of his election, a Vatican official said Wednesday. John Paul II has been on the fast track for sainthood since then-Pope Benedict XVI waived a five-year waiting period, prompting a study of his virtues just weeks after his 2005 death. (AP)


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Failing Too Fast to Be Fixed? Have we reached a point where, despite Metro’s work schedule, the infrastructure and rolling stock are simply failing faster than they can be fixed, thus risking more incidents and more serious incidents? The equipment isn’t failing faster than it can be fixed. Things may be bad, but not that bad yet. Some riders have asked if the work could be done faster if Metro shut down entire lines. That’s almost certainly true, but I think the folks asking that have a time frame of a few weeks, or maybe months. It would take a lot longer than that. I’ve encountered

no one in any leadership spot who thinks a complete shutdown of a line is a good idea. Travel would be horribly disrupted, and the economic consequences would be severe.

Is Metro taking any advice from London on how to execute repairs? The Underground is also a two-track system (unlike NYC with its express tracks) and it is MUCH older than Metro is. I haven’t noticed Metro managers taking advice from any other transit systems on the repairs. Metro launched its aggressive

Dr. Gridlock offers commuter counseling online at washingtonpost.com.

track-work program in 2011, and it’s going to continue to 2017 at about the current pace. I don’t know whether the work could be more focused than it appears to be right now; I’m not sure we can find the answers to such questions by looking at other transit systems.

I propose the use of SmarTrip cards for parking at Dulles, Reagan and BWI. Bet someone will say it is too hard to put in place, but we need to view long term. I would pay a little more for system maintenance. I think the D.C. region’s transportation systems will eventually settle on one payment method for road

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tolls, transit use and parking, but I don’t believe that will wind up being SmarTrip. It would be so much easier if you could pay for everything with an ordinary credit card and not need a specialized card.

The parking lots at JFK, Newark, Albany and LaGuardia airports in New York and New Jersey all allow E-ZPass for payment. That would be an easy way for D.C. airports to handle parking, since more drivers have E-ZPasses than SmarTrip cards. I’d love it if our airports allowed E-ZPass payments. But I think the ideal thing, eventually, would be a universal form of payment. I hear from plenty of people who don’t want to get E-ZPasses. It comes up a lot when we talk about the HOT lanes and the Intercounty Connector.

The Lotteries Wednesday, June 19 District Mid-day D.C. 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-1-8 Evening D.C. .3 (Tue.). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-4-1 Mid-day D.C. 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-8-9-2 Evening D.C. 4 (Tue.) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-1-3-0 Mid-day D.C. 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-4-1-3-9 Evening D.C. 5 (Tue.) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-8-2-5-8

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TRACK WORK THIS WEEKEND From Friday, June 21 at 10 p.m. to Sunday, June 23 at closing: Buses replace trains on the Red Line between Rhode Island Ave and Forest Glen while Metro eliminates joints, renews track fasteners and upgrades communications. For last train times or information about shuttle bus service, parking, alternate routes or track work on upcoming weekends, please visit MetroForward.com or call 202-637-7000.

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Local

Douglass Statue Finds Its Place

For now, there will be no nude dancing on tables or in private alcoves at JP’s. WASHINGTON

Board: Strip Club Must Scale Back Plans to Open JP’s, a strip club that promised to offer nude dancing on tabletops and in private alcoves in Glover Park, could open as early as Friday, but it will have to do so with scaled-back plans, D.C. officials decided Wednesday. The decision from the District’s Alcoholic Beverage Control Board comes after neighborhood advocates and other strip-club owners expressed concerns that the new operation could change the nature of nude dancing in the city. THERESA VARGAS (THE WASHINGTON POST)

WARRENTON, VA.

Va. Newspaper Removes ‘Democrat’ From Name The Fauquier Times-Democrat, a Virginia newspaper that traces its roots back nearly 200 years, announced Wednesday that it is changing its name because of the increasingly divisive political landscape. In an editorial, the newspaper said it would become known as the Fauquier Times, adding that having the word “Democrat” in its name “is no longer a very astute business decision.” Fauquier County — about 45 minutes from D.C. — is far from Democratic. (AP) WASHINGTON

Teen Charged in 2009 Double Killing in D.C. D.C. police have announced the arrest of a 17-year-old in connection with the 2009 shooting deaths of two teenagers, one of them a 15-year-old ninth-grader caught in a crossfire between groups fighting over a stolen gun in Northeast Washington. Police said they charged the youth with second-degree murder on Tuesday. PETER HERMANN (TWP)

After years of delay, statue of abolitionist dedicated at Capitol

Meanwhile … LINDA DAVIDSON (THE WASHINGTON POST)

NIKKI KAHN (THE WASHINGTON POST)

In Brief

Washington It is a little more than 7 feet tall, a bronze, bearded figure perched atop a 3-foot marble pedestal. T he c ombi ne d w e i g ht i s 1,700 pounds, but the symbolic heft of the Frederick Douglass statue is much greater than that, as became clear Wednesday when the carving of the famed abolitionist and District advocate found its place inside the halls of Congress after years of delay and debate. Before an audience that included Douglass’ descendants, the first statue chosen to represent D.C. was unveiled at a ceremony in the Cap-

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Vice President Joe Biden speaks Wednesday before the Frederick Douglass statue, which now has a permanent home in the U.S. Capitol.

itol Visitor Center’s Emancipation Hall. Its arrival marked the culmination of a fight by Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton and others that has stretched more than a decade. Fittingly for a city that has endured repeated frustration at the hands of Congress, Wednes-

day’s victory was only a partial one. While the 50 states have two statues apiece in the Capitol, the District was granted only one, as congressional Republicans objected to placing it on equal footing with the states. So a second completed statue, of architect Pierre L’Enfant,

Architect Frank Gehry is changing some elements of his design for a memorial honoring President Dwight Eisenhower near the National Mall as planners move toward seeking approvals to build the project over some observers’ objections. Gehry proposed a park with statues representing Eisenhower as president and World War II hero in a set of changes last year. (AP)

remains at One Judiciary Square. Some speakers Wednesday noted the irony that Douglass, a champion of D.C. voting rights and self-government, was being enshrined in a building where the city’s voice remains muffled. BEN PERSHING (THE WASHINGTON POST )

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Washington Three female pedestrians were struck and injured — two critically — by a black sport utility vehicle that witnesses and police said sped through an intersection near Union Station on Wednesday morning and then plowed into a catering van. Police said three more people — two in the catering van and the driver of the SUV — also were injured and rushed to local hospitals. Authorities said two of the pedestrians suffered life-threatening injuries, including one who was pinned under the van. Witnesses to the crash, which occurred at North Capitol Street and Massachusetts Avenue, reported a horrific scene with people running and screaming. Two people said they saw the SUV go through a red light, hit a traffic-signal pole and then hit the three women. PETER HERMANN (THE WASHINGTON POST)

NOVEMBER 2–3 AT THE WASHINGTON CONVENTION CENTER This huge foodie fest, DC’s largest, includes presentations by Paula Deen, the Cooking Channel’s Extra Virgin costars, actress Debbie Mazur and husband Gabriele Corcos, Extreme Chef winner Terry French and other TV celebrity chefs. Also visit scores of exhibitors with everything from cutlery to chocolates, hot sauces to the hottest foodstuffs, kitchen gadgets to kitschy gift ideas, entertaining tips and much more.

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Plus, don’t miss the Grand Tasting, featuring sumptuous samplings prepared by top chefs from DC’s favorite restaurants.


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Cover Story

Is Anyone Listening? Washington Emergency intercoms on Metro trains did not work on scores of rail cars for several years, the transit agency said Wednesday. The problem, which plagued cars that were arranged in certain configurations, meant that riders were without any way to reach operators. As a result, Metro scrambled to rearrange dozens of trains and said that the intercoms were working by the time the system opened Wednesday. Metro spokesman Dan Stessel said the agency has been looking into the issue for months but would not offer a more complete timetable. However, the transit agency was aware of an issue affecting intercoms four years ago. After the Red Line crash that killed nine people in 2009, Metro began placing older cars from the 1000 series in the middle of train sets, putting them behind newer cars from the 6000 series. In a news release that year,

Short Term Intercoms failed on trains where cars from the 6000 series, the newest in Metro’s fleet, were followed by older cars from the 1000 or 4000 series. Workers on Tuesday night rearranged cars so that no trains were traveling in this order.

Metro acknowledged that arranging cars in this fashion could cause the intercoms to fail and that “officials are seeking to identify a fix.” “I would assume we’re talking about the same issue,” Stessel said on Wednesday. “This issue has existed for as long as [the] 6000-series car has been on the property.” The newer cars were introduced in 2006. Stessel said that while Metro k new t here was an issue and received reports of failing intercoms, on Tuesday, Metro engineers were for the first time able to identify the cause and come up with a solution. The transit agency announced this news the day after Metro General Manager Richard Sarles was informed of the situation and two days after a reported issue involving an intercom. A fight aboard a Red Line train on Monday spilled out onto the platform at the Woodley Park station, and reports from the scene indicated that riders were unsure if they were able to reach the train operator over the intercom. That particular train had two cars from the 6000 series followed by cars from the 1000 series, Stessel said, so the reported intercom failure could have been caused by this issue.

Long Term The fix requires hardware and software changes. Replacing parts on the 6000 cars will allow riders on the 1000 cars to use the intercoms, while the 4000 cars require new equipment containing the necessary software changes.

A Review Metro has launched a review of the problem — which will cover, in part, whether the issue should have been detected earlier — and present it at a meeting of the board’s safety committee. Employees will also conduct random tests of the intercoms. (T WP)

THINKSTOCK/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

After years of complaints, Metro acknowledges intercom failures

What Metro Plans to Do

Rider Reaction In September 2011, the blog UnsuckDCMetro reported that intercom failures were caused by sandwiching older 1000-series cars between newer 6000-series cars, citing two unnamed Metro sources. The post generated dozens of comments from riders fed up with Metro’s shortcomings. Similar frustration swept social media Wednesday, when Metro publicly admitted the problem nearly two years later. (E XPRESS)

“I have tried to give #WMATA a fighting chance, but with the response to the intercom I am beyond outraged …” — @RENE W TR A NSIT ON TWITTER

“Did you hear the joke about broken intercoms on #WMATA trains? That’s OK, the train operator didn’t hear it either.” — @GFIT ZP ON TWITTER

“This #Wmata emergency call button issue is a big damn deal and should not go away. Sack-worthy.” — @K EL SE Y LH3H ON TWITTER

Mort Downey, chairman of the Metro board’s safety and security committee, said that after an NBC 4 investigation into intercom problems earlier this year, board members were told the intercoms were working. Intercoms are located in every rail car and are meant to let riders contact the train operator to report suspicious behavior or emergencies. They are particularly vital because when trains travel underground, riders lose cell-phone reception and have no other way to report emergencies. “Even if … their cell phone is working, they’re not going to use their cell phone to call the train operator,” Downey said. “Literally the only way they could address a message to that train operator is via the intercom.” The flaw was brought to Metro’s attention by riders and employees. In addition, the Tri-State Oversight Committee had requested that Metro investigate the issue in April. “It’s a passenger feature that needs to work and needs to work reliably,” said Jim Benton, who heads the Tri-State Oversight Committee. MARK BERMAN (THE WASHINGTON POST )


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Sports Series Preview

Nats vs. Rockies TODAY 7:05 P.M., MASN

There’s a New Ace In Town

J. Zimmermann 9-3, 2.44 ERA

FRIDAY 7:05 P.M., MASN2

Stephen Strasburg 3-6, 2.50 ERA

GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

“I’m hoping he wears that brace every time he goes out for every game,” Johnson said after the game. Zimmermann has been one of Washington’s few consistencies in 2013. He has a 9-3 record in 14 outings, with 11 quality starts. His 2.44 ERA is the 11th best in the majors, and his 0.93 WHIP ranks fifth. The 27-year-old entered the season with one complete game in his first 81 career starts. This year, he already has three complete games and is on pace to throw nearly 230

innings. “I take pride every time I go out there, and try to go as deep as I can,” Zimmermann said. “I’m going to pitch to attack guys. Whatever happens will happen for a reason.” Zimmermann is 6-0 at home, with all three of his losses away from Nationals Park. He’s coming off one of his worst outings of the season, allowing six earned runs in five innings in Cleveland. Zimmermann will start at home against Colorado today, giving

Jhoulys Chacin 5-3, 4.26 ERA

SATURDAY 12:05 P.M., MASN

Jordan Zimmermann has emerged as the Nats’ best starting pitcher

Before his start on June 9, Jordan Zimmermann attended a team meeting with a heating pad wrapped around his neck. Manager Davey Johnson was concerned, seeing his star pitcher with what looked like a neck brace. Johnson immediately asked if Zimmermann would be OK. When that day’s game against the Minnesota Twins began, it was clear Johnson had nothing to worry about. Zimmermann pitched seven scoreless innings in a 7-0 win.

Roy Oswalt 0-0, 0.00 ERA

In Good Company Zimmermann is considered a candidate to be the starting pitcher for the National League at next month’s All-Star game. Here’s how he compares with other contenders: Jordan Zimmermann Nationals 9-3 record, 99⅔ innings, 2.44 ERA, 67 Ks, 0.93 WHIP Clayton Kershaw Dodgers 5-4 record, 107⅓ innings, 1.84 ERA, 104 Ks, 0.97 WHIP Matt Harvey Mets 6-1 record, 104 innings, 2.16 ERA, 115 Ks, 0.90 WHIP Patrick Corbin Diamondbacks 9-0 record, 94⅔ innings, 2.28 ERA, 74 Ks, 1.01 WHIP Adam Wainwright Cardinals 10-4 record, 110 innings, 2.37 ERA, 100 Ks, 1.01 WHIP

him an opportunity to bounce back where he’s most comfortable pitching. The Nationals’ offense, which ranks 28th in the majors in runs scored, has actually provided Zimmermann with decent run support. He’s receiving 4.43 runs per start, whereas the other four starters rank near the bottom of all MLB pitchers in run support. For young batters, such as 23-year-old infielder Anthony Rendon, Zimmermann’s success on the mound helps hitters. “It takes off a lot [of pressure] when he can pound the zone like that,” Rendon said. “He moves his pitches in and out. He does what he does. It’s pretty crazy how he can do that every time.” Zimmermann can’t recall a better stretch than the one he’s started this season with. “It’s gotta be the best,” he said. JASON BUT T (FOR E XPRESS)

Dan Haren 4-8, 5.72 ERA

Jorge De La Rosa 7-4, 3.21 ERA

SUNDAY 1:35 P.M., MASN2

Ross Detwiler 2-5, 3.34 ERA

Jeff Francis 2-5, 6.58 ERA

Who’s Hot? Ian Krol, Nationals: The 22-year-old left-handed reliever has allowed one hit and no runs in his first six appearances since being called up.

Who’s Not? Denard Span, Nationals: The center fielder and leadoff hitter entered Wednesday’s game with one hit and one walk in his past six games.

How They Match Up THROUGH TUESDAY’S GAMES

Nationals

Rockies

243

275

355

319

RUNS SCORED

RUNS ALLOWED

RUNS SCORED

RUNS ALLOWED

Stat to Watch At-Bats Per Home Run Nationals Rockies

42.3 25.5


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

THE WILL OF WALE

After years of making a name in the area’s nascent hip-hop scene, the rapper gets his best shot yet at the big time E6

SMALLZ RASKIND

FREE

EVENT

PIRATE

Tied to the Real Pirates exhibition Tickets to the exhibition not included with free event.

FA M I LY F E S T I VA L SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 10 AM - 4 PM

Experience pirate reenactors, sword fights, falconry, sea shanties, and more!

17th & M Streets NW www.ngmuseum.org


E2 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

GAYE GERARD (GETTY IMAGES)

Or Like Kanye Touring With Beethoven

No Bluths to Be Seen It has to be tough to be a member of the band Arrested Development right now. The Internet has been abuzz for months about the return of “Arrested Development” — the cult TV show, not the thoughtful ’90s hip-hop group that made the crossover-hit call-and-response song “Tennessee.” Actually, the band too is back — it put out a new album, “Standing at the Crossroads,” last year — and is bringing more music with a message. Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. NW; Sun., 6 p.m., free; 202-467-4600, kennedy-center.org. (Foggy Bottom)

Grown-Up, Yes. Boring, Never. Nerd superstar Neil Gaiman — he wrote “Good Omens,” “American Gods,” some episodes of “Doctor Who” and the “Sandman” comic book series — has released a new book, “The Ocean at the End of the Lane.” His first adult novel in years (he’s been busy writing children’s books), it’s about childhood, friendship and supernatural secrets. The dark magic of which we assume he will reveal when he signs your book. Lisner Auditorium, 730 21st St. NW; Fri., 7 p.m., sold out; 202-994-6800, lisner.org. (Foggy Bottom)

Billy Idol was one of the protostars of the MTV age, a bleached-blond bad boy who rode out the ’80s on a rebel yell and a snarl. Thursday, he’ll have Cat Power, right, opening for him, which is sort of like Joni Mitchell opening for Ozzy Osbourne. Power’s mellow-yet-powerful indie rock melds postpunk and electronic influences, most recently on her hit 2012 album “Sun,” so the pairing does make some sense. Some. Wolf Trap, Filene Center, 1551 Trap Road, Vienna; Thu., 8 p.m., $35-$48; 703-2551868, wolftrap.org.


K

T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | E3

Fete de la Musique is the Alliance Francaise’s yearly reminder that French culture is about more than cheese. The party starts Saturday afternoon and continues all night, with hours of music by bands including reggae-funk group The Nova Lights and rootsy Gramophonic. The event is held at Georgetown’s new Gallic restaurant, the Malmaison — where, yes, you can obtain cheese in case the day doesn’t feel French enough without it — as well as on the surrounding waterfront. Malmaison, 3401 K St. NW; Sat., 2 p.m., free before 11 p.m., after 11 p.m. tickets are $5 in advance and $10 at the door; francedc.org.

dining

Don’t Do as She Says … OR as She Does

D.C. can get downright swampy in the summer. We present four local restaurants serving foods fresh from the bog. E11

Courtney Love was never out to be a role model. The media hasn’t presented her in the best light, nor did 2010’s meh Hole comeback disc, “Nobody’s Daughter.” But the now-solo Love will always be a grunge pioneer and a survivor. She put the harsh realities of love, death and struggle into some amazing music that changed the lives of riot grrrls and boys and misfits of every type. Fillmore, 8656 Colesville Road, Silver Spring; Sat., 8 p.m., $29; 301-960-9999, fillmoresilverspring.com. (Silver Spring)

PIER MARCO TACCA (GETTY IMAGES)

screen

Compiled by Express’ Fiona Zublin

AFI Docs (formerly Silverdocs) rolls out a buffet of hot documentary films. We help you plan your menu. E5

stage

DANISHA CROSBY

INSIDE

Je Ne Sais Quois, All Night

Round House Theatre’s “Becky Shaw” is about a blind date gone bad. The play’s actors share their own romantic horror stories. E8

END OF SEASON OFFER $20 ORCHESTRA SEATS!*

saint-saënsand macmillan Krzysztof Urbanski, conductor Jean-Yves Thibaudet, piano

JERRY GARCIA SYMPHONIC CELEBRATION

Emil de Cou, conductor Featuring Warren Haynes, guitar and vocals Jam out at this groundbreaking tribute to the late Grateful Dead legend featuring Grammy®-winning blues rocker Warren Haynes and orchestral interpretations of Garcia’s timeless compositions.

FRIDAY, JUNE 28 AT 8:30 P.M.

FROZEN PLANET IN CONCERT

George Fenton, conductor From playful penguins who inspire children’s “audible wonderment and hilarity” (Los Angeles Times) to gorgeous killer whales and rarely seen landscapes, BBC Earth’s Frozen Planet in Concert presents the ultimate portrait of Earth’s great frozen wilderness. This family-friendly show combines stunning imagery with an original score conducted by the composer and performed by the NSO.

TICKETS AND INFORMATION:

WOLFTRAP.ORG 1 (877) WOLFTRAP

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

GRIEG Peer Gynt—Suite No. 1 MACMILLAN Piano Concerto No. 3 “The Mysteries of Light”

Urbanski Photo by Ole-Einar Andersen and Adresseavisen

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26 AT 8:15 P.M.

Urbanski

(THU. ONLY)

SAINT-SAËNS Piano Concerto No. 5 “Egyptian” (FRI. & SAT. ONLY) LUTOSŁAWSKI Concerto for Orchestra

THU., JUN. 20 AT 7 FRI., JUN. 21 AT 8 SAT., JUN. 22 AT 8 CONCERT HALL

BE TON GINS IGH T!

Organ Postlude: Thu., Jun. 20 performance followed by a mini recital on the new Rubenstein Family Organ with Russell Weismann, Associate Director of Music at DC’s Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, free with purchase of concert ticket.

*Offer valid for select Orchestra seating on June 21 & 22 NSO performances only. Mention code “158237” when ordering by phone or in person. Offer subject to availability. Not valid in combination with any other offer. Not valid on previously purchased tickets. Offer may be withdrawn at any time. Service fees may apply.

Tickets on sale now! (202) 467-4600 kennedy-center.org Tickets also available at the Box Office | Groups (202) 416-8400 | TTY (202) 416-8524 David and Alice Rubenstein are the Presenting Underwriters of the NSO.

General Dynamics is the proud sponsor of the NSO Classical Season.

The Blue Series is sponsored by


E4 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT EXCERPTS OF REVIEW 0F OCTOBER 2012 PRODUCTION REPRINTED BY PERMISSION OF

At Arena, Janis Joplin in full ‘Cry’ By Peter Marks • Originally Published October 9, 2012 The only acknowledgment here of her drug and alcohol addictions is a bottle of hooch from which she takes a single swig during Act 1.

It features not just one remarkable performance, that of Mary Bridget Davies, looking uncannily like Joplin and producing a version of the Joplin screech that starts somewhere around the singer’s ankles, wends its way up into the back of her throat and shoots off into the farthest reaches of Arena’s Kreeger Theater. The twohour, 10-minute production also showcases the variety of vocal gifts of Sabrina Elayne Carten, who materializes as some of the blues greats Joplin here claims as inspirations: Bessie Smith, Odetta, Nina Simone, Etta James. With such a patently glorious roll call, “One Night With Janis Joplin” certainly has the entertainment quotient stacked in its favor. And to a surprising level, this concert-as-theater, written and directed by Randy Johnson, achieves the exhilarating effect it desires. It’s a portrait, more than anything else, of a romance: a singer in love with the cleansing embrace of the crowd. “No man has made me feel as good as an audience,” Davies declares, fully in charge of her environment, a stage realistically outfitted by the splendid set and lighting designer Justin Townsend as a road-stop home for Joplin and her band — and enveloped aptly in what might be termed a purple haze. In the annals of jukebox musicals — and there have been enough of them to qualify for their own annals — “One Night With Janis Joplin” is an entry both straightforward and sanitized. Like most such evenings, its success depends entirely on a trick, that we buy the illusion of corporeal

Photo of Mary Bridget Davies by Jim Cox.

If “One Night With Janis Joplin” glosses over some of our more sordid memories of a rockand-roll legend silenced at 27 by a heroin overdose, the Arena Stage tribute show that has oldsters’ heads bobbing sure manages to generate a joyful ruckus.

ONE NIGHT WITH

JANIS JOPLIN Created, written and directed by Randy Johnson

NOW PLAYING

truth. This one works because we do. Even if Davies seems in technical terms to be the better singer, she’s close enough in mannerism and vocal personality to allow audience members of a certain age quickly to set aside any skepticism and simply savor the songs — including such hits from Joplin’s short but spectacular career as “Ball and Chain,” “Me and Bobby McGee” and, of course, “Piece of My Heart.” The show neither transforms the star’s work, as Twyla Tharp did for Billy Joel’s songbook in “Movin’ Out,” nor assembles it into an engaging narrative, a la the “Jersey Boys” book for Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons. It doesn’t go the warts-and-all route, either, and maybe the clichés are such that the omission is a relief:

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But it sure sounds good. The context is a concert out of Johnson’s imagination, one in which Joplin recounts growing up in Texas in the 1940s and ’50s, and the deep impact black women singing the blues made on her. Carten performs in the styles of these other greats, and some of the production’s most rewarding sequences occur as it segues from her role models’ performances of a song, such as Odetta’s rendition of “Down on Me,” to Joplin’s anguished, leave-blood-onthe-floor version. The Kreeger is an ideal platform for the pseudoconcert, whose precise time remains vague; vaguer still is the awkward transition to an evening that suddenly seems to be headlined by Carten as Aretha Franklin, with Joplin appearing as a guest star for a dream duet, “Spirit in the Dark,” that serves as the Act 1 finale. That audiences can be moved by such moments is not in question, certainly not on the evidence of the performance that I attended. During this song, a woman who’d been waving her arms showily to the music rose from the second row and danced her way onto the stage, past the stunned backup singers. She planted herself at center stage before a staffer emerged from the wings to coax her back to her seat. (No, she was not part of the show.) Other, better-mannered patrons — the majority of whom appeared to be old enough to have attended a concert by the real Joplin — swayed and roared, and during Davies’s propulsive “Piece of My Heart,” tears ran down the cheek of a man to the right of me. Nothing wrong with a blast from acid-laced pipes to remind you who you used to be.

202-488-3300 www.arenastage.org


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entertainment | Weekend Pass

A Doc for All Reasons AFI Docs (formerly Silverdocs) is an all-you-can-eat buffet of the best documentaries yet to hit theaters. The problem with all-you-can-eat is there’s a limit to how much you can actually consume. Short of bending time and space, you won’t catch all 45 features, plus the discussions, plus the two groupings of shorts, especially now that the festival has expanded from its usual Silver Spring locations to theaters in the District. Here are five films we don’t plan to miss. KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (E XPRESS) FILM: ‘The Crash Reel’

THE REASON: The director

Lucy Walker directed this story of pro snowboarder Kevin Pearce’s recovery from a traumatic brain injury he suffered in 2010, just as his rivalry with Shaun White was heating up. Walker has twice been nominated for her documentaries at the Oscars: in 2012 for the short “The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom” and in 2011 for “Waste Land.” She’s one of the most promising names in documentary film — maybe this will be the year she nabs that statue. Thu., 8:45 p.m., National Museum of American History; Fri., 7:30 p.m., AFI Silver.

FILM: ‘The New Black’

THE REASON: The local angle

Last year’s battle in Maryland over Question 6, which brought marriage equality to the state this year, divided voters, particularly in the black community. “The New Black” looks at the complex relationship between gay rights, the civil rights movement and African-American churches. It’s a hometown take on one of the most contentious issues facing the country. Sat., 1:30 p.m., Goethe-Institut; Sun., 1:15 p.m., AFI Silver.

FILM: ‘The Act of Killing’

THE REASON: The innovation

In looking at the Indonesian genocide of 1965-66, a group of Danish filmmakers interviewed aging death squad leaders and got them to re-create their crimes in front of the camera. What’s tricky, though, is that they allowed the men to use American film genres to tell their stories, so the re-enactments are in the style of, for example, Westerns and musicals. You don’t often see whimsy and genocide in the same movie (for good reason!), but if the filmmakers pull it off it’ll be something special. Sat., 8:30 p.m., Goethe-Institut; Sun., 3:30 p.m., AFI Silver.

FILM RIFFS School Ties Since the ending of “Monsters, Inc.” was nearly perfect, the Pixar powers decided to sell more toys through a prequel. ‘Monsters University’ follows Mike and Sully through their undergrad years, meaning they join an ancient and honorable company of scholars. K.P.K.

1 ‘Real Genius’ Super-bright teens (including a girl!) find out their professor is using their smarts to develop a military weapon in this 1985 comedy, which is only slightly worse than a prof assigning his own book as a class text and then using it only once.

2 ‘Love Story’ In 1970’s weepiest film, rich kid Oliver and working-class Jenny meet in college, marry and find that “till death do you part” sometimes comes early. Other lessons learned include “love means never having to say you’re sorry,” which is a total lie.

3 ‘Revenge of the Nerds’

FILM: ‘Remote Area Medical’

THE REASON: The issue

Outside of the NASCAR stadium in Bristol, Tenn., on a non-race day last year, thousands of uninsured Americans lined up to get free routine health care they couldn’t otherwise afford. The nonprofit Remote Area Medical team travels around in retrofitted trucks and buses, pulling teeth, giving eye exams and performing checkups. The film puts a human face — a lot of human faces, actually — to a political problem that can too often seem purely theoretical. Fri., 4:30 p.m., Goethe-Institut; Sat., 3 p.m., AFI Silver.

FILM: ‘Best Kept Secret’

THE REASON: The hope

Janet Mino, a special education teacher in Newark, N.J., is getting ready to see her students — many of whom are on the autism spectrum — graduate from high school. The problem is now they’ll age out of most state resources; in a high-poverty area, that’s a scary prospect. In and out of the classroom, Mino fights for her kids, first to teach them life skills, then to help ensure they don’t spend that life neglected in a poorly funded state-run home. Thu., 6 p.m., National Museum of American History; Sat., 1:30 p.m., AFI Silver.

AFI Silver, 8633 Colesville Road, Silver Spring. (Silver Spring); National Museum of American History, 1400 Constitution Ave. NW. (Smithsonian); Goethe-Institut, 812 Seventh St. NW. (Gallery Place); through Sun.; see afi.com/afidocs for the complete schedule.

Proving that nerds were cool long before everyone was watching “Doctor Who,” this 1984 comedy is about a group of geeks who form their own fraternity. We can only assume their drinking games involved calculus.

4 ‘Animal House’ The 1978 film that spawned a thousand T-shirts worn by a thousand college students is on this list because we don’t want letters complaining we left it out. It’s a really funny movie, too.

5 ‘The Social Network’ BecauseAaronSorkinwrotethescreenplayandJesseEisenbergisthestarthedialogueinthis2010BestPicturenomineemovesreallyfastinfactjustasfastasFacebookchangesitsprivacysettings.


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Weekend Pass | entertainment

RAP IT UP

Homegrown rhymer Wale jumps to hip-hop’s major league

SMALLZ RASKIND

“Wah-LAYYY!” That name was the refrain of the D.C.-area-raised rapper’s 2006 go-go-inflected single “Dig Dug (Shake It),” which made Wale a local name to watch. He’s been on a “no-days-off” hustle ever since. “I ain’t stopped working in a year,” Wale says from the road after finishing radio promos for his third studio album, “The Gifted,” which drops Tuesday — two days after his homecoming show at the Howard Theatre. “I don’t know anything else but work.” This is the moment he’s been working toward. For Wale, “The Gifted” is a career-defining release. “This is a historical moment,” he says. “It’s a make-or-break moment.” Wale first stormed onto D.C’s rap scene with a stream of mixtapes; a push from mega-producer Mark Ronson helped those gather buzz. In 2008, Wale signed to Interscope and put out “The Mixtape About Nothing,” using “Seinfeld” audio interludes to set up socially conscious

ON WRITING

Wale credits his extensive vocabulary to growing up without television. “We didn’t have no cable, so I definitely would read a lot,” he says. “I would read anything.” He remembers picking up a biography of Malcolm X, not because he was interested in the civil rights leader, but “just to kill time.” ON THE RECORD INDUSTRY

“We give out a lot of free music now,” Wale says. “It’s almost like a norm. You have to do it to survive.” These days, he says, albums aren’t about the dough but a shared experience. “I look at [albums] like movements,” he says. “I want people to be part of [what I] was doing right then.” ON WORKING WITH RICK ROSS

Critics claim Ross (who guests on “The Gifted”) influences Wale’s music with a heavy hand. But Wale, who produced the record, sets things straight: “Ross gives me a lot of freedom to do what I want to do,” he says. “It’s been exciting to be able to work with someone so successful.”

songs about subjects including fatherhood (“I gotta be a man before I can become a father,” he raps on “The Grown Up”) and how the N-word plays out in rap music and in real life (on “The Kramer,” a reference to actor Michael Richards’ infamous outburst at the Laugh Factory). Since then, Wale has released several other mixtapes to high critical acclaim (2010’s “More About Nothing” featured a track rapped from the perspective of Tiger Woods following his scandal) and albums that bordered on being total flops (most notably his debut full-length, 2009’s “Attention Deficit”). Wale’s trip has been long and strange, but its destination was still uncertain. Enter rap kingpin Rick Ross, who helped reboot Wale’s career by signing him to his Maybach Music Group label in 2011. They launched “Ambition,” Wale’s biggest record up to that point, the same year. While Wale’s signature style — verbosity, verbal acrobatics and sharp wit — didn’t change, his content seemed to. Gone were the considered lyrics of songs like 2008’s “The Artistic Integrity”: “They say I’m too nice to be a rapper/ The prerequisite is gun clappin’.” Instead, there was stereotypical rap misogyny: “I got a lot of b----es/they got a lot of feelings,” goes the title track to “Ambition.” There’s a lot riding on “The Gifted” for Wale — as a test of his direction and whether he will step up the hip-hop ladder. But he’s used to a challenge. He cut his teeth in a tough town for hip-hop, rhyming at house parties instead of rap battles. It’s why he keeps striving, he says; it’s as simple as “not wanting to lose, not wanting to let up.” Of the future, only one thing is certain: “D.C.’s always gonna be home.” TR AVIS ANDREWS (FOR E XPRESS) Howard Theatre, 620 T St. NW; Sun., 8:30 p.m., $35-$40; 202-8032899, thehowardtheatre.com. (Shaw)

“It’s definitely an emotional feeling I get when I’m home, because [I love] seeing old faces and the smiles on their faces. I don’t have as much fun anywhere as I do when I’m in D.C.”


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1811 14TH ST NW

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Weekend Pass | entertainment

So Call Me, Maybe, or Not at All

you going to get married?’ The idea is so universal.” Or is it? In the 43 years since “Company” debuted, marriage has changed. In 1960, 72 percent of American adults were married. Now barely over half are, according to a 2011 survey by the Pew Research Center.

Dating is rarely as difficult as it is in “Becky Shaw,” now at Round House Theatre. Brusque Max (Will Gartshore) is set up with needy, slightly crazy Becky (Michelle Six), only to have everything deteriorate into violence and recrimination. Offstage, the actors have their own tales of dates gone awry. FIONA ZUBLIN (E XPRESS)

“Bobby is always observing. … It’s only when he’s by himself that he asks himself the really hard questions.” — ERIC SCH A EFFER, DIRECTOR OF “COMPA-

Bobby (Matthew Scott) is surrounded by his “good and crazy” married friends.

“I was supposed to meet him at his parents’ house, but I didn’t understand that I was going to be grilled by the entire family,” Six says. “Then his mother decided she liked me and said, ‘I’m just going to join you.’ So there were three of us at a romantic wine bar.”

“I got to know this guy online,” Gartshore says. “He said he was moving to D.C. and I said, ‘If you want to get coffee or something, I can show you around.’ [So we met] and … this guy thought he was showing up for an engagement. And he just couldn’t take a hint. It was literally two years of him calling me every three weeks.”

“In high school, there was a boy I was madly in love with,” says Alyssa Wilmoth Keegan, who plays Becky and Max’s matchmaker. “He graduated, but then he called me up one day. We went out and I thought, ‘It’s going to happen. He’s totally going to kiss me.’ And it was the worst kiss ever, to this day. Lizard tongue. All hopes dashed.” Round House Theatre, 4545 East-West Highway, Bethesda; through Sun., $26-$63; 240-644-1100, roundhousetheatre.org. (Bethesda)

SCOTT SUCHMAN

Rex Daugherty, Will Gartshore, Michelle Six and Alyssa Wilmoth Keegan

NY” AND SIGNATURE’S ARTISTIC DIRECTOR

The Wives Of Others In ‘Company,’ a bachelor both envies and scoffs at his married friends Stage “Company,” a 1970 musical about a 35-year-old single man and his married friends, should be outdated by now. Marriage is in decline, 35 is the new 25, and the musical motif of the opening number is based on a telephone busy signal. (When was the last time anyone heard one of those?) W hat the setup does bring to

mind, however, is Facebook. Scrolling through pages of other people’s wedding photos, the single adult is prone to think, “All my friends are married,” even if that’s an exaggeration. In “Company,” however, now at Signature Theatre, they actually are. Bobby (Matthew Scott) is the go-to best friend of five sets of couples, all very different, all eager for him to find a wife and settle down. “Married friends have always said, ‘Oh, we don’t want you to live your life by yourself, we want you to have someone!’ ” says “Company” director Eric Schaeffer. “They ask me, ‘When are

The Plot “Plot” is a problematic term here. “Company” is more a collection of scenes — Bobby hanging out with his married friends and his three casual girlfriends, trying to figure out why anyone would ever show his or her true self to another human being. (Fun fact: When composer Stephen Sondheim wrote “Company,” he’d never been in a long-term relationship.)

But the show is not exactly about marriage; it’s about commitment. When Bobby’s friends scoff at his social butterfly existence — “To me, a person’s not complete until he’s married,” says the earnest Jenny, played by Erin Driscoll — they’re actually telling him that he needs to let his guard down and some unmitigated trust in. “Bobby is always observing, always charming, never showing his cards” Schaeffer says. “It’s only when he’s by himself that he asks himself the really hard questions.” Schaeffer last directed “Company” in 1993, also at Signature. Then, it seemed to him like a ’70s period piece. This time, he steered away from the polyester and tried to make sure the message hit home: This show, he says, is about all of us. “We wanted it simple, laid bare. We didn’t want it stuck in a time,” he said. “The questions that it makes you ask about yourself, about your friends — they’re not about the ’70s; they’re still relevant.” FIONA ZUBLIN (E XPRESS) Signature Theatre, 4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington; through June 30, $29-$86; 703-820-9771, signature-theatre.org.

Film

INDIES & ARTIES

‘Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan’: If “Star Trek Into Darkness” piqued your interest in the first timeline’s second film (Sequel Prime, let’s call it), E Street Cinema is showing 1982’s “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan” as this week’s Midnight Madness film. It has no Benedict Cumberbatch, but lots of William Shatner and a tremendously moving performance from Ricardo Montalban’s pecs, which won an Oscar for best performance by a chest. KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (E XPRESS) Landmark E Street

Cinema, 555 11th St. NW; Fri., 11:59 p.m.; 202-452-7672, landmarktheatres.com. (Metro Center)


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ALL SHOWS 18 & OVER CARLOS MENCIA

GRADUATION SHOWCASE

GUY TORRY

TOM PAPA

JUNE 20–JULY 3 # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # 20 THU # UNHCR World Refugee Day: Cheick Hamala Diabate ®

The Grammy -nominated musician is a historian in the Griot tradition and master of the ngoni (a Malian stringed lute).

21

FRI # Akua Allrich

The multilingual jazz vocalist and D.C. native captures a broad range of musical genres, from blues, soul, and R&B to jazz and pan-African music. Part of The Legacy of Bob Marley.

22 SAT # Emmanuel Jal The world-renowned Southern Sudanese hip-hop artist, a former child soldier, is also a humanitarian advocate for social justice and human rights. Part of The Legacy of Bob Marley.

25 TUE # An-Sky Yiddish Ensemble

29 SAT #Dimen Dong

The group is led by singer and multiinstrumentalist Michael Alpert who has been a pioneering figure in East European Jewish klezmer music for more than 30 years.

The group performs a multipart polyphonic singing technique unique to the Dong nationality, who mainly dwells in southwest China.

Part of Homegrown: The Music of America concert series & the Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

26 WED # Eszter Biro The acclaimed Hungarian singer, film, and stage actress offers a musical performance backed by her own band.

1 MON # Parno Graszt

Part of the Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

28 FRI # Ethnic

Heritage Ensemble

The Grammy®-winning hip-hop group has been spreading its unique sound and positivity across the globe since the early ’90s.

The Chicago-based group combines contemporary African American musical styles, jazz, and traditional African instrumentation and rhythms. Part of the Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

JUNE 26

JUNE 27 - 30

Special Event JULY 5 - 7

Special Event JULY 11 - 14

Mind of Mencia & Comedy Central

Chris Coccia hosts new stand-up school grads

Comedy Central, BET, HBO & Showtime

The Marriage Ref, Comedy Central & The Informant

Friday, House Party & The Boondocks

TAMMY PESCATELLI

FLIP ORLEY

LOUNGE SHOWCASE

GILBERT GOTTFRIED

GARY OWEN

JULY 18 - 21

JULY 24 - 28

Last Comic Standing, The Talk & Comedy Central

America’s Premier Comic Hypnotist

JUNE 26

Special Event AUGUST 2 - 4

Special Event AUGUST 8 - 11

MON # Diego Garcia

House of Payne, Comic View & Showtime

Part of the Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

The Hungarian ensemble performs Roma music. Part of the Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

2 TUE # Libaya Baba

Great views, Great Drinks, Great Escape

Events Line Up

The group performs a program of Garifuna music and dance, featuring the traditional format of call-and-response and a blend of traditional genres.

3 WED # Hawaiian Music and Dance

This group presents their vibrant Hawaiian culture through music and hula. ALL PERFORMERS AND PROGRAMS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE.

Stand-up school graduates Comedy Central, host our Comedy Lounge Howard Stern & The Burn

Buy tickets @ dcimprov.com or 202.296.7008

Part of the Homegrown: The Music of America concert series and the Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

The former front man of popular indie act Elefant, the Argentine-American singer offers a set of his original songs.

#######

Hungarian Folk Ensemble

The traditional Bolivian ensemble offers a performance of traditional Andean music.

Development

24

30 SUN # Heveder

27 THU # Los Masis

Part of the Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

Special Event JUNE 20 - 23

Part of the Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

The folk ensemble performs with dance house musician Gázsa as well as Moldavian flute player Zoltán Juhász and his daughter, singer and gardon player Réka Juhász.

23 SUN # Arrested

Part of The Legacy of Bob Marley.

Folk Chorus

JOHN WITHERSPOON

Part of the Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

7 Days - 5PM to Close

• Thursday And Saturday Nights: Art Soiree Sunset Rooftop Performance Series, Live performances and/or DJ 5PM To Closing • Creative Drinks and Bar Food • Big Chill Sundays — $6.00 Brain Freeze Cocktails • Friday, June 14, and Friday, June 21 Stewart Lewis Performing Songwriter: Stunning Guitar Work And Soaring Voice” — Denver Post “A New Breed Of Blue Eyed Soul” • Open 7 Days — 5PM to Close

Please see our website for details on these and other seasonal events

Sky-Bar Available for Private Luncheons. A Perfect Summer Outing.

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 Capital One Bank, DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, The Isadore and Bertha Gudelsky Family Foundation, Inc., The Meredith Foundation, The Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation, Suzy and Bob Pence, Dr. Deborah Rose and Dr. Jan A.J. Stolwijk, U.S. Department of Education, and the Millennium Stage Endowment Fund.

MON 24 # DIEGO GARCIA

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.

SAT 29 # DIMEN DONG FOLK CHORUS

For more information call: (202) 467-4600 (202) 416-8524 T T Y 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.

Saturday Brunch $24.95 — 11:00 AM - 2:30 PM Sunday Buffet Brunch $34.95 — 11:00 AM - 3:00 PM Live Piano Dinner Entertainment Thursday, Friday and Saturday Nights

The Kennedy Center welcomes persons with disabilities.

17th & Rhode Island Avenue, NW 202-872-1126 www.bbgwdc.com

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SUN 23 # ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT

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dining | Weekend Pass CASA OAXACA

Grasshoppers mingle in fondue at Casa Oaxaca, left; B. Too’s frog legs are prepared two ways, above; Acadiana offers a classic turtle soup, below.

There’s something strange about having something with a lot of legs in your mouth on purpose. Strange, yet tasty: Insects, like chicken, tend to absorb the flavors of whatever they’re prepared in. Such is true for the grasshopper fondue at Casa Oaxaca (2106 18th St. NW; 202- 3872272). The hoppers are sauteed in lime, salt and spices before they’re added to a melty mix of Oaxaca cheese and yellow mole. “It doesn’t look very appealing,” says Casa Oaxaca’s manager, Joanna Hernandez. “But the flavor is earthy, and it adds a crunch to the dish.”

Alligator Alligator meat is often coated with batter and deep-fried to a golden-brown finish. Redline’s Swiss-trained chef, Fabrice Reymond, takes a more innovative route with the reptilian meat (707 G St. NW; 202-347-8683). His is pan-seared and coated in house-made sauces: spicy chili, smoked barbecue and Dijon mustard. Another unconventional preparation is Fat Shorty’s alligator andouille ($8.50), made with pork, pepper, aromatics and direct-from-Louisiana gator meat (3035 Clarendon Blvd., Arlington; 703-243-5660).

The frog legs at B. Too are prepared two ways: The upper part of the leg is breaded, deep-fried and served on the bone like a chicken wing, while the calf muscle — which resembles a clove of garlic — is pan-seared in butter (1324 14th St. NW; 202-6272800). The appetizer is served with a tarragon dipping sauce and a tangy puree of tomatoes, cream, anise and garlic. “Frog is not fish. It’s not meat. It’s really a product on its own,” says chef de cuisine Thijs Clinckemaillie. “If I had to compare it to something, I would say it tastes like frog meat.”

Swamp Things D.C. restaurants offer a taste of the wetlands to daring diners Despite the subtropical humidity D.C. experiences every summer, the widely circulated tidbit that the city was built on a swamp is a myth. (While our proximity to the Potomac and Anacostia rivers certainly makes matters muggy, only a negligible fraction of the District could be considered technically a swamp.) This falsehood didn’t stop us from digging into the various damp-dwelling creatures served at local restaurants (nor did the disgusted looks we got after telling friends we wanted to try grasshopper fondue). Following are the surprisingly satisfying, though often slimy, results. FIONA ZUBLIN (E XPRESS)

ACADIANA

Grasshopper

Frog

Turtle Turtle soup is a Gulf state specialty, so naturally it’s served at Acadiana, the Louisiana fish house in Mount Vernon Square (901 New York Ave. NW; 202408-8848). Executive chef Brant Tesky serves the classic in a traditional manner, with bits of briny snapping turtle floating in a tomato-based broth. It comes with a buttermilk biscuit and a shot of dry sherry, which you’re encouraged to pour into the soup right before eating. “Sherry has a delicate, oaky flavor,” Tesky says. “If you add it while cooking the soup, it cooks away and you lose that flavor.”


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Weekend Pass | dining

LIVE

UPCOMING PERFORMANCES

START

MAKING KATHERINE FREY PHOTOS (FOR THE WASHINGTON POST)

SENSE

TALKING HEADS BAND

W/ GREAT WHITE CAPS

FRIDAY

JUNE 21

the

BLACK LILLIES W/ MANDOLIN ORANGE

SATURDAY

JUNE 22

Etto chef Cagla Onal-Urel introduces Italian-inspired eats nightly, left; Roman pizza is topped with tomato sauce, olives, onion, anchovies, mozzarella cheese and capers. THURSDAY, JUNE 20

TODD PARK MOHR

A Pizza Joint Venture

(OF BIG HEAD TODD & THE MONSTERS) MONDAY, JUNE 24

BILLY COX BAND

TUESDAY, JUNE 25

and David Rosner from the brew and ’cue retreat on 14th Street NW. Their collaboration features small plates of Italian flavors, including salumi, as well as pizzas. Show up early to catch one of the trim restaurant’s 42 seats. Start with some of what the menu calls Fishies — maybe meaty Spanish anchovies on a sauce made green with parsley and mint and vibrant with garlic and lemon zest — before moving on to one of more than a dozen pizzas. The seasonal numbers include morels with

The teams behind two beloved eateries excel at Italian

SHAKEY GRAVES, WILD CHILD, & MARMALAKES WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26

SOL DRIVEN TRAIN

The recent merger of talents from 2 Amys, one of the city’s premier pizzerias, and Standard, the beloved beer garden known for its barbecue, sounds like a union poised to become a classic. Please welcome Etto to the everexpanding food scene in Logan Circle. The newcomer’s players include Peter Pastan and Amy Morgan from the popular pie joint in Cleveland Park and Tad Curtz

W/ THE SHACK BAND

FRIDAY, JUNE 28

BRONZE RADIO RETURN W/ TADDY PORTER

SATURDAY, JUNE 29

ACOUSTIC SYNDICATE SUNDAY, JUNE 30

THE SLACKERS

W/ THE SHIFTERS AND CAZ AND THE DAY LABORERS

ramps and asparagus with mint, toppings scattered on chewy crusts with billowing lips and pleasant amounts of char. Cagla Onal-Urel, a onetime cook at Obelisk in Dupont Circle, is in charge of the kitchen, which also sends out lovely salads and nightly specials. Cocktails are few but high-quality. The pizza, by the way, is not a ringer for 2 Amys’. Pastan says he uses a different method of making and baking Etto’s dough, which incorporates spelt and fresh-milled wheat

First Bite

and cooks at a slightly hotter temperature. The spelt gives the dough elasticity; the wheat, milled on-site, lends the base sweetness. You might spot Curtz at Etto’s red-oak-fired oven. Before he opened Standard, he worked as a cook and bartender at 2 Amys. Curtz appears to be good with his hands: the chairs and bar at Etto are his work, says his boss-turnedbusiness-partner. “He’s good at fixing things, too!” Pastan adds. TOM SIETSEMA (THE WASHINGTON POST )

1541 14th St. NW; 202-232-0920, ettodc.com.

MONDAY, JULY 1

NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE

EXTRA BITES

W/ PROFESSOR LOUIE AND THE CROWMATIX

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The second Monday of each month in Express.

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In celebration of summer, Georgetown’s 1789 is serving a discounted four-course tasting menu through Sept. 13 (1226 36th St. NW). Fifty bucks gets you two appetizers, such as scallops with lobster grits; an entree, such as wild salmon with fennel fritters, above; and a dessert.

new & soon

The Long Alco-Haul

Old Town, New Eats

Eight Dupont Circle bars, including Science Club, Buffalo Billiards and James Hoban’s, will be stops along the inaugural Bourbon Bash on Saturday from noon to 10 p.m. Tickets ($55, available at dcbourbonbash.com) include eight 1-ounce samples of top-shelf bourbons from Knob Creek, Eagle Rare and Four Roses. Proceeds benefit the Lead the Way Fund, which supports disabled U.S. Rangers.

This Saturday marks the second annual Alexandria Food and Wine Festival at John Carlyle Square (300 John Carlyle St., Alexandria). Food tickets ($15 for eight) can be used toward bites from La Tasca, Walker’s Grille, Trademark and Crepe Deli while the wine garden ($10 for entry) promises wine tastings from local vineyards. A children’s corner keeps kiddies preoccupied with craft projects.

6.12 Arcuri opened at 2400 Wisconsin Ave. NW 6.13 Protein Bar opened at 1011 19th St. NW 6.17 Malmaison opened at 3401 K St. NW 6.17 Taco Bamba opened at 2190 Pimmit Drive, Falls Church 6.19 MXDC opened at 600 14th St. NW 6.24 Teddy and the Bully Bar will open at 1200 19th St. NW


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goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass

►sound POWERED BY WWW.GOINGOUTGUIDE.COM

Twins Jazz: Christian Wallumrod Ensemble, 8 and 10 p.m., $16. U Street Music Hall: Simian Mobile Disco, 10 p.m., $10; The 1975, 7 p.m., $12. Wolf Trap/Filene Center: Billy Idol, Cat Power, 8 p.m., $35-$48.

Really? Yes, Really.

8 and 10 p.m., $20. U Street Music Hall: Fred Falke, Zimmer, 10 p.m., $10. Velvet Lounge: Morning Brigade, Eppard, Getting Even, 9:30 p.m., $8. Warner Theatre: Seth Meyers, 8 p.m., $35. Wolf Trap/Filene Center: The Tenors, 8 p.m., $25-$48.

THURSDAY FRIDAY 9:30 Club: Dwight Yoakam, 8 p.m., $45. Birchmere: Rahsaan Patterson, 7:30 p.m., $55. Black Cat: Chvrches, Still Corners, 9 p.m., sold out; New York Grind Show, 9:15 and 11:30 p.m., $12 in advance, $15 at the door. Blues Alley: Monty Alexander, 8 and 10 p.m., $40. Bohemian Caverns: E.J. Strickland, 8:30 and 10:30 p.m., $18. DC9: Coal Bxx, 9 p.m., free. George Washington University/Lisner Auditorium: Neil Gaiman, 7 p.m. Iota Club & Cafe: Beach Day, The Blank Tapes, Song Preservation Society, 9 p.m., $12. Jammin’ Java: Rocknoceros, 10:30 a.m., $5; The Grandsons, Jr., 1 p.m., $5; Luke Brindley and Friends, 8 p.m., $15. Kennedy Center/Concert Hall: National Symphony Orchestra, 8 p.m.,

SLAVEN VLASIC (GETTY IMAGES)

9:30 Club: Son Volt, Colonel Ford, 7 p.m., $20. Black Cat: “Banding Together 2013,” 7 p.m., $10. Blues Alley: Monty Alexander, 8 and 10 p.m., $40. DC9: Monk Czech, Leroy Justice, Zooks, Ben Guernsey, 7:30 p.m., $8. Jammin’ Java: The Great Zucchini, 10:30 a.m., $5; Oh Susannah!, 1 p.m., $5. Kennedy Center/Concert Hall: National Symphony Orchestra, 7 p.m., $10-$85. Rams Head On Stage: Bill Payne, 8 p.m., $28.50. Rock & Roll Hotel: Cold Cave, Boyd Rice, 8 p.m., $12 in advance, $14 day of show. The Hamilton: Todd Park Mohr (of Big Head and The Monsters), 7:30 p.m., $25.50-$27.50. The Howard Theatre: SuckerPunch, 9 p.m., $20 in advance, $25 day of show.

SOON, YOUR WEEKLY dose of Seth Meyers will grow from one night a week

to five as the “Saturday Night Live” star moves on to host “Late Night” next year. To get ready for the new gig, he’ll do stand-up at the Warner Theatre on Friday.

$10-$85. Rams Head On Stage: Delbert McClinton, 8 p.m., $65. Rock & Roll Hotel: Kid Architect, Satellites on Parade and Night Idea, 7 p.m., $10. The Fillmore: Maggie Rose, 8 p.m., $12.

The Hamilton: Start Making Sense (Talking Heads cover band), Great White Caps, 8:30 p.m., $20-$22.50. The Howard Theatre: K-Ci & JoJo, 7:30 p.m., $39.50 advance, $45 day of show; Papa Grows Funk, 11 p.m., $13-$15. Twins Jazz: Tomas R. Einarsson Trio,

SATURDAY 9:30 Club: “Who’s Bad,” 8 p.m., $20. Birchmere: The Seldom Scene and Jonathan Edwards, 7:30 p.m., $29.50. Black Cat: Lemuria, Chain And The Gang, Give, 9 p.m., $12. Blues Alley: Monty Alexander, 8 and 10 p.m., $40. Bohemian Caverns: E.J. Strickland, 8:30 and 10:30 p.m., $18. DC9: DJ Matt Bailer, 10:30 p.m., $5. Iota Club & Cafe: Vandaveer, 9 p.m., $12. Jammin’ Java: AndyRoo and the AndyRooniverse, 10:30 a.m., $8; Orchard Wall, Hollertown, 1:30 p.m., $20; The Kennedys, 7 p.m., $18; Black Dog Prowl, The Joy Kills, Vinyl Side, 10 p.m., $10-$15. Kennedy Center/Concert Hall: Continued on page E16

LA FIRMA

TOBY LOVE PA’ LOS BACHATEROS

SPANGLISH FLY

10:00 - 11:30 AM & 12:30 - 2:00 PM

Show for 10am brunch starts at 10:30am. Show for 12:30pm brunch starts at 1pm.

EVERY SUNDAY - $30

Tickets should be purchased in advance as they do sell out.

FRANKIE VAZQUEZ HERMAN OLIVERA EL SONERO DEL BARRIO SONERO DEL SIGLO XXI

WWW.LATINOFEST.ORG

MARYLANDS ORIGINAL LATINOFEST FEATURING THESE ARTISTS AND SO MUCH MORE!

DIRECT FROM EL SALVADOR! GRUPO LA MAQUINA


E14 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

THEATRE Shear Madness The Kennedy Center Theater Lab

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

The smash hit comedy

Final Week!

Becky Shaw

Shear Madness is the fresh, funny, and up-to-the-minute record breaking comedy whodunit that lets the audience spot the clues, question the suspects and solve the funniest murder mystery in the annals of crime. Gina Gionfriddo’s wickedly funny comedy of romantic errors & bad manners. “Tantalizing…you laugh a lot…gripping” – Washington Post Play that revolves around the persecution of Gays during the Holocaust.

Thru June 23 only Final Weekend!

Bent

By Martin Shermann Directed by Shawn G. Byers

Thurs., 6/20 Fri., 6/21 Sa., 6/22

“An Incredible Experience” “FIVE-STARS” Check out the review at: www.dcmetrotheaterarts.com “...high style, handsomely done.” -DCTheatreScene; “Outstanding” -The Examiner; Directed by Steven Scott Mazzola.

8pm Curtain The American Century Theater

By S.N. Behrman

The Kennedy Center Theater Lab Student Rush Tickets Available Tickets: 202-467-4600 Groups: 202-416-8400 www.shearmadness.com Round House Theatre 240-644-1100 www.roundhousetheatre.org

Starts at $25

Theatre on the Run 3700 S. Four Mile Run Drive Arlington, VA 22206 571-DS-SHOWS www.DominionStage.org

$18 Online

AmericanCentury.org 703-998-4555

Up to $40

Biography

Must Close June 29!

WSC Avant Bard presents

Pay What You Can Previews June 19 thru June 21. All previews begin at 8 P.M.

War. Devastation. Shakespeare. And bunnies.

Callan Theatre – Catholic University of America 3801 Harewood Rd. NE, Washington, DC 20017

Jun. 26 – Aug. 11, 2013

When Wendy has to give up her childhood bedroom, it’s not just Peter Pan who won't grow up. In this swashbuckling musical adventure, our heroes – and a host of magical Neverland friends – must decide if growing up is really all that bad.

Imagination Stage 4908 Auburn Ave. Bethesda, MD imaginationstage.org 301-280-1660

Caesar and Dada by Allyson Currin

Peter Pan and Wendy

Washington, DC’s Premiere Political Satire Troupe

PERFORMANCES

$48 Great Group Rates Avail.

$20 Door

Pay What You Can

Hylton Performing Arts Center 10960 George Mason Circle Manassas, VA 20110 HyltonCenter.org 888.945.2468

Charlotte Symphony Youth Orchestra

Saturday, June 22, 7:30pm

North Carolina's best youth orchestra performs Vaughan Williams, Mozart, Sibelius, and music from Pirates of the Caribbean.

Atlas Performing Arts Center, Lang Theater 1333 H Street NW, Washington DC.

Free

NVTA One-Act Play Festival

June 21, 22, 28, 29 7:30; 30 Awards 6pm

Four nights of different one-act plays adjudicated by local reviewers and theatre professionals.

James Lee Community Center 2855 Annandale Road Falls Church, VA 22042 (703) 615-6626

$14

Castleton Festival at the Hylton with Lorin Maazel conducting the Castleton Festival Orchestra

For more information visit wscavantbard.org

Free

An Italian Extravaganza Sunday, June 30 at 7 p.m.

MUSIC - CONCERTS

Gunston Arts Ctr Arlington Plenty of free parking!

Inclement weather cancellations made by 6 p.m. Call (202) 4334011.

Enjoy a breathtaking performance of glorious highlights from Italian opera with well-known soprano soloist Elizabeth Futral, Castleton alums (including tenor Jonathan Burton and baritone Corey Crider), and tomorrow’s opera stars!

Thursdays at 7:30 p.m.

Violence

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

Thursday The Yards Park, 355 Water St. SE Washington, DC www.marineband.usmc.mil

Wednesdays at 8 p.m.

Brief Nudity

$36

This Week’s Program Highlights: March of the Women Marines / Saverino Savannah River Holiday Ov. / Nelson Duo Concertante / James Barnes

Summer Fare

Adult Themes & Language

Best for ages 4-10.

Ronald Reagan Building 1300 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Tix available at 202.397.SEAT ticketmaster.com Wednesday U.S. Capitol, West Terrace Washington, DC

Marine Band

$10 & $15 tickets for age 30 and under

$10+

A musical, political satire. We put the MOCK in Democracy! www.capsteps.com Info: 202.312.1555 Featuring light classics and patriotic favorites on Wednesdays & Thursdays, June through August.

Fridays & Saturdays at 7:30pm

Added Show: Tues @ 5

$30, $45, $60

Line starts at 6:30pm. Call 703-683-6040 for seats ZemfiraStage @gmail.com


T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | E15

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass

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

VIENNA; 703-255-1566, JAMMINJAVA.COM.

➜RED PALACE: 1212 H ST. NE; 202-399-3201,

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➜KENNEDY CENTER: 2700 F ST. NW;

REDPALACEDC.COM.

CONTHALL.

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

➜ROCK & ROLL HOTEL: 1353 H ST. NE; 202-

202 . 558.0558

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

KENNEDY-CENTER.ORG.

388-7625, ROCKANDROLLHOTELDC.COM.

DCNINE.COM.

➜MERRIWEATHER POST PAVILION: 10475

➜STATE THEATRE: 220 N. WASHINGTON

➜EMPIRE: 6355 ROLLING ROAD, SPRING-

LITTLE PATUXENT PKWY., COLUMBIA, MD.;

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

930.COM.

FIELD, VA; 703-569-5940, EMPIRE-NOVA

410-715-5550, MERRIWEATHERMUSIC.COM.

THESTATETHEATRE.COM.

➜ARLINGTON CINEMA & DRAFTHOUSE:

.COM.

➜ MUSIC CENTER AT STRATHMORE:

➜ U STREET MUSIC HALL: 1115 U ST. NW;

2903 COLUMBIA PIKE, ARLINGTON; 703-

➜THE FILLMORE: 8656 COLESVILLE R0AD,

5301 TUCKERMAN LANE, NORTH

202-588-1880, USTREETMUSICHALL.COM.

486-2345, ARLINGTONDRAFTHOUSE.COM.

SILVER SPRING; 301-960-9999,

BETHESDA; 301-581-5100, STRATHMORE

➜VELVET LOUNGE: 915 U ST. NW; 202-462-

➜BIRCHMERE: 3701 MOUNT VERNON

FILLMORESILVERSPRING.COM.

.ORG.

3213, VELVETLOUNGEDC.COM.

AVE., ALEXANDRIA; 703-549-7500,

➜THE HAMILTON: 600 14TH ST. NW; 202-

➜PATRIOT CENTER: 4500 PATRIOT CIR-

➜WARNER THEATRE: 13TH AND E STREETS

BIRCHMERE.COM.

787-1000, THEHAMILTONDC.COM.

CLE, FAIRFAX; 202-397-7328, 703-993-3000,

NW; 202-783-4000, WARNERTHEATREDC

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

➜IOTA CLUB & CAFE: 2832 WILSON BLVD.,

PATRIOTCENTER.COM.

.COM.

7960, BLACKCATDC.COM.

ARLINGTON; 703-522-8340,

➜RAMS HEAD TAVERN: 33 WEST ST.,

➜WOLF TRAP: FILENE CENTER: 1551 TRAP

➜BLUES ALLEY: 1073 WISCONSIN AVE. NW;

IOTACLUBANDCAFE.COM.

ANNAPOLIS; 410-268-4545,

ROAD, VIENNA; 703-255-1900, WOLFTRAP

202-337-4141, BLUESALLEY.COM.

➜JAMMIN’ JAVA: 227 MAPLE AVE. E.,

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Men 4 Men

202.822.1666 FREE to Listen & Reply to Ads! FREE CODE: Post Express For other local numbers call:

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next stop: your front door. The Metro Rider’s Guide. Every second and fourth Wednesday of the month.

0185 1X.5

venues

➜DAR CONSTITUTION HALL: 18TH AND C STREETS NW; 202-628-4780, DAR.ORG/

MUSIC - CONCERTS Sunsets with a Soundtrack Series

Concert Band

Serenade! Washington DC Choral Festival

Tonight and Friday, June 21 8:00 p.m.

An evening of marches, movie themes, and arias: “Spitfire Prelude and Fugues” from The First of the Few, and tenor arias “Nessun Dorma” and “Be My Love.” Will feature Benjamin Andrews on marimba, winner of the Army Band’s 3rd Annual National Collegiate Solo Competition.

June 27 – July 1

Why travel across the world when you can have an international concert experience in your backyard? The 3rd annual Serenade! Festival will feature choirs from Poland, Latvia, Australia, Russia, China, Canada, and the USA! All concerts are Free to the public.

Experience Music From Around the World!

FESTIVALS Summer Music Fête at the Embassy of France

June 22, 2013 4:00 PM – 12:00 AM

The Summer Music Fête at the Embassy of France is a day-long festival that celebrates France, music, food, and fun! More than 300 local musicians in at least 50 different bands perform, while guests enjoy French food & drinks, family-friendly activities, and in the evening, dancing to a DJ!

West Steps of U.S. Capitol Washington, DC www.usarmyband.com

Free No Tickets Required

Series runs: Thu & Fri June-August

Free

Lines start 1 hour prior to concert time.

Concerts will be held in Alexandria, DC, Annapolis, Strathmore, and Damascus. Concert details and reserve seats at: ClassicalMovements.com/dc or call 703-683-6040

Embassy of France 4101 Reservoir Rd., NW Washington, DC 20007

Advertise in The Guide to the Lively ly Arts! 202-334-7006 | guidetoarts@washpost.com

$15.00 (for a limited time)

For more information or to purchase tickets, visit: www.fdlm2013. eventbrite.com


E16 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

Weekend Pass | goingoutguide.com Continued from page E13

National Symphony Orchestra, 8 p.m., $10-$85. Merriweather Post Pavilion: Zac Brown Band, Levi Lowrey, Nic Cowan, 5:30 p.m., $45, $79. Rams Head On Stage: Rahsaan Patterson, 6:30 and 9:30 p.m., $37.50. Rock & Roll Hotel: Two Gallants and Broncho, 8 p.m., $15. The Fillmore: Courtney Love, 8 p.m., $29. The Hamilton: The Black Lillies, 8:30 p.m., $27.50-$29.50. The Howard Theatre: Syleena Johnson, 7:30 p.m., $32.50 advance, $37 day of show; INNA, 11 p.m., $30-$50. Twins Jazz: Line Kruse. U Street Music Hall: Walker & Royce and Jacques Renault, Chris Nitti, 10 p.m., $10; Selah Sue, Bushwalla, 6 p.m., $15. Velvet Lounge: Catching Dragons, Sweet Interference, Grumpus, Dizzy Bats,

9:30 p.m., $8. Warner Theatre: Daniel Tosh, 7 and 9:30 p.m., $59.50-$75. Wolf Trap/Filene Center: Sing-A-Long “Grease,” 8:30 p.m., $20-$38.

SUNDAY Birchmere: Bill Payne, 7:30 p.m., $25. Black Cat: Man … Or Astro-Man?, Jacuzzi Boys, 8 p.m., $15. Blues Alley: Monty Alexander, 8 and 10 p.m., $40. Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center: “Peter and the Wolf,” 3 and 5 p.m., free. DC9: Imperial State Electric, Joy Buttons, 8:30 p.m., $15. Empire: Drowning Pool, Eye Empire, Even The Dead Love A Parade, Exilia, 5 p.m., $20-$25. George Washington University/Lisner Auditorium: Hamid Askari, 7:30 p.m.,

$31.20-$79. Jammin’ Java: Banjo Man Frank Cassel, 10:30 a.m.; Hello Headlights, Exit 18, 1:30 p.m., $10-$13; Jill Andrews, G.B. Parker, 7:30 p.m., $12. Kennedy Center/Concert Hall: “The Legacy of Bob Marley,” 8 p.m., $20-$48. Rams Head On Stage: Hey Marseilles, 1 p.m., $16.50; 7 Bridges (Eagles Tribute), 8 p.m., $23.50. Rock & Roll Hotel: JC Brooks & the Uptown Sound and John Michael Rouchell, 7 p.m., $14. State Theatre: Buddy Guy, 8 p.m., sold out. The Fillmore: Logic, Skizzy Mars, 7 p.m., $12. The Hamilton: Gospel Brunch, 10 a.m. and 12:30 p.m., $30. The Howard Theatre: Wale, 8:30 p.m., $35 advance, $40 day of show. U Street Music Hall: Kastle, Starkey,

Cosby, 9 p.m., $12. Warner Theatre: Daniel Tosh, 7 and 9:30 p.m., $59.50-$75.00. Wolf Trap/Filene Center: The Turtles, Flo & Eddie, Chuck Negron, Gary Puckett & The Union Gap, Mark Lindsay, Gary Lewis & The Playboys, 8 p.m., $25-$42.

►sight POWERED BY WWW.GOINGOUTGUIDE.COM

Addison/Ripley: Group exhibition “Sigil”: Carol Brown Goldberg serves as guest curator of this group show, through June 29. 1670 Wisconsin Ave. NW; 202-3385180, addisonripleyfineart.com. American Painting: “The Art of Washington, DC,” through Sept. 28. 5118 MacArthur Blvd. NW; 202-244-3244, classicamericanpainting.com.

American University/Katzen Arts Center: “Chester Arnold: Accumulations and Dispersals,” the San Francisco Bay Area artist displays his works of ecologically relevant oil paintings, through Aug. 11. “Kitty Klaidman: Beneath the Surface,” the local artist displays her mixed-media paintings, through Aug. 11. “Nan Montgomery: Opposite and Alternate,” a showcase of Montgomery’s latest works, which display her signature minimalist aesthetic and large fields of color, through Aug. 11. “Raya Bodnarchuk: Form,” a showcase of the artist’s sculptures of animals and people, through Aug. 11. “Tim Tate: Sleep Walker,” the artist who has moved on from contemporary glass to video installations displays his newest creations, through Aug. 11. “Washington Art Matters: 1940s-1980s,” works from 80 D.C. artists who were selected to tell the history of Washington’s

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Plan your visit soon at brandywinevalley.com. /brandywinevalley |

/visitbrandywine


T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | E17

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass art from the 1940s through the 1980s are

poser Alberto Gaitan juried this exhibi-

“David Levinthal: War Games,” combat-

displayed, through Aug. 11. Katzen Arts

tion, through July 27. Wilmer Wilson IV:

related tableaux and images of war from

Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW;

“The Forever Aftermath” poses the ques-

the central figure of American postmod-

202-885-1300, american.edu/cas/katzen.

tion “What is performance art, and what

ern photography, through Sept. 1. “James

happens after it’s complete?” through

Bridle: A Quiet Disposition,” the Corco-

June 30. 1101 Wilson Blvd., Arlington;

ran’s Gallery 31 presents five of the art-

703-875-1100,

ist’s research-based projects dealing

artisphere.com.

with the subject of drone warfare. Bri-

Art Museum of the Americas: “Fusion: Tracing Asian Migration to the Americas through AMA’s Collection,” this exhibit aims to examine the migration of artists and their families to the Americas from Asia during the second half of the 19th century, through Sept. 15. 201 18th St. NW; 202-370-0147, museum.oas.org. Arthur M. Sackler Gallery: “Nine Deaths, Two Births: Xu Bing’s Phoenix Project” looks at the making of “Phoenix Project,” Chinese artist Xu Bing’s massive bird installations on view at MASS MoCa. The 12-ton, 100-foot sculptures are composed of construction site detritus that the artist found in Beijing. This exhibit details the feat of constructing the pieces and includes sketches, scale models and a film, through Sept. 2. “World in Print: Japanese Illustrated Books From the Gerhard Pulverer Collection,” features ehon, Japanese woodblock-printed illustrated books that brought reading to the masses during the Edo period (1615-1868), through Aug. 11. 1050 Independence Ave. SW; 202-6331000, asia.si.edu. Artisphere: “Demographic + Sampling,” a dual exhibition featuring work by Amy Hughes Braden and Aaron Hughes, through Aug. 31. Photo/Video 13, Juried Mid-Atlantic Exhibition: Frank Goodyear, associate curator of photographs at the National Portrait Gallery; Kaitlin Booher, Corcoran Gallery of Art’s assistant curator of photography and media arts; and new media artist and com-

Athenaeum: “Hair Apparent,” a multimedia, group exhibition about the myths, rituals, memories and cultural perceptions surrounding hair. Features sculpture, live performance, photography and more, through July 14. 201 Prince St., Alexandria; 703-548-0035, nvfaa.org. BlackRock Center for the Arts: An Anne Marchand, Mike Shaffer and Mark Sharp group exhibition features acrylics, wood sculptures and mixed media pieces, through June 28. Reception from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Friday. Robert O’ Brien, oil paintings by the artist, through July 26. 12901 Town Commons Drive, Germantown, Md.; 301-528-2260, blackrock center.org. Carroll Square Gallery: “Raising Dust,” a group exhibition, features works of clay and mixed media by Margaret Boozer, Akemi Maegawa, Melissa Mytty, Matt Price and Matt Ziemke, through Aug. 23. 975 F St. NW; 202-624-8643. LAST CHANCE Connersmith: “Koen Vanmechelen: (Work From Documenta 13),” recent work by the Belgian conceptual artist, Thu.-Sat. 1358-60 Florida Ave. NE; 202-588-8750, connersmith.us.com. LAST CHANCE Corcoran Gallery of Art: “Cynthia Connolly: Letters on Top of Buildings,” 12 of Connolly’s photographs of bygone signs, inspired by road-trip fantasies, are on display, through Sun.

dle uses such public resources as Google Image to investigate and visualize the military application of unmanned aerial vehicles, through July 7. “Roots and Links: Gifts From the Women’s Committee of the Corcoran Gallery of Art,” a selection of photographs and works on paper all stemming from the ideas of identity, portraiture and self-expression,

GEORGES BRAQUE AND THE CUBIST STILL LIFE, 1928–1945 NOW THROUGH SEPT 1 Co-organized by The Phillips Collection and the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum at Washington University in St. Louis

through July 14. Free Summer Saturdays,

Supported by the Share Fund and the National Endowment for the Arts

the museum opens its doors, waives its

Supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities

admission fee and offers tours, workshops and activities Saturdays through Aug. 31: Let’s Fly a Kite: Kite Making Workshop, the museum provides everything visitors need, including materials and instruction, to build a kite, 10 to noon Sat. Sidewalk Chalk Drawing, chalk artists Julia Benton and Whitney Waller use the Corcoran Collection as inspiration and the sidewalk as canvas to create works of art, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturdays through Aug. 31, 500 17th St. NW; 202-

ELLSWORTH KELLY: PANEL PAINTINGS 2004–2009 JUNE 22 THROUGH SEPT 22 Organized by The Phillips Collection

Generous support provided by Fenner Milton

TRYST AT THE PHILLIPS

New Parisian-inspired food and cocktail menu

SUMMT-OEF-ORFFICE

U HAVE AN O E EXPERIENC

Permanent collection is

639-1700, corcoran.org. LAST CHANCE Curator’s Office: Nicholas

FREE

and Sheila Pye, photography and film,

on weekdays

Thu.-Sat. 1515 14th St. NW; 202-387-1008, curatorsoffice.com. Fairfax Art League: Old Town Fairfax, art based on sights of Old Town Fairfax, through June 30. Old Town Hall, 3999 University Drive, Fairfax; 703-273-2377, Continued on page E18

The ART of

www.phillipscollection.org 1600 21st Street, NW • Dupont Circle Metro (Q Street exit) • 202-387-2151 Thursday Nights Open until 8:30 pm Members Enjoy Free Unlimited Admission and Discounts. Join Us! Georges Braque, Studio with Black Vase, 1938. Oil and sand on canvas, 38 1/4 x 51 in. The Kreeger Museum, Washington, D.C. © 2013 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris


E18 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

Weekend Pass | goingoutguide.com Continued from page E17

dela is showcased along with a num-

fairfaxartleague.net.

ber of Mandela’s sketches made in the

Flashpoint: Sam Scharf: “Sit Here & I See You,” sculptures and installations by the artist, through July 27. 916 G St. NW; 202315-1305, culturaldc.org. Folger Shakespeare Library: “A Book Behind Bars: The Robben Island Shakespeare,” a copy of Shakespeare’s “Complete Works” signed by Nelson Man-

early 2000s, reflecting back on his life in prison, through Sept. 29. “The Folgers Our Founders,” several art collections and manuscripts important to the founders of the library, Henry and Emily Folger, are put on display, through Sept. 29. 201 East Capitol St. SE; 202-544-4600, folger.edu.

Foundry Gallery: “Scotland: Boundless, Beautiful and Home,” abstract paintings of Scotland’s landscape by Lesley Clarke, through June 30. 1314 18th St. NW; 202463-0203, foundrygallery.org. Freer Gallery of Art: “Arts of Japan: Edo Aviary and Poetic License,” two complementary exhibits examine Japanese art inspired by and from the Edo period. One features bird paintings, a signifi-

cant part of the Japanese visual reper-

highlight the late Six Dynasties and the

toire, and the other displays classical

High Tang (sixth to eighth century). “Syl-

Asian literary traditions interpreted in

van Sounds: Freer, Dewing and Japan,”

paint, through Aug. 4. “Old Tales Retold:

American tonalism — shadowy paint-

Chinese Narrative Painting,” 23 paint-

ings in muted hues— became a gateway

ings relay lively stories about notorious

to Japanese art for patron Charles Lang

figures and places from Chinese history,

Freer. His namesake museum explicitly

through Oct. 20. “Promise of Paradise:

shows the connection, exhibiting works

Early Chinese Buddhist Sculpture,” Bud-

by American artist Thomas Dewing

dhist sculptures of stone and gilt bronze

alongside Japanese pieces Freer

Local movie times DISTRICT

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MARYLAND

AMC Loews Georgetown 14

AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Center

Iron Man 3 (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 3:10 Man of Steel (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 1:45-4:15-5:00-6:00-8:15 Monsters University (G) CC;Digital Presentation: 8:00-10:30 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 1:35-4:35-10:35 Epic (PG) CC;Digital Presentation: 12:00-2:30 World War Z (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-9:30 The Great Gatsby (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 12:00 The Great Gatsby in 3D (PG-13) CC;RealD 3D: 3:20-10:00 Now You See Me (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 1:20-4:10-10:35 Star Trek Into Darkness 3D (PG-13) RealD 3D: 1:25-7:30 This Is The End (R) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 1:30-2:30-4:15-5:15-7:00-9:40-10:50 The Internship (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 1:35-4:20-5:05-7:10-10:00 Monsters University 3D (G) CC;RealD 3D: 8:00 Man of Steel: The IMAX Experience (PG-13) Digital Presentation;IMAX: (!) 12:30 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) CC;RealD 3D: (!) 1:00-6:45-7:45 Man of Steel: An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) IMAX;RealD 3D: (!) 3:45-7:15-10:45 The Purge (R) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:25-2:50-5:05-10:45 World War Z 3D (PG-13) CC;RealD 3D: 8:00 The Bling Ring (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: 8:00 Star Trek Into Darkness (PG-13) Digital Presentation: 4:25-10:35 The Hangover Part III (R) Digital Presentation: 12:30 Before Midnight (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: 1:50-4:25-10:00

Before Midnight (R) NO PASSES: (!) 12:20-2:35-4:50-7:05-9:20 Shorts Program 1: Truth Be Told NO PASSES: (!) 3:15 Stories We Tell (PG-13) 12:30-2:45-5:00-7:15-9:30 The Expedition to the End of the World (Ekspeditionen til verdens ende) (NR) NO PASSES: (!) 7:45 Shorts Program 2: Live and Death NO PASSES: (!) 5:30

3111 K Street N.W.

www.AMCTheatres.com

AMC Loews Uptown 1

3426 Connecticut Avenue N.W. www.AMCTheatres.com Man of Steel (PG-13) Digital Presentation: (!) 4:45 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) RealD 3D: (!) 1:30-8:00

AMC Mazza Gallerie 5300 Wisconsin Ave. NW

www.AMCTheatres.com

Star Trek Into Darkness (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 3:40 Monsters University (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 9:00 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:10-3:056:10 Epic (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 3:00 Epic in 3D (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 12:30-5:30 World War Z (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 8:40-9:05 The Great Gatsby (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 4:00 The Great Gatsby in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 12:50 Now You See Me (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:00-2:405:20 Star Trek Into Darkness 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 12:40-6:30 This Is The End (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:25-3:205:50-8:20 The Internship (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:20-3:106:20 Monsters University 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 8:00 World War Z 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00-9:40

Avalon

5612 Connecticut Avenue

www.theavalon.org

Mud (PG-13) 99% Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes!: 11:30-2:15-5:10-8:00 Renoir (R) NY Times- Washington Post Critics Pick!: 10:30-12:50-3:15-5:45-8:15

Landmark E Street Cinema 555 11th Street NW

www.landmarktheatres.com

The Painting (Le Tableau) (NR) SUB-TITLED: 9:30 Shadow Dancer (R) 2:10-4:40-7:10-9:40 The East (PG-13) 1:40-4:20-7:00-9:35 Frances Ha (R) 1:00-3:10-5:20-7:30-9:45 Before Midnight (R) 2:15-5:15-8:15 The Kings of Summer (R) 1:05-3:15-5:30-7:45-9:55 Dirty Wars (NR) 2:20-4:50-9:50 Pandora's Promise (NR) 1:15-3:30-5:45-8:00-10:00 The Painting (2005) (PG-13) 1:10-3:20-5:35-7:40

Regal Gallery Place Stadium 14 707 Seventh Street NW

www.regalcinemas.com

Star Trek Into Darkness (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:00-3:106:40-9:40 Iron Man 3 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:50-6:55 Man of Steel (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 12:45-2:30-4:00-7:309:30-10:50 Monsters University (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:30 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:40-3:40-10:30 Epic (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 11:05-1:30-4:05 After Earth (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 11:20-2:00-4:55 The Great Gatsby (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 7:15-10:25 World War Z (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00-11:00 Now You See Me (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 11:10-1:50-4:30-7:2010:00 The Hangover Part III (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 4:15-9:55 This Is The End (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 11:30-1:00-2:10-3:50-5:006:50-7:40-9:50-10:30 The Internship (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 11:00-1:55-4:50-7:50-10:40 Monsters University 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vide;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 10:30-12:15-1:30-3:304:40-7:00-10:20 The Purge (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:10-3:20-5:40-10:50 World War Z 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 8:00-11:00

West End Cinema 2301 M Street NW

http://westendcinema.com/

Mud (PG-13) New York Times Critic's Pick!: 1:20-9:20 Wish You Were Here (R) Washington Post Critic's Pick!: 9:40 Stories We Tell (PG-13) Washington Post Critic's Pick!: 2:40-5:00-7:20 We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks (R) Washington Post Critic's Pick!: 4:00 Now You See Me (PG-13) Starring Jesse Eisenberg- Woody Harrelson & Morgan Freeman: 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30

8633 Colesville Road

www.afi.com/silver

AMC Loews Center Park 8 4001 Powder Mill Rd.

www.AMCTheatres.com

Man of Steel (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 2:15-5:40-8:45-9:20 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 12:00-3:00 World War Z (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 8:00 After Earth (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 12:25-2:45-5:05 This Is The End (R) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 2:00-4:30-7:05-9:40 The Internship (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:15-3:00 Monsters University 3D (G) CC;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) CC;RealD 3D: (!) 12:30-3:45-7:00-10:05 The Purge (R) CC;Digital Presentation: 12:50-3:00-5:05-7:10 World War Z 3D (PG-13) CC;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00 Monsters University (G) Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00 Now You See Me (PG-13) Digital Presentation: 12:05-2:45-5:20

AMC Loews White Flint 5 11301 Rockville Pike

www.AMCTheatres.com

Man of Steel (PG-13) Digital Presentation: (!) 4:00 World War Z (PG-13) Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00 Now You See Me (PG-13) Digital Presentation: 12:45-4:00 The Internship (PG-13) Digital Presentation: (!) 1:00-3:45 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) RealD 3D: (!) 12:45-7:15 World War Z 3D (PG-13) RealD 3D: (!) 8:00 Monsters University (G) (!) 8:00 Epic (PG) 12:30-3:00-5:30 This Is The End (R) (!) 1:30-4:30-7:30

AMC Magic Johnson Capital Center 12 800 Shoppers Way

www.AMCTheatres.com

Iron Man 3 (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 1:50-7:30 Man of Steel (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:00-11:002:40-4:40-6:05-9:30 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 9:20-12:203:30-6:35-9:45 Epic (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 10:40-4:00-9:00 Epic in 3D (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 1:20-6:30 World War Z (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00 After Earth (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 11:10-1:40-4:207:10-9:40 Now You See Me (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 11:05-2:004:45-7:40-10:35 The Hangover Part III (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 11:20-4:5010:40 This Is The End (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:55-1:45-4:307:20-10:15 The Internship (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:50-2:005:00-7:50-10:45 Man of Steel: The IMAX Experience (PG-13) Digital Presentation;IMAX: (!) 12:25 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: (!) 1:25-5:20-8:05 Man of Steel: An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) IMAX;RealD 3D: (!) 9:00-3:40-7:05-10:30 The Purge (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:20-11:50-12:45-2:153:00-4:35-8:35-10:50

Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema 7235 Woodmont Avenue

www.landmarktheatres.com

The Great Gatsby (PG-13) 8:10 The Great Gatsby in 3D (PG-13) 1:40-4:50 The East (PG-13) 2:20-5:00-7:30-10:05 Fill the Void (Lemale et ha'halal) (PG) 2:00-4:10-8:00-10:10 The Company You Keep (R) 1:30-4:20-7:20-9:55 Frances Ha (R) 2:10-4:30-7:50-10:00 Before Midnight (R) 1:20-3:50-7:10-9:30 What Maisie Knew (R) 1:50-4:00-7:40-9:45 The Kings of Summer (R) 2:30-4:40-7:00-9:15

Regal Bethesda 10 7272 Wisconsin Avenue

www.regalcinemas.com

Star Trek Into Darkness (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:20-3:20 Iron Man 3 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 4:40-7:40 Man of Steel (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 12:50-4:20-7:50-9:45 Monsters University (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:40 Epic (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:30-4:00-6:30 Now You See Me (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:10-3:50-6:50 World War Z (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:15 The Hangover Part III (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 10:30 Mud (PG-13) 12:30-3:40 This Is The End (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:30-4:40-7:15-10:20 The Internship (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:00-4:30-9:50 The Purge (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:40-5:00 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 12:00-3:30-7:00-10:15 Monsters University 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vide;RealD 3D: (!) 8:30 World War Z 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 8:45

Regal Hyattsville Royale Stadium 14 6505 America Blvd.

Star Trek Into Darkness (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 3:55-10:05 Iron Man 3 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:00-6:55 Man of Steel (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 1:05-3:40-4:30-7:55-10:20 Monsters University (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 9:45 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:35-1:15-4:20-7:20-10:10 After Earth (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:35-4:00-6:40-9:50

Epic (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 2:10-4:40-7:05 World War Z (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 10:15 Now You See Me (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:10-4:25 The Hangover Part III (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 2:10-4:40 This Is The End (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:55-4:35-7:45-10:25 The Internship (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:50-3:35-6:45 Monsters University 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vide;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00-10:30 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 12:30-1:40-2:20-5:006:20-7:00-8:30 The Purge (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:30-2:45-3:45-4:55-6:15-7:158:45-9:20 World War Z 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 8:00-9:30

Regal Majestic 20 & IMAX 900 Ellsworth Drive

Star Trek Into Darkness (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 10:15-1:35-4:307:25-10:30 Iron Man 3 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:25-3:25 Man of Steel (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 10:00-11:45-1:30-3:00-5:006:30-8:30-10:00 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 10:40-1:40-3:40-5:056:40-8:00-10:55 Epic (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 11:55-2:20-4:45-7:15-9:50 Monsters University (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 9:00 Epic in 3D (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 10:25-1:10-3:45 After Earth (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 10:55-1:20-3:55-6:50-9:25 The Great Gatsby (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 11:35-2:45-5:55-9:35 Now You See Me (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 11:05-1:45-4:25-6:357:35-9:15-10:20 World War Z (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 9:20 The Hangover Part III (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 10:10-12:45 This Is The End (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 10:10-11:30-12:40-2:15-3:154:50-5:50-7:40-8:20-10:15-10:50 The Internship (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 10:35-12:00-1:25-3:10-4:157:10-10:05 The Purge (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 10:25-12:10-1:00-2:40-3:35-4:555:45-7:05-8:10-10:35 Man of Steel: The IMAX Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Se;IMAX: (!) 12:30 Man of Steel: An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Se;IMAX: (!) 4:00-7:30-11:00 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 10:30-11:00-2:00-2:305:30-6:00-9:00-9:30 Monsters University 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vide;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00-10:30 World War Z 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 8:20-11:00

Xscape 14 Theatres

7710 Matapeake Business Drivewww.xscapetheatres.com Star Trek Into Darkness (PG-13) Stadium Seating: 12:25-3:40 Iron Man 3 (PG-13) Stadium Seating: 2:15-8:15 Man of Steel (PG-13) Stadium Seating: (!) 10:30-11:00-1:35-4:40-5:15-7:45 Monsters University (G) Stadium Seating: (!) 8:00 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) Stadium Seating: 10:40-1:25-4:25-7:35-10:30 Epic (PG) Stadium Seating: 10:45-1:45-4:15-6:50 World War Z (PG-13) Stadium Seating: (!) 8:00 After Earth (PG-13) Stadium Seating: 10:00-11:20-1:40-4:35-7:00-9:20 Now You See Me (PG-13) Stadium Seating: 10:00-12:35-3:10-7:05-9:50 The Hangover Part III (R) Stadium Seating: 10:10-12:30-2:50-5:25-7:40-10:00 This Is The End (R) Stadium Seating: (!) 11:20-2:00-4:30-7:00-9:15-9:45 The Internship (PG-13) Stadium Seating: (!) 10:30-1:10-3:50-6:30-9:10 Monsters University 3D (G) 3D;Stadium Seating: (!) 9:00 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) 3D XTREME XSCAPE;Stadium Seating: (!) 10:00-1:05-4:10-7:15-10:20 The Purge (R) Stadium Seating: (!) 10:15-1:20-4:00-6:20-8:30-10:35 World War Z 3D (PG-13) 3D XTREME XSCAPE;Stadium Seating: (!) 8:00-10:45 Man of Steel (PG-13) Stadium Seating;XTREME XSCAPE: (!) 12:20-3:25-6:30-9:35 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) 3D;Stadium Seating: (!) 11:30-2:40-5:50

VIRGINIA

AMC Courthouse Plaza 8 2150 Clarendon Blvd.

www.AMCTheatres.com

Star Trek Into Darkness (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 1:30 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 1:35-4:40-7:45-10:50 Now You See Me (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 12:10-3:00-5:50-8:40 Star Trek Into Darkness 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D;Reserved Seating: 1:30-4:30-7:30-10:30 The Hangover Part III (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 4:40 This Is The End (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 12:00-12:40-2:40-3:40-5:20-6:20-7:15-9:30-10:00 The Internship (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 12:20-3:15-6:10-9:00 The Purge (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 12:102:30-4:50-7:10 The Bling Ring (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 8:00-9:00-10:20

AMC Hoffman Center 22 206 Swamp Fox Rd.

www.AMCTheatres.com

Star Trek Into Darkness (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 1:40-7:55-11:05 Iron Man 3 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 1:25-7:30 Man of Steel (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:55-12:15-2:203:40-5:45-7:05-9:05-10:30 Monsters University (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-10:40 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:50-2:254:00-7:00-10:05 Epic (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 3:05 Epic in 3D (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 12:25-5:40 World War Z (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-10:00-12:00

After Earth (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 12:20-2:50-5:30 The Great Gatsby (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 1:05-4:15 Now You See Me (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 10:40-11:401:30-4:25-5:25-7:15-10:10 Star Trek Into Darkness 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 10:35-4:45 The Hangover Part III (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: 11:40-2:154:50-7:20 This Is The End (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:30-11:45-1:152:30-4:00-5:15-6:40-8:00-9:25-10:30-12:00 The Internship (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:15-11:001:45-4:40-7:35-10:25 Monsters University 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00-10:40 Man of Steel: The IMAX Experience (PG-13) Digital Presentation;IMAX: (!) 12:35 The East (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 11:15-2:05-4:55 Iron Man 3 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: 10:15-4:30-10:25 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: (!) 10:10-11:30-1:35-2:554:50-8:25-11:40 Man of Steel: An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) IMAX;RealD 3D: (!) 4:00-7:20-10:35 The Purge (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:20-11:35-12:40-1:503:00-4:10-6:30-8:50-10:00-11:10 Before Midnight (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 11:20-1:55-4:30-7:10-9:50 Vehicle 19 (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:00-2:20-4:35-6:50-9:10-11:30 World War Z 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00-9:00-11:00 The Bling Ring (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-10:30 Assaulted: Civil Rights Under Fire (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 5:00-7:00

Angelika Film Center Mosaic 2911 District Ave

Iron Man 3 (PG-13) 11:00AM Man of Steel (PG-13) 2:00-5:00-8:15-11:15 World War Z (PG-13) 8:00-10:45 Mud (PG-13) 10:20-1:20-4:15-7:10-10:10 The Great Gatsby (PG-13) 10:10-1:15-4:20 Star Trek Into Darkness 3D (PG-13) 4:15 Frances Ha (R) 10:55-1:10-3:20-5:30 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) 10:00-1:00-4:00-7:00-10:00 Before Midnight (R) 10:50-2:10-4:35-7:00-9:25 The Kings of Summer (R) 11:05-1:15-3:25-5:35-7:45-9:55 World War Z 3D (PG-13) 8:00-10:45 The Bling Ring (R) 8:00-10:25 Star Trek Into Darkness (PG-13) 10:05-1:05

Regal Ballston Common 12 671 N. Glebe Road

www.regalcinemas.com

Man of Steel (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 12:30-4:00-7:30 Monsters University (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00 World War Z (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 1:30-5:00-8:30 Monsters University 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vide;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00 World War Z 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 8:00

Regal Kingstowne 16 & RPX 5910 Kingstowne Towne Center

Star Trek Into Darkness (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:20-4:25-7:1510:15 Iron Man 3 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 11:15-2:15-5:25-9:30 Man of Steel (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 12:15-3:35-4:35-7:008:00-10:25 Monsters University (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:00-10:45 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:35-4:30 Epic (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:40-4:00-6:25-9:25 Epic in 3D (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 11:20AM The Great Gatsby (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:25-6:55 Now You See Me (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:05-3:20 After Earth (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:35-3:30-6:40-9:15 World War Z (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:15-11:05 The Hangover Part III (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 3:55-10:10 This Is The End (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 11:45-1:05-2:35-3:45-5:15-6:307:50-9:10-10:35 The Internship (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:30-4:20-7:45-10:40 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descripti;Dolby Atmos;RPX;RealD 3D: (!) 12:45 Monsters University 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vide;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00-10:50 The Purge (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:15-1:15-2:30-3:30-4:45-5:407:05-9:15 World War Z 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 8:15-11:05 Man of Steel (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video;Dolby Atmos;RPX: (!) 4:05 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 11:30-1:15-2:50 World War Z 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vide;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00-10:50

Regal Potomac Yard 16 3575 Jefferson Davis Highway

www.regalcinemas.com

Star Trek Into Darkness (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:20-3:15-9:20 Iron Man 3 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:25-3:25-6:25-9:40 Man of Steel (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 12:00-1:00-3:10-4:30-6:006:40-8:00 Monsters University (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:30-10:00 Fast & Furious 6 (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:40-3:50-6:50-10:00 Epic (PG) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:50-3:30-6:10 The Great Gatsby (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:00-3:20-6:30-9:45 After Earth (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:05-2:20-5:00-7:40 World War Z (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: (!) 8:45-10:45 Now You See Me (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:15-4:10-7:00-9:50 The Hangover Part III (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:10 The Internship (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:50-4:50-10:40 This Is The End (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 12:10-1:30-2:40-4:20-5:20-7:107:55-9:55-10:45 The Purge (R) CC/DVS & Descriptive Video Service: 1:25-3:40-5:55-8:10 Monsters University 3D (G) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vide;RealD 3D: (!) 8:00-10:35 Man of Steel 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 12:30-1:40-2:30-4:005:00-7:20-10:30 World War Z 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descriptive Vid;Real D 3D: (!) 8:15-10:15


T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | E19

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass

COME JOIN US FOR A SPECIAL SCREENING OF

SPEAK

collected in the late 1890s, through May 28, 2014. “Whistler’s Neighborhood:

ABOUT SPEAK THE MOVIE SPEAK is a documentary film that follows six characters as they overcome life’s hurdles while participating in the largest speech contest in the world, the Toastmasters World Championship of Public Speaking. Funny, inspiring and moving, SPEAK tells a story about hope, perseverance and transformation — a story everyone can relate to. This screening is part of the SPEAK INTERNATIONAL FILM TOUR, which launched in January 2012. Run-time: 1 hour and 29 minutes. www.speakthemovie.com

Impressions of a Changing London,” etchings, watercolors and small oil paintings offer James McNeill Whistler’s quick impressions of London’s Chelsea neighborhood from 1863 to his death in 1903, through Sept. 8. Jefferson Drive and 12th Street SW; 202-633-1000, asia.si.edu.

Hemphill: “Artist-Citizen, Washington D.C.,” all-media exhibition in which local artists aim to dispel stereotypes about artists being irresponsible and explore the artist’s role in bringing about social change, through July 27. 1515 14th St. NW; 202-234-5601, hemphillfinearts.com. Hillyer Art Space: J.J. McCracken, the Washington performance artist, exhibits a suite of photographs documenting “Thirst and the Martyr,” her performance at the 2011 (E)merge art fair. The show will also include remnants of that performance, through June 28. Marley Dawson, new sculptures and installations by the Australian artist, through June 28. Santiago Rios: “New Work,” Rios displays his artwork, which attempts to show the connectivity between music and painting and drawing, through June 28. 9 Hillyer Court NW; 202-338-0680, artsandartists.org. Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: “Barbara Kruger: Belief + Doubt,” the entire museum space — walls, floor, escalator sides — is wrapped in text on vinyl by the artist, immersing visitors in halls of voices that address conflicting perceptions of democracy, power and belief. “Black Box: Democracia,” an artist collective formed by Pablo Espana and Ivan Lopez, presents a multidimensional work that includes performance, books, circulars and video installations, through Sept. 30. “Directions: Jennie C. Jones,” new work by the Brooklyn-based artist, who uses audio, sculptures and drawings to create modernist art forms influenced by avant-garde jazz, through Oct. 27. “Over, Under, Next: Experiments in Mixed Media, 1913-Present,” the exhibition features about 100 pieces that explore various forms of collage, including the room-sized installation “Palimpsest” by Ann Hamilton. The piece features newspaper pieces, beeswax tablets and snails, among other things, through Sept. 8. Seventh Street and Independence Avenue SW; 202-6331000, hirshhorn.si.edu. Historical Society of Washington: “Window to Washington: The Kiplinger

SQUAWK! SQUAWK! THE MUSEUM

SCREENING DETAILS District 36 Toastmasters June 20, 2013 7:00 pm US Navy Memorial Heritage Center 701 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. Washington, DC 20004 FREE ADMISSION

HOST: DATE: LOCATION:

OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN tries

to be everything: an art space, a history lesson and a representation of a hugely diverse set of cultures. The “Ceramica de los Ancestros” exhibit explains history and present culture through 160 pottery objects, including this incense burner.

ABOUT THE DIRECTORS Paul Galichia, a native of Wichita, KS graduated from Stanford University in 1996 and later attended the Peter Stark Producing Program at USC. Since founding Tumbleweed Entertainment in 2006 with partner and co-director of SPEAK Brian Weidling, Paul has produced numerous documentaries including The Goal about the United States World Cup Soccer team and a short documentary about the We Advance clinic in Haiti with acclaimed actress and activist Maria Bello.

Brian Weidling, a native of Hillsborough, NJ attended Emerson College in Boston Massachusetts where he began his filmmaking career with a student award-winning documentary called 13 Seconds, about the 1970 Kent State shootings. Brian produced and directed The Goal (narrated by Robert Duvall) about US Soccer Captain Claudio Reyna’s journey to the World Cup in 2002; and is currently finishing the documentary A Symphony of Hope: The Haiti Project.

www.speakthemovie.com | www.facebook.com/speakthefilm

THE ROSSLYN BUSINESS IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT PRESENTS

Collection at HSW,” through Dec. 31. 801

ing, how the brain works and how to plan

K St. NW; 202-383-1420, historydc.org.

healthy meals, 525 E St. NW; 202-334-

Honfleur: John K. Lawson: “Figures In Jazz,” large-scale collage portraits featuring prominent jazz musicians, through June 28. 1241 Good Hope Road SE; 202365-8392, honfleurgallery.com. International Visions: “Who Used to Dance,” Russian painter Anna Demovidova presents a series of paintings inspired by jazz and flamenco. The exhibition’s title comes from one of Demovidova’s favorite jazz albums, Abbey Lincoln’s “Who Used to Dance,” through June 29. 2629 Connecticut Ave. NW; 202-234-5112, inter-visions.com. Jane Haslem: “the mind / the line / the image,” an exhibition of works by 16 American artists, through July 31. 2025 Hillyer Place NW; 202-232-4644. Jerusalem Fund: “Hopes and Dreams,” Palestinian-American artist Vian Shamounki Borchert exhibits her paintings of Jerusalem landscapes, through July 12. 2425 Virginia Ave. NW; 202-338-1958, thejerusalemfund.org. Koshland Science Museum: 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 liv-

SUMMERSCHOOL 2013 ROSSLYN OUTDOOR FILM FESTIVAL

1201, koshland-science-museum.org.

Mount Vernon: “Hoecakes and Hospitality: Cooking With Martha Washington,” a behind-the-scenes look at Washington’s kitchen in an exhibition celebrating food at Mount Vernon and Washington, through Aug. 11. 3200 Mount Vernon Memorial Hwy., Alexandria; 703-7802000, mountvernon.org. National Air and Space Museum: Ongoing exhibits: Explore the evolution of flight through displays, hands-on 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, Sixth Street and Independence Avenue SW; 202-633-1000, nasm.si.edu. National Building Museum: “Green Schools,” Perkins + Will architects presents a classroom model that conserves energy and builds on the possibility of a greener, more sustainable school building, through Jan. 5. “House and Home,” an ongoing exhibition that explores what it means to live at home. “Play Work Continued on page E20

FREE. FRIDAYS. GATEWAY PARK. MAY 17 – AUGUST 30. DUSK.

RISKY BUSINESS JUNE 7

May 17 May 24 May 31 June 7 June 14 June 21 June 28 July 5 July 12

The Breakfast Club R Ferris Bueller’s Day Off PG-13 Clueless PG-13 Risky Business R Can’t Buy Me Love PG-13 Easy A PG-13 10 Things I Hate About You PG-13 Bring It On PG-13 Pretty in Pink PG-13

July 19 July 26 Aug. 2 Aug. 9 Aug. 16

She’s All That PG-13 Fame R Can’t Hardly Wait PG-13 Sixteen Candles PG High School Musical 3: Senior Year G Aug. 23 American Graffiti PG Aug. 30 Grease PG-13 rosslynva.org/film

Gateway Park – at foot of Key Bridge, 1300 Lee Hwy. Two blocks from the Rosslyn Metro station. Parking available for $3 after 6:00 p.m. at Atlantic Parking Garage on Moore St. next to Continental.

Business Improvement District

Bring blankets, low chairs and a picnic. Arrive early for best seating, pre-show games and prizes. Movies shown rain or shine. However, movies will be cancelled for severe weather, including heavy rains and strong winds. Note: Alcohol consumption is not permitted in Gateway Park.


E20 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

Weekend Pass

COMING UP AT WOLF TRAP! TONIGHT! 8 PM

Billy Idol

The Tenors

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Sing-A-Long Grease

Jerry Garcia Symphonic Celebration The Temptations The Four Tops Featuring Warren Haynes Symphony rocks out to Grateful Dead legend’s classics JUNE 26

Motown hits like “My Girl,” “Ain’t Too Proud to Beg,” and “Baby I Need Your Loving” JUNE 27

Frozen Planet in Concert Anita Baker

Straight No Chaser

Playful wildlife and stunning landscapes with live orchestral score HUGE SCREENS – House and Lawn!

A cappella covers of pop hits like “I Want You Back” and “Rolling in the Deep”

JUNE 28

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THESE GREAT SHOWS ALSO ON SALE NOW Pink Martini 7/1 BUDDY—The Buddy Holly Story 7/2 & 7/3 Harry Connick, Jr. 7/5 Doobie Brothers 7/6 Golden Dragon Acrobats from China 7/7 Los Lobos Los Lonely Boys 7/9

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Continued from page E19

of the museum’s collection of artifacts,

Build,” the ongoing exhibit explores the

shows how stories and history have

history of play through a toy collection

shaped our national identity. “Chang-

and foam block area, through Nov. 18,

ing America: The Emancipation Procla-

2014. Ongoing exhibits: Learn about the

mation, 1863, and the March on Washing-

history of buildings and their environ-

ton, 1963,” a collection of photos and arti-

mental impact, 401 F St. NW; 202-272-

facts commemorating two major events

2448, nbm.org.

in American history, through Sept. 15.

National Gallery of Art, East Building: “Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes, 1909-1929: When Art Danced With Music,” original costumes, set designs, paintings, sculptures and photographs from the innovative 20th-century dance company founded by Russian impresario Serge Diaghilev, through Sept. 2. “Ellsworth Kelly: Colored Paper Images,” an exhibition of 23 paper-pulp pieces by Kelly, through Dec. 1. Fourth Street and Constitution Avenue NW; 202-737-4215, nga.gov. National Gallery of Art, West Building: “Civic Pride: Dutch Group Portraits From Amsterdam,” rare depictions by Govert Flinck and Bartholomeus van der Helst of meetings inside the Kloveniersdoelen, the gathering place of one of Amsterdam’s three militia companies. “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. Edvard Munch: A 150th Anniversary Tribute: the Norwegian artist may be most famous for his portrait of anguish, “The Scream,” but Munch had a broad repertoire. This celebration of his 150th birthday features 20 paintings, including the stunning, abstracted “Two Women on the Shore” and “Madonna,” an unusually amorous 1895 depiction of the Virgin Mary, through July 28. Sixth Street and Constitution Avenue NW; 202-7374215, nga.gov. National Museum of African Art: “Earth Matters: Land as Material and Metaphor in the Arts of Africa” surveys artwork that portrays African land as something revered and exploited, through Jan. 4. “Walt Disney-Tishman African Art Highlights,” donated to the museum in 2005, the collection features unique and rare works of traditional African art from throughout sub-Saharan Africa, through Sept. 1. 950 Independence Ave. SW; 202-633-4600, africa.si.edu. National Museum of American History: “American Stories,” a cross-section

“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. “History Highlights Display: 1913 Suffrage Parade,” illustrates a seminal day in the woman’s suffrage movement, when 5,000 women marched down Pennsylvania Avenue for a “national procession” during President Woodrow Wilson’s inauguration, through Oct. 31. “Not Lost in Translation: The Life of Clotilde Arias,” Arias, who immigrated to New York from Peru in 1923, led an atypical life and is most known for her song “Huiracocha.” Her possessions and papers tell a story of the first half of the 20th century, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW; 202633-1000, americanhistory.si.edu. National Museum of Natural History: “Dom Pedro,” the 14-inch obelisk, is a 10,363-carat aquamarine. “Living on an Ocean Planet,” a new permanent exhibit that explores the ocean space and its relationship to human life. “Nature’s Best Photography Awards,” portraits of plants, animals and people by the world’s best amateur and professional photographers, through June 1, 2014. “Portraits of Planet Ocean: The Photography of Brian Skerry,” an underwater journey through different marine environments by the award-winning photojournalist, through Nov. 30. “The Evolving Universe,” see images of space taken through telescopes and explore the time from the creation of the universe to the present day on Earth, through July 7. “Whales: From Bone to Book,” traces the journey of fossil bones from sea cliff to museum drawer and illustration in a science book, through May 31, 2014. 10th Street and Constitution Avenue NW; 202-633-1000, mnh.si.edu. National Museum of the American Indian: “Ceramica de los Ancestros: Central America’s Past Revealed,” Central American ceramics from 1000 B.C. to the present. “Grand Procession: Dolls


T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | E21

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass From the Charles and Valerie Diker Col-

Women of Achievement in the Early

Chapman, Ben Durham, Till Freiwald and

through Jan. 5. “Three Shots Were Fired,”

through July 28. 17th Street and Pennsyl-

lection,” intricate figurines made of buf-

Republic,” seven portraits of women

Rob Matthew are explored, through Aug.

artifacts and headlines that tell the story

vania Avenue NW; 202-633-1000,

falo hair, porcupine quills and shells from

who figured prominently during and

18. “Recent Acquisitions,” new pieces

of JFK’s assassination from the perspec-

the Plains and Plateau American Indian

after the American Revolution, through

include paintings of Amerigo Vespucci

tive of the news media, through Jan. 5.

tribes, through Jan. 5. Fourth Street and

Sept. 2. “Mathew Brady’s Photographs

and Henry Louis Gates Jr., a sculpture

555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW; 888-639-

Independence Avenue SW; 202-633-1000,

of Union Generals,” studio portraits by

of Dwight Eisenhower, a photograph of

nmai.si.edu.

one of the most famous photographers

Marjorie Merriweather Post and more,

of the Civil War. “Meade Brothers: Pio-

through Oct. 27. “The Network,” Lincoln

neers in American Photography,” a col-

Schatz’s group video portrait combines

lection of daguerreotypes from the 19th-

and recombines 89 famous interviewees,

century American photographer broth-

Eighth and F streets NW; 202-633-1000,

National Museum of Women in the Arts: “Bice Lazzari: Signature Line,” a collaboration with the Italian Embassy in honor of 2013’s designation as the Year of Italian Culture, this show features drawings and sketches by the late abstract artist. Born in 1900, she missed out on formal figure study during art school because of her gender. The result: She excelled in abstract work, drawing inspiration from her love of music, through Sept. 22. Ongoing exhibits: works by female artists, 1250 New York Ave. NW; 202-783-5000, nmwa.org. National Portrait Gallery: “A Will of Their Own: Judith Sargent Murray and

ers, through June 1, 2014. “Mr. Time: Portraits by Boris Chaliapin,” features 26 portraits by Time magazine’s most prolific cover artist, through Jan. 5. “Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition 2013,” a juried exhibit of mixed-media portraits. The competition winner will receive a commission to create a piece for the museum’s permanent collection, through Feb. 23. “Portraiture Now: Drawing on the Edge,” the techniques of Mequitta Ahuja, Mary Borgman, Adam

npg.si.edu. Newseum: “A Thousand Days,” examines John F. Kennedy’s time in office and his family life through a documentary video of original footage and interviews. The film is one in a series of events at the museum that marks the 50th anniversary of the former president’s death, through Jan. 5. “Creating Camelot: The Kennedy Photography of Jacques Lowe,” intimate shots of John F. Kennedy’s family taken by his personal photographer,

7386, newseum.org. Phillips Collection: “Georges Braque and the Cubist Still Life,” features 44 paintings by Braque and objects from the years leading up to and during World War II, through Sept. 1. “Laib Wax Room,” German artist Wolfgang Laib originally created this fragrant, illuminated beeswax chamber for the Phillips family home. It will be the museum’s first permanent installation since the Rothko Room in 1960, 1600 21st St. NW; 202-387-2151, phillipscollection.org. Renwick Gallery: “Thomas Day: Master Craftsman and Free Man of Color” examines the career of one of North Carolina’s most successful cabinetmakers during a time of widespread racial discrimination,

americanart.si.edu. Smithsonian American Art Museum: “Inventing a Better Mousetrap: Patent Models From the Rothschild Collection,” models of mousetraps and other inventions show patents inventors submitted in the 19th century, through Nov. 3. “Nam June Paik: Global Visionary,” the exhibition features “Zen for TV” (1963/1976), “Megatron/Matrix” (1995) and objects from the Nam June Paik Archive, a collection of correspondence and Paik ephemera, through Aug. 11. “Pictures in the Parlor,” an examination of decorative images from the mid-19th century that were used in domestic interiors, through June 30. Eighth and F streets NW; 202633-1000, americanart.si.edu. Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum: “Reclaiming the Edge: Urban Continued on page E22

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

RAHSAAN PATTERSON IFé 22 The Seldom Scene & Jonathan Edwards 23 BILL PAYNE (of Little Feat)

June 21

Tracing Footsteps, A Journal of Music Photography and Tales From The Road 24

29

SHAUN MURPHY

(Formerly of Little Feat) June 21 & June 22

ENVIRODRUM- MARYLAND June 23

GOTTASWING DANCE NIGHT W/ SOLOMON DOUGLAS QUARTET June 26

BUSHMASTER BLUES BAND June 27

HAROLD MELVIN’S BLUE NOTES

TRAVIS TRITT

DELBERT McCLINTON

JASON ISBELLWidowspeak 2 SIMON & GARFUNKEL RETROSPECTIVE July 1

by

3

June 29

7719 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda, MD 20814

(240) 330-4500

www.bethesdabluesjazz.com Facebook.com/Bethesda.Blues.Jazz Follow us on Twitter: @BethesdaBlues

AJ Swearingen & Jonathan Beedle

YOUNG LIONS OF GYPSY JAZZ Stars of The Django Reinhardt NY Festival

w/Samson Schmitt, Ludovic Beier, Pierre Blanchard, Doudou Cuillerier, Brian Torff

6

BILL KIRCHEN & TOO MUCH FUN CD Release Show with Austin deLone

SWING OUT SISTER S 8 RACHEL YAMAGATA B 12 RHONDA VINCENT & THE RAGE and LOU REID & CAROLINA 13 SOUTHSIDE JOHNNY & Kane THE ASBURY JUKES Duffy Brooke 17 JARS OF CLAY Waggoner 7

ANDERS OHLKE

19

BILLY PRICE BAND

20 The

Mike Seeger Commemorative 7th Annual

June 28

JUNIOR CLINE W/ JULIA NIXON & THE RECLINERS

Amy Black

An Evening with

OLD TIME BANJO FESTIVAL featuring Tony Trischka, Dan Gellert, Adam Hurt, Paul Brown, Cathy Fink & Marcy Marxer The Birchmere Presents

FANTASiA Sat. July 20, 8pm Warner Theatre, Wash DC

Tix On Sale Now through Ticketmaster.com/800-745-3000.

The Adventure Lovers’ Weekend Is Just 3 Hours Away! • Cool off this summer in our crystal clear mountain streams and long, lazy rivers – ideal for canoeing, kayaking and river rafting. • Continue your adventure on land with mountain biking and scenic hiking over awesome trails that wind through old growth forests and mountain ridges.

Call us to help plan outdoor adventure itineraries for all ages, accommodations and nighttime entertainment:

Broadway comes to town July 10-Aug. 4!

• Climb the high quality rock routes at Coopers Rock . . . Or go underground and explore wild caving. • Then wind down with local bands in our compact, action-packed downtown.

/MOREgantown

800.458.7373 | www.tourmorgantown.com/outdoors


E22 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

Weekend Pass Continued from page E21

I LIED FOR A LIVING. - Peter Earnest, CIA, Operations

Opening reception from 2 to 4 p.m. Sat-

Waterways and Civic Engagement”

urday. “Yellowstone Abstracted,” dis-

examines civic attempts to recover,

play of Bob Tetro’s photos of Yellowstone

clean up, reimagine or engineer urban

National Park. “(CON)text,” text-based

rivers for community access and use,

and statement artwork are featured

through Sept. 15. 1901 Fort Place SE; 202-

in this juried exhibit, through July 1, 10

633-4820, anacostia.si.edu.

a.m.-9 p.m. Art League Gallery, Room 21,

Susan Calloway Fine Arts: “Place and Process,” local artist Matthew Langley explores process-based painting in these works, through July 13. 1643 Wisconsin Ave. NW; 202-965-4601, callowayart.com. Textile Museum: “Out of Southeast Asia: Art that Sustains” reveals the cross-cultural dialogue and friendship between three artists through paintings and works on paper from 1945 to 1958, through Oct. 13. 2320 S St. NW; 202-6670441, textilemuseum.org. The Old Print Gallery: “Ross/Romano,” works by the printmaking couple, John Ross and Clare Romano, through July 13. 1220 31st St. NW; 202-965-1818, oldprintgallery.com. Torpedo Factory Art Center/Art League Gallery: “Tabletop,” functional ceramic pieces are displayed in this national juried exhibition, through July 1.

105 N. Union St., Alexandria; 703-6831780, theartleague.org. Touchstone: “Along the Oregon CoastFrom Gold Beach to Coos Bay,” Harvey Kupferberg displays some of his photography after 16 years of capturing the Oregon Coast, through June 30. “Fragments of Classical Music,” Aina Nergaard-Nammack displays paintings she created while repeatedly listening to an excerpt of a musical composition by a classical composer, through June 30. All-member exhibition, works by 45 members are displayed, through June 30. 901 New York Ave. NW; 202-347-2787, touchstone gallery.com.

We ran out of room! Please visit goingoutguide.com for dance and theater listings.

‘So I Just Hold the Tree Like This?’

Experience espionage and undercover secrets from the people who practiced them professionally. REAL SPIES. REAL STORIES.

MEQUITTA AHUJA

TM

spymuseum.org 800 F St. NW

“PORTRAITURE NOW” BRINGS A NEW take on the concept of portraits to the National Portrait Gallery. Vibrant, weird works including “MOCOONAMA,” above, by Mequitta Ahuja, expand our idea of what portraits can be.


T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | E23


SUMMER PREVIEW

E24 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

We’re staying open late! Get a sneak preview of the new exhibition Peter Coffin: Here & There and check out Jennie C. Jones: Higher Resonance and Over, Under, Next: Experiments in Mixed Media, 1913–Present. Food and drinks available for purchase. For more information and schedule updates: hirshhorn.si.edu

Friday June 28 7–10 pm Admission is free! Come rain or shine. Major funding for and Peter Coffin: Here & There is provided by Altria Group.

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Independence Avenue at 7th Street SW Washington DC 20013 L’Enfant Plaza Metro Stop hirshhorn.si.edu

With additional generous funding for from

Peter Coffin, Untitled (Dog), 2012. Courtesy of the artist and Mugrabi Collection. Photo: Cathy Carver


T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 15

Sports BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

GW COLLEGE OF PROFESSIONAL STUDIES WASHINGTON, DC

Tiger Woods finished tied for 32nd with a 13-over at the U.S. Open at Merion.

Woods to Skip AT&T National

Defending champion will rest elbow strain for the British Open Golf

Tiger Woods’ sore left elbow will keep him out of competition until the British Open. Woods said Wednesday on his website that doctors found a strain in his left elbow and advised that he take a few weeks off for rest and treatment. That means he will miss the AT&T National next week at Congressional in Bethesda, where he is the defending champion. The tournament benefits the Tiger Woods Foundation. “I’ll be ready to go for the British Open, and I’m looking forward to playing at Muirfield,” Woods said. The British Open is July 18-21. Woods began flexing his left wrist after hacking several shots out of the thick rough at Merion

during the first round of the U.S. Open. He said that he was “fine” when the first round was halted by darkness, offered few other details the next morning and only after he finished the second round did he reveal scant details of the injury. Woods wound up at 13-over 293 at Merion, his worst score ever for a U.S. Open and matching his highest total in any major. Woods extended his regret over not being able to play next week, though he indicated he would be at Congressional at some point to support the tournament. “The AT&T National means a lot to me and my foundation,” he said. “It’s especially difficult not defending at my own tournament. It’s going to be a great event, and I look forward to being there to provide my support.” This is the sixth straight year that injury has kept him from either playing a tournament or finishing one. DOUG FERGUSON (AP)

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TV Lineup SOCCER (6 P.M., ESPN) With Tahiti being outmatched in Group B — it lost its opener 6-1 — and Spain the heavy favorite, the Nigeria-Uruguay match will be critical to see which team advances in the Confederations Cup.

MLB (7:08 P.M., MLBN) Two division leaders face off when the Red Sox head to Detroit. Boston sends John Lackey (4-5, 3.08 ERA) to the mound, while Detroit goes with Jose Alvarez (1-0, 1.50 ERA).

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16 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

Sports

LeBron Fighting for His Right to Repeat NBA Finals LeBron James could not sleep after Game 6. Imagine, then, how frayed his emotions will be going into Game 7. So much is at stake. Legacies, for so many players, James included. The NBA championship. Whether the season was a success or a bust. How he will be portrayed over the next few months. How history will judge a Miami Heat team that won 27 straight games in one stretch, 66 games in the regular season and now 81 games overall. Although the Heat will insist otherwise, the common belief is that it all hinges on James’ shoul-

9 P.M. | ABC Today NBA FINALS

ders. And the four-time NBA MVP wouldn’t have it any other way when his Heat take on the San Antonio Spurs in Game 7 of the NBA Finals tonight. “I want to go down as one of the greatest. I want our team to go down as one of the greatest teams. And we have an opportunity to do that,” James said. “Hasn’t been many teams to win back-toback championships. It’s so hard. It’s the hardest thing. I said last year it was the hardest thing I’ve ever done, winning my first. Last year don’t even come close to what we’ve gone through in this post-

KEVIN C. COX (GETTY IMAGES)

James leads the Heat into Game 7 against the Spurs in Miami

The Heat had a thrilling comeback to beat the Spurs on Tuesday and force a Game 7.

season and in these finals.” James was so weary after Tuesday night’s game that he had trouble pulling himself up from the chair where he conducted interviews. But on Wednesday, even after a night of no sleep — “everything goes through your mind after

a game,” he said — James said he was already feeling more spry. More rest, more treatment, some time at home with family and friends and a scheduled 9 p.m. date to watch SpongeBob with his kids, James figured that was the right formula to get ready for Game 7.

“First of all, I’m blessed, man. I don’t even know how I got here,” James said. “I wasn’t supposed to be in the NBA, if you go by statistics and things of me growing up where I grew up. Every time I go into my locker room and see the ‘James’ on the back of an NBA jersey, I’m like, ‘Wow.’ No criticism can deter me from playing this game because of that. I’m not supposed to be here.” In James’ lifetime, only four franchises — Chicago, the Los Angeles Lakers, Detroit and Houston — have won consecutive championships. Miami can be the fifth, and even though Heat coach Erik Spoelstra is cautioning his team to not think about the potential prize, James said “human nature” dictates that he has to at least daydream a little bit about what might be looming. TIM REYNOLDS (AP)

Looking Back The Washington Bullets, led by Wes Unseld, were the last road team to win a Game 7 in the NBA Finals — defeating the Seattle Supersonics in 1978. So the Spurs have history against them tonight in Miami. Here are the past three Game 7s of the NBA Finals. JEFFREY TOMIK (EXPRESS) 2010: Lakers 83, Celtics 79 This was an ugly game, with the Lakers winning despite shooting 32.5 percent from the field. Kobe Bryant shot 6-for-24 and had 23 points.

2005: Spurs 81, Pistons 74 Tim Duncan won his third NBA Finals MVP after scoring 25 points and grabbing 11 rebounds in the decisive game.

1994: Rockets 90, Knicks 84 Hakeem Olajuwon pretty much did it all in the clincher, with 25 points, 10 rebounds, seven assists and three blocks.


T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 17

ATTORNEY (FT)

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18 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

STUFF

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T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 19

MD RENTALS

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1829 Belle Haven Drive, Hyattsville, MD 20785

Security Deposits from $250

MODERN AND UPDATED 1 BEDROOM APTS FROM $899 2 BEDROOM APTS FROM $1509

• Electronic entry building system *Income Qualifications • Free business center # Occupants Maximum Income • Free after school program 1 $41,180 • Metro Accessible 2 $51,600 3 $58,080 • Bring in ad to rec. 4 $64,500 free app. fee per unit

WITH STUNNING HARDWOOD FLOORING, UPDATED KITCHENS & BATHROOMS LOADS OF SHOPPING, FINE DINING, AND METRO ACCESSIBLE. UTILITIES INCLUDED – SMALL FEE

**Limited Availability

UNIVERSITY CITY

www.summerridgeapartments.net summerridgeleasing@comcast.net

(866) 405-6986 www.universitycityapts.com RESTRICTIONS MAY APPLY

Performance. People. Pride.

With $0 Security Deposit

5601 Regency Park Court • Suitland, MD 20746

*Limited time offer

Parkway Apartments 2BDR Apartments Starting at $999 All Utilities included Laundry Facility on site Call 301-256-7066

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HYATTSVILLE

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Call today to schedule an appointment tour!

XX740 1x.25

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Contact us at 202.334.6732 or ads@readexpress.com XX195 1x1

599

(when you sign a 12mo. lease)

Super Convenient Location Close to shops & rec. ctr $

$

1BR 905 • 2BR 1005 Utilities & Carpet Included!

Rents

starting at

*When you sign a 12 mo. lease

DC Rider

301-289-7553

KETTERING- 3 bdrm, 1 bth. 2- level town house No pets. Sec. dep. req. $1,500/mo. 301-925-0002

RIVERDALE

OXON HILL

FREE UTILITIES

GATED COMMUNITY

• Swimming Pool • Private balconies and patios • Minutes to The National Harbor

• 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

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FANTASTIC SPECIALS

COLONIAL VILLAGE 908 Marcy Ave. • Oxon HIll, MD 20745

888-583-3047 LANDOVER

GATED COMMUNITY

(**Select Units) *Subject to change.

OPEN HOUSE

Fri, June 21 to Mon, June 24 (Fri, Mon: 9-6, Sat 10-4, Sun 12-4) SPECIALS - FREE RENT ‘til August 1 (Select apts)

FREE JUNE RENT (select units only)

FREE Application Fee FREE Refreshments Deposit as low as $200

MAPLE RIDGE

PARKVIEW GARDENS 6400 Riverdale Road • Riverdale, MD 20737

888-251-1872

$920

• Under New Management • Metro Bus at property • Renovated units available • 5 min walk to Southern Ave Metro • All credit considered • Apts with dens available • Pet friendly

On residential street next to DeMatha HS Off-st parking -Ceiling Fans (tenant pays electric) 301-779-1734

866.464.0993

888-583-3045

$

1 & 2BRs

Rent $599*

en t e-In Speci Mov $599 al! 1st Mon t h R (wit h a 12 Lease) On ly Mo.

www.mapleridgeapartments.com

only

Forest Village

ARTS DISTRICT

MOVE-IN SPECIAL 1ST Month's

1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. from $880

2252 Brightseat Road • Landover, MD 20785

MOVE IN SPECIAL

1st Mo. Rent/1 BR

301-277-6202

GARFIELD COURT

A partm ents

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

Arundel APARTMENTS

Suitland, MD

CASTLE MANOR

METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.

MT. RAINIER

(A/C Extra)

* w/approved credit

HYATTSVILLE

We Offer Second Chance Program

301-850-0045

METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.

Rosecroft Mews

866.507.2283 Summer Ridge

XX740 1x.50

1, 2 & 3BRs

1 BR from $909 2 BR from $1019

MD RENTALS

Hyattsville

SIZZLING HOT PRICES

XX740 1x.25

Stylish Floor Plans...Great Location

MD RENTALS

www.parkviewgardensapartments.com

OXON HILL- 3BR, 1BA, eat-in-kitchen, fenced back yard, basement, near Bus line & Wash Harbor. $1,600. 301-375-7072

DC Rider

METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE. LANDOVER

FREE UTILITIES

• Walk to Metro • Walk to Elementary School • Minutes to the NEW WEGMANS • Granite Countertops • Stainless Steel Appliances Call Now For Our

FANTASTIC SPECIALS

KINGS SQUARE

3402 Dodge Park Rd. • Landover, MD 20785

877-898-6958

www.kingssquareapartments.com

RIVERDALE

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

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

FREE JUNE RENT (select units only)

RIVERDALE VILLAGE

5409 Riverdale Road • Riverdale, MD 20737

800-767-2189

Free 6-Week Summer Camp

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

XX609 1x.75

MD RENTALS

XX609 1x.75

MD RENTALS


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MD RENTALS

MD RENTALS

866.507.2283 Summer Ridge

Our Sizzling Prices Will Make You Shiver Stop in Today

Hyattsville

1829 Belle Haven Drive, Hyattsville, MD 20785

Security Deposits from $250

$1,195*

• Electronic entry building system *Income Qualifications • Free business center # Occupants Maximum Income • Free after school program 1 $41,180 • Metro Accessible 2 $51,600 3 $58,080 • Bring in ad to rec. 4 $64,500 free app. fee per unit **Limited Availability

www.summerridgeapartments.net summerridgeleasing@comcast.net Performance. People. Pride.

Suburban feeling Yet in the heart of the city Brand New 2BRs from $1449! • Brand New kitchens and baths • Large floorplans with plenty of closets • Pool and Business Center • Minutes to Silver Spring/Bethesda Metro • Bus stop at community entrance

Present this ad and receive a free application fee

The Villages At Montpelier

* w/approved credit

202-499-2082A

(on a 12 mo. lease)

Are At Station Square!!!

Maximum income limits apply

877-608-6548

$500.00 On 3 Bedroom Apartment Homes, Contact office for complete details.

• Washer & dryer in each apt home • Large walk-in closets • Dishwasher • Private patio or balcony • Only 2 blocks to Metro • Pet Friendly • All credit considered Suitland, MD

301.289.7565

MON-FRI 9:00AM TO 6:00PM SATURDAYS 10:00AM TO 5:00PM SUNDAYS FROM 1:00PM TO 5:00PM

3BR $1525.00 All Utilities Included*

1,2, 3 Bedrooms Starting @ $799

301-825-9162

• Renovated Apartments Available • Central A/C & Heating • 2 Playgrounds • Five Minutes away from 95 South and North Swimming Pool and A Gym Coming Soon

www.morgan-properties.com 3400 Pearl Drive, Suitland, MD 20746

DC Rider

CAPITOL HILL -- Share house, rooms for rent. $175 weekly. Minutes to downtown and metro. Call 202-412-6783

DISTRICT HEIGHTS, MD - 1 large fully furnished room for rent in SFH, prof'l M/F prefd. $700/month. Util, cable & net incl. Avail Immed. 240-424-2541 Gaithersburg—$750, Private basement 1 bedrm, 1 ba, rec room, office nook 240-793-0908, near Kentlands, NIST, Medimmune. Assigned parking, cable tv & Internet SUITLAND - Share SFH. Fully furnished room with refrigerator, microwave, CATV, wireless net. $150/week. Call 301-775-0019 WALDORF / TEMPLE HILL. MD - Rooms at $650 up/ utils incl/ public transp./ newly renovated, very NICE! Bsmt suite avail. Call 240-432-0751

Lanham/Upper Marlboro, MD-1/2 price homes for sale. Can rent w/ option. Vet avail. Cred check. Use tax refund wisely. Call Ike Metro RE 301-335-4447

REAL ESTATE SERVICES You want to buy a home, now what? Enter the market armed with financing, property and legal information. Attending class completes education requirement for low down payment financing. Hosted by Re/Max and a team of 4 experienced professionals. June 25, 26th 5:459pm, 3319 Lee Hwy, Arlington, VA 22207. To register call Karrina - 703-336-3745 or visit www.TaylorBrown.com

COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE INDUSTRIAL LOT FOR SALE4302 Hunt Pl NE (Nr Rt 295 & Metro). 15,936 sf. C-1 zoned w/ newly improved water, sewage & electric. New asphalt surface & 8' wrought iron fence. $1.3M. 202-636-9203

CARS Jeep 2008 Wrangler — X, 4WD 2 dr auto $19500, Excel cond 52k mi, Burgundy, AC, 3panel hardtop, alarm 571-238-6091 KIA 2001 RIO, 5 speed, good clutch, only 96K mi, 4 dr, power sterring, runs like new. Clean body, red, cold ac, $1600. 202-510-2185 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

WANTED: Classic/Collectible Vehicles for Private Collection Top $$ Paid. Fast Transaction. 301-385-9395 classiccars1@yahoo.com

Park your browser here. Concerts, movies, events, restaurants and more.

Come on in and take a tour.

CALL TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT!!!

XX740 1x.25

XX740 1x.25

XX740 1x.25

Mon, tue, wed, thu 9-7 • fri, sat 9-5 • sun 11-5

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

XX740 1x.25

301-289-7556 *must move-in by June 30, 2013

*All Prices & Specials Subject to change without notice.

SECOND CHANCE PROGRAM WITH NO SECURITY DEPOSIT

Marlow Heights

2BR $1230.00

• All u ili ies paid • No Securi y Deposi or move-in fees • Me robus a fron door o Pen agon & Van Dorn Me ro 1 St mo • Free parking • 24-hour 7-11 fre (Select Ape • Convenien o Pen agon, ts) Shopping & I-395 • Small pe s welcome • 6 Mon h lease avail.

(888) 450-3292

*limited time offer

1BR $1095.00

METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.

Shadyside Gardens

Efficiency from ...$1000* 2 Bedroom from..$1590* 1 Bedroom from..$1235* 3 Bedroom from..$1985*

XX609 1x1

1BRS special $799** 2BRS special $949*

4901 Seminary Rd., ALEXANDRIA, VA

SOU THERN TOWERS

• Spacious closets • Lots of windows • Minutes to Metro • Access to swimming pool

Offered On Select 1&2 Bedroom

Limited time offer certain restrictions apply

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

1brs $899* 2brs $999*

Move - In ASAP and get June FREE!

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

EXTENDED STAY HOTEL

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

ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED (a/c extra)

Temple Hills

301-593-0485

BRAGG TOWERS

HILLWOOD MANOR

$30 Application Fee Walk to Metro W/W Carpet or Hardwood avail Keyed entry ways Parklike setting w/picnic tbls & grill

ROOMMATES

HOUSES FOR SALE

Alexandria

FROM WHEN YOU SIGN A 12 MONTH LEASE

HOT SUMMER

Forest Glen Apts.

Marlow Plaza

301-289-7575 • Marlowplaza.com

VA RENTALS

1 BR SPECIAL! $950/MONTH

SILVER SPR/Forest Glen Metro

1-BR $1050 2-BR $1175

Highrise or garden style apts Dishwashers Gas cooking & heat Swimming pool Pet friendly (some restrictions)

TAK PK—New Hamp. Ave.

PARKWAY TERRACE 1 BRs fr $860 2 BRs fr $968

Mon-Fri. 9am-6pm. Sat.by app't. only

Move In Special 1st mo. rent $599

• • • • •

866.914.9712

3415 Parkway Terr. Dr. Suitland, Md.

8800 Lanier Dr, Silver Spring, MD 20910

1brs from $799 2brs from $899

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

SPACIOUS APTS W/CEILING FANS LOVELY PARK-LIKE SETTING! OFF STREET PARKING HARDWOOD FLOORS

PADDINGTON SQUARE 301 795-2838

TEMPLE HILLS

11658 South Laurel Drive Laurel, MD 20708

SUITLAND

H H H H

MD RENTALS

LINDEN PARK APARTMENTS 3600 Jurgensen Drive Triangle, VA 22172

703-221-3146

XX470c 1x2 XX740 1x.25

MD RENTALS


T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 21

‘Anger’ Issues Did Charlie Sheen force co-star Selma Blair out of his FX sitcom? 27

Broadcast Muse

SARAH L. VOSIN (THE WASHINGTON POST)

CBS

For more about the films playing AFI Docs, see page E5.

Domeland CBS’ creepy miniseries “Under the Dome,” based on Stephen King’s novel, arrives at 10 p.m. Monday. The premise: An invisible dome seals a seemingly wholesome Maine town off from the world. In episode one, characters ask lots of questions. I’ve done my best to give answers. “Whaaaat happened?” CBS wants to shake up its “geriatric” image with a “True Blood” vibe. People die in yucky ways! People have sex on camBy Marc era (though private Silver parts are not shown)! There’s a secret stash of propane and we don’t know why! And actress Dale Raoul, the fabulously frumpy Mrs. Fortenberry in HBO’s vamp series, has a cameo as a nosy townie! “Where the hell did it come from?” From aliens or from Bjork, because the town radio station picks up an odd broadcast that sounds like a mixtape of aliens talking and Bjork singing. “What is it?” It’s SYMBOLISM. King has famously said, “The fact is we all live under the dome.” “You think we might be stuck in here a while?” Yeah, for 13 episodes. “Is everyone all right?” A character notes: “Nothing about this is all right.” Especially for the cow that got sliced in half when the dome descended. Read Marc’s previous columns at: readexpress.com/muse

AFI Docs festival director Sky Sitney joined what was then the AFI-Discovery Channel Silverdocs festival eight years ago.

A Transitional Lens AFI Docs’ Sky Sitney is a calm presence in the midst of the festival’s big changes Film Since arriving in Washington to program the AFI-Discovery Channel Silverdocs Documentary Film Festival eight years ago, Sky Sitney says she’s found herself talking as much about issues and impact as more esoteric filmmaking concerns. “It’s definitely been a huge evolution for me,” Sitney says. “It’s a whole other world that has turned out to intersect much more spectacularly with film and with doc-

umentary in particular than I ever would have imagined.” Politics has taken on even higher stakes this year, both as subject matter and subtext. With the festival’s Policy Engagement Program, for example, documentary filmmakers will be invited to discuss the subjects of their films with lawmakers, political appointees and organizations. And a pilot project will offer five filmmakers one-on-one meetings with congressional staffers. The festival is “about identifying films that can change the dialogue around an issue, as well as films of the kind of quality we want to be connected with at the festival,” Sitney says. Just two months ago, the Amer-

ican Film Institute announced that Discovery Channel had dropped out as the sponsor of Silverdocs. Now called AFI Docs and presented by Audi, the festival — running

“I love the idea of it growing, but I also hope to preserve the accomplishments that we’ve had.” through Sunday — will expand this year from its hub at AFI’s Silver Theatre in Silver Spring to downtown Washington. A pared-down slate of 53 nonfiction films will play at the

Goethe Institut, the National Museum of American History, the National Portrait Gallery, the National Archives and the Newseum. At the center of it all is the festival’s director, Sitney, who at 42 exudes the openness and enthusiasm of someone half her age even as she juggles new programs and venues, disgruntled Silverdocs fans, stepped-up involvement by AFI’s home office in Los Angeles, and her own roiling anxiety and excitement. “We’re executing a much more ambitious event … in half the time,” she says. “It’s been very reassuring to receive the enthusiastic response from one of the constituents I care about the most, which is the filmmaking community.” That Sitney is getting support from filmmakers should come as no surprise to anyone familiar with her tenure at Silverdocs, during which she has become one of the most beloved and respected figures on the festival circuit. Lauded as much for her aesthetic judgment as for her even-keeled temperament, Sitney earns near-universal praise for turning what might have been a diverting but inessential suburban festival into a crucial destination on the documentary circuit. “The timing of [Silverdocs] was always so bad,” says director A.J. Schnack, whose films “We Always Lie to Strangers” and “Caucus” will be at AFI Docs this year. “It was after Cannes and it overlapped with the big documentary festival in Sheffield. But the big thing the festival always had going for it was Sky.” ANN HORNADAY (THE WASHINGTON POST )

Higher Calling: Warner Bros. enlisted Christian-focused firm Grace Hill Media to promote “Man of Steel” to faith-based groups by inviting them to early screenings and creating trailers that highlight the film’s religious themes. They also enlisted Craig Detweiler, author of “Into the Dark: Seeing the Sacred in the Top Films of the 21st Century,” to create a Superman-centric sermon outline for pastors titled “Jesus: The Original Superhero.” (AP)


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T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 23

TV tonight lookout Comedy

BEST BETS ‘Pawn Stars’ Corey has hurt his hand and his ankle, but he shows

HIST

9:00

PRASHANT GUPTA (FX)

up at work anyway. Rick looks over an oil painting by John Daly, an artist known for his images of classic Americana. Another customer brings in a Harley-Davidson rat bike that was custom-built from random parts.

‘Burn Notice’ Michael summons Sam and

USA

9:00

Jesse to help him with a high-stakes trade involving an international bomber. Back home, Fiona (Gabrielle Anwar, right) steps in when Madeline becomes the target of a bookie with extortion on his mind.

BRAVO

10:00

NBC

10:00

‘Tabatha Takes Over’ The staff at Nadia’s Family Salon in New Jersey is unhappy and dysfunctional. The owner, Kevin, lost his passion for the business and developed a gambling problem. It’s up to Tabatha to help him get back in control of himself and his business. ‘Hannibal’ When Will returns from Minnesota without Abigail, Hannibal turns him in. Jack comes to suspect Will killed Abigail and that he might be behind all of the Copy Cat Killer’s crimes. (TRIBUNE MEDIA)

8nual!

An

th

Visit more than 60 artists in their studios, watch them at work, enjoy demonstrations, buy art and take in the beautiful Loudoun countryside on this self-guided studio tour!

A Dog And Sissy Show ‘WILFRED’

“Wilfred,” beginning its third sea10:00 son tonight, presents itself as a meditation on guy culture, with a dialogue between a stoner hedonist (a talking dog personified by Jason Gann, left) and a neurotic wimp (Elijah Wood, right). As Season 3 begins, the story takes on elements of a cosmic mystery as Ryan (Wood) begins to see evidence that Wilfred (Gann) was part of his life as early as childhood. (UNIVERSAL UCLICK) FX

A Real Know-It-All John Hodgman’s new stand-up special starts streaming on Netflix today. In “Ragnarok,” Hodgman maintains his so-straighthe’s-weird persona. Look for his usual low-caffeinated delivery and mastery of arcane knowledge and challenging analogies, such as a long digression on hockey, which he describes as a “minor sport … the mixed-martial arts of curling.” (UU)

Marymount University Arlington, Virginia

M.A. in Interior Design • Emphasis on evidence-based design merges

best professional practices with research data. • Curriculum topics include sustainable

design, healthcare design, and historic preservation. • Award-winning faculty combine professional

design and architecture credentials. • First-professional degree track is accredited by the

Council for Interior Design Accreditation.

Information Session, Tuesday, June 25 - 7 p.m.

www.wlast.org Visit our website for extensive information and on-line map

Phone: 540-338-7973 or 703-777-5498

Reinsch Library, Main Campus • 2807 N. Glebe Road, Arlington, VA

RSVP: (703) 284-5902 or MarymountDesign.com

www.marymount.edu


24 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

YOUTUBE

lookout online

“Am I aging out of DC drinking culture at just 28-years-old?” — CARA SCHARF AT BORDERSTAN .COM in response to news that

Cause, the PhilanthroPub, is rolling out a brunch featuring “Adult Cereals” — cereal and alcohol combos including the “Silly Sloe Rabbit,” made with Trix, Sloe gin, lemon syrup and Half & Half.

“Those in the dimly lit room solved significantly more problems correctly than those in the brightly lit room. They also felt freer and less inhibited than their intensely illuminated counterparts.” — TOM JACOBS AT PSMAG.COM

reports on German research that shows dim lighting sparks creativity.

“Great Odin’s raven, I can barely contain my excitement.” — BRANDON WENERD AT BROBIBLE .COM is in a glass case of emotion

over the recently released trailer for “Anchorman 2,” which shows the Action News Team in the 1980s ditching San Diego for New York City to start a 24-hour news network.

Us + the kids having. the best. time.. together. It’s your

WeekendPass Every Thursday in Express XX0165 1x3.75

“The legislative saga that D.C. Councilmember Jim Graham (D-Ward 1) sometimes refers to as ‘one of the longest-running movies’ in the John A. Wilson Building is finally near an end.” — DCIST.COM reports on the

D.C. Council passing new food-truck regulations after more than four years of debate.

“All my good memories of Hastings involve him slumming it on the trail. Nothing good he told me failed to make it into print, which is a terrific rule for a journalist.” — BLOGGER DAVE WEIGEL AT SLATE.COM

remembers journalist Michael Hastings, who died Tuesday night in a car accident in Los Angeles. Hastings, 33, received much attention for his Rolling Stone piece that ultimately cost Gen. Stanley McChrystal his job as the commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan.

Thursday, July 4 • 3-10pm

Celebrate July 4th

LONG BRIDGE PARK

www.arlingtonva.us/july4


T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 25

puzzles lookout Scrabble Grams

HOROSCOPE

PAR SCORE 145-155, BEST SCORE 212

Sudoku

DIFFICULT

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You may respond favorably to a change in your surroundings. Something has to inspire you to reach new heights — it’s time! CANCER (June 21-July 22) You may have been encountering hidden dangers for some time, but today is the first day in which you have that “funny feeling.” LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It’s a good day in theory, but if you stumble, you may find that things become more complicated than necessary. Choose a stable path. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You may have to work harder than usual today to achieve the same results, but in the end, you’ll be glad you did, and so will your boss! LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You don’t want to say the wrong thing and be put in a position in which you will be required to backpedal and explain yourself.

Yesterday’s Solution

Yesterday’s Solution

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You may enjoy a lucky break today that puts you ahead of the competition – perhaps for the first time in a while. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You may have to take a certain calculated risk today before you can claim the reward that you think is rightfully yours. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) A small error may have a large impact today; take care that you have made all necessary preparations and are not overlooking details.

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

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You may have to present yourself in a way that requires more homework than expected. Today, everything you say will be heard. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You may have a voice from the past in your ears today, reminding you that not everything is as it seems. DAILY CODE

RE

Forecast

82 61

POOCH CAFE | PAUL GILLIGAN

Today: Mostly sunny, pleasant and less humid today. Partly cloudy tonight.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You may run the risk of failure today simply by doing things out of order. You’ve gotten your priorities straight; don’t alter the plan! PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) A minor misunderstanding can lead to major trouble today. It will be up to you to make sure that everyone understands one another well.

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

85 63 Tomorrow: Partly sunny tomorrow with low humidity. Clear tomorrow night.

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS

Looking Ahead

SAT

SUN

MON

86 65 90 69 90 72 Sun and Moon Sunrise today: 5:43 a.m. Sunset today: 8:37 p.m. Moonrise today: 5:37 p.m. Moonset today: 3:06 a.m.

Almanac Normal high: 85 Record high: 99 Normal low: 68 Record low: 51

FORECAST BY ACCUWEATHER.COM ©2013


26 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

lookout puzzles Crossword

GUY TALK

ACROSS

not my whole Life HIV is ______________. I’m living with HIV and I still have a good job, great friends, and play basketball every weekend. Treatment allows me to continue to do what I love in life. I see my doctor, follow my plan and I take my medications.

See Your Doctor • Get A Plan • Stay In Treatment

Visit DCTakesOnHIV.com/TREATMENT for information.

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The Metropolitan Cooking & Entertaining Show $15 for General Admission Ticket ($29 Value!) Don't miss The Metropolitan Cooking & Entertaining Show, a two-day food-lover's event featuring hundreds of exhibitors, tastings, cooking demos and entertaining workshops. (November 2-3)

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1 Tread-bare 5 Insect stage 9 Gets really steamed 14 Arch type 15 Western blue flag, e.g. 16 Open, as a bottle 17 Lip balm brand 19 Christmas dinner bird 20 Done for 21 Lead-in to “date” or “trap” 23 “___ and improved!” (ad claim) 24 Orchestral heavyweight 27 After-bath wear 29 Ben Savage coming-ofage sitcom 34 Injection location 35 Skin, as an apple 36 Like a missed field goal 38 Twice-monthly tide 40 Law school course 42 Fit to be tried? 43 “Mutiny on the Bounty” island 45 Terminus of all roads? 47 Blaster’s need 48 Musical about Don Quixote 51 Anagram of “riot” 52 Get in on the pot 53 Fed. construction overseer 56 Bunch 58 Barely beats 62 Browning’s ben Ezra, e.g. 64 Resort for city slickers 67 Ice house 68 Abu Dhabi honcho 69 Like white rhinos and black swans 70 Hymn of thanksgiving 71 Anger 72 An upright in house framing

1 Dark German beer 2 Eastern pooh-bah (var.) 3 Ballet move

EDITED BY TIMOTHY E. PARKER

4 Sheriff’s sidekick 5 Barbecue site 6 Paranormal showman Geller 7 Cropped photos? 8 “Jeopardy!” contestants, e.g. 9 Source of concern 10 Musical Yoko 11 Clickable image 12 Beam intensely 13 Erupt 18 Make political promises 22 Municipal native 25 Saintly 26 Sleek, for short 28 Units of work 29 Bluegill fish 30 Biggest city in

Nebraska 31 ___-cotta 32 Disinclined 33 Ritchie Valens hit 34 “A Bug’s Life” character 37 “Law & Order” fig. 39 Four gills 41 1970s Tony Musante series 44 Twister’s force 46 “Come in!” 49 Bulldozer companion 50 “Snow Falling on ___” 53 Film crew member 54 “Roots,” e.g. 55 ___-bodied 57 Russian assembly 59 Buzzing pest 60 Almond’s kin, color-

wise 61 Abandon 63 ___ constrictor 65 Archaeological site 66 “... ___ he drove out of sight”

TODAY IN HISTORY

1782

Congress approves the Great Seal of the United States, featuring the bald eagle.

1921

U.S. Rep. Alice Mary Robertson, R-Okla., becomes the first woman to preside over a session of the House of Representatives.

1972

President Richard Nixon meets with his chief of staff about Watergate; a secretly made tape of this meeting ends up with a 18½-minute gap.

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T H U R S D AY | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 27

people lookout ARTISTIC E XPRESSION

THE SHEENIC ROUTE

On One Hand, Free Speech. On the Other, Sooo Ugly

And … Cue The Juicy Interviews

LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

Dirtbag Digest

‘I Also Request the Return Of My Dignity, As Evidence’ Last month, Justin Bieber’s security was accused of roughing up photographer Gustavo Garces and stealing the SIM card from his camera. Now TMZ .com reports that Garces is threatening to take legal action unless it’s returned, saying it’s evidence in his case. He also warned against messing with the contents of the card, which would be evidence tampering. (EXPRESS)

Charlie, oblivious, ignored Selma’s withering looks. So she spit in his water.

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

Paula Deen admits that she told racially insensitive jokes and used racial slurs, according to Radar Online. While being questioned over a 2012 lawsuit that alleged Deen’s racist behavior, the celebrity chef also admitted that she had wanted black waiters to play slaves at a party she was throwing, Radar says. (E XPRESS)

“I think alcohol is way more dangerous than marijuana — people can be mad at me for saying that, but I don’t care.” — MILE Y CY RUS, IN AN INTERVIEW WITH ROLLING STONE. WHEN ASKED IF SHE’S A STONER, SHE REPLIED, “YOU CAN’T ASK SOMEONE THAT AND EXPECT THEM TO SAY YES.”

SHEEHY HONDA

ALEXANDRIA, VA 7434 RICHMOND HWY

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LEXUS OF SILVER SPRING

SILVER SPRING, MD 1-800-266-4874 2505 PROSPERITY TER. LEXUSOFSILVERSPRING.COM

Selma Blair is making a sudden exit from the Charlie Sheen sitcom “Anger Management.” In a statement Tuesday, producer Lionsgate says the actress won’t be returning to the FX comedy. The company says it wishes her “the very best” but has no further comment. TMZ.com reports that Blair objected to Sheen’s tardiness and work ethic and that he orchestrated her firing. Sheen has an ownership stake in the show. (AP/E XPRESS)

THE WORLD IS WAITING

Pictures, or It Didn’t Happen, Kardashian-Wests PASCAL LE SEGRETAIN (GETTY IMAGES)

MIGUEL MEDINA (GETTY IMAGES)

Paula, You Give Butter a Bad Name

Bieber will return the SIM card, but it’ll be filled with shots of his middle finger.

LUSTINE DODGE

FREDERICK M. BROWN (GETTY IMAGES)

Chris Brown says the mural he painted on the front wall of his Los Angeles house is protected by the first amendment. TMZ.com reports that Brown filed an appeal with the city to keep from having to pay a fine or remove the art. He says the graffiti enhances the “architectural and aesthetic features” of his house. If his appeal fails, he can take it to L.A. County Superior Court. (EXPRESS)

“Baby, let’s name her Blue Ivy. I just want to watch the world burn.”

DARCARS NISSAN

ROCKVILLE, MD 15911 INDIANOLA DRIVE

301-309-2200 WWW.DARCARS.COM

Kim Kardashian’s baby daughter is described as “the prettiest, tiniest thing with a full head of straight, dark hair,” a close friend of Kim’s told People magazine. The friend also mentioned that the baby was already smiling, though no photographic evidence has been made public. The baby is in an incubator, as is standard for premature babies, and a name has not yet been revealed. Kardashian has hinted in the past that it would begin with a K. (EXPRESS)

355 TOYOTA

ROCKVILLE, MD 15625 FREDERICK ROAD

301-309-3917 WWW.DARCARS.COM


28 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

If you don’t get it, you won’t taste it.

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washingtonpost.com/cookbook Hardcover | 252 full-color pages Edited by Bonnie S. Benwick, deputy editor, Food section Foreword by Phyllis Richman, former editor, Food section

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W4 | E X P R E S S | 0 6 . 2 0 . 2 0 1 3 | T H U R S D AY

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