Sunday, November 8
| Scott Westerfeld's Leviathan Thalia Kids’ Book Club
The New York Times bestselling author of Uglies discusses his latest series—which takes readers on a fantastical adventure around the world, set in an alternate-history World War I, complete with living airships—with Matthew Cody (Powerless) and middle graders and teens ages 12 and up. The event includes a conversation with the audience, a creative writing project, and a book signing. See More... |
| Who Does She Think She Is? Thalia Film Sundays
This film follows five women artists as they navigate the challenges of making work outside the elite upper echelons of the art world. Each woman has a radically different background, race, religious creed and choice of artistic field, range in age from 27 to 65, and live in communities as different as the suburbs of Ohio and Hawaii’s Big Island. In tandem with their creative existence, they are pulled in different directions as they try to answer the competing demands of artistic fulfillment, marriage, motherhood and economic survival. See More... |
| You Cannot Start Without Me - Valery Gergiev, Maestro Thalia Film Sundays
Final Day!! From Academy and Emmy Award-winning director Allan Miller, comes an exclusive "year in the life" look at one of the leading conductors of our time on the go: rehearsal excerpts and performance sequences are interspersed with the Maestro's myriad activities in London, New York, and St. Petersburg. In cinema verité style, the camera captures his process and interactions with musicians to illuminate his rehearsal strategy and technique. See More... |
| Beeswax Thalia Film Sundays
Jeannie, who has been in a wheelchair since youth, co-owns a used clothing store with her semi-estranged friend Amanda, while her (real-life) twin sister Lauren is between jobs. Tensions are mounting between the friends and threat of a lawsuit is implied. This is a story about families, real and imagined, people taking care of each other when they want to, when they need to, when they ought to, and those awkward moments that bring all of them together. See More... |











