Lifestyle
Joey Arias has plenty of art left to give: ‘I want to live to be at least 200 years’
Joey Arias hitting the high notes at Barrel House Cafe and Bar in Washington, D.C.
Ryan Benk/NPR News
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Ryan Benk/NPR News
At 76, cabaret artist Joey Arias’ resume reads like the movie Big Fish. The tales are almost too tall to believe, but he’s really done them all.
He’s sold clothes to Spanish royalty, sung backup for David Bowie, performed at the 2015 centennial celebration for jazz legend Billie Holiday, and even played ringmaster for Cirque Du Soleil’s first ever adult show.
But perhaps this creature of New York is best experienced in a small, swanky, and dimly lit club – the kind of place where you can cozy up to strangers in the safety of relative darkness, while leaving your problems at the door.
A place like Northwest Washington, D.C.’s, Barrel House Cafe and Bar, where on a recent night, the petite Joey Arias slinked up to the stage on black leather high heels, sporting jet black bangs, deep red lipstick and a corset pulled so tight it’s a wonder he can even breathe.
“I’m so happy. So honored to be here in D.C. Are you comfortable? Are you feeling sexy?” Arias asks with his trademark smirk.
It’s best to go into your first Joey Arias show sans expectations. It’s musical, sure, but it’s not a concert. He’s surely sultry and serious, but he’s also a comedian. And be mindful of your aura, as Arias is likely to read your mood with a single look.
“Improv is kind of my strongest point with my career. So I start collecting ideas and think, you know, ‘what should I talk about?’” Arias says. “And then when the show starts, the audience kind of tells me what they want.”
During a show, Arias will often consult a giant songbook he calls his bible. With long, black press-on nails, he flips through it like a list of spells. It includes years of handwritten notes, some classic rock covers, original music, and jazz standards he can sing so eerily perfect that they’ll have you thinking Billie Holiday was reincarnated as a septuagenarian gay man.
Arias prefers to approach the daylight incognito, in an all-black tracksuit, sipping a six-espresso-shot venti coffee and wearing large black sunglasses reminiscent of Italian actor Marcello Mastroianni’s character in Federico Fellini’s 8 1/2.
When asked where his penchant for entertaining started, Arias replies with a chuckle.
“I think it first started when I landed on this planet. I tell people, I wasn’t born here. I was brought here,” Arias says.
Arias landed in Fayetteville, N.C., and grew up in California.
“I think I was creating and reinventing myself constantly, even as a child. It kind of worried my parents because … even at the age of like nine years old, I was dying my hair and tweezing my eyebrows and doing weird things to myself,” he says.
Arias calls himself a shapeshifter.
“People always think: ‘oh I know Joey.’ No, you don’t know Joey,” Arias explains.
If there’s anyone who DOES know Joey Arias, it’s Kim Hastreiter, founder of Paper Magazine. She met Arias while a student at CalArts in Southern California.
“We grew up together… he was like my bestie,” Hastreiter says. In her recent memoir, Stuff: A New York Life of Cultural Chaos, she devotes an entire chapter to Arias.
“Joey is everything to me – my brother, my husband, my sister, my mother, and my soulmate,” Hastreiter writes in the book, “And I know, I am that for him.”
When she graduated from CalArts in the mid-1970s, Hastreiter says Arias offered to help move her to New York City. She wasn’t allowed to sublease her apartment, so she had to switch places with the new tenant quickly.
“[Joey] helped me move out in the middle of the night through the window, literally. We packed my dragon wagon. It was crazy,” Hastreiter tells NPR.
The dragon wagon was Hastreiter’s old pickup truck emblazoned with a long, colorful dragon along the side.
“We made this whole itinerary, and we went to every thrift shop between L.A. and New York,” she says.
Hastreiter and Arias arrived in New York in 1976. They shared an apartment, both got jobs, and went dancing every night. She says her soulmate Joey Arias just never looked back.
He started working as a sales associate at the Italian fashion brand Fiorucci’s flagship store in the United States. And Arias quickly became a draw, acting as a living mannequin who once spoofed patron Andy Warhol and played fashion consultant for the then-Queen of Spain.
“It was sexy with the way it was lit. It was beautiful and all the Italians were always there to market,” Arias says. “And it was the beginning of my redefining and reinventing who I was [again].”
Arias eventually made friends with German avant-garde opera singer Klaus Nomi and he began performing with him, even joining Nomi on stage with David Bowie as the musical guests for Saturday Night Live.
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Arias often performs a song he wrote in tribute to Nomi, who died of AIDS in 1983 at age 39.
“Klaus had pneumonia… and I went to the hospital and I had to put a paper jumpsuit on. I went in there and he was looking at me and he said ‘I can’t see you.’ I took everything off and I hugged him, kissed him on the cheeks. The doctors were so mad [at me],” Arias says.
AIDS created a tragic duality for Arias’ contemporaries of this particular time and scene: a burgeoning underground movement of artists and performers populated by blindingly colorful lights that were being snuffed out as quickly as they came to life.
Arias recalls losing collaborators, friends and even lovers of his, like Chuck Smith.
“We were supposed to grow old together. But he’s always guided me spiritually. I know that,” Arias says.
Shortly after Nomi died, Arias remembers Smith rolling over in bed one night and whispering simply “I have it.” He died a short time later.
“At that point, that was the sentence. If you said you had it, you had less than a year to live,” He adds. Arias says he doesn’t really know how he made it through that period alive.
Joey Arias at Barrel House Cafe and Bar
Ryan Benk/NPR News
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Ryan Benk/NPR News
In the following years, he continued performing throughout New York City clubs before getting the role of a lifetime: Emcee for Cirque du Soleil’s first adult-themed show at the New York, New York Casino in Las Vegas.
Arias also wrote songs for the show. It was called Zumanity.
The show was raunchy, outrageous and sexy. The perfect vehicle for a performer like Arias. But it was also grueling.
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After years of doing ten shows a week, Arias says the show’s doctor gave him prescription pain killers. He became addicted and his then-husband asked him for a divorce.
“It seemed like things were falling apart,” Arias says ” I started to drink and before I knew it, I found myself drinking white wine 24 hours a day.”
One night, Kim Hastreiter visited her friend during his show at Joe’s Pub where she immediately knew something was wrong: Arias, always eager to perform, was getting other people to sing his songs.
“He was slurring, he was completely [intoxicated] on stage. He got other people to sing for him. It was like a mess,” Hastreiter says.
Hastreiter then invited her friend to a tea party – a small get-together with a whole bunch of their old friends.
It was an intervention. She helped raise funds to send Arias to rehab, and now Arias has been sober for almost eight years.
“Kim came through and she said I’m not gonna let my best friend, this incredible artist, die on my watch,” Arias reflected.
Joey Arias has resurrected and reinvented his career and his persona endless times over his more than seven decades on earth.
And he says he’s nowhere close to being finished.
“I want to live to be at least 200 years. … There’s so much I want to do. I feel like I’m just starting over again, even right now. I feel like I’m a messenger of the universe,” Arias says.
And — he has a message he wants to share with NPR listeners and readers:
“Remember how beautiful you are. Look in the mirror. And if you don’t feel inspired, seriously, go to the park, touch a tree, look at the sky,” because whatever’s happening in the world, Arias says, mother nature knows how to take care of herself.
“And come to my shows, because I will take care of you too,” Arias says.
Joe Arias’ next set of shows are at Washington, D.C.’s Barrel House Cafe and Bar on Oct. 17 and 18.
Lifestyle
‘American Classic’ is a hidden gem that gets even better as it goes
Kevin Kline plays actor Richard Bean, and Laura Linney is his sister-in-law Kristen, in American Classic.
David Giesbrecht/MGM+
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David Giesbrecht/MGM+
American Classic is a hidden gem, in more ways than one. It’s hidden because it’s on MGM+, a stand-alone streaming service that, let’s face it, most people don’t have. But MGM+ is available without subscription for a seven-day free trial, on its website or through Prime Video and Roku. And you should find and watch American Classic, because it’s an absolutely charming and wonderful TV jewel.
Charming, in the way it brings small towns and ordinary people to life, as in Northern Exposure. Wonderful, in the way it reflects the joys of local theater productions, as in Slings & Arrows, and the American Playhouse production of Kurt Vonnegut’s Who Am I This Time?
The creators of American Classic are Michael Hoffman and Bob Martin. Martin co-wrote and co-created Slings & Arrows, so that comparison comes easily. And back in the early 1980s, Who Am I This Time? was about people who transformed onstage from ordinary citizens into extraordinary performers. It’s a conceit that works only if you have brilliant actors to bring it to life convincingly. That American Playhouse production had two young actors — Christopher Walken and Susan Sarandon — so yes, it worked. And American Classic, with its mix of veteran and young actors, does, too.

American Classic begins with Kevin Kline, as Shakespearean actor Richard Bean, confronting a New York Times drama critic about his negative opening-night review of Richard’s King Lear. The next day, Richard’s agent, played by Tony Shalhoub, calls Richard in to tell him his tantrum was captured by cellphone and went viral, and that he has to lay low for a while.
Richard returns home to the small town of Millersburg, Pa., where his parents ran a local theater. Almost everyone we meet is a treasure. His father, who has bouts of dementia, is played by Len Cariou, who starred on Broadway in Sweeney Todd. Richard’s brother, Jon, is played by Jon Tenney of The Closer, and his wife, Kristen, is played by the great Laura Linney, from Ozark and John Adams.
Things get even more complicated because the old theater is now a dinner theater, filling its schedule with performances by touring regional companies. Its survival is at risk, so Richard decides to save the theater by mounting a new production of Thornton Wilder’s Our Town, casting the local small-town residents to play … local small-town residents.
Miranda, Richard’s college-bound niece, continues the family theatrical tradition — and Nell Verlaque, the young actress who plays her, has a breakout role here. She’s terrific — funny, touching, totally natural. And when she takes the stage as Emily in Our Town, she’s heart-wrenching. Playwright Wilder is served magnificently here — and so is William Shakespeare, whose works and words Kline tackles in more than one inspirational scene in this series.
I don’t want to reveal too much about the conflicts, and surprises, in American Classic, but please trust me: The more episodes you watch, the better it gets. The characters evolve, and go in unexpected directions and pairings. Kline’s Richard starts out thinking about only himself, but ends up just the opposite. And if, as Shakespeare wrote, the play’s the thing, the thing here is, the plays we see, and the soliloquies we hear, are spellbinding.
And there’s plenty of fun to be had outside the classics in American Classic. The table reads are the most delightful since the ones in Only Murders in the Building. The dinner-table arguments are the most explosive since the ones in The Bear. Some scenes are take-your-breath-away dramatic. Others are infectiously silly, as when Richard works with a cast member forced upon him by the angel of this new Our Town production.
Take the effort to find, and watch, American Classic. It’ll remind you why, when it’s this good, it’s easy to love the theater. And television.


Lifestyle
The L.A. coffee shop is for wearing Dries Van Noten head to toe
The ritual of meeting up and hanging out at a coffee shop in L.A. is a showcase of style filled with a subtle site-specific tension. Don’t you see it? Comfort battles formality fighting to break free. Hiding out chafes against being perceived. In the end, we make ourselves at home at all costs — and pull a look while doing it.
It’s the morning after a night out. Two friends meet up at Chainsaw in Melrose Hill, the cafe with the flan lattes, crispy arepas and sorbet-colored wall everybody and their mom has been talking about.
Miraculously, the line of people that usually snakes down Melrose yearning for a slice of chef Karla Subero Pittol’s passion lime fruit icebox pie is nonexistent today. Thank God, because the party was sick last night — the DJ mixed Nelly Furtado’s “Promiscuous” into Peaches’ “F— the Pain Away” and the walls were sweating — so making it to the cafe’s front door alone is like wading through viscous, knee-high water. Senses dull and blunt in that special way where it feels like your brain is wearing a weighted vest. The sun, an oppressor. Caffeine needed via IV drip.
The mood: “Don’t look at me,” as they look around furtively, still waking up. “But wait, do. I’m wearing the new Dries Van Noten from head to toe.”
Daniel, left, wears Dries Van Noten mac, henley, pants, oxford shoes, necklace and socks. Sirena wears Dries Van Noten blouse, micro shorts, sneakers, shell charm necklace, cuff and bag and Los Angeles Apparel socks.
If a fit is fire and no one is around to see it, does it make a sound? A certain kind of L.A. coffee shop is (blessedly) one of the few everyday runways we have, followed up by the Los Feliz post office and the Alvarado Car Wash in Echo Park. We come to a coffee shop like Chainsaw for strawberry matchas the color of emeralds and rubies and crackling papas fritas that come with a tamarind barbecue sauce so good it may as well be categorized as a Schedule 1. But we stay for something else.
There is a game we play at the L.A. coffee shop. We’re all in on it — the deniers especially. It can best be summed up by that mood: “Don’t look at me. But wait, do.” Do. Do. Do. Do. We go to a coffee shop to see each other, to be seen. And we pretend we’re not doing it. How cute. Yes, I’m peering at you from behind my hoodie and my sunglasses but the hoodie is a niche L.A. brand and the glasses are vintage designer. I wore them just for you. One time I was sitting at what is to me amazing and to some an insufferable coffee shop in the Arts District where a regular was wearing a headpiece made entirely of plastic sunglasses that covered every inch of his face — at least a foot long in all directions — jangling with every movement he made. Respect, I thought.
Dries Van Noten’s spring/summer 2026 collection feels so right in a place like this. The women’s show, titled “Wavelength,” is about “balancing hard and soft, stiff and fluid, casual and refined, simple and complex,” writes designer Julian Klausner in the show notes. While for the men’s show, titled “A Perfect Day,” Klausner contextualizes: “A man in love, on a stroll at the beach at dawn, after a party. Shirt unbuttoned, sleeves rolled up, the silhouette takes on a new life. I asked myself: What is formal? What is casual? How do these feel?” What is formal or casual? How do you balance hard and soft? The L.A. coffee shop is a container for this spectrum. A dynamic that works because of the tension. A master class in this beautiful dance. There is no more fitting place to wear the SS26 Dries beige tuxedo jacket with heather gray capri sweats and pink satin boxing boots, no better audience for the floor-length striped sheer gown worn with satin sneakers — because even though no one will bat an eye, you trust that your contribution has been clocked and appreciated.
Daniel wears Dries Van Noten coat, shorts, sneakers and socks. Sirena wears Dries Van Noten jacket, micro shorts and sneakers.
Back at Chainsaw the friends drink their iced lattes, they eat their beautiful chocolate milk tres leches in a coupe. They’re revived — buzzing, even; at the glorious point in the caffeinated beverage where everything is beautiful, nothing hurts and at least one of them feels like a creative genius. The longer they stay, the more their style reveals itself. Before they were flexing in a secret way. Now they’re just flexing. Looking back at you looking at them, the contract understood. Doing it for the show. Wait, when did they change? How long have they been here? It doesn’t matter. They have all day. Time ceases to exist in a place like this.
Daniel wears Dries Van Noten tuxedo coat, pants, scarf, sneakers and necklace and Hanes tank top. Sirena wears Dries Van Noten jacket, micro shorts, sneakers and socks.
Creative direction Julissa James
Photography and video direction Alejandra Washington
Styling Keyla Marquez
Hair and makeup Jaime Diaz
Cinematographer Joshua D. Pankiw
1st AC Ruben Plascencia
Gaffer Luis Angel Herrera
Production Mere Studios
Styling assistant Ronben
Production assistant Benjamin Turner
Models Sirena Warren, Daniel Aguilera
Location Chainsaw
Special thanks Kevin Silva and Miguel Maldonado from Next Management
Lifestyle
Nature needs a little help in the inventive Pixar movie ‘Hoppers’ : Pop Culture Happy Hour
Piper Curda as Mabel in Hoppers.
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Disney
In Disney and Pixar’s delightful new film Hoppers, a young woman (Piper Curda) learns a beloved glade is under threat from the town’s slimy mayor (Jon Hamm). But luckily, she discovers that her college professor has developed technology that can let her live as one of the critters she loves – by allowing her mind to “hop” into an animatronic beaver. And it just might just allow her to help save the glade from serious risk of destruction.
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