New York
Daniel Radcliffe to Star in Off Broadway ‘Merrily’ Revival
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The actor Daniel Radcliffe will star in an Off Broadway revival of “Merrily We Roll Alongside,” a Stephen Sondheim musical that famously flopped on Broadway however within the a long time since has grow to be an oft-produced and beloved present.
The brand new manufacturing, directed by Maria Friedman, is bound to be a troublesome ticket to get, given Radcliffe’s celeb and the dimensions of the venue: It’s to be staged late this 12 months by the nonprofit New York Theater Workshop at its 199-seat primary stage within the East Village.
Sondheim, in an interview days earlier than his dying final November, stated he was trying ahead to the manufacturing. Friedman, a British musical theater star with an extended historical past of performing in Sondheim musicals, first directed “Merrily” on the Menier Chocolate Manufacturing facility in London in 2012; that manufacturing, hailed by The Guardian with a five-star assessment, transferred to London’s West Finish in 2013, and Friedman then directed a run on the Huntington Theater in Boston in 2017.
“Merrily” is an uncommon present, written in reverse chronological order, a couple of trio of artists whose shut friendship, and shared goals, unravel over time. The musical, that includes songs by Sondheim and a ebook by George Furth, ran on Broadway in 1981; it closed 12 days after opening. The abbreviated Broadway run was the topic of a well-received 2016 documentary movie, “Finest Worst Factor That Ever Might Have Occurred”; Richard Linklater is now spending 20 years making a movie adaptation of the musical starring Ben Platt and Beanie Feldstein.
Ben Brantley, then the co-chief theater critic for The New York Occasions, known as “Merrily” “the much-loved downside baby of Sondheim’s musicals.” He noticed Friedman’s manufacturing in London, the place he known as it “heart-clutching,” and in Boston, the place he deemed it “transcendent.” The present, with an admired rating and a critiqued ebook that builds towards a rooftop second the place the three primary characters meet, has been repeatedly rethought; Jesse Inexperienced, the present Occasions chief theater critic, as soon as described himself as “somebody who’d gladly patronize a devoted ‘Merrily’ repertory theater, maybe on that rooftop, operating nothing however reworked variations in perpetuity.”
New York Theater Workshop, greatest often called the birthplace of “Lease,” stated Monday that its manufacturing of “Merrily” would run in “late 2022”; it didn’t announce dates. Radcliffe will play Charley Kringas, a lyricist and playwright; the theater didn’t announce different forged members.
Radcliffe, who vaulted to fame by portraying Harry Potter on movie, has starred in a number of Broadway and Off Broadway performs; he additionally starred in a 2011 Broadway revival of the musical “The right way to Achieve Enterprise With out Actually Making an attempt.”
The “Merrily” manufacturing is the ultimate present chosen by James C. Nicola, who has been the creative director of New York Theater Workshop since 1988, and who’s planning to step down in June. Nicola noticed the unique manufacturing on Broadway, and within the a long time since, he stated, the present “eerily, uncannily, has managed to entwine itself into my very own life.”
“I had by no means earlier than heard or learn any murals that appeared to know me — the truth is, all of us Boomers in that exact second of our lives,” he stated by e-mail. “‘Merrily We Roll Alongside’ is as soon as once more magically discovering its method into my life.”
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New York
We Counted 22,252 Cars to See How Much Congestion Pricing Might Have Made This Morning
![We Counted 22,252 Cars to See How Much Congestion Pricing Might Have Made This Morning](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2024/07/01/multimedia/2024-06-25-up-congestion-pricing-index/2024-06-25-up-congestion-pricing-index-facebookJumbo.jpg)
Today would have been the first Monday of New York City’s congestion pricing plan. Before it was halted by Gov. Kathy Hochul, the plan was designed to rein in some of the nation’s worst traffic while raising a billion dollars for the subway every year, one toll at a time.
A year’s worth of tolls is hard to picture. But what about a day’s worth? What about an hour’s?
To understand how the plan could have worked, we went to the edges of the tolling zone during the first rush hour that the fees would have kicked in.
Here’s what we saw:
Video by Noah Throop/The New York Times; animation by Ruru Kuo/The New York Times
You probably wouldn’t have seen every one of those cars if the program had been allowed to proceed. That’s because officials said the fees would have discouraged some drivers from crossing into the tolled zone, leading to an estimated 17 percent reduction in traffic. (It’s also Monday on a holiday week.)
The above video was just at one crossing point, on Lexington Avenue. We sent 27 people to count vehicles manually at four bridges, four tunnels and nine streets where cars entered the business district. In total, we counted 22,252 cars, trucks, motorcycles and buses between 8 a.m. and 9 a.m. on Monday.
We wanted to see how the dense flow of traffic into the central business district would have generated money in real time.
Though we can’t know that dollar amount precisely, we can hazard a guess. Congestion pricing was commonly referred to as a $15-per-car toll, but it wasn’t so simple. There were going to be smaller fees for taxi trips, credits for the tunnels, heftier charges for trucks and buses, and a number of exemptions.
To try to account for all that fee variance, we used estimates from the firm Replica, which models traffic data, on who enters the business district, as well as records from the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and city agencies. We also made a few assumptions where data wasn’t available. We then came up with a ballpark figure for how much the city might have generated in an hour at those toll points.
The total? About $200,000 in tolls for that hour.
Note: The Trinity Place exit from the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel, which would have been tolled, is closed at this hour.
It’s far from a perfect guess. Our vehicle total is definitely an undercount: We counted only the major entrances — bridges, tunnels and 60th Street — which means we missed all the cars that entered the zone by exiting the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive or the West Side Highway.
And our translation into a dollar number is rough. Among many other choices we had to make, we assumed all drivers had E-ZPass — saving them a big surcharge — and we couldn’t distinguish between transit buses and charter buses, so we gave all buses an exemption.
But it does give you a rough sense of scale: It’s a lot of cars, and a lot of money. Over the course of a typical day, hundreds of thousands of vehicles stream into the Manhattan central business district through various crossings.
Trips into tolling district, per Replica estimates Note: Data counts estimated entrances on a weekday in spring 2023. Source: Replica.
Queens-Midtown Tunnel
50,600
Lincoln Tunnel
49,200
Williamsburg Bridge
27,900
Manhattan Bridge
24,000
Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel
23,100
Queensboro Bridge
21,700
Brooklyn Bridge
17,100
Holland Tunnel
15,400
All other entrances
118,000
Total
347,000
The tolling infrastructure that was installed for the program cost roughly half a billion dollars.
The M.T.A. had planned to use the congestion pricing revenue estimates to secure $15 billion in financing for subway upgrades. Many of those improvement plans have now been suspended.
Methodology We stationed as many as five counters at some bridges and tunnels to ensure that we counted only cars that directly entered the tolling zone, not those that would have continued onto non-tolled routes.
Our count also excluded certain exempt vehicles like emergency vehicles.
We used estimates of the traffic into the district to make a best guess at how many of each kind of vehicle entered the zone. Most of our estimates came from the traffic data firm Replica, which uses a variety of data sources, including phone location, credit card and census data, to model transportation patterns. Replica estimated that around 58 percent of trips into the central business district on a weekday in spring 2023 were made by private vehicles, 35 percent by taxis or other for-hire vehicles (Uber and Lyft) and the remainder by commercial vehicles.
We also used data on trucks, buses, for-hire vehicles and motorcycles from the M.T.A., the Taxi and Limousine Commission and the Department of Transportation.
For simplicity, we assumed all vehicles would be equally likely to enter the zone from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m. as they would be in any other hour. We could not account for the other trips that a for-hire vehicle might make once within the tolled zone, only the initial crossing. And we did not include the discount to drivers who make under $50,000, because it would kick in only after 10 trips in a calendar month.
New York
Transcript of Trump Manhattan Trial, May 30, 2024
![Transcript of Trump Manhattan Trial, May 30, 2024](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2024/06/03/doc-2925a3ae-35c0-4312-92f9-1-promo/doc-2925a3ae-35c0-4312-92f9-1-promo-facebookJumbo.png)
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Jury Deliberation Re-charge
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
COUNTY OF NEW YORK CRIMINAL TERM
-
-
PART: 59
Χ
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK,
-against-
DONALD J. TRUMP,
DEFENDANT.
BEFORE:
Indict. No.
71543-2023
CHARGE
4909
FALSIFYING BUSINESS
RECORDS 1ST DEGREE
JURY TRIAL
100 Centre Street
New York, New York 10013
May 30, 2024
HONORABLE JUAN M. MERCHAN
JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE PEOPLE:
ALVIN BRAGG, JR., ESQ.
DISTRICT ATTORNEY, NEW YORK COUNTY
One Hogan Place
New York, New York 10013
BY:
JOSHUA STEINGLASS, ESQ.
MATTHEW COLANGELO,
ESQ.
SUSAN HOFFINGER, ESQ.
CHRISTOPHER CONROY, ESQ.
BECKY MANGOLD, ESQ.
KATHERINE ELLIS, ESQ.
Assistant District Attorneys
BLANCHE LAW
BY:
TODD BLANCHE, ESQ.
EMIL BOVE, ESQ.
KENDRA WHARTON, ESQ.
NECHELES LAW, LLP
BY: SUSAN NECHELES, ESQ.
GEDALIA STERN, ESQ.
Attorneys for the Defendant
SUSAN PEARCE-BATES, RPR, CSR, RSA
Principal Court Reporter
LAURIE EISENBERG, RPR, CSR
LISA KRAMSKY
THERESA MAGNICCARI
Senior Court Reporters
Susan Pearce-Bates, RPR, CCR, RSA
Principal Court Reporter
New York
Transcript of Trump Manhattan Trial, May 29, 2024
![Transcript of Trump Manhattan Trial, May 29, 2024](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2024/05/30/doc-0028eb72-58c8-4310-bea5-2-promo/doc-0028eb72-58c8-4310-bea5-2-promo-facebookJumbo.png)
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
COUNTY OF NEW YORK CRIMINAL TERM
-
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK,
PART: 59
Indict. No.
71543-2023
CHARGE
-against-
DONALD J. TRUMP,
DEFENDANT.
BEFORE:
4815
FALSIFYING BUSINESS
RECORDS 1ST DEGREE
JURY TRIAL
X
100 Centre Street
New York, New York 10013
May 29, 2024
HONORABLE JUAN M. MERCHAN
JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE
PEOPLE:
ALVIN BRAGG, JR.,
ESQ.
DISTRICT ATTORNEY, NEW YORK COUNTY
One Hogan Place
New York, New York 10013
BY:
JOSHUA STEINGLASS, ESQ.
MATTHEW COLANGELO,
ESQ.
SUSAN HOFFINGER, ESQ.
CHRISTOPHER CONROY, ESQ.
BECKY MANGOLD, ESQ.
KATHERINE ELLIS, ESQ.
Assistant District Attorneys
BLANCHE LAW
BY:
TODD BLANCHE, ESQ.
EMIL BOVE, ESQ.
KENDRA WHARTON, ESQ.
NECHELES LAW, LLP
BY: SUSAN NECHELES, ESQ.
Attorneys for the Defendant
SUSAN PEARCE-BATES, RPR, CSR, RSA
Principal Court Reporter
LAURIE EISENBERG, RPR, CSR
LISA KRAMSKY
THERESA MAGNICCARI
Senior Court Reporters
Susan Pearce-Bates,
RPR, CCR, RSA
Principal Court Reporter
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