free things to do in New York City
Free events for Monday, 11/16/09
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Free Events, Free Things to Do in New York City!  Read More

Are you looking for free things to do in New York City (NYC) on November 16, 2009?

49 free events take place on Monday, November 16 in New York City. Don't miss the opportunities that only New York provides! Exciting, high quality, unique and off the beaten path free events and free things to do take place in New York today, tonight, tomorrow and each day of the year, any time of the day: whether it's a weekday or a weekend, day or night, morning or evening or afternoon, December or July, April or November! These events will take your breath away!

New York City (NYC) never ceases to amaze you with quantity and quality of its free culture and free entertainment. Check out November 16 and see for yourself. Summer or Winter, Spring or Fall! Just click on any day of the calendar above and you'll find most inspiring and entertaining free events to go to and free things to do on each day of November . Don't miss the opportunities that only New York provides!

Some events take place all year long: same day of the week, same time there are there for you to take advantage of. One of the oldest free weekly events in Manhattan is Dixieland Jazz with the Gotham Jazzmen, which happen at noon every Tuesday. Another example of an event that you can attend all year round on weekdays is Federal Reserve Bank Tour, which takes place every week day at 1 pm (but advanced reservations are required). You can take at least 13 free tours every day of the year, except the New Year Day, July 4th, and the Christmas Day. If you are classical music afficionado, you can spend whole day in New York going from one free classical concert to another. If you love theater, then New York gives you an option to attend plays and musicals free of charge, or at deep discount. You just need to have information about it. And we are here to make that information available to you.
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The quality and quantity of
free events,
free things to do
that happen in New York City
every day of the year
is truly amazing.

So don't miss the opportunities
that only New York provides:
stop wondering what to do;
start taking advantage of
free events to go to,
free things to do in NYC
today!

49 free things to do in New York City (NYC) on Monday, November 16, 2009

All events are free unless otherwise noted.
        

Workshop | Daily Instructed Meditation


Learn some serenity at the start of your busy day.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:30 am
Free

Other | Ice Skating in the City


The 170' x 100' rink features free admission ice skating. Whether you are looking to skate before going to the office, through the lunch hour, with friends at a party, with a date, or for a spin under the stars at a holiday party, this is the perfect destination.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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8:00 am
Free

Tour | Federal Reserve Bank Tour


Learn about central banking functions that Federal Reserve System performs and see Bank's vault of international monetary gold on bedrock of Manhattan Island, five stories below street level. Learn why Federal Reserve has "Federal" in its name, while it's a private bank, not Federal at all. Congressman Ron Paul considers the Federal Reserve "both corrupt and unconstitutional" Five tours daily on the hour.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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9:30 am
Free

Workshop | Basic Web Searching


Hands on using wireless laptops. Review basic search skills using subject directories and search engines. Prerequisite: Basic Internet.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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10:30 am
Free

Discussion | Observations on Publishing and the Book Market in Russia


A discussion with: Liudmila Evgen'evna Kalinova, Head of the Acquisitions Dept, Rudomino State Library of Foreign Literature; Dr. Mikhail Veniaminovich Levner, Assistant to Director, Curator of Acquisitions, Library for Natural Sciences, Russian Academy of Sciences; and Edward Kasinec, Harriman Institute, Discussant.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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12:00 pm
Free

Discussion | Policy Responses to Bubbles in Japan and the U.S.


A lecture from the series "The Global Financial Crisis: Responses from East and Southeast Asia" with David E. Weinstein, Carl S. Shoup Professor of the Japanese Economy.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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12:00 pm
Free

Concert | Wind Ensemble performs works by Copland, Berlioz and others


Program: Esprit de Corps - Robert Jager Red Pony Suite - Aaron Copland Handel in the Strand - Percy Grainger March to the Scaffold - Hector Berlioz Star Wars Trilogy - John Williams, arr. Donald Hunsberger A reception to follow.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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2:00 pm
$5

Workshop | Advanced Internet Search Strategies


Hands on using wireless laptops. Learn how to conduct effective searches on the Web using search engines, metasearch engines and searchable databases. Prerequisite: Internet Search Strategies.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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2:30 pm
Free

Lecture | The Great African War - Congo and Regional Geopolitics, 1996-2006


Filip Reyntjens, professor of Law and Politics and director of the Institute of Development Policy and Management at the University of Antwerp, will address causes, outcomes, and extraordinary human toll of the successive wars in the Great Lakes Region of Africa since the early 1990s.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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3:30 pm
Free

Concert | Canterbury Choral Society performs works by Gabrieli and Langlais


Program: GABRIELI: Symphoniæ Sacræ LANGLAIS: Missa Salve Regina The Canterbury Choral Society opens their 57th Season with music for multiple choirs and brass. Charles Dodsley Walker, founder and conductor.
   New York City, NY; NYC
4:00 pm
$20 suggested donation...

Lecture | Causation: What Can Be the Use of It?


Nancy Cartwright, a professor of philosophy at the London School of Economics, will deliver this lecture. Cartwright is a philosopher of the natural and social sciences who works on issues of causation, modeling, and objectivity. Much of her current research is concerned with how to improve evidence-based policy. Her published works include: How the Laws of Physics Lie (1983); Nature's Capacities and Their Measurement; Otto Neurath: Philosophy between Science and Politics;, a co-authored volume, The Dappled World: A Study of the Boundaries of Science, and Hunting Causes and Using Them.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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4:00 pm
Free

Concert | The Sound of Music 50th Anniversary Celebration


Join host Laurence Maslon with the cast members from the original 1959 Broadway production -- Theodore Bikel, Lauri Peters and Brian Davies -- and Sam von Trapp and other special guests in celebration of the 50th anniversary.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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5:00 pm
Free

Workshop | Daily Instructed Meditation


Learn some serenity at the end of your busy day.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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5:45 pm
Free

Workshop | It's Elementary – An Introduction to Dutch Conversation


Introduction to Dutch: a short class for beginners. Learn to say some basic phrases in Dutch and meet with others interested in the Dutch language. Event followed by a reception.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Staged Reading | John Walch's The Dinosaur Within, with Tony Nominee Kathleen Chalfant


Directed by Shana Gold. The disappearance of ancient dinosaur footprints in the Australian outback triggers a series of mysterious events, bringing together a forgotten movie star, an aboriginal Australian elder, and a haunted newsman on what promises to be an epic journey of transformation. The Dinosaur Within is the winner of both the Elizabeth Osborn Award and the Kennedy Center Fund for New Plays.
   New York City, NY; NYC
6:00 pm
Free

Tour | LightMappingNYC: LightWalk Session


LightMappingNYC is intended to provide the New York City lighting design community with a forum to consider the current, past and future conditions of their urban environment at night. By combining the local/national interest in this topic generated by the IESNYC/DLFNY Lights Camera Walk map with the global scope of PLDA’s Lightmapping initiative, this program will underscore the vital role of lighting design in making New York City after dark. With Stephen Horner.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Author Reading | Lori Carlson reads from her book The Sunday Tertulia


Carlson is a writer, editor and translator who also teaches at Duke University.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Dance Performance | Sattriya: Classical Dance of Assam


Lecture-performance by Madhusmita Bora and Prerona Bhuyan.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Dance Performance | Skybetter & Associates, Contemporary Dance


Skybetter & Associates perform repertory material developed during their residency, followed by an open conversation focusing on the relationship between choreographic form and meaning. They hope to provoke a discussion that grapples with the effect of movement and structure on feeling and perception.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Discussion | The Future in Five(?) Senses: Echoes of Italian Futurism in New York Architecture and Design


A panel organized by Ara H. Merjian. Panelists: Rodolphe El Khoury, Andre Lepecki, Ted Sheridan, David Humphrey.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Slide Lecture | What about Form & Konsequenz


Talk and slides with Jan Verwoert and Bernd Krauß, who discuss whatever happened to the notion of doing justice to materials: What form follows function if formalism is a folly? Introduction by RoseLee Goldberg.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:00 pm
Free

Poetry Reading | Pulitzer-winning poet Robert Hass reads his work


A reading by Hass followed by an interview with Saskia Hamilton. Hass served as Poet Laureate of the United States from 1995 to 1997.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:15 pm
Free

Staged Reading | Playwrights Before the Fall Performing Revolution Festival


Playwrights Before the Fall: Eastern European Drama in Times of Revolution is a just-published anthology edited by Daniel Gerould with a preface by Dragan Klaić. It is the first multi-author international anthology of Eastern European plays to appear in English. Part of Performing Revolution in Central and Eastern Europe, the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts exhibition and festival marking the 20th anniversary of the fall of communism. The anthology features plays by Sławomir Mrożek, Karel Steigerwald, Gyorgy Spiró, Matei Vişniec, and Dušan Jovanović. Join Polish-American actress Elzbieta Czyzewska for staged readings of excerpts from the five plays, as well as a panel on the playwrights’ role in the theatrical revolution of the 1980s.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Lecture | Dan Flavin and the Hudson River School


T.J. Wilcox delivers this lecture. Wilcox was born in Seattle in 1965 and currently lives and works in New York. Among his solo exhibitions are shows at Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (2007), Kunstverein Munich (2005), and the Institute of Contemporary Art, London (1998). His films have been screened at venues such as the Museum of Modern Art, New York (2005) and Tate Modern, London (2003).
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
$6

Opening Reception | Exhibition on New York City History: Rediscoveries


A public exhibition showcasing a major unearthed piece of New York City history. Historical detective work by two archivists has reunited the long-separated halves of an historic collection of documents from two distinguished New York area families. A selection from the unified collection of the interrelated families of Peter Cooper, an inventor, industrialist and philanthropist, and Congressman Abram S. Hewitt is now on display.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Opening Reception | Exhibition: 1989 - Year of Miracles: Austria and the End of the Cold War


An exhibition curated by Günter Bischof (Center Austria, New Orleans) and Lorenz Mikoletzky (Austrian State Archives. 1989 was a year of astounding revolutions in Eastern Europe. One by one, the Soviet Union's satellite states shook off their communist regimes and Moscow's iron heel. First came Poland and Hungary, then the German Democratic Republic and Czechoslovakia, finally Romania and Bulgaria. In a "carnival of revolutions" (P. Kenney) people power (civil society) and velvet revolutions confronted communist regimes and unhinged their repressive power. Unlike the blood baths of Tianamen Square (and later in Yugoslavia) - and apart from the brief violence in Romania - these revolutions did not shed blood. Unlike his predecessors in 1953 (GDR), 1956 (Hungary), and 1968 (Czechoslovakia), Gorbachev did not intervene as he had promised when he renounced the Brezhnev Doctrine in a speech before the United Nations on December 7, 1988. Historians will be challenged to assess these surprisingly gentle "velvet" revolutions for a long time to come. During the opening reception, Barbara Prammer, President of the Austrian Parliament, will give brief remarks about the exhibition.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Discussion | Fiction writers Susan Shapiro and Andrew Zornoza read and discuss their work


Shapiro's work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Newsweek, The Los Angeles Times, and The Village Voice. She is the author of the memoirs Only as Good as Your Word and Lighting Up as well as Five Men Who Broke My Heart, which was optioned for a feature film. Speed Shrinking is her first novel. Zornoza is a writer and visual artist from Houston. He is the author of the photo-prose novel Where I Stay. His fiction and essays have appeared in magazines such as Sleepingfish, Literary Arts and CapGun.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
$5

Discussion | Jewish Cultural Pluralism


Can there be cultural pluralism in a state where Jews are the majority? Is there more than one Jewish culture? This panel reflects on the stakes involved in maintaining autonomous cultural traditions within political states and the ways in which Jewish thinkers have contemplated coexistence. Panelists include Michael Walzer, editor of Dissent and The Jewish Political Tradition and author of Pluralism and Democracy, On Toleration, and Spheres of Justice: A Defense of Pluralism and Equality; and Yirmiyahu Yovel, editor, New Jewish Time: Jewish Culture in the Era of Secularization, and author of The Other Within: The Marranos, Split Identity and Emerging Modernity and Spinoza and Other Heretics; moderated by Oz Frankel, author of What’s in a Name? The Black Panthers in Israel and States of Inquiry: Social Investigations and Print Culture in Nineteenth-Century Britain and the United States.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Lecture | New Universities in Libya


A lecture on 7th of October University at Bani Walid and Al Asmariya University, Zliten Campus. With: Gordon Hood, Principal, RMJM Hillier; Director of RMJM's Global Education Studio; and Neil MacFarquhar, journalist, The New York Times.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Lecture | New York City as “Jerusalem on the Hudson:” The Spiritual Legacy of the Hudson River School


With Ronald J. Brown, PhD. Chronicle the spiritual impact of Thomas Cole (1801-1848), the father of the Hudson River School of painting, on the emergence of New York City as the Empire City.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Discussion | Who Cares About Family?


This panel brings together experts from various fields to examine not only who cares about the family, but who does not, who should, and why. Speakers will include Patricia Hill Collins (University of Maryland), author of Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment; Joan Williams (University of California at Hastings), author of Unbending Gender: Why Family and Work Conflict and What to Do About It; and Rhacel Salazar Parreñas (Brown), author of The Force of Domesticity. Alyson Cole, Resident Mellon Fellow at the Center for the Humanities, will moderate.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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6:30 pm
Free

Author Reading | New York Times columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin discusses Too Big to Fail


New York Times columnist Sorkin delivers the first true behind-the-scenes, moment-by-moment account of how the greatest financial crisis since the Great Depression developed into a global tsunami. From inside the corner office at Lehman Brothers to secret meetings in South Korea, and the corridors of Washington, Too Big to Fail is the definitive story of the most powerful men and women in finance and politics grappling with success and failure, ego and greed, and, ultimately, the fate of the world’s economy.
   New York City, NY; NYC
7:00 pm
Free

Book Signing | The Hills stars Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt sign How to be Famous


For the first time ever, Montag and Pratt invite fans and haters alike behind the scenes as they reveal the ten-step plan that took them from nobodies to notorious.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Discussion | An Evening with Author Sarah Schulman


Join the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies for an inspiring evening of conversation with author and activist Sarah Schulman. Linda Villarosa, award winning journalist, editor and author, will play conversational host.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Book Discussion | Contributors read from The Black Body


Ranging from deeply serious to playful, The Black Body is an anthology that illuminates the incredible diversity of identities and experiences that define the black body in our culture, and includes the stories of dozens of actors, artists, writers, and comedians. Please join editor Meri Nana-Ama Danquah and contributors Greg Tate and Stephanie Armstrong for a discussion about the role of the black body in American history.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Screening | Guy Ben-Ner's Untitled: A Conversation With Himself About How Art Can Serve Life


Filmed and edited over the course of twelve months, Israeli artist Ben-Ner will present an unusual “live film,” that captures an ongoing phone conversation between the artist and himself as he flies to and fro between Berlin and Tel Aviv, the respective locations of his girlfriend and his family. Unlike a regular film, which is edited externally after all of the shooting is complete, Ben-Ner’s film never leaves the camera during a twelve-month period. The film always remains “live,” awaiting the next shot, which might take place in either Israel or Germany. Ben-Ner’s “storyboard” is life itself, and each scene occurs in real time, although with significant ellipses in between. Since the only editing is done entirely in-camera, the move from one shot to the next requires a real physical move: the camera traveling the full distance from Tel Aviv to Berlin and back as the dialogue progresses. Shot in Hebrew, and subtitled in English, the film presents a conversation in rhyme, which discusses how art can be at the service of life and the repercussions of such a unified relationship.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Author Reading | Jonathan Safran Foer reads from his book Eating Animals


Foer has written the novels Everything Is Illuminated and Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Concert | Musicians from Instituto Superior de Arte del Teatro Colon


For the third consecutive year, a group of talented young musicians from the ISATC, the training institute of the Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires, gather for an evening of opera favorites, including arias from Mozart's The Magic Flute, Verdi's Otello, Donizetti's L'elisir d'amore, and Berg's Wozzeck.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Jazz | Pete Malinverni, Acclaimed Jazz Pianist


Malinverni, pianist and composer, presents selections from his work Joyful!, which re-introduces long lost siblings Jazz and Gospel. He performs with the "Devoe-tions," the Gospel Choir of the Street Baptist Church of Brooklyn, NY, and members of the Soul Voices, the 68-voice choir he founded at Purchase College.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
$10 suggested donation

Concert | String Orchestra of New York City


The "feisty" SONYC plays "with an appealing deftness" says The New York Times. Come hear some of New York's own finest string players join forces in this dynamic conductor-less ensemble.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Colloquium | Ten Days for Oppositional Architecture: Towards Post-Capitalist Spaces


The transformation of the urban landscape within the last decades has increasingly been dominated by the demands of capitalist utilization. Due to the current crisis, however, which goes far beyond a mere crisis of the real estate and financial market, these neoliberal politics and attendant forms of production of space have been subject to a loss of legitimation. For this reason, not only do the dominance and promises of the privatization model, the free market and private property have to be questioned, but also the conventions of the space-producing professions that follow and materialize these policies. In this context, the event “Ten Days for Oppositional Architecture” takes up the task of exploring possibilities and conditions of a socially committed architectural practice. Therefore the narrow boundaries of the profession have to be left behind. Invited are activists, geographers, architects, planners, and economists representing different critical approaches to discuss and develop concepts and practices that not only try to oppose and challenge the capitalist mode of production of space, but also try to go beyond it strategies of de-commodification, re-appropriation and alternative production of space. They will look at already existing spatial actions of resistance as well as search for possibilities to further theorize them: How can these strategies and alternative practices be turned into social and political forces towards post-capitalist spaces?
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:00 pm
Free

Jazz | Café Jazz: Student Jazz Combos


Refreshments provided.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:30 pm
Free
7:30 pm
Free

Author Reading | The Good Men Project: Reading and Discussion with Julio Medina and James Houghton


The Good Men Project started with a book, and has since evolved into a film, an online discussion and a series of live events around the nation. The book -- The Good Men Project: Real Stories from the Front Lines of Modern Manhood is a collection of 31 essays that speaks to a diverse range of men’s stories, from the point of view of the defining moment in each.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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7:30 pm
$5

Dance Performance | Dance: Arianne Hoffmann / Katy Pyle / Cori Olinghouse


Contemporary dance.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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8:00 pm
Free

Concert | Faculty Composers Fall


This concert will feature performances of new works by faculty composers.
   New York City, NY; NYC
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8:00 pm
Free

Concert | Pianist Jerome Rosen performs Bach, Mozart, Beethoven and Brahms


Program: Bach, "Italian" Concerto Mozart, Rondo in A minor K. 511 Brahms, 4 Pieces op. 119 Beethoven, 33 Variations on a theme of Diabelli op. 120 Rosen, violinist-turned-pianist, will celebrate his 70th birthday with this piano recital. A graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music, Jerome Rosen, was violinist and keyboardist for three major American Orchestras over 40 years, as well as a participant in the Casals and Marlboro Festivals and a faculty member at Tanglewood and Boston University. He has also been Apprentice Conductor of the Cleveland Orchestra, Robert Shaw's rehearsal accompanist and assistant, and an arranger for the Boston Pops. Since retiring from the Boston Symphony in 1998, he has played the piano exclusively, performing many times as a recitalist and chamber music player. He has recently been appointed Music Director of the Independence Sinfonia of Philadelphia.
   New York City, NY; NYC
8:00 pm
Free

Lecture | The State of Israeli Literature


Meir Shalev, Israeli novelist, essayist and columnist, speaks
   New York City, NY; NYC
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8:00 pm
Free
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Play | Broadway Actors in a Modern Adaptation of The World Classic

Regular Price: $59
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Concert | Christmas Concert

Regular Price: $55
CFT Member Price: $0.00
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