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Arts Culture

Pick: Christmas at The Paramount

Carols everywhere: The Oratorio Society of Virginia returns to the stage after nearly two years for Christmas at The Paramount. Directed by Michael Slon and composed of some of the community’s finest singers, the choral group will perform an assortment of seasonal favorites, including excerpts from Antonio Vivaldi, Sergei Rachmaninoff, and Virginia’s own Adolphus Hailstork. The chorus will be joined onstage by a live orchestra during this long-running local tradition.

Saturday 12/18. $10-52, 2:30pm and 7pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net

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Arts Culture

Pick: Corey Harris

New blues: With imaginative compositions and an eye for eclectic experimentation, guitarist and vocalist Corey Harris has his own vision of the blues. Drawing on his origins as a New Orleans street singer and his travels through the South and Cameroon, Harris takes the traditional blues formula to the next level with influences from reggae, soul, rock, and West African music. Harris will celebrate the release of his new album, Insurrection Blues, and book, Bluespeople Illustrated: Legends of the Blues, while also raising money for the Charlottesville-Winneba Foundation, a nonprofit that works to strengthen the sister city partnership of Charlottesville and Winneba, Ghana.

Thursday 12/2. $25-35, 7pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net.

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Arts Culture

Pick: Mark Nizer


Lasers, comedy, action!: Entertaining family the day after Thanksgiving can be hard, so let Mark Nizer do it for you at a live show like no other. The immersive one-man performance is a sensory extravaganza of world-class juggling (anything from bowling balls to a burning propane tank), lasers, movement, and music. Nizer delivers original comedy while expertly drawing audience members into a new dimension with the help of unique 4D glasses. Make sure to bring your smartphone so you can get in on the action when Nizer takes over audience members’ phones and uses them in his light show.

Friday 11/26. $19.75-29.75, 7pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net

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Arts Culture

Pick: Fran Lebowitz

Tales of the city: Social commentator and cultural satirist Fran Lebowitz has an impressive resume of books, essays, and films. Her New Yorker flair won her a spot on Vanity Fair’s Best Dressed Hall of Fame list, and she’s the subject of Martin Scorsese’s recent Emmy-nominated, limited documentary series “Pretend It’s a City.” Lebowitz appears solo to share her views on current events, pet peeves, and whatever else is on her mind.

Thursday 11/18. $24.75-44.75, 7:30pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net.

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Arts Culture

If cats could laugh

Liz Miele, author of the book Why Cats Are Assholes, describes herself as a “cat comedian.” That’s why her favorite Charlottesville place to visit was The Cat House, the Downtown Mall’s most reliable home decor source for a self-professed crazy cat lady.

“I just feel like someday, someone will discover my body, because, you know, I won’t have anybody,” says Miele. “And my cat will have eaten my face, and then they’ll be like, we should just save it as it is and let people see she was a decent comedian, who lived with her own thoughts, and this is how it ended up. And it will be like a museum-slash-cautionary tale.”

The Cat House has closed, but Miele returns to Charlottesville on November 6 as a headliner in the 10th annual United Nations of Comedy Tour. New on this tour are a few Miele-approved COVID-19 safety measures.

“Some things shouldn’t be the same [as they were before],” Miele says. “I hate shaking hands with men. I just think they’re gross. Honestly, as somebody that works with mostly men, it’s been really nice not to have to shake their hand.”

Prior to Charlottesville, Miele spent her current run of shows joking with crowds everywhere from Richmond, where the fashion choices of a polo-shirted front row guest invited a roasting, to Forth Worth, Texas, where she promised the audience there would be no sex with any of them that night, as she’d like to leave the state with her uterus intact.

At the Paramount she’ll be laughing about the pandemic, sex, and breakups, but her signature cat comedy has recently taken a sad turn—Miele’s beloved companion Pasta, the subject of frequent jokes during her pre-COVID shows, passed away after a recent move.

“I move in, three days later my parents drop her off, and two days later she died,” says Miele. “It was pretty bad. I was like, cool, way to change the mojo in my new apartment, Pasta.”

Three months later, Miele is ready to love again. In her search for a new cat, she’s recruited scouts to look for a male, non-black, “chill” cat.

“I gave my friends a bunch of interview questions,” says Miele. “I was like okay, there’s a bump in the night. Do you bite whatever’s closest to you, do you hiss, or do you just cuddle harder? There is a correct answer. Please ask every kitten.”

These careful requirements for the future Tater Tots—although Coupons and Mrs. Nesbitt were close runners-up for potential names—are designed to protect the legacy of the female, black, un-chill Pasta watching from photo frames around the apartment.

“She died over a month ago, and I’m so worried I’m gonna get this kitten and then people are gonna treat me like that guy whose wife dies and he’s married to a younger woman three months later,” says Miele.

As the cat interviews get underway, Miele, who’s been featured on Comedy Central, NPR, and Hulu, and gone viral on YouTube and TikTok, is hard at work on her next animal-related project. She  plans to branch out into the world of the hour-long TV dramedy. The historical details of her script, about animals and medicine set in the 1960s, will take some research, but Miele’s veterinarian parents taught her the main theme by heart.

After completing her current set of North American shows, Miele, who has also starred in a web series and done an hour-long YouTube comedy special, will return to Europe, where she was packing houses before the pandemic sent her back to New York City. The comedian attributes her international success to two things: other countries’ Hollywood-enhanced familiarity with American accents, and the global relatability of her New York neuroticism. Audience members of her show in Karachi, the  12th-largest city in the world, may live in Pakistan, but jokes about stop-and-go traffic and over-friendly commuters land just like they would with any city-dwelling American.

“City people become a certain type of people,” Miele says. “My aggression or impatience is all very relatable to any city, no matter where you are. Bangkok and New York City are going to have a lot more in common than New York City and West Virginia.”

In addition to the absurdity of the modern city, Miele says cat comedy—in which furry companions like Pasta are vehicles for jokes about love, loss, and trauma—holds an emotional universal appeal for people, no matter what dog owners might say.

“No one gets a cat,” says Miele. “Basically, something bad has to happen to you, and then cats just kind of fall into your life. I say that everyone’s one bad breakup away from owning a cat, whether you like them or not.”

United Nations of Comedy

November 6

The Paramount Theater

* Correction: A previous version of this story incorrectly stated the date of the United Nations of Comedy event as November 26.

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Arts Culture

Dealing with dope

Since 2012, Roanoke-based writer Beth Macy has been at the forefront of reporting on the opioid epidemic, covering the toll that the drugs have taken on people and communities in the Appalachian region. In that time, she’s tracked the story of one drug in particular: the painkiller OxyContin.

Macy works in western Virginia, but the harrowing stories she’s told aren’t geographically unique. “The story could have been told anywhere,” she says. “It’s bad everywhere.”

The result of Macy’s research is her 2018 New York Times bestseller Dopesick, which Hulu has adapted as an eight-episode limited television series starring Michael Keaton. Macy is an executive producer and contributing screenwriter, and actor-turned-writer Danny Strong is the showrunner and executive producer.

“Dopesick” reveals how the Sackler family’s Purdue Pharma preyed on poor, pain-afflicted laborers and their families. By selling the lie that their drug OxyContin was seldom addictive, Purdue caused widespread addiction, ruined communities, and left over 450,000 Americans dead.

The Sackler family is currently claiming bankruptcy. That’s not enough, says Macy. “There should be criminal prosecution of this family…well over half a million Americans are dead now and we know that OxyContin was the taproot of this epidemic. And they’re going to walk away richer than they are right now after they pay their fine. That’s wrong.”

The real-life heroes of “Dopesick” are the lawyers and activists—particularly opioid victims’ family members—who have bravely, relentlessly crusaded in court against the billionaires’ white-collar drug-pushing.

Macy enthuses about Strong as a showrunner. “Woe be it to the person who tries to fight Danny Strong, because there is no better fighter,” she says. “He was just determined to tell this story.”

The series takes the epidemic’s complex backstory and assembles it in a palatable way. And during the production process, fresh information kept pouring in, from sources like leaked documents and conference calls with former Purdue employees. “It’s a little bit thrilling, says Macy. “It’s a legal investigative story. I would have no idea how to do that, but Danny knew exactly what he wanted.”

For someone used to working alone in a home office, Macy says that working on “Dopesick” was an entirely new experience—like getting paid to get a graduate degree in screenwriting. “The scriptwriting itself was really hard at first because, all of a sudden, you don’t have the tool of exposition,” she says. “You have to show it or tell it in dialogue. You can’t just drop in a 20-minute PowerPoint presentation.”

“Dopesick” was largely filmed in Virginia, with Richmond serving as a headquarters, and Clifton Forge representing the fictional town of Finch Creek. Although the setting was ultimately Disney’s decision—it owns Hulu—Macy says she made an impassioned speech to Strong about filming in Virginia, because it’s one of the states hardest hit by the epidemic. 

The cast was thoroughly invested in the story, and worked hard to grasp every aspect of the epidemic. Macy describes a particularly intense scene where Dr. Samuel Finnix (Keaton) faces a grand jury. “I could watch that scene a hundred times—it gives me goosebumps! He can do so many things with his face in three seconds.”

Ultimately, “Dopesick” delivers the message that America desperately needs to value human beings over profits. “The infrastructure has to be the health of Americans,” Macy says. “We’ve got to get these two-plus million people who are addicted to opioids the care they need. Because we’re not going to be able to build roads and bridges if we can’t find employees to do it.”

“Why can’t we hold power accountable? The show asks that question. America has got to stand up and demand that we have humanity in our institutions again.”

An episode of “Dopesick” will be screened on October 30, followed by a Q&A with Macy and Strong.

“Dopesick”

October 30

The Paramount Theater

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Arts Culture

Pick: Fire Shut Up in My Bones

On fire: Growing up in rural Louisiana, journalist Charles Blow never imagined his life story would one day be portrayed on the world’s most popular opera stage. His memoir, Fire Shut Up in My Bones, a treacherous story of dysfunction and abuse, opened the 2021-22 Metropolitan Opera season. The adaptation by Grammy Award–winning jazz musician and composer Terence Blanchard made history as the first opera by a Black composer (and Black librettist Kasi Lemmons). Victory Hall Opera’s Miriam Gordon-Stewart hosts a lecture before The Met: Live in HD screening. 

Saturday 10/23. $18-25, 12:55pm. The Paramount Theater, 103 E. Main St.,  Downtown Mall. theparamount.net. 

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Arts Culture

Pick: Masterchef

Joy of cooking: Are you a great cook and a fierce competitor? Can you handle having your culinary creations judged down to the smallest leaf of parsley? The immersive stage show MasterChef Live brings past MasterChef and MasterChef Junior contestants together to take on live cooking challenges and demonstrations—and its family-friendly, interactive format means the audience  is in on the fun.

Thursday 10/14. $24.75-44.75, 7pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall, theparamount.net.

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Arts Culture

PICK: Like Water For Chocolate

Hot chocolate: Food nourishes the magical realism in the 1992 international sensation Like Water For Chocolate. When Tita is forbidden from marrying her true love Pedro due to her place in the family lineage, he marries her older sister. Tita becomes a cook, and channels her undying passion for her brother-in-law into meals with special powers, including one in which a rose petal sauce induces a lustful frenzy. The titillating film winds through themes of gender and tradition while composing a fantastical recipe for the power of love.

Wednesday 5/5, $6.50-8. 3 and 7pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net.

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Arts Culture

PICK: The Great Debaters

Smart moves: Set in 1930s Texas during the Jim Crow era, the story of The Great Debaters was brought to national attention in a 1997 American Legacy magazine article. It became a passion project for Denzel Washington, who directed and starred in the 2007 film, inspired by the experiences of the all-Black Wiley College debate team. Produced by Oprah Winfrey’s Harpo Films, the movie features Washington as professor Melvin B. Tolson, who brilliantly leads his team to a series of successes, culminating with an invitation to debate Harvard University’s champion team in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Wednesday 4/21, $5-8, 3 and 7pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net.