Are you looking for free things to do in New York City (NYC) on September 19, 2013?
65 free events take place on Thursday, September 19 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 September 19 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 September . 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!
65 free things to do in New York City (NYC) on Thursday, September 19, 2013
There will be 5 classes per day. Each 60-minute class is led by an exhale yoga instructor who will teach participants of all levels to integrate breath and movement, while also strengthening inner and outer alignment. Yoga mats will be provided for free.
TIMES: Classes will begin at: 7:15am, 9:00am, 4:15pm, 5:30pm and 6:45pm.
Teachers trained in different styles will be giving classes throughout the afternoon, with the scenic park lake in the background. Please bring your own mat, as there will be none provided.
Grab a pole and relax on the Harlem Meer while you wait for a bite from one of the many species of fish that live in its diverse aquatic ecosystem! Poles available to borrow; must release fish after catching them. Free for families and individuals; groups larger than 5 must reserve at least 2 weeks in advance. Adult with photo I.D. must accompany all children.
It is here, as much as anywhere, where American history started. It's where the first US Congress assembled and produced the Bill of Rights and where President George Washington took his first oath of office. It's here where the world's most important stock exchange and one of the most famous bridges stand. And it is here where an unspeakable tragedy took place and where a rebirth is underway.
Arguably the world's most valuable, busiest and most crowded pieces of real estate, Midtown Manhattan is what most visitors think of when they think of New York City. Home to some of the city's most iconic architecture, from Gothic to Post-Modern and from Beaux-Arts to Art Deco (lots of Art Deco). it's not difficult to understand why. But just behind the massive facades, lie facinating histories just waiting to be unveiled.
In tribute to artist Theaster Gates, a two-day conference on the artist’s prize-winning work, The Dorchester Projects. An artwork of extraordinary complexity and impact, and selected from an international pool of twenty nominated projects, Dorchester Projects expands the discourse of political enfranchisement and social inclusion. Gates began Dorchester Projects in 2006 by transforming two buildings on Chicago's South Side into community gathering spaces, with a library, slide archive, performance space, and soul food kitchen. The ongoing project advances social justice through art, spirituality, history, economics, and materiality, and in so doing has charted groundbreaking ways for urban renewal.
Attend a live taping of Who Wants to be a Millionaire with new host Cedric "The Entertainer." You are guaranteed to laugh yourself silly. Studio audience members will also have the opportunity to audition to be on the show.
Explore the Cathedral's newly cleaned and restored Nave. Learn about the art, architecture and history of this great sacred space from 1892 to the present.
Learn to play pétanque, the popular European game anchored in precision, patience, and camaraderie from members of La Boule New Yorkaise, NYC’s championship-winning club.
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"
Tour times: 11:15 a.m., 12:00 p.m., 1:15 p.m., 2:30 p.m., 3:15 p.m., and 4:00 p.m.
Test your coordination and dexterity with free juggling lessons in the park. All skill levels are welcome to join in the fun. Equipment is provided. Lessons are weather permitting. You'll be surprised that Alex and Jordan can often be found outside tossing pins in the snow!
History buffs will love this tour of the Harlem Meer and its environs, which were key lands in the American Revolution and the War of 1812. Route involves many hills and stairs. 60 minutes.
The Nerve Tank, a world-class theater innovator, brings the woeful myth of Sisyphus to life. Sisyphus, a daring and clever king who outwitted the gods on many occasions, is sentenced by Zeus to the absurd and eternal fate of pushing a boulder uphill only to have it roll back down.
The Nerve Tank’s interactive encounter with this story features a 6 1/2-foot metal sphere pushed along the Plaza, overseen by a dancing Persephone, Queen of the Underworld. Sisyphus’ labor is to play the “boulder” in narrative order, which is filled with technology that triggers audio and video fragments as it moves. The task is impossible, yet he's forced to keep going – and through his punishment he celebrates his stubborn pride.
Times: 12-1:30pm & 4-6pm (20-minute performances on loop)
Born in Tokyo, Japan, Kuni Mikami came to the United States in 1975. He continues to play for many of the top big-bands around including: the Lionel Hampton Orchestra; Duke Ellington; Cab Calloway; Illinois Jaquet; and George Gee Orchestra.
Explore the Cathedral's newly cleaned and restored Nave. Learn about the art, architecture and history of this great sacred space from 1892 to the present.
Share your passion for Checkers, Chess, Monopoly, Scrabble, Boggle, or your favorite board game. There will be a demonstration of Boggle. Please feel free to bring your own game set, and join us for some lively board time. All levels of play welcome.
Free tour of Bill Traylor: Drawings from the Collections of the High Museum of Art and the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts and Traylor in Motion: Wonders from New York Collections.
Program:
Benajmin Britten: Introduction and Rondo a la Burlesca op. 23, no. 1
Francis Poulenc: Sonata for 2 Pianos
George Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue (arranged for two pianos)
The versatile and prolific composer Benjamin Britten will be honored on his 100th birthday.
Celebrated favorites and rarely-performed works of Britten’s repertory will be presented, led by Director of Music and the Arts, Julian Wachner, The Choir of the church and NOVUS NY. Other featured artists include tenor Nicholas Phan, cellist Matt Haimovitz, and The Youth Chorus.
Monthly book discussions to explore titles you've been meaning to read, or reread, and discuss with other lovers of literature. Participants should read each title before the discussion.
Although world famous, Harlem may be New York's best kept secret with some of the city's best architecture, food, music and people. Harlem's history is also one of the city's most dramatic, having gone through many ethnic, cultural and socioeconomic changes over the past roughly 400 years, which have resulted in a diverse array of places of worship, theaters, homes and eating establishments.
Many people think of the New York City subway as one of the largest, most efficient, if not the cleanest mass transit systems in the world. Few, however, think of it as the largest and longest art gallery on the planet. Well, they don't know what they are missing. This lively walking AND subway riding tour visits over a dozen subway stations to experience a selection of these striking often whimsical works that go largely unnoticed by the general public.
Join this climate controlled subway and walking art tour. Along the way you'll learn about and become expert at navigating the (in)famous NYC subway system. There's also the invaluable opportunity to confer about your other sightseeing plans with the acclaimed Bronx born, vastly experienced licensed NYC tour guide, Darryl Reilly.
With Trevor Howard, Vanessa Redgrave, John Gielgud.
This is the impressive British remake of the film. The history is more on the mark, however there still are details left out. A first-rate cast of famous English actors from the late 60s makes this sumptious film a treat to see.
139 min.
Attend a live taping of Who Wants to be a Millionaire with new host Cedric "The Entertainer." You are guaranteed to laugh yourself silly. Studio audience members will also have the opportunity to audition to be on the show.
Presented as part of the Moving Sounds 2013 festival, this non-visual performance by Kenji Ouellet centers on the touch sense. The performance explores how sounds, music, language and narrative can be translated into the medium of touch. The piece is performed directly on the body of the visitor, who does not move actively.
With Harrison Ford, Chadwick Boseman, Alan Tudyk.
Jackie Robinson's story is told in this biopic from writer/director Brian Helgeland. Robinson paved a new road for minorities by being the first African-American to play in Major League Baseball since the racial barrier was put in place in the late 1800s.
128 min.
Play as your favorite game piece and navigate the chess board from inside at these Human Chess games, where chess
becomes a embodied team sport. All levels welcome!
An introductory Chess group which welcomes new players. Other strategy games also played. Come and refresh your chess game or learn anew and enjoy some other strategy games as well.
Known as America's first suburb, Brooklyn Heights is truly a gem. Travel and Leisure named it one of America's top 10 most beautiful neighborhoods, and its beauty is rivaled only by its place in American history. These quaint, tree-lined streets have been the sites of Revolutionary War battles, abolitionist activism and have inspired numerous novelists. Visit a stop on the Underground Railroad, or the home of Truman Capote, where he penned Breakfast at Tiffany's and where Jackie Robinson signed with the Dodgers.
This exhibit honors 15 men and women who were either interned themselves or are the children of internees. Its message is powerful: civil injustice resonates for generations. This living history exhibit teaches us the importance of civic engagement, and emphasizes that historical events are always linked to powerful personal stories.
With the visual art debut of pioneering novelist, journalist, director, playwright, actor, rapper and musician Melvin Van Peebles as its centerpiece, the showcase series, now in its second year, will feature Peebles' "Ex-Voto Monochrome (A Ghetto Mother's Prayer)," - a mixed media meditation exploring the intersection between violence, economic disenfranchisement, womanhood and faith - and also boast noteworthy pieces from Van Peebles' private collection, including two rarely-seen paintings by George Helton, deceased husband of Isabel Taylor Helton, designer of Van Peebles' museum-like Manhattan apartment, which is home to the paintings, illustrations, and sculptures he's completed over the years.
Open-level yoga with a certified instructor. Please wear comfortable clothes and bring your yoga mat (or use one of theirs). All participants must sign a waiver form before they join in. For adults 18+.
In her paintings of interiors, Smith captures and transforms familiar environments into dreamlike and timeless scenes devoid of people but filled with a lush playfulness. Roxa Smith's detail-rich and imaginative display of poignant environments is on view til October 7th.
Expert instructors lead all levels of yogis. Mats are provided. Presented by Athleta and produced by alignyo. Instructors and assistants from YogaWorks.
Silvestre Pantaleón lives in a Nahuatl-speaking village in the Mexican state of Guerrero. He is one of the last to hand-craft sisal rope in the traditional way, starting with harvesting the fibers from wild agave plants. Seeking relief from chronic pain, he visits a card reader and is told to make offerings to the dead, the hearth, the ants and the river. Working with his family, he fashions a rope that will raise the funds for the ceremony to “lift the shadow” from him.
65 min. With English subtitles.
In 2011, Silvestre Pantaleón won Best Mexican Documentary Feature at the Morelia International Film Festival and the Grand Prix Tehuikan at Montreal’s First Peoples’ Festival/Présence autochtone.
The author of Inside a Dog switches her focus to the human mind. People assume they are completely aware of their surroundings, but they are awash in inattention, tuning out about 80% of sensory activities. Each person has a different experience, leading her to take walks with different people to see the world in a new way, making a familiar landscape new and novel.
This visual presentation shows how richly textured an ordinary experience truly is—and how many of these sensory details we miss. At any given moment we filter out the bulk of the information streaming around us; this lecture offers ways to tune into the myriad sights, sounds, and smells.
David Lehman, series editor of The Best American Poetry, joins guest editor of the 2013 volume, Denise Duhamel, to present poets and poems for the 25th edition of the acclaimed anthology.
Readers will include Kim Addonizio, Timothy Donnelly, John Hennessy, Major Jackson, Lawrence Joseph, Noelle Kocot, Dorianne Laux, Amy Lawless, Amy Lemmon, Anthony Madrid, Sally Wen Mao, Vijay Seshadri, Mitch Sisskind, Stephanie Strickland, Angela Veronica Wong, and Wendy Xu.
Written just prior to his death in July 2012, Cockburn’s memoir is a riotous road trip through nearly two decades of American culture and politics. Daisy Cockburn, Laura Flanders, James Wolcott and other panelists will read and reflect upon the late journalist’s work.
Joshua and Zakary Sandler are New York-based artists who come from distinct creative backgrounds. Joshua studied photography and video, and his brother Zak trained in experimental theater and modern performance. As teenagers, they began collaborating on photography projects. Their early works documented the fantasy, inhibition, and intimacy shared between family and close friends.
As adults, Josh and Zak make videos that examine the line drawn between adolescent and adult behavior, and the dysfunction that often ensues when adults try to hold on to feelings of idealistic hope and youthful indiscretion. They aim to capture a general state of alienation, and the protective worlds people create in the midst of oppressive or tumultuous circumstances. Their work has been described as “dysfunctional family theatre”.
Part of 7 nights of free comedy and variety.
Tonight: Ladies Variety Night
Live music by The Harriers
Hosted by Buzz Off Lucille
- Suck My Dick I (UCB)
- Leslie Meisel (30 Rock, Bachelorette)
- Taco Supreme (The PIT)
- Halle Keifer (Girl Code)
- Suck My Dick II (UCB)
- Will Cooper & The Ladies
Acclaimed novelist Daphne Kalotay and award-winning pianist Júlia Hámos for a collaborative evening of literature and music. Kalotay, author of the international bestseller Russian Winter, will read from her new novel, Sight Reading — “a fictive musical and familial feast” (Booklist, starred review). Hámos, a graduate of the Royal Academy of Music, who has performed at Lincoln Center and Carnegie Hall, will perform Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No. 31, Opus 110.
With Tom Drury, Sarah Manguso, and Antoine Wilson. Readings by contributors to the award-winning Brooklyn-based quarterly. Hosted by founding editor Brigid Hughes.
Menzel’s newest comedy about a small opera ensemble performing Mozart’s Dona Giovanni is an insight into a theater backstage with its stories of love and disappointment, and a man's lifelong love for soprano opera singers.
Q&A with the director follows.
Come and meet David Schickler (Kissing in Manhattan, Sweet and Vicious) as he reads and discusses his memoir, his candid reflection of his early struggles between his desire to enter the priesthood and women.
A new novel by bestselling author Nicholson Baker reintroduces feckless but hopeful hero Paul Chowder, whose struggle to get his life together is reflected in his steadfast desire to write a pop song, or a protest song, or both at once.
Installed as an incongruous presence, a tall palm tree functions as the fulcrum of the performance in which two ballet dancers - dressed in fancy gowns – will climb to the top of the tree with the help of a scissor lift.
Konrad Jarodzki's first solo show in the US. A renowned international artist born in Zaklikow, Poland, Jarodzki has been creating work since the 1950's. The artists' paintings and drawings reflect his constant pursuit of space and form, their relations to each other as a manifestation of human existence - both physical and spiritual, and often reveal deeply experienced events within Jarodzki's life - such as the destruction of Wroclaw after WWII and the aftermath of September 11th.
Pamela Erens and Jonathan Dee will come together to discuss Erens' new novel.
It’s 1979, and Aviva Rossner and Seung Jung are notorious at Auburn Academy. They’re an unlikely pair at an elite East Coast boarding school (she’s Jewish; he’s Korean American) and hardly shy when it comes to their sexuality. Aviva is a formerly bookish girl looking for liberation from an unhappy childhood; Seung is an enthusiastic dabbler in drugs and a covert rebel against his demanding immigrant parents.
A live performance, featuring artist Sophia Peer in collaboration with her parents Alice and Aaron Peer. Sophia, who directs and choreographs the performance, employs various actions that attempt to make connections in the wake of unreached goals and unfulfilled desires.
Re-Thinking Literature brings together philosophers, writers, critics and theoreticians of literature and art, to examine what, in the 21st Century, is understood when we speak about “literature.” We still ask familiar questions such as “What is the situation of the writer today? What does literature mean today?” but ask them today undetermined by preexisting “isms,” past the dogmas of recent years, post-Post, as it were. Re-Thinking Literature seeks new, multiple perspectives for the meaning and significance of the cultural construct “literature” today—and examines how a younger generation of literary thinkers and practitioners deals with it.
Dr. Stanton Peele has been at the cutting edge of addiction theory and treatment since his publication (with Archie Brodsky) of Love and Addiction in 1975. He has authored 12 books and 250 articles, as well as developing the Life Process Program for addiction treatment. His next book (with Ilse Thompson), Recover! Stop Thinking Like an Addict, will be published in February, 2014.
The Prosodic Body is a new field of research founded by Daria Fain and Robert Kocik that explores language as sound, embodiment, and utmost expression. Tone, intention, rhythm, gesture, the tacit, hesitation, interaction, evocation and even cosmogenesis are all acts of „prosody“ - which describes the rhythm, stress, and intonation of speech. The Prosodic Body is manifest in various areas: performance, architecture, health, education, and socioeconomic justice.
MSM Chamber Jazz Ensemble performs Miles Davis' album Milestones
A re-creation of the landmark album Milestones by Miles Davis’s late 1950s quintet, featuring John Coltrane and Cannonball Adderley, and the group’s foray into modal jazz.
Acardenchados take their name from the Mexican Cardenche style of popular music, which is created through the spontaneous interpretation of three or four voices. This improvisational yet traditional vocal ensemble joins together in exploring creative boundaries of singing in the Cardenche and Pirekua-- the syncretism of religious music chants from the Spanish evangelizers and with Indian Mexican music-- ways.
Joining Tareke Ortiz, Leo Soqui, and Juan Manuel Torreblanca, welcome back Juan Pablo Villa, one of the most respected exponents of improvisation music in Mexico. Acardenchados exposes us to extended vocal techniques in the most fascinating and energizing ways.
This astounding film is the first to document the illegal gold-diggers in Mongolia's Gobi Desert risking their lives for a few grams of the precious mineral. While the speculative market value of gold in the Western world holds little relation to any tangible yardstick, the film describes in very direct and stark images what it means to prospect for gold by hand, in brutal conditions eerily reminiscent of the California Gold Rush during the late 19th-century.
86 min.
New York is a skyscraper city and there is no better time to view Manhattan’s icons than after the sun sets and the lights go on. Fueled by competition and a dash of audacity, New York City is still producing one of mankind’s most remarkable skyline.
Marco Benevento Presents: A Circuit Bent Piano Rock Picture Show in Exploding Color.
Visionary pianist Marco Benevento, known for straddling the worlds of jazz, jam and indie music, brings a multimedia concert experience that promises to cross Pink Floyd’s The Wall with Dan Deacon with the Talking Heads’ Stop Making Sense – all infused with a rambunctious DIY artist co-op spirit. Benevento and his outstanding trio featuring bassist Dave Dreiwitz and drummer Andy Borger team up here with the maverick video artist Jay Cooper to perform a set of original songs live to their own music videos, complete with costumes, dancers, and other shenanigans.
This concert by Mario Diaz de Leon and Mahir Cetiz, which is part of the Moving Sounds 2013 festival, represents the first duo performance by these two composers. Following six years of acquaintance in the Columbia University doctoral program, they began collaborating in the winter of 2012. Using analog synthesizer, Ciat-Lonbarde Tetrazzi, 36-string zither, electric guitar and piano, their expansive improvisations evoke influences ranging from Xenakis to Scriabin.
What do you do when your father owns a strip club, and your mother works there? BECOME A DENTIST! Mike King's One-Man-Show "The Fifth Dentist" is a hilarious true story by America's funniest dentist, cutting-edge comedy from one of New York's brightest comics...has been seen on Comedy Central and has opened for Ray Romano!
See this work-in-progress before it's off-Broadway production.
"Exceptional story!" - Eric Hansen, Producer of the Montel Williams and Whoopi Goldberg show.