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NYC recording artist, Valerie Ghent releases electrifying re-make of “Feelin’ Alright”, 50 years after the song’s original release by the British rock band, Traffic. See Valerie perform at Ashford & Simpson’s Sugar Bar on Oct 2, and Oct 9, 2018

An electrifying remake of the soul-blues classic written by Dave Mason and made famous by Joe Cocker, Valerie delivers a strikingly powerful performance, heralding a band of world-class musicians recorded in New York City and France. In her full, live production complete with rock solid rhythm section, sizzling horns, a blazing piano solo and gospel-soul backing vocals, Ghent brings her multi-faceted talents (vocals, piano, organ, production, engineering & arranging) shaped by 20+ years working with music luminaries Ashford & Simpson, Nina Simone, Maya Angelou, Debbie Harry & Billy Preston to the forefront.

“We’re thrilled to release our version of Feelin Alright in 2018,” Valerie says, “Feelin’ Alright is a timeless song, with a universal feeling everyone can relate to. Even though it was first released fifty years ago, to me the lyrics take on even more relevance today. Plus it’s such a fun song to play live! We had a blast putting our own NYC spin on it, while honoring the power of Joe Cocker’s version. We’ve been closing every show with Feelin Alright and audiences on both sides of the Atlantic love it. We salute you Dave Mason, and Joe Cocker, thank you both for bringing Feelin’ Alright into the world and giving us such a great song to sing.”

Feelin’ Alright features stellar performances from Valerie on piano and vocals, and top musicians you have heard on countless R+B hits including Luther Vandross/Ashford & Simpson bassist Tinkr Barfield, Average White Band drummer Rocky Bryant, Blues Hall of Fame pianist Dave Keyes, world-renowned percussionist Bashiri Johnson, Roberta Flack backing vocalists Dennis Collins, Keith Fluitt and Toto’s John James. Add to the mix a blazing horn section from Paris, Blues’Up organist Pierre Sibille, renowned French guitarist Jérôme Buigues, and Feelin’ Alright is ready to light up the world again in 2018! Available April 27 on iTunes, amazon and all streaming platforms.

Listen to “Feelin’ Alright” on Jazz Radio France!: http://www.jazzradio.fr/news/musique/35095/valerie-ghent-un-nouveau-single

Listen to “Feelin’ Alright” on on SoundCloud!:

Valerie Ghent
at Nick Ashford’s “Nuttin but the Blues”
Tuesdays
Oct 2 and Oct 9 at 8PM

Ashford & Simpson’s Sugar Bar
254 W. 72nd Street
NYC 10023
Reservations: 212.579.0222

More info at: http://valghent.com/valerie-ghent-at-nick-ashfords-nuttin-but-the-blues-2/

Powerhouse recording artist VALERIE GHENT is a New York singer, songwriter, keyboard phenomenon who regularly wows audiences with her emotive, evocative voice, piano chops to match, and “soul-stirring, uplifting songs full of vitality and joy.” An outstanding live performer, Valerie weaves together blues, soul, R+B, jazz and pop. With her stunning 3 1/2 octave range, listeners are treated to soulful, romantic, highly melodic music rendered with passion, undeniable skill and a mighty heart.

It’s no surprise Valerie has toured with music legends Ashford & Simpson and Debbie Harry, and performed/recorded with artists as diverse as Dr. Maya Angelou, Billy Preston, Nina Simone, Roberta Flack and Defunkt. In addition to her newest single, Feelin’ Alright (2018), Valerie has produced five albums, including Day to Day Dream, which launched her #1 hit song on iHeart Radio, Love Enough for a Lifetime. Her album Velours, recorded in NYC and France, was named Soul Tracks Top 50 Albums of 2016, plus launched the hit song and video, New York City Streets, hailed by critics as a “New Anthem for NYC”. Valerie tours and records in France several times each year. Her growing popularity in Europe led to the release of The French Sessions (2017), her first album on a French label.

Music, video & more at valerieghent.com

“Ghent sings from the guts. Her contralto rises with the smooth momentum of something out of NASA.”- Woman About Town

“Ghent, herself, is a vocal phenomenon. She has the professionalism and rippling, effervescent energy of a top pop/rock star.” – NY Cabaret Today

WESTBETH TOWN HALL
CONGRESSMAN JERRY NADLER

WHEN: Monday Sept 24, 2018 at 7:30PM
WHERE: Westbeth Community Room 155 Bank St between West and Washington Sts.
HOSTED: Westbeth Artists Residents Council

About Jerry Nadler
Congressman Jerrold “Jerry” Nadler represents New York’s 10th Congressional District, one of the most dynamic and diverse districts in the country. The district includes Manhattan’s Upper West Side, Morningside Heights, Hell’s Kitchen, Chelsea, Greenwich Village, SoHo, Wall Street, and Battery Park City, as well as the Brooklyn neighborhoods of Borough Park, Kensington, and parts of Bay Ridge, Bensonhurst, Dyker Heights, Red Hook, Sunset Park and Midwood.

Rep. Nadler began his career in public service in 1976 in the New York State Assembly. Representing the Upper West Side, he served as a Democratic Assemblyman for 16 years and played a significant role in shaping New York State law concerning child support enforcement and domestic abuse, as well as making major contributions to housing, transportation and consumer protection policy in the state. In 1992, Rep. Nadler was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in a special election and has served in Congress ever since. He was re-elected to his thirteenth full term in 2016, receiving a resounding 78% of the vote.

The Ranking Member of the House Judiciary Committee, Congressman Nadler served as Chairman or Ranking Member of its Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties for 13 years and also served as the Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the Internet.

Rep. Nadler is a graduate of Crown Heights Yeshiva, Stuyvesant High School, Columbia University and Fordham Law School. He lives on the Upper West Side of Manhattan with his wife, Joyce Miller. They have one son, Michael.

Fighting for Civil Rights, LGBT Rights, Women’s Rights

“Jerry Nadler is a staunch defender of civil rights and civil liberties in America, and a passionate advocate for these issues in Congress.”

— Representative John Lewis (D-GA), Civil Rights leader

For over 30 years, in both the House and in the New York State Assembly, Congressman Nadler has proudly been on the front lines in the fight for civil rights, and has been a relentless defender of our country’s fundamental promise of equality for all. Central among his concerns has been the ongoing civil rights struggle for people of color. Rep. Nadler has been a leader in the fight to protect voting rights and reduce voter disenfranchisement. He served as a key House leader behind the reauthorization of the Voting Rights Act, continuing to serve on the small House working group directing its advancement, and held oversight hearings on Department of Justice efforts to combat voter suppression. He also has worked vigorously to call attention and seek remedies to past and present racial injustices. Rep. Nadler was an original co-sponsor of the Pigford Claims Remedy Act of 2007 (H.R. 3073), and held a landmark Judiciary subcommittee hearing on the Pigford case, which involved thousands of African-American farmers who suffered discrimination at the hands of the Department of Agriculture for most of the 20th century. He also championed the Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act, which he ushered through to a decisive House victory.

Congressman Nadler has also taken an active role in working against discriminatory racial profiling by law enforcement, co-sponsoring the End Racial Profiling Act among other actions, and has devoted considerable time as a senior Member of the House Judiciary Committee to monitoring and reinforcing voting rights for African-Americans and other groups that have been systematically disenfranchised. He was one of the first to call for a Justice Department investigation in 2000 of Mayor Giuliani and then-NYPD Commissioner Howard Safir after three separate fatal shootings involving three unarmed New Yorkers—Patrick Dorismond, Amadou Diallo, and Gideon Busch—and was an outspoken advocate for justice in the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner in 2014. In his district, Rep. Nadler successfully worked to create the African Burial Ground National Historic Site in Lower Manhattan, recognizing the landmark 17th and 18th century African burial ground discovered there.

“Congressman Jerrold Nadler is one of the nation’s fiercest protectors of LGBT rights and a powerful ally for trans equality.”

— The Advocate magazine

A Vice-Chair and founding member of the House Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Equality Caucus, and the first from New York’s congressional delegation to openly support marriage equality, Rep. Nadler has been an original co-sponsor of every major piece of LGBT civil rights legislation for the last twenty-plus years. He personally authored the Respect for Marriage Act (RMA), the Uniting American Families Act (UAFA), the Father Mychal Judge Act, and the Equal Access to Social Security Act, marking his place as a central architect of LGBT legislative strategy in Congress. He led the fight in the House against the Defense of Marriage Act and the Federal Marriage Amendment and continues to oppose anti-gay efforts as they emerge in Congress. Additionally, Rep. Nadler authored and led the Congressional amicus briefs in the two most significant marriage equality-related cases to go to the Supreme Court—both Windsor and Obergefell—and procured the first-ever non-AIDS related House appropriation for a LGBT organization — New York’s LGBT Center. He was also one of only six members of the House Democratic Caucus to oppose the Employment Non-Discrimination Act when it failed to protect members of the transgender community. Former Representative Barney Frank has praised Rep. Nadler’s record, saying: “Jerry Nadler has been a vigorous, unyielding, active supporter of fairness for gay men and lesbians on every relevant issue since he came to Congress.”

“Jerry Nadler is at the forefront of the movement to protect reproductive freedom, fighting every day against anti-choice leaders in Congress.”

— Kate Michaelman, former president of NARAL Pro-Choice America

Congressman Nadler has played a significant role in the fight for women’s rights, serving as a central figure in the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act and the author of the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act. In recognition of his leadership in the area of equal pay, Rep. Nadler was invited to join President Obama at the White House for the signing of the Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act.

Representative Nadler is nationally recognized as a staunch defender of women’s health, including a woman’s constitutional right to access an abortion. As a senior Member of the House Judiciary Committee and a leader in the House Pro-Choice Caucus, he has often taken a central role in standing up to conservative attacks against every American’s right to make personal decisions about reproductive health, including devising the strategy to defeat countless anti-choice bills and carrying the movement’s signature piece of legislation — the Freedom of Choice Act. Because of his strong voice defending such rights, in 2015 Rep. Nadler was named by Leader Nancy Pelosi as one of six Democratic Members (and the only male Member) chosen to serve on the Republicans’ Select Committee shamefully set up to attack women’s health organizations like Planned Parenthood, which provides lifesaving reproductive health services to millions of women and families across the country.

Rep. Nadler has also been a life-long advocate for the differently-abled, shepherding the Americans with Disabilities Act Restoration Act of 2007 through the House.

Even early in his career in the State Assembly, Rep. Nadler was a major civil rights voice. He passed the first bills protecting People with AIDS (PWAs) from discrimination and served as a key women’s rights advocate, garnering the New York State Chapter of the National Organization for Women’s “Legislator of the Year” Award, the first and one of only two men to ever receive this honor.

Defending Civil Liberties

“Jerry Nadler is a gifted constitutional scholar and the conscience of the House.”

— House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi

As a nationally recognized leader on civil liberties, Congressman Nadler has fought for protections against unwarranted government interference in our personal affairs and has been called “one of the House’s most stalwart defenders of the Constitution” by the American Civil Liberties Union. His legislation to remove the most pernicious elements of the USA PATRIOT Act and stop the NSA’s dragnet surveillance of Americans has won him praise from organizations and individuals spanning the political and ideological spectrum. In 2015, he was one of four Members of the U.S. House of Representatives to author the bipartisan USA Freedom Act—ending the illegal collection of bulk data by the NSA—the passage of which represented the first significant reform of government surveillance carried out by the federal government since 1978.

Another hallmark of Rep. Nadler’s career is his commitment to due process rights for the accused, his work to prevent prosecutorial over-zealousness and misconduct, and his staunch advocacy against the use of illegal torture methods.

Congressman Nadler serves as a champion in the House for free speech and free expression. He has often taken difficult votes on controversial issues in order to remain true to his principles and the fundamental belief in the rights guaranteed under the First Amendment. He is one of Congress’s most vocal defenders of the separation of church and state and of Americans’ right to exercise their religion freely, while also denouncing efforts by some to use religion as an excuse to discriminate. Rep. Nadler was one of the lead Democratic sponsors of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) and the author of the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA), which ensure that individuals are able to assert their religious beliefs without jeopardizing the freedom and rights of others. He also has opposed state-based laws with similar titles that were specifically designed to discriminate against LGBT Americans.

Congressman Jerrold Nadler website

MERCE CUNNINGHAM
Cultural Medallion Event

When: Thursday Sept 20, 2018 at 12pm
Where: 55 Bethune Street Entrance of Westbeth Artists Housing

On September 20, at 12 pm, Westbeth and the Merce Cunningham Trust will host a celebration of the life and work of Merce Cunningham.

The event, which will take place at the 55 Bethune St. entrance, will include the installation of a commemorative cultural medallion by the Historic Landmarks Preservation Center led by Barbaralee Diamonstein-Spielvogel, with featured speakers including:

· Alastair Macaulay, Chief Dance Critic, The New York Times

· Mikhail Baryshnikov, Artistic Director, Baryshnikov Arts Center

· Joan Davidson, President Emeritus, J.M. Kaplan Fund

Reception: The event will be followed by a reception in the Westbeth Gallery.

Open Master Class: An open masterclass in the Cunningham style will be held from 3:30 to 5:30 pm in the Martha Graham Studio. All Westbeth residents are welcome to attend the day’s events.

The occasion is part of a year-long celebration of Merce Cunningham’s life, with a special performance on April 16, 2019, which would have been his 100th birthday. In memoriam, the Merce Cunningham Trust will join together with the Center for the Art of Performance at UCLA, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Barbican London, and the Opéra Comique in Paris, to present the largest Cunningham event ever staged. For more information please visit www.mercecunningham.org/centennial.

Westbeth Diamond Jubilee
Celebrating Productivity and Creativity Beyond the Age of 75.

Dates:
Sept 8 – Sept 29,2018
Opening Reception:
Sept 8, 5:30PM – 8PM
with Young Jazz Ensemble

Coinciding with the 50th Anniversary of Westbeth Artist Housing, a very special exhibit of the work of seven artists who have been actively creating beyond the age of 75 will open on Saturday, September 8th in the Westbeth Gallery. Entitled A Diamond Jubilee, this exhibition will feature a wide variety of art forms: abstract, figurative and impressionistic paintings, as well as masks, puppetry, embroidery, and photographs.

By the year 2050, experts predict that the segment of the population over the age of 60 will more than double, jumping from 900 million to 2.1 billion. Further complicating the situation, the United States Social Security Administration is running a deficit year in, year out. The only way they’ve been able to stay afloat is by eating into a reserve accumulated from surpluses of past years. However, that well is expected to dry up by 2034, and unless the age of retirement is increased, the SSA will only be able to pay out 79% of the need from the amount accumulated through taxes.

Jenny Tango may provide the solution. At 92 years old, she is renowned for her vitality, quick wit and lust for life, which she attributes, in part, to marrying a man 28 years her junior. Active since the 1970’s in the Feminist Movement, Tango is a figurative painter who often uses her own naked body in her portraits. By her own admission, she lives in a different world than most people and wouldn’t have it any other way: “If you conform to the middle class idea of [society], boy can you be boring. I mean look at Trump! He is the perfect example of someone who has more than everything, and as far as I’m concerned, he has nothing.”

Ralph Lee, a mask maker whose creations have appeared in everything from the Metropolitan Opera to Broadway to Saturday Night Live, is perhaps best known for founding the Village Halloween Parade, which today draws 60 thousand costumed participants and 2 million onlookers each year. He, too, believes that conformity is over-rated, especially since one of the great things about being human is the freedom of choose which mask to wear. Just as the widely popular television show RuPaul’s Drag Race promotes the idea that “We are all born naked and the rest is drag”, Ralph Lee explains, “In a lot of cultures, you become the deity when you’re wearing the mask. It allows you to behave in a lot of different ways, to use your body in a different way.”

Judy Lawne came up with the idea for A Diamond Jubilee shortly after she was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. As a photographer, she considered the camera an extension of her body, and now must use a tripod to continue her work. She persists because she’s devoted to capturing, “a moment in time. There may be 60 to 100 pictures taken of any one [subject], but there’s only one that is really a moment in time. That’s what photography is: a moment in time that no other medium can capture. “

You are invited to attend the opening reception of A Diamond Jubilee on Saturday, September 8th from 5:30pm to 8pm. The show will run until September 29th in the Westbeth Gallery (55 Bethune Street, New York, NY 10014).

Featuring the work of:
Penny Jones, puppets and marionettes
Edith Isaac Rose, figurative paintings and embroidery
Robert Ludwig, abstract paintings
Jenny Tango, figurative painting
Judy Lawne, photography
Ralph Lee, masks and puppets
Bea Kreloff,figurative paintings and drawings.

More info:
Stanley Wlodyka
(646) 474-4275
wlodyka.stanley@gmail.com

Grove Pharmacy and Westbeth Artists Residents Council
Let’s Talk Nasal and Oral Inhalers

This is the one year anniversary of these healthful and informative talks!
This Sunday find out the answers to: Do I have to rinse my mouth after oral inhaler?; Can I get an asthma inhaler over the counter?; and more!

Featuring Ilana Aminov BSPharm and
Rebecca Aminov, Pharmacy Intern.

Refreshments and bag a goodies.

Entertainment by Eve Zanni and Isaac Raz.

FREE EVENT

Westbeth Playwrights Feminist
Collective ‘s work has been selected for its permanent collection by the New York Historical Society

Co-founding playwrights l-r Sally Ordway, Susan Yankowitz, Christina Maile, Gwen Gunn, Patricia Horan, Dolores Walker (center)

Co-founding playwrights l-r Sally Ordway, Susan Yankowitz, Christina Maile, Gwen Gunn, Patricia Horan, Dolores Walker (center)

The Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective was a group of professional women playwrights in New York active from 1971 to 1975.

Co-founder-playwrights were Dolores Deane Walker, Gwen Gunn, Christina (Chryse) Maile, Helen Duberstein, Patricia Horan, Sally Ordway and Susan Yankowitz. Megan Terry and Dacia Maraini were among the guest playwrights.

The Advisory Board included Gloria Steinem, Muriel Rukeyser, Eleanor Perry, Florynce Kennedy, along with Margaret Croyden, Alice Denham, Elizabeth Fisher, Ellen Frankfort, Carol Greitzer, Tania, Alix Kates Shulman, and Anita Steckel.

Franklins Bride,  by Chryse Maile, photo Pat Horan, Shown Helen Pugatch, Michael Darrow, Joel l Simon,Tom Leo, Alix Elias, 1972  Wicked Women Revue

Franklins Bride, by Christina (Chryse) Maile, photo: Pat Horan, Shown: Helen Pugatch, Michael Darrow, Joel Simon,Tom Leo, Alix Elias. 1972 Production: Wicked Women Revue

The plays of the Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective featured such women’s issues as religious patriarchy, work-place discrimination, dominance/submission relationships, historical figures, masquerade, and sexual harassment

Their plays transcended the limiting context of agit-prop theatre by discarding the revenge themes current in much feminist writing at the time, and instead strove to accurately reflect the complexity of women’s lives and celebrate their accomplishments.

Cast of UP: with Danny DiVito, Rhea Perlman, Cathy Heriza , Ilan Mamber, and others

Cast of UP: with Danny DiVito, Rhea Perlman, Cathy Heriza , Ilan Mamber, and others

While the Collective used both male and female actors – unusual for feminist stage productions in the 1970s – the company offered serious employment opportunities for women stage managers, directors, producers, and lighting designers.

New York Historical Society ABSTRACT: Introduction to the Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective collection:

Records of the short-lived but groundbreaking Westbeth Playwrights’ Feminist Collective, one of the earliest feminist theater groups in the United States. Incorporated 1972 and dissolved 1976, the WPFC was headquartered at the historic Westbeth Artists’ Housing on West Street, Manhattan, and produced plays by feminist authors focused on issues central to the women’s movement like sexual harassment and workplace inequality. The collection includes scripts, publicity material, articles and reviews, some correspondence, ephemera, and photographs of select production scenes and WP members.

More information: Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective on Wikipedia