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Night+Day 

Wednesday, Jul 23 1997
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wednesday
july 23
Newly Mounted The art of sex inspires Dr. Magnus Hirschfeld's Museum of Sexology, an interactive theatrical show based on Hirschfeld's long-gone Institute of Sexual Science and Museum of Sexology, which began 100 years ago as a lab/clinic/exhibit hall, and was destroyed in 1933 by Nazis who didn't look kindly upon openly gay Jewish Socialists studying all things sexual. As Dr. Hirschfeld, New York actor Howard Pinhasik will lead viewers through three rooms: the Exhibit Hall, a re-creation of the museum's original presentation "The Derangement of the Sexual Instinct," with mechanical displays(!); the Performance Chamber, where live erotic performances take place; and the Aphrodisiac Lounge, which serves an international array of food and drink long considered to induce passion. Sexual aids and aphrodisiacal items tested in the original institute will also be available for purchase. Mel Gordon, creator of the Nina Hagen vehicle The Seven Addictions and Five Professions of Anita Berber, wrote and directs this 21-and-over show, which runs at 8 and 10:30 p.m. (and continues through Aug. 17) at 1209 Howard (at Eighth Street), S.F. Admission is $35; call 646-0864. Audience size is limited, so reservations are recommended.

thursday
july 24
This Budd's for You Moby-Dick is way too long, and then there's that problem of finding a card-carrying Actors' Equity whale, so Louis O. Coxe and Robert Chapman opted instead to adapt Herman Melville's novella Billy Budd to a maritime setting. From the deck to the hold of 1895 schooner the C.A. Thayer, Venture Theater stages this story of young Billy, a sailor on a British man-of-war who becomes embroiled in a life-or-death conflict between law and justice in the late 1800s. Due to harsh content and salty language, the show isn't recommended for youngsters. The show begins at 8 p.m. (and runs through Aug. 31) at the San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park, Hyde Street Pier, Fisherman's Wharf (at Hyde), S.F. Admission is $22-25; call 929-0202 ext. 58.

Word Up Los Angeles' punk-rock elder stateswoman, Exene Cervenka, singer/songwriter of the late, great X and the proprietress of an L.A. store specializing in UFO and punk kitsch, headlines "Sundown on the Millennium," a three-way spoken-word bill with a rock 'n' roll bent. Cervenka, whose millennial visions have included apocalyptic X hits like "The Unheard Music" and "Sex and Dying in High Society," will be joined by poetry slammer Beth Lisick, who once opened for Neil Young, and author Don Bajema, whose work has been published through Henry Rollins' 2.13.61 Publications; DJ IJ provides musical interludes. It all begins at 9 p.m. at Cafe Du Nord, 2170 Market (at Sanchez), S.F. Admission is $5; call 861-5016.

friday
july 25
Hot Sax and Tasty Licks Percussionist Pete Escovedo, trombonist Wayne Wallace, and Orquesta Charanson will help the Pacific Rim Ensemble hold down the Latin Jazz and Salsa Stage, while over at the Swingin' Thing Stage, Lavay Smith & Her Red Hot Skillet Lickers prime listeners for blues pianist Charles Brown, and Ann Dyer & the No Good Time Fairies meet Will Bernard on the San Francisco Scene Stage. And that's just opening night at the seventh annual Jazz and Wine Festival, a weekendlong free block party that, with the exception of the St. Stupid's Day Parade, is about as lively (and cheap) as the Financial District gets. This year's festival, a prelude to fall's San Francisco Jazz Festival and the first place to buy tickets to same, features gourmet food and regional wines, and opens the second day with Women in Jazz and Youth in Jazz stages. Latin jazz pianist Rebecca Mauleon and the All-Star Women's Jazz Band are among the guests playing the former; the UC Berkeley Jazz Ensemble and pianist Kito Gamble are featured attractions at the latter. The festival begins at 5:30 p.m. throughout 2, 3, and 4 Embarcadero Center, Promenade Level, S.F. It continues at 2 p.m. Saturday; Sunday's program features brunch with Dulce Maria Arguelles and Bruno Pelletier at 11 a.m. at Hyatt's Equinox in 5 Embarcadero and Marcos Silva 2 to 5 p.m. at the SkyDeck in 1 Embarcadero. Admission is free; call 398-5655.

saturday
july 26
And Now, Causes Involving Fruit Like peaches? How about strawberries? At the Peach Festival, a fund-raiser for the San Francisco Food Bank and Share Our Strength, guests will be surrounded on all sides by peaches. Boulevard's Patrick Hooker offers cooking demonstrations involving the fruit, and there will be a pie-eating contest. Fresh produce will be sold and dishes incorporating peaches will be available for tasting. Strawberries won't be the main attraction at "Pachanga for the Movimiento," although proceeds from the party will benefit the United Farm Workers strawberry workers campaign. Latin funk band Los Angelitos, Blooz Katz, Los Jappenin Jarochos (featuring members of Dr. Loco's Rockin' Jalapeno Band), and Quetzal will play, Aztec dance troupe Teokali will perform, and an art exhibit will display work by Leonard Peltier and others. The Peach Festival begins at 11 a.m. in the Cannery, 2801 Leavenworth (at Beach), S.F. Admission is free with a donation of nonperishable food items (although tasting tickets are available for purchase); call 771-3112. "Pachanga" begins at 8 p.m. at Brava Theater, 2781 24th St. (at York), S.F. Admission is $10-15; call 826-4127.

Moon Unit Never mind the man in the moon; in Romance Gitano de la Luna Luna, the moon is home to the alluring figure of a woman who woos a Gypsy boy with her expressions of passion and melancholy, conveyed with the sinuous curve of an arm and the rapid-fire barrage of clicking heels. Luna is a world premiere for Rosa Montoya Bailes Flamencos; Montoya, a Madrid-born, locally based performer who helped popularize flamenco in the States, and whose own Gypsy lineage includes her flamenco guitarist uncle Carlos Montoya, built the piece around a piece by Spanish poet Federico Garcia Lorca. Guest dancers Antonio Alcazar and Victoria Palacios, winners of Spain's Premio Nacional, join Montoya to perform this and other classical Spanish dances to live music by Antonio Flores. The show begins at 8 p.m. (and repeats tomorrow at 2 p.m.) at the Herbst Theater, 401 Van Ness (at Grove), S.F. Admission is $18-36; call 392-4400. The company also leads workshops for all levels of dancers Wednesday, July 23, at 4:30 p.m. and Thursday, July 24, at 7:15 p.m. at the Rosa Montoya Bailes Flamenco Center for Spanish Dance, 3691 Mission (at Highland), S.F. Admission is $125 overall; call 824-1960 for more information.

Tres Bon Like Dia de los Muertos, the Japanese Buddhist Bon Festival, or "Festival of Souls," honors the spirit of the dead with live entertainment and good food. In a related event, sushi, potstickers, and udon noodles will be dished up at the Ginza Bazaar, where the kimono-clad Hanayagi and Fujima Rokushige Odori dance groups guide guests through celebratory bon odori dances; in a slightly less traditional vein, the bazaar will also celebrate the dearly departed with bingo and carnival games. Costumed bon odori dancers will also congregate at the Bon Festival in Japantown, where viewers will be handed fans and other props, and encouraged to join in. The bazaar begins at noon (also Sunday, the day that includes dancing, which begins at 1 p.m.) at the Buddhist Church of San Francisco, 1881 Pine (at Octavia), S.F. Admission is free; call 776-3158. The Bon Dance begins at 3 p.m. (also Sunday) at the Japan Center Peace Plaza, Post & Buchanan, S.F. Admission is free; call 421-4373.

sunday
july 27
Sweat for Less Rhythm and Motion celebrates its new, seismically sound studios with a day of free torture disguised as aerobic exercise. Brazilian, Afro-Haitian, and hip-hop dance classes will be taught along with the regular workouts, in which a professional dancer leads an hourlong class designed to build coordination and cardiovascular endurance; just getting through one without hyperventilating and passing out is worth celebrating with a cigarette and a beer. In all fairness, Rhythm and Motion classes are more dancelike than dance aerobics, the teachers are less like cheerleaders, and the music (which ranged from the Rolling Stones to C&C Music Factory on one visit) is frequently better. Classes begin at 9 a.m. (and continue until 7 p.m.) at Knights of the Red Branch Hall, 1133 Mission (at Seventh Street), S.F. Admission is free (first 500 attendees receive a free poster); call 621-0643.

This Is Your Life Drama belongs in the theater, of course, but enough of it happens in real life that actors can take their cues from actual incidents. Remember when your old flame from the West Coast boarded the cross-town bus you were riding on the East Coast? How about that time you and a friend drove to Texas to see a rock show? Pacific Playback Theater invites the audience to share anecdotes like these in its world-premiere performance. The evening begins with short warm-up exercises conveying moods or feelings, based on an audience's answers to questions like "How was the drive here?" Later, viewers volunteer to share their stories with an MC, who acts as a conduit between the teller and the ensemble. The tales -- whether scary, romantic, or hilarious -- may be re-created in straightforward fashion, says Artistic Director Nan Crawford, or may take on new dimensions, considering the music, the movement, and the unpredictable nature of improv. The show, a benefit for Youth Chance High School, begins at 8 p.m. at the Magic Theater, Building D, Fort Mason, Marina & Laguna, S.F. Admission is $15; call 282-8558.

monday
july 28
Where Every Day Is Ash Wednesday! It's wall-to-wall people on any given day at the Columbarium, but groundskeeper Emmitt Watson is the only one making any noise, since everyone else is dead. The Victorian at 1 Loraine Court is home to some of California's most historically prominent families, or what's left of them, and Watson is a walking repository of information about their lives. Look for urns shaped like silver martini shakers or tree stumps as Wilson leads the tour from the inlaid mosaic ground floor to the rotunda, ticking off the accomplishments and peculiarities of Kaisers, Folgers, and Magnins as he passes through four floors of vaults containing their remains. The renovated Columbarium is open Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday and Sunday 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., and is located between Geary, Anza, Stanyan, and Arguello, S.F. Admission is free; call 221-1611.

tuesday
july 29
Ladies Night When the middle-aged caretaker in Three Tall Women emerges, try to stifle that impulse to shout, "It's Ma Walton!" even though actress Michael Learned really did play the rural matriarch on the long-running TV series. Learned's theatrical credits extend long beyond that show, to include roles in Edward Albee's Seascape and A Delicate Balance, making her performance in this touring production her third go at the playwright's work. In this piece, Learned and a young lawyer (Christina Rouner) have come to look after a 92-year-old widow (Marian Seldes), whose re-examination of the events of her life provides the momentum to the comic drama. Albee added the Pulitzer Prize he won for this play to the Tony Award he won for Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? The show opens at 8 p.m. (and has an open-ended run) at the Herbst Theater, 401 Van Ness (at Grove), S.F. Admission is $20-50; call 776-1999.

Ticket to Ride "Fast Pass: A Game of Destinations" is like an urban update on the Game of Life, only instead of navigating toy cars jammed with plastic peg children around a maze of insurance policies, players can move one of 13 tile characters (with names like "Wolf" or "Low Rider") around an open-air mural. The directions of the game are literally written on the wall, in poetic form, as are the rules, which aren't as hard and fast as the rules of regular board games. Players are advised to be aware of challenges and temptations as they travel toward their destination, which could be anywhere from Alaska to outer space. The game was created by kids from the Inner City Public Art Projects for Youth Program, under the direction of muralist Johanna Poethig; a reception featuring readings, refreshments, and appearances by the artists begins at 5:30 p.m. at the mural site at the De Vera Store, Russ & Natoma, between Sixth & Seventh streets, S.F. Admission is free; call 861-9838.

About The Author

Heather Wisner

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