Category Archives: New Yorker Festival

Enter the New Yorker Festival Fanatic Contest!

Martin Schneider writes:
Oh boy, this should be good. The New Yorker Festival has invited its hardcore junkies to outdo one another. Best evidence of past Festival obsession yields a profusion of tickets—but that person would need it least of all!

We want you to share your Festival bona fides. Have you been to all nine Festivals? Did you stand in line for two hours to get the chance to meet Alice Munro? What’s your favorite Festival memory?

The Festival staff will review all the comments posted by September 30th and announce the most die-hard Festival fan on [the New Yorker Festival blog]. The winner will receive a specially curated batch of tickets for two to this year’s Festival.

More details here.
I don’t have any good stories of obsession, I had attended a half-dozen events or so over the years, but recently I’ve been comped. (But wait: My Festival tattoo makes me a shoo-in….)

2009 New Yorker Festival Schedule Is Here!

Martin Schneider writes:
The 2009 New Yorker Festival schedule has been released!
I think it’s a very strong lineup, so appropriate for the 10th anniversay festival. I mentioned in the previous update that I’m very excited to see Bill James and Nate Silver, particularly. Pity that the Matthew Weiner event is at the same time, but such problems are the very stuff of outstanding New Yorker Festivals!
Tickets for The New Yorker Festival will go on sale at 12 noon ET on Friday, September 18. We wish you luck in grabbing tix for your most feverishly desired events!

Friday | October 16
Fiction Night | Paired Readings by New Yorker Writers
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Yiyun Li
7 P.M. (Le) Poisson Rouge ($25)
David Bezmozgis and Jonathan Franzen
7 P.M. Cedar Lake Theatre ($25)
T. Coraghessan Boyle and Mary Gaitskill
7 P.M. Angel Orensanz Foundation ($25)
Daniyal Mueenuddin and Salman Rushdie
7 P.M. Directors Guild Theatre ($25)
Edwidge Danticat and Junot Diaz
9:30 P.M. Angel Orensanz Foundation ($25)
Joshua Ferris and Aleksander Hemon
9:30 P.M. (Le) Poisson Rouge ($25)
Jonathan Lethem and Colson Whitehead
9:30 P.M. Directors Guild Theatre ($25)
George Saunders and Gary Shteyngart
9:30 P.M. Cedar Lake Theatre ($25)
Brooklyn Playlist | A Special Concert Featuring Bands from the County of Kings
With Dirty Projectors, House of Ladosha, Jubilee, and Liturgy.
Curated by the New Yorker staff writers Sasha Frere-Jones and Kelefa Sanneh.
8 P.M. The Bell House ($25)
Take Out of School | New Yorker Writers on The New Yorker
The Moth and The New Yorker present an evening of stories about life at the magazine.
With Roger Angell, Adam Gopnik, Ariel Levy, Mark Singer, and Judith Thurman.
Hosted by Andy Borowitz.
8 P.M. City Winery ($40)
Saturday | October 17
Writers and Their Subjects
Ricky Jay and Mark Singer
1 P.M. City Winery ($27)
In Conversation With
Annie Proulx interviewed by Deborah Treisman
10 A.M. Florence Gould Hall ($27)
Rachel Maddow interviewed by Ariel Levy
10 A.M. Acura at Stage37 ($27)
Tyler Perry interviewed by Henry Finder
4 P.M. Cedar Lake Theatre ($27)
New Yorker Talks
Malcolm Gladwell | The Curious Case of Michael Vick
1 P.M. Florence Gould Hall ($27)
Simon Schama | Obama and History
4 P.M. Florence Gould Hall ($27)
Screen Gems | New Yorker Film Critics Present Overlooked Masterpieces
Alfred Hitchcock’s “Shadow of a Doubt”
With David Denby.
10 A.M. Directors Guild Theatre ($20)
Henri-Georges Clouzot’s “Quai des Orfevres”
With Anthony Lane.
1:30 P.M. Directors Guild Theatre ($20)
Jean-Luc Godard’s “King Lear”
With Richard Brody.
5 P.M. Directors Guild Theatre ($20)
Panels
New Math
With Nancy Flournoy, Bill James, Nate Silver, and Sudhir Venkatesh.
Moderated by Ben McGrath.
10 A.M. Cedar Lake Theatre ($27)
Mad Men
With Lee Clow, Steve Stoute, and Matthew Weiner. Moderated by Ken Auletta.
10 A.M. City Winery ($27)
The Music Biz
With Jace Clayton, Josh Deutsch, Melvin Gibbs, Danny Goldberg, and Livia Tortella.
Moderated by Sasha Frere-Jones.
1 P.M. Cedar Lake Theatre ($27)
The Political Scene
With Hendrik Hertzberg, Ryan Lizza, and Jane Mayer. Moderated by Dorothy Wickenden.
4 P.M. City Winery ($27)
Character Actors
With Christine Baranski, Joan Cusack, Luis Guzman, Richard Kind, and John Turturro.
Moderated by Nancy Franklin.
4 P.M. Acura at Stage37 ($27)
Early Shift
Loudon Wainwright III talks with Susan Morrison | A Conversation with Music
7:30 P.M. The Bell House ($35)
Wallace Shawn talks with John Lahr
7:30 P.M. City Winery ($35)
Ian Hunter and Graham Parker talk with Ben Greenman | A Conversation with Music
7:30 P.M. (Le) Poisson Rouge ($35)
Neko Case talks with Sasha Frere-Jones | A Conversation with Music
7:30 P.M. Acura at Stage37 ($25)
Saturday Night Sneak Preview
“Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ by Sapphire”
After the screening, Kelefa Sanneh will talk with Sapphire and the film’s director, Lee Daniels.
8 P.M. Directors Guild Theatre ($27)
Late Shift
Jason Schwartzman talks with Richard Brody
10 P.M. The Bell House ($35)
James Franco talks with Lauren Collins
10 P.M. Cedar Lake Theatre ($35)
Tilda Swinton talks with Hilton Als
10 P.M. City Winery ($35)
Steve Earle talks with John Seabrook | A Conversation with Music
10 P.M. (Le) Poisson Rouge ($35)
Justin Vernon of Bon Iver talks with Sasha-Frere Jones | A Conversation with Music
10 P.M. Acura at Stage37 ($25)
Sunday | October 18
About Town
Tailing Tilley
A live, interactive game drawing on eighty-four years of New Yorker history.
11 A.M. Galway Hooker ($15)
Morning at the Frick
Peter Schjeldahl will lead a tour of the museum before public hours begin, followed by coffee and conversation.
11 A.M. Frick Collection ($60)
Come Hungry
Calvin Trillin will lead a tasting walk from Greenwich Village to Chinatown, concluding with a dim-sum feast.
11 A.M. Ticket buyers will be contacted concerning the starting point. ($100)
Strings Attached
Basil Twist will lead a tour of his studio and talk about the puppeteer’s art with Joan Acocella. Drinks will be served.
12 noon. Ticket buyers will be contacted concerning the location. ($60)
Inside the Artist’s Studio
Chuck Close will show his work and talk with Adam Gopnik at his studio. Drinks will be served.
12 noon. Ticket buyers will be contacted concerning the location. ($60)
Bottoms Up
Sam Calagione will demonstrate the beer-brewing process and discuss his work with Burkhard Bilger. Tastings, paired with meats and cheeses, will be served.
12 noon. The Gate ($50)
New Yorker Talks
James Surowiecki | Tomorrow Never Comes: Why We Procrastinate and How It Matters
11 A.M. City Winery ($27)
Atul Gawande | The Death of the Master Builder: A Story of Risk, Medicine, and Skyscrapers
1 P.M. Directors Guild Theatre ($27)
Kaffeeklatsch | New Yorker Writers and Artists Up Close
Heroes and Antiheroes
With Donald Antrim, A. M. Homes, George Saunders, and Gary Shteyngart.
Moderated by Cressida Leyshon.
10 A.M. Conde Nast Executive Dining Room ($15)
George Booth interviewed by David Owen
12 noon. Conde Nast Executive Dining Room ($15)
Our Far-Flung Correspondents
With David Grann, Elizabeth Kolbert, and Ian Parker. Moderated by Daniel Zalewski.
2 P.M. Conde Nast Executive Dining Room ($15)
Master Classes
Master Class: Cartooning
With Robert Mankoff.
10 A.M. Conde Nast Auditorium ($35)
Master Class: Photography
With Platon.
12 noon. Conde Nast Auditorium ($35)
Master Class: Copy Editing
With Ann Goldstein, Mary Norris, and Elizabeth Pearson-Griffiths.
2 P.M. Conde Nast Auditorium ($35)
Panels
Radical Opera
With Lisa Bielawa, Nico Muhly, Peter Sellars, and Rufus Wainwright. Moderated by Alex Ross.
3 P.M. City Winery ($35)
A Humor Revue
Shouts & Murmurs Live
With Jenny Allen, Woody Allen, Noah Baumbach, Yoni Brenner, Ian Frazier, Patricia Marx, David Owen, Amy Ozols, Simon Rich, Paul Rudnick, George Saunders, Paul Simms, and Calvin Trillin. Hosted by David Remnick.
4 P.M. Directors Guild Theatre ($35)
How to Purchase Tickets
Tickets for The New Yorker Festival will go on sale at 12 noon E.T. on Friday, September 18th. There are several ways to purchase tickets:
Online: Get tickets at newyorker.com/festival.
By phone: Call 800-440-6974.
At Ticket HQ: Ten per cent of tickets to all events will be available at Cedar Lake Theatre, at 547 West 26th Street (between Tenth and Eleventh Avenues).
Tickets will be sold on Friday, October 16th, from 12 noon to 4 P.M. First come, first served.
At the door: A limited number of tickets will be sold at the door to each event one hour before start time, with the exception of Morning at the Frick, Come Hungry, Strings Attached, Inside the Artist’s Studio, and Bottoms Up. First come, first served. Cash only.
Book Signings at McNally Jackson Books
SATURDAY | OCTOBER 17
12 noon
T. Coraghessan Boyle – “The Women”
Aleksandar Hemon – “Love and Obstacles”
1 P.M.
Junot Diaz – “The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao”
Mary Gaitskill – “Don’t Cry”
2 P.M.
Annie Proulx – “Fine Just the Way It Is: Wyoming Stories 3″
3 P.M.
Malcolm Gladwell – “Outliers: The Story of Success”
Bill James – “The Bill James Gold Mine 2009″
4 P.M.
Paul Rudnick – “I Shudder: And Other Reactions to Life, Death, and New Jersey”
Wallace Shawn – “Essays”
5 P.M.
Robert Mankoff – “On the Money: The Economy in Cartoons, 1925-2009″
SUNDAY | OCTOBER 18
12 noon
Tad Friend – “Cheerful Money: Me, My Family, and the Last Days of Wasp Splendor”
David Grann – “The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon”
1 P.M.
John Cassidy – “How Markets Fail: The Economics of Rational Irrationality”
Paul Goldberger – “Why Architecture Matters” and “Building Up and Tearing Down: Reflections on the Age of Architecture”
2 P.M.
Daniyal Mueenuddin – “In Other Rooms, Other Wonders”
Colson Whitehead – “Sag Harbor”
3 P.M.
Adam Gopnik – “Angels and Ages: A Short Book about Darwin, Lincoln, and Modern Life”
Hendrik Hertzberg – “One Million”
4 P.M.
George Booth – “About Dogs”
Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly – “The TOON Treasury of Classic Children’s Comics”
The 2009 program schedule will appear in the September 21st issue of The New Yorker, on newsstands September 14th. The Festival schedule will also be posted on the same date on newyorker.com/festival.

New Yorker Festival: First Glimpse of the Lineup!

Martin Schneider writes:
The New Yorker sent out its first lengthy announcement regarding the attendees of the New Yorker Festival today. Below are the lightly trimmed highlights from the press release.

* * *

The 2009 New Yorker Festival
Date: October 16-18
The full program guide will be included in the September 21, 2009, issue of the magazine, on newsstands September 14, and will be available at newyorker.com/festival.
Among this year’s highlights:
Interviews with the filmmaker Tyler Perry; the news anchor Rachel Maddow; the actor James Franco; the actress Tilda Swinton; the actor Jason Schwartzman; the playwright and actor Wallace Shawn; the author Annie Proulx; and the sleight-of-hand artist Ricky Jay.
The character actors Joan Cusack, Christine Baranski, Luis Guzmán, Richard Kind, and John Turturro will discuss how they create such memorable supporting characters.
Shouts & Murmurs Live will feature some of the funniest men and women from our pages Jenny Allen, Woody Allen, Noah Baumbach, Yoni Brenner, Ian Frazier, Patricia Marx, David Owen, Amy Ozols, Simon Rich, Paul Rudnick, George Saunders, Paul Simms, and Calvin Trillin–and will be hosted by David Remnick.
New Yorker writers Roger Angell, Adam Gopnik, Ariel Levy, Mark Singer, and Judith Thurman will gather for an evening of stories about life at the magazine, presented in conjunction with the Moth performance series and hosted by Andy Borowitz.
Pop-music offerings will include interviews with and performances by Neko Case, Bon Iver, Steve Earle, and Loudon Wainwright III; a pub-rock reunion with Ian Hunter, of Mott the Hoople, and Graham Parker, of Graham Parker and the Rumour; and a panel discussion about the music industry with Jace Clayton, Josh Deutsch, Melvin Gibbs, Danny Goldberg, and Livia Tortella. In addition, a special Brooklyn Playlist concert at Brooklyn’s Bell House, curated by Sasha Frere-Jones and Kelefa Sanneh, will feature Dirty Projectors, House of Ladosha, Jubilee, and Liturgy.
In a series of New Yorker Talks, Atul Gawande will relate a story of risk, medicine, and skyscrapers; Malcolm Gladwell will examine the curious case of Michael Vick; Simon Schama will explore Obama’s role in history; and James Surowiecki will look at why we procrastinate.
New Yorker film critics will screen and discuss overlooked masterpieces: David Denby will present Alfred Hitchock’s 1943 thriller, “Shadow of a Doubt”; Anthony Lane will explore the 1947 French film “Quai des Orfèvres”; and Richard Brody will discuss Jean-Luc Godard’s 1987 version of “King Lear.”
After a sneak-preview screening of “Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ by Sapphire,” Kelefa Sanneh will talk about the film with Sapphire and the film’s director, Lee Daniels.
A panel, Radical Opera, will explore innovations in the genre, with participants Nico Muhly, Peter Sellars, Rufus Wainwright, and Lisa Bielwa discussing their recent work. This event will feature a special performance by the string quartet Brooklyn Rider.
About Town excursions throughout the city will include Calvin Trillin‘s ninth gastronomic walking tour of Chinatown and Little Italy, with stops at some of his favorite eateries; a tour of the Frick Collection before public hours begin, conducted by Peter Schjeldahl; a look into Chuck Close‘s studio, with drinks and conversation with Adam Gopnik; a studio tour with Basil Twist, who will discuss over drinks the art of puppeteering with Joan Acocella; and a beer-brewing demonstration and tasting with Sam Calagione, of Dogfish Head Brewery, in conversation with Burkhard Bilger.
Friday Night Fiction events will feature paired readings by New Yorker fiction writers: Mary Gaitskill and T. Coraghessan Boyle; Edwidge Danticat and Junot Díaz; David Bezmozgis and Jonathan Franzen; George Saunders and Gary Shteyngart; Daniyal Mueenuddin and Salman Rushdie; Jonathan Lethem and Colson Whitehead; Yiyun Li and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie; and Joshua Ferris and Aleksandar Hemon.
A panel on the world of advertising, moderated by Ken Auletta, will feature Matthew Weiner, the creator of AMC’s “Mad Men”; Lee Clow of TBTA Worldwide and Chiat/Day; and Steve Stoute of Translation Consultation + Brand Imaging, who will look at the reality behind Madison Avenue, today and in the past.
The interactive game Tailing Tilley game will send teams of participants off with New Yorker-inspired clues that will point the way to iconic locations around the city. Eustace Tilley himself will be hopping from one location to another, and the team with the most sightings will get a prize.
A live version of The New Yorker‘s popular weekly podcast on politics, the Political Scene, will feature Hendrik Hertzberg, Ryan Lizza, Jane Mayer, and Dorothy Wickenden discussing President Obama’s first year in office.
A New Math panel will feature people who crunch numbers in interesting ways, to fascinating ends: Bill James, the baseball theorist; Nate Silver, the political analyst and creator of FiveThirtyEight.com; Sudhir Venkatesh, the urban ethnographer; and Nancy Flournoy, the biostatistician. [Note: I really hope I get to go to this!—MCS]
In a new series called Kaffeeklatsch, New Yorker writers and artists will come together for discussions in an intimate setting. The writers Donald Antrim, A. M. Homes, George Saunders, and Gary Shteyngart will explore the themes of heroes and anti-heroes in their work; David Owen will interview the cartoonist George Booth about his decades of work for The New Yorker; and the correspondents David Grann, Ian Parker, and Elizabeth Kolbert will tell of their far-flung travels to report stories for the magazine.
A set of Master Classes will feature Platon on photography, Bob Mankoff on cartooning, and Ann Goldstein and others on copy editing at The New Yorker.
Tickets will go on sale on Friday, September 18, at 12 noon, and may be purchased at newyorker.com/festival or by calling 800-440-6974. Ten percent of tickets to all events will be available at Ticket HQ, at Cedar Lake Theatre, 547 West 26th Street (between Tenth and Eleventh Avenues). These tickets will be sold on Friday, October 16, from 12 noon to 4 P.M. A limited number of tickets will be sold at the door to each event one hour before start time (including Tailing Tilley, but excluding all other About Town events). Updated Festival information will be available online at newyorker.com/festival.

More New Yorker Festival Gets Announced Quizzically

Martin Schneider writes:
The New Yorker Festival blog has lately been teasing its readers with blind previews of the Festival, which takes place October 16-18. Yesterday came the third installment:

Which indie-film actor once played a monarch in a movie directed by his cousin?

The New York Times called which political guru “perhaps the most unlikely media star to emerge” in the 2008 election season?

Which single-named poet studied under Allen Ginsberg at Brooklyn College?

In previous editions we learned of the likely appearance of Rufus Wainwright, E. Annie Proulx, Matthew Weiner, James Franco, Wallace Shawn, and Rachel Maddow. Who are the mystery guests this week?

Blind Items from the New Yorker Festival Blog, Part 2

Martin Schneider writes:
More Festival blind items from the New Yorker Festival blog (here’s the first one):

Which television personality got her big break when she won a contest to be a radio host on WRNX, in Holyoke, Massachusetts?

What actor and playwright once played a New Yorker theatre critic in a movie?

Which singer-songwriter once said, “I’m one of those people that will probably look better and better as I get older—until I drop dead of beauty”?

Any guesses?

Sneak Peek: Tasty Previews of the New Yorker Festival

Martin Schneider writes:
I see that the New Yorker Festival blog has posted a few blind items pertaining to the featured personalities who will be appearing at the 2009 Festival in October. Here they are:

Which author said that her most famous short story took twice as long to write as a novel “because I had to imagine my way into the minds of two uneducated, rough-spoken, uninformed young men”?

Which young movie actor pretended to have different accents—”Italian, Russian, Irish”—when he worked at a McDonald’s drive-thru?

This creator of an Emmy Award-winning drama was once a contestant on “Jeopardy!” (Answer in the form of a question, please.)

Any guesses? I figured out a couple of them, but I’d like to hear what you think. We’re hearing that there’ll be several more of these blind posts before the schedule is announced in September. Exciting!

A Decade of Good Gets: Garry Kasparov and Nick Nolte, Together Again!

Martin Schneider writes:
Question: What do the following people have in common?
Steve Albini
Woody Allen
Pedro Almodóvar
Christiane Amanpour
Fiona Apple
Mikhail Baryshnikov
Samantha Bee
Björk
Manolo Blahnik
Doyle Brunson
T. Bone Burnett
Rosanne Cash
Cat Power
Tracy Chapman
Joel and Ethan Coen
Stephen Colbert
Steve Coogan
Wes Craven
Chuck D
Guillermo del Toro
Ani DiFranco
Matt Dillon
Clint Eastwood
Elizabeth Edwards
Edie Falco
Douglas Feith
The Flying Karamazov Brothers
Jamie Foxx
Ricky Gervais
Matt Groening
P.J. Harvey
Ethan Hawke
Salma Hayek
Buck Henry
Werner Herzog
D.L. Hughley
Eddie Izzard
Peter Jennings
Tommy Lee Jones
Garry Kasparov
Stephen King
Jeff Koons
KRS-ONE
Robert Klein
John Landis
Eugene Levy
Laura Linney
Rich Lowry
Mike Lupica
Reinhold Messner
David Milch
Nick Nolte
Peggy Noonan
Krist Novoselic
Conan O’Brien
Ric Ocasek
Cheri Oteri
Nick Park
Graham Parker
Mary-Louise Parker
Trey Parker and Matt Stone
Harold Ramis
John C. Reilly
Seth Rogen
Henry Rollins
Sonny Rollins
The Roots
Paul Rudd
RZA
M. Night Shyamalan
Sigur Rós
Paul Simon
Sleater-Kinney
Kevin Smith
Patti Smith
Jon Stewart
Oliver Stone
Tom Stoppard
Stanley Tucci
Rufus Wainwright
David Foster Wallace
Chris Ware
Gillian Welch
Robin Williams
Answer: They have all been participants of the New Yorker Festival at least once since 2000.
To my eye, anyway, they’re all plausibly people you wouldn’t automatically assume have been involved with the Festival, although if you have been following the event over the years, you know that the offerings are quite diverse. Whoever has been responsible for booking this event over the years is very good (or has deep pockets) (or both). I was present at exactly three of those events (Colbert, Milch, Stone).
And now they’re all tags in our bloggy content management system (if they weren’t already).
The 2009 New Yorker Festival takes place October 14-16. The participants will be announced in September. Personally, I’m hoping for Mark Sanford Newt Gingrich Sarah Palin Al Franken!

New Yorker Summit Comestibles Feted as “Yummy” by Gracious Attendee

Martin Schneider writes:
I couldn’t be at the New Yorker Summit yesterday, but through the magic of Twitter, I have iron-clad verbal/visual evidence that the food served during the lunch break was “quite good for being in a box.”
In an unprecedented (for Emdashes) follow-up “Twinterview” (wince), attendee Jed Cohen elaborated: “Steak sandwich + tortellini salad + cookies + apple = yummy. Thanks New Yorker/NYU catering!”
Cohen continued: “They also had a grilled vegetable wrap and some kind of chicken sandwich.” (Can Emily confirm?)
Never doubt that Emdashes will provide muckraking of the first order!
(Jed also posted in a more thoughtful way about the Summit. Why not go over and check it out?)

New Yorker Summit: Brzezinski, Naomi Klein Also to Appear

Martin Schneider writes:
Today The New Yorker posted information about the New Yorker Summit ($350, May 5) on its website. (We had the basics for you yesterday.)
This seems an important bit of business: Tickets go on sale March 23, but you can pre-register. Here’s the text, straight from the horse’s mouth: “Tickets go on sale March 23rd at 12 noon E.T. You can pre-register now by calling 212-286-5753 or e-mailing Phyllis_Stambolian@newyorker.com.”
Yesterday we reported that Robert Shiller, Malcolm Gladwell, Richard Holbrooke, Geoffrey Canada, Neera Tanden, Howard Dean, and Nassim N. Taleb were on the bill. Today we learn that the attendees also include: Zbigniew Brzezinski, Esther Duflo, David Kilcullen, Naomi Klein, Robert Kuttner, Jeffrey Sachs, and R. James Woolsey. New Yorker-affiliated people to take part include John Cassidy, Malcolm Gladwell, Elizabeth Kolbert, Ryan Lizza, Jane Mayer, David Remnick, and James Surowiecki.
New Yorker description:
With a new President in office, our country is in a period of immense challenges, from unprecedented economic tumult to a worldwide environmental crisis. With more at stake than at any time in recent memory, we are compelled to put forward new solutions and new thinking.
In this spirit, The New Yorker Summit: The Next 100 Days will gather economic heavyweights and national-policy voices to look at the formative days of the new Administration, and to explore what lies ahead in the next hundred days. The event will feature a keynote address by the New Yorker staff writer Malcolm Gladwell, the author of “The Tipping Point” and “Outliers.”
Program Schedule
Programming will begin at 9 A.M. and conclude at 6 P.M. Breakfast and lunch will be included.
Skirball Center for the Performing Arts
New York University
566 LaGuardia Place
at the corner of LaGuardia Place and Washington Square South
Tickets
Tickets are $350 (breakfast and lunch included). Tickets go on sale March 23rd at 12 noon E.T. To pre-order your tickets and for more information, call 212-286-5753.