Tag: Perelman Performing Arts Center

  • PAC NYC Announces Lenape Exhibit and New Civic Alliances

    The Perelman Performing Arts Center (PAC NYC) announced civic alliances in advance of opening later this month, as part of its mission to enrich the lives of New Yorkers through the arts. Executive Director Khady Kamara and Artistic Director Bill Rauch made the announcement as the group prepares to open the performing arts center at the World Trade Center in lower Manhattan.

    Perelman Performing Arts Center designed by REX.
    Image Iwan Baan

    PAC NYC is partnering with a number of organizations to further their commitment to collaborating and building alliances with the community. They have established anchor alliances with the Borough of Manhattan Community College, Center for Independence of the Disabled, New York, Interfaith Center of New York City, and The New York Immigration Coalition. In addition, PAC NYC has formed a foundational alliance with the Lenape Center.

    The anchor alliances are relationships across multiple years with organizations that share a commitment to involving constituents in both PAC NYC and the allied group’s programs. Project-based alliances will spark dialogue and create programming around specific PAC NYC events, performances, and productions, and will allow both groups to reach new communities. Through these alliances, PAC NYC will collaborate closely with organizations with deep experience serving the city of New York across a variety of areas. 

    Building a performing arts center in this location was a promise to all of New York City. From the day we began working on the artistic programming, we also began developing relationships and creating dialogue around our events and performances. These partnerships will invite and include our neighbors from all five boroughs, connect people across differences, and help us discover how art can continue to inspire and heal.

    Bill Rauch, PAC NYC Artistic Director

    In addition, PAC NYC has announced a new exhibit in collaboration with new foundational alliance partner The Lenape Center. The exhibit is titled “Kishux,” and features a curated presentation of 12 large format photographs by Devin Pickering.

    Perelman Performing Arts Center designed by REX.
    Image Iwan Baan.

    “Kishux” shows photographs from over a period of five months, from all times of day, telling the story of the ancestral seeds return home to Lenapehoking, the Lenape name for their homeland. The Lenape people have historically inhabited a region across the eastern US, spanning much of what is now known as New Jersey, eastern Pennsylvania, New York’s Hudson Valley and the NYC metropolitan area. The exhibit at PAC NYC will run from September 23 through October 9, and is free for all.

    PAC NYC tickets and memberships are available now at PACNYC.org or by phone at 212.266.3000. Tickets begin at $39 and memberships start at $10. For more information or to learn how to support PAC NYC, visit PACNYC.org.

  • An Evening with LaChanze Comes To NYC’s Brand New Perelman Performing Arts Center

    Three-time Tony Award winner LaChanze announced a solo performance on Oct. 1 for the inaugural season of the Perelman Performing Arts Center, or PAC, titled ‘An Evening with LaChanze.’

    Three-time Tony Award winner LaChanze

    An Evening with LaChanze was co-written by LaChanze and Daniel “Koa” Beaty, directed by Jerry Dixon, and includes musical direction by Marco Paguia. 

    The evening is the first of PAC NYC’s Downtown Sessions series, which seeks to expand the facility’s music program with performances by Tony-winning artists. PAC is one of Manhattan’s newest performing arts spaces, opening this fall in the Financial District’s World Trade Center.

    Perelman Performing Arts Center
    Perelman Performing Arts Center Aerial View. Credit: Bill Saltzstein

    An Evening with LaChanze will feature original music by Crystal Monee Hall, American Standards, and Broadway favorites.

    We’ve designed an inspiring evening of music and moments, filling this beautiful new space in lower Manhattan with love, light, and laughter.

    LaChanze

    PAC NYC’s Downtown Sessions will extend throughout the fall, including other performances by Brian Stokes Mitchell and Ben Platt. The series seeks to bring audiences closer to beloved artists in intimate performances.

    LaChanze, as founder and current president of Black Theatre United, will also perform at BTU’s inaugural gala on October 30 at the Ziegfeld Ballroom in New York City. Supported by Business for Good, the gala’s theme will be “A Salute to Broadway Legends: Past, Present, and Future,” and will highlight legends such as Common, Billy Porter, and Samuel L. Jackson.

    Tickets and more information are available here.

  • Perelman Performing Arts Center Announces Inaugural Season Events

    The Perelman Performing Arts Center (PAC) has recently announced shows for their inaugural season, with “Refuge: A Concert Series to Welcome the World” kicking off the season in Sept. 2023. PAC is located in the World Trade Center and was the final public piece of the reconstruction.

    Perelman Performing Arts Center Aerial View. Credit: Bill Saltzstein

    The facility was named after Ronald O. Perelman, a businessman, philanthropist, and benefactor, the building was designed by the architecture firm REX, with many interior spaces being designed by Rockwell Group. Leading the opening of PAC is the Chair of the PAC Board of Directors Mike Bloomberg, Executive Director Khady Kamara, and Artistic Director Bill Rauch.

    The opening of Perelman Performing Arts Center is going to add light and hope to the World Trade Center site in a manner that respects its role as a place for reflection. PAC NYC’s impact will extend far beyond downtown, as we know the impact of the power of the arts – bringing energy and excitement to bolster neighborhoods, spur investment and build a stronger city.

    Mike Bloomberg, Chair of PAC Board of Directors

    Inaugural Season Showings

    Refuge: A Concert Series to Welcome the World

    The opening five-night series with over 30 internationally acclaimed artists, Refuge is a pay-what-you-wish event focused on the theme of refuge. A wide range of music will be played, from Afro-Latin rhythms to futuristic electronic beats, from traditional Klezmer melodies to soulful Rock and Funk.

    The first show on Sept. 19 is “NYC Tapestry: Home as Refuge” featuring Laurie Anderson, Raven Chacon, Natalie Diaz, thingNY, Emel, Forró in the Dark, Wang Guowei, Angélique Kidjo, Michael Mwenso, and Mwenso & the Shakes. It is currently sold out on the PAC website.

    Sept. 20 is “Devotion: Faith as Refuge” and will feature Arun Ramamurthy & Trina Basu, Samarth Nagarkar, The Choir of Trinity Wall Street, Trinity Youth Chorus, ÌFÉ, Innov Gnawa, The Klezmatics, Damien Sneed, Chorale Le Chateau, and Tanya Tagaq.

    Sept. 21 is “Playing it Forward: School as Refuge,” featuring David Broza, Common, Arturo O’Farrill & the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra, and Mahani Teave.

    Sept. 22 is “Relatively Speaking: Family as Refuge” and will feature Fanoos Ensemble, The HawtPlates, Martha Redbone, The Villalobos Brothers, as well as Amal Murkus & Firas Zreik.

    The final show, “Childhood Songs: Memory as Refuge” is on Sept. 23 and will feature Alphabet Rockers, Shoshana Bean, Daniel Gortler, Trinity Youth Chorus, Abigail Washburn, and Michelle Zauner.

    Musical Theater and Opera

    “Watch Night” from Nov. 3-18 2023 is an all-new premiere for the production that explores justice and forgiveness. It was co-conceived, directed, and choreographed by Tony Award-winning Bill T. Jones, with Marc Bamuthi Joseph also co-conceiving the production and responsible for the libretto.

    “Number Our Days” will be held from April 12-14, 2024, and is a multi-media oratorio based on Jamie Livingston’s “Photo of the Day” series. This series was made by Jamie Livingston, who documented his life by taking a Polaroid every day until he died at age 41.

    From May 12-19, 2024, “An American Soldier,” a new opera based on the true story of U.S. Private Danny Chen, will be held. This will be the production’s New York premiere.

    “Cats” will be held sometime between June and July of 2024, reimagining Andrew Lloyd Webber’s beloved musical. The original musical itself was based on T.S. Eliot’s Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats.

    Theater and Comedy

    “The Following Evening,” held from Feb. 1 to 18, 2024, will be an intimate portrait of two theater-making couples: Ellen Maddow and Paul Zimet of Talking Band and Abigail Browde and Michael Silverstone of 600 Highwaymen. This may be the final performance for the two couples.

    “Between Two Knees” is a comedy by Indigenous sketch comedy group The 1491s, taking place Feb. 3 through 24, 2024. Spanning 90 years in the life of a fictional Native American family, “Between Two Knees” is an “outrageously funny ride through American history.” “Good Medicine” is an all-Native stand-up evening event on Feb. 9, 2024. It features Indigenous comedians from all across the country and will be curated and hosted by Jackie Keliiaa. 

    “Like They Do in The Movies,” which will be at PAC from March 10 to 31, 2024, is the world premiere of the “tour-de-force” written and performed by Tony and Emmy-winning Laurence Fishburne. Fishburne is known for his work as Ike Turner in “What’s Love Got to Do with It?,” Sterling Johnson in August Wilson’s “Two Trains Running,” and as Morpheus in the blockbuster film series The Matrix.

    Laurence Fishburne.

    Dance

    “Is It Thursday Yet?” held from Dec. 8-23, 2023, is a commissioned display of Jenn Freeman’s neurodivergent journey through a mix of dance, live music, and home video footage.

    “March” by Big Dance Theater will be held Dec. 10 to 16, 2023. It is an evening of contemporary dance split into three parts, featuring Tendayi Kuumba, Annie-B Parson, and Donna Uchizono.

    “Motion/Matter: Street Dance Festival,” held from Jan. 5 to 14, 2024, is a celebration of street dance movements, both those that have originated in NYC and those from around the world.

    Music

    Sept. 28, 2023 – Mahani Teave

    Oct. 5, 2023 – An Evening with Brian Stokes Mitchell

    Oct. 14 & 15, 2023 – 2023 Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz International Piano Competition

    Dec. 20, 2023 – Anthony Roth Costanzo & Friends

    Dec. 21, 2023 – Toshi Reagon

    Dec. 22, 2023 – Time For Three

    Dec. 23, 2023 – Orfeh and Andy Karl

    Speaker Series

    Sept. 26, 2023 – Kerry Washington

    Oct. 16, 2023 – Jada Pinkett Smith

    Nov. 13, 2023 – Jenna Bush Hager and Barbara Pierce Bush

    Cover for Kerry Washington’s new memoir, “Thicker than Water.”

    Perelman Performing Arts Center memberships are now available for $10 for the inaugural season. Members receive early access to tickets and other perks. Tickets for inaugural season events are starting at $39. More information on memberships, tickets, and shows can be found on PAC’s website.

  • Perelman Performing Arts Center to Open in Lower Manhattan this September

    The final public piece of the reconstruction of the World Trade Center, the Perelman Performing Arts Center (PAC), will be opening in September 2023. Executive Director Khady Kamara and Artistic Director Bill Rauch announced recently that the facility would be opening after 20 years of labor to create a new heart of culture in lower Manhattan.

    Perelman Performing Arts Center
    Perelman Performing Arts Center exterior at day. Credit: Field Condition

    The vision for the PAC began almost 20 years ago as a part of the original master plan for reconstructing the World Trade Center during Michael Bloomberg’s time as mayor of NYC. Bloomberg currently acts as the chair for the project. Named after Ronald O. Perelman, a businessman, philanthropist, and benefactor, the building was designed by the architecture firm REX, with many interior spaces being designed by Rockwell Group.

    According to a recent article by the New York Times, the building has gone through a lot of changes over its 20-year development. Even without formally changing the name of the building, the institution has switched from calling it “the Perelman” to “the PAC.” Though the namesake of the PAC, Ronald Perelman, has his name on the building, former mayor Bloomberg has now contributed more capital, totaling at $130 million.

    Our goal in developing the artistic program is to innovate – providing exciting new ways
    for artists to create, collaborate, and share their work with a broad public – while representing and celebrating the humanity of our city in all its fullness. Whoever you are, wherever you come from, we want you to be able to find yourself in the PAC and find your connection to everyone else who shares in the work we do.

    Artistic Director of PAC Bill Rauch

    A defining feature of the building’s façade are the 5,000 panels of bookmatched marble. They allow for light to cast an amber glow into the building in the day and for the building to produce an amber glow at night. The panels were quarried and cut in Portugal, fabricated with glass in France, and assembled into panels in Germany.

    Perelman Performing Arts Center
    Perimeter interior of the PAC, with marble panels visible. Credit: Laurian Ghinitoiu

    The interior design is also unique, with three modular stages that can quickly merge or separate depending on the venue’s requirements. Independently, the three stages include: the John E. Zuccotti Theater, which seats up to 450; the Mike Nichols Theater, which seats up to 250; and the Doris Duke Theater, which seats up to 99. Altogether, their capacities range from 99 to 950 people.

    Perelman Performing Arts Center
    A render of a theater in PAC. Credit: REX

    The interior of the eight-story structure is divided into three main sections. The “public” level includes the John C. Whitehead Lobby, which features a stage for free performances, a restaurant, a bar, and the Dalio Family Terrace. The “artist” level has the necessary support spaces for artists at the center, whereas the top level, the “play” level has the three theaters and a rehearsal space.

    Perelman Performing Arts Center
    Render of the restaurant on the “public” level. Credit: Rockwell Group

    Leading PAC is Executive Director Khady Kamara, who has more than 24 years of theater management experience. Prior to being executive director at PAC, Kamara was executive director for Second Stage in NYC. She would go on to win a Tony Award in 2022 as a member of the leadership team for “Take Me Out.” As a part of her extensive non-profit background, Kamara had a 20-year career with Arena Stage in Washington DC.

    Responding to the sanctity of the World Trade Center site and the humanistic
    aspirations of the PAC’s mission, our design empowers artistic teams to imagine and create a vast range of performances and audience experiences, within a building that addresses its setting with respect and warmth.

    Joshua Ramus, founding principal of REX

    Bill Rauch acts as PAC’s artistic director, and has worked as a theater director in venues ranging from small community centers to the largest in the country. He has been a part of productions of the Tony Award-winning “All The Way” and its sequel “The Great Society,” as well as directed seven world premieres of plays.

    While details for the opening Fall shows have yet to be announced, more information and updates can be found on the PAC’s website.