Los Angeles Times - 18.03.2020

(Frankie) #1

CALENDAR


WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, 2020:: LATIMES.COM/CALENDAR


E


On Sunday night, Mayor
Eric Garcetti made an an-
nouncement that movie the-
aters in Los Angeles, along
with other entertainment
venues, bars and fitness cen-
ters, would all be closed until
at least March 31 to slow the
growing coronavirus pan-
demic. On Monday that
shutdown was expanded to
include all of Los Angeles
County. National cinema
chains such as AMC and Re-
gal also closed all their ven-
ues.
For independent thea-
ters in Los Angeles, the shut-
down comes at an already
perilous time, as they fight
for audiences against the
larger chains and studio
blockbusters, as well as the
increasing dominance of
streaming platforms as part
of audiences’ entertainment
options.
“Frankly, we’ve already
been in a fight to stay above
water with streaming,” said
Christian Meoli, owner and
operator of Arena Cine-
lounge in Hollywood.
Initially, Meoli thought
he would be able to stay
open as the city encouraged
social distancing and at first
looked to merely limit the
size of audiences.
“We’ve recently been see-
ing an upswing in our at-
tendance and so over the
weekend I thought that we
were going to be in the clear
because Garcetti had kept it
to 50 seats. And I’m a 49-seat
art house,” said Meoli. “But
the news, it’s just decimat-
ing.”
Greg Laemmle, presi-
dent of Laemmle Theatres,
said that the venues in his
chain, all of which are in the
county of Los Angeles, had

Indie


movie


houses


in dark


place


The already struggling


theaters have been hit


hard by closure over


coronavirus concerns.


Gift cards can help.


By Mark Olsen

[SeeIndies, E4]

Celeste Ng is walking inside her
own imagination. At least, it feels
that way.
The author of “Little Fires Ev-
erywhere,” the bestselling 2017 nov-
el that explores the intricate rela-
tionship between mothers and chil-
dren, is wandering a cavernous
soundstage in West Hollywood for a
glimpse of her book’s transforma-
tion into a Hulu limited series star-
ring and executive produced by
Reese Witherspoon and Kerry
Washington.
“I think of myself as being like
this little intruder,” she whispers
during a break from shooting in
mid-July while walking back in time
through the series’ re-created ’90s
suburbia. “I don’t want to mess
things up, but I also want to dissect
everything.”


CELESTE NG,author of “Little Fires Everywhere,” visits the set of Hulu’s adaptation of her book in West Hollywood last July.


Christina HouseLos Angeles Times

Stoking ‘Fires’ into


mothering inferno


KERRY WASHINGTON,left, and Reese Witherspoon execu-
tive-produce and star in the eight-episode series “Little Fires
Everywhere,” about relationships between mothers and children.

Hulu

[See‘Fires,’E5]

Author admires


creative spark of


novel’s adapters


By Yvonne Villarreal


Los Angeles State Historic
Park, where the opera is
staged. On this evening, his
deep melancholic notes
sound especially mournful.
It is Sunday, in the hour
before sunset, and as the
cast pours its heart into
what will be its final, impro-
vised performance of “Sweet
Land,” Mayor Eric Garcetti
is preparing to announce the
closure of bars, movie thea-
ters and gyms and placing
limitations on restaurants
to prevent the spread of the
novel coronavirus responsi-
ble for COVID-19.
“This is the last day we
could do something like
this,” says co-conductor
Jenny Wong, who also plays
Totaa’ar, as she steps into
the set with the other per-
formers. “Just everyone stay
6 feet apart.”
With the opera’s remain-
ing shows canceled —
“Sweet Land” had been
scheduled to close on March
22 — the video will be an at-

Like every show before it,
this one began with a thrum
of discordant strings, the
singers, in costume, stand-
ing at attention, as they
await their musical queues.
Unlike every other show
before it, the seats are empty
of spectators. For its final
show, the Industry’s criti-
cally acclaimed new opera,
“Sweet Land,” is being
staged only for a trio of video
cameras.
As the action unfolds,
Derrell Acon, a bass-bari-
tone singer dressed in red-
and-white regalia in the role
of Grandfather, presents a
bowl of fruit to the open sky
in the open-air theater in


Last chance to get their opera on camera


Behind the scenes


with Yuval Sharon’s


‘Sweet Land’ amid


coronavirus whiplash.


By Carolina
A. Miranda


DERELL ACONin a taping of the Industry’s “Sweet Land” on Sunday, after live performances were canceled.

Carolina A. MirandaLos Angeles Times
[See‘Sweet Land,’E4]

Museums keep
up pay, for now
Many say they will
continue to pay hourly
and part-time staff,
but the institutions’
futures are unclear. E3

Comics...................E6-7
What’s on TV..........E8

Engaging melodrama and
stumbling social commentary meet
in “Little Fires Everywhere,” Hulu’s
eight-part adaptation of Celeste
Ng’s bestselling 2017 novel of the
same name, which opens with a
well-to-do woman watching in dis-
belief as her suburban McMansion
burns down.
Keeping up appearances while
getting to the bottom of things is a
dangerous combination in this not
too heavy, not too light miniseries
about what happens when a
planned community is upended by
unplanned events. Casual quaran-
tine viewing wasn’t likely the goal of
“Little Fires Everywhere,” but it
hits that middling mark and arrives
[SeeReview,E5]

Not very searing,


but the drama


hits the mark


LORRAINE ALI
TELEVISION CRITIC

TELEVISION REVIEW
Free download pdf