Categories
Featured Lifestyle Living Technology

Downtown’s Holiday Gift Guide 2019 For Him

How many times have you heard, “I have everything that I need” only to find out that they really don’t? Rather than ask again, this year our editors have collected cool, on-trend unique, gifts for him, just in time for you to say thank you for all that you do!

Daniel Patrick’s collections draw a number of inspirations that are true to who Daniel is and this identity become more and more poignant from collection to collection. We have chosen this brilliant DP backpack.

STOW has disrupted the world of travel accessories. Their contemporary, colorful and practical designs are meticulously hand-crafted for a lifetime of use. We have chosen this stunning leather tech case for that special someone.

 

 ARRAW Spider-Man Watch
RJ Spider-Man Watch Collection, time will tell with this technically innovative collection, created in partnership with Disney and MARVEL, the ARRAW Spider-Man Tourbillon and the new skeletonized ARRAW Spider-Man mechanical timepiece.

 

Eastern Standard Provisions Gift Box

We are all in love with this Boston-based brand, their deep roots throughout New England, is fiercely passionate in their pursuit of making the best soft pretzels on the planet, and our entire team agrees!

Oceano Chardonnay Wine

Oceano Wines is a joint venture between Rachel Martin and Kurt Deutsch. Together they decided to make wine from a very specific place, Spanish Springs Vineyard, on the coast of San Luis Obispo, California. We stumbled across this refreshing and truly delicious chardonnay, a must for this holiday season.

 

Lasvit Fine Collection of Mouth-Blown Glasses

The fine collection of mouth-blown table glasses is composed of individual pieces, all handcrafted by traditional artisan glassmakers. Lasvit offers this flexible copper mold that allows the fluid glass to form its distinct shape of free-flowing circles. Every piece is one of a kind, for him.

Speedster Capsule Heritage Leather Jacket

Speedster Capsule Collection Heritage Motocross Leather Jacket, drawing inspiration from the legendary Porsche Speedster automobile, practical with sporty details. Keep him warm this holiday season.

 

ROAM Luggage

ROAM Luggage, the first brand that allows you to fully customize your suitcase to match your personality. When two founders were building the TUMI brand, they were propelled by a desire to create the best luggage in the world. That quest for the extraordinary has always been what drives this unique brand.

 

 

Downtown's Holiday Gift Guide 2019 For Him
Men’s Wool Felt Slippers

Step into a pair of handcrafted men’s wool felt slippers and step into something good. Made by Nepalese women with natural wool from New Zealand sheep and Himayalan buffalo leather soles, the simple slip-on slippers keep feet warm in the winter and cool in the summer.

See More

Downtown’s Holiday Gift Guide 2019

Downtown’s Ultimate Beauty Gift Guide

Categories
Culture Entertainment Featured

Remembering Stan Lee: NYC’s True Believer

“I never thought that Spider-Man would become the world wide icon that he is. I just hoped the books would sell and I’d keep my job,” said Stan Lee in a 2006 interview with PR.com. Despite humble beginnings, Marvel’s brand has spiraled into a juggernaut. The comics still have strong sales, the merchandise flies off the shelves, and its Cinematic Universe is the best selling movie franchise of all time. The legacy Lee crafted is an unstoppable worldwide story telling force.

You’d have to live under a rock to avoid hearing about Marvel. Its heroes are household names that entered modern mythology: Spider-Man is as synonymous with New York City as the Loch Ness Monster is with Scotland. Yet every good hero has an origin story, and Stan Lee’s is the epitome of a self made New Yorker.

Stan Lee 2016

From Zero To Hero

Born in 1922, Stanley Martin Lieber was the child of Romanian Jewish immigrants, and was raised in uptown Manhattan. He started as an assistant at Midtown’s Timely Comics in 1939. His first duties were mundane: filling inkwells, getting lunch, and proofreading. Then he progressed to writing filler, where he adopted the pen (and later legal) name Stan Lee. Once Timely Comics became Marvel, his skills as a writer and businessman landed him the editorial director/publisher position.

In 1961, Lee and his frequent collaborator Jack Kirby created the Fantastic Four as an answer to DC’s Justice League. The superpowered family of adventurers were immediately popular. More importantly, they paved the way for a new style of superhero. Before, superheroes were known for being perfect, nearly godlike beings. Stan Lee brought humanity to his characters, with relatable real world problems. For example, Spider-Man had trouble paying rent and the X-Men faced bigotry on a daily basis.

Lee pushed the boundaries of what was acceptable at the time. Censorship guidelines formerly forbid stories about drug addiction. He wrote one into Spider-Man anyway, winning the support of his readers. As a result, it changed the guidelines forever. His editorial section, ‘Stan’s Soapbox’, frequently called out discrimination and prejudice.

Stan Lee believed the key to good storytelling was lovable characters. His writing style became the signature heart behind Marvel. Lee, with his charisma and showmanship, became its face well into his final days.

Lessons Left Behind

Spider-Man: Into The Spider-VerseThe diverse roster of Into The Spider-Verse

 

Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse is Marvel’s latest theatrical outing. In it, characters from a variety of backgrounds take on the mantle of the world’s most popular hero. As women and men of different ages, races and creeds swing into action, viewers are reminded of what Stan Lee believed in: anyone can become a hero. This lesson for Hollywood is loud and clear following Black Panther and Wonder Woman‘s accolades: people want to see themselves represented in their entertainment. Lee understood that when his contemporaries didn’t.

Stan Lee’s presence echoes through Marvel’s pantheon to this day. His belief that we are all heroes is forever inspiring. New York’s greatest comics creator will be sorely missed.

 

 

Categories
Culture Entertainment Movies Theater

Q&A with Broadway’s “Groundhog Day” star John Sanders

John Sanders of "Groundhog Day"
John Sanders of “Groundhog Day”

When it comes to comedies, few films are as universally-respected as 1993’s Groundhog Day. The movie — co-written by Danny Rubin and director Harold Ramis and starring Bill Murray — manages to be very funny, while maintaining both heart and originality. All these years later, it retains a 96% rating on Rotten Tomatoes while holding top honors from BAFTA, the Writers Guild Of America, and the American Film Institute.

Last year, a theatrical adaptation of Groundhog Day opened at The Old Vic on London’s West End. The production was critically-acclaimed as can be, earning various “best” nominations from the Evening Standard Theatre Awards, the Critics Circle Theatre Awards, and the Laurence Olivier Awards. Fortunately for New Yorkers, a Broadway production of Groundhog Day begins previews at the August Wilson Theatre on Mar. 16; the show opens Apr. 17.

The team behind the Groundhog Day musical is very impressive, even by Broadway standards. Director Matthew Warchus was nominated for “Best Director” at the 2014 British Independent Film Awards for his work on Pride, also succeeding Kevin Spacey as the new Artistic Director of the Old Vic Theatre London that year. Choreographer Peter Darling worked on Billy Elliot The Musical and Matilda The Musical. Designer Rob Howell won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Set Design for Ghost The Musical and an Olivier Award for his work on Matilda The Musical in 2012. Composer Tim Minchin is another award-winning member of the Matilda team, although you may recognize him as Atticus Fetch from the show Californication. Andy Karl — who plays the Bill Murray-helmed “Phil Connors” role — received a nomination for the Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Musical for his work in Rocky The Musical. And those are just a few of the cast and crew members that have received major honors.

Downtown had the pleasure of chatting with Groundhog Day actor John Sanders, who will play the lovable Ned Ryerson role, as originated by Stephen Tobolowsky. John is another former Matilda cast member, beyond spending time on Broadway in Peter and the Starcatcher. Prior to moving to New York, he was a veteran of the Chicago theater scene. Beyond his work with Groundhog Day, John can be seen in the upcoming Netflix series Iron Fist.

More on John and the rest of the Groundhog Day cast can be found at www.groundhogdaymusical.com. The show can also be followed on Twitter via @GHDMusical.

Do you remember the first time you saw Groundhog Day? Was it in the theater?

John Sanders: Groundhog Day was one of my favorite movies when I was younger. I don’t remember my first viewing, I’m pretty sure it was on VHS. I’ve always loved the combination of comedy and mind-bending metaphysics in this story.

Do you have a favorite scene in the movie?

John Sanders: I love watching Bill Murray stuff pastries into his face while contemplating whether he’s a god. Who wouldn’t want to be able to eat like that with no consequences?

Aside from it being a musical, are there any major differences between the movie and the play? Or will fans of the movie be pleased either way?

John Sanders: Fans of the film will not be disappointed. First of all, we have the same writer as the movie, the brilliant Danny Rubin. He’s brought so many of the iconic lines and moments that fans of the movie will love to see and hear. But telling the story as a musical opens up a lot of new possibilities. We never attempt to explain the same-day phenomenon, but we do get to hear so much more about what’s inside these characters’ heads and hearts. And I must say my character Ned has some really surprising depth that isn’t in the film, and that’s really fun to play and to sing about.

Had you worked with any of the Groundhog Day cast before being cast in this production?

John Sanders: I have. A number of actors from my time at Matilda are here, at least five or six of us from that production. And most of the creative team from Matilda are the ones behind Groundhog Day. And of course there are the dozens of backstage crew who I’ve worked with before, and many that I’m getting to know now. I’m a California boy who worked in the Chicago theater scene for 11 years, so I sometimes have to pinch myself that I get to be part of this Broadway community.

Do you have a theory on the time loop duration of Groundhog Day? I’ve heard that it’s 10 years, and I’ve read Harold Ramis say that it was 10,000 years.

John Sanders: I think it must be longer than 10 years, since Phil changes so profoundly. It’s like we get to witness someone live an entire alternate lifetime and come out the other end a changed man. Sort of like, dare I say it, that episode of Star Trek when Patrick Stewart lives a whole life on this other planet in the space of 20 minutes. Did I just up the dork factor in here? Yes, yes I did. But I also think 10,000 years seems a little long — Phil would just be comatose and insane at the end of that, like Leo DiCaprio near the end of Inception.

Have you ever encountered Stephen Tobolowsky?

John Sanders: Only through his work, which I love. But he certainly seems like a fascinating and well-rounded guy. My first encounter with him was watching him as Ned Ryerson in Groundhog Day. Since then I’ve loved him in Californication, Silicon Valley, and his Tobolowsky Files podcast. He also has a fantastic episode on The Nerdist, which I highly recommend.

Although you have worked in television and have appeared on film, what is it that draws you to theater?

John Sanders: My parents were great and took me to theatre in San Francisco when I was young. I remember being blown away by the original touring production of Les Miserables. We also saw a version of this farce called Charley’s Aunt at ATC back in the 80’s, and I remember marveling at the lead actor’s skill and physical precision. He seemed to be juggling eight things at once and walking the line between control and chaos. He had us all on the edge of our seats, and I just remember thinking I wanna do that! I wanna have an audience in the palm of my hand like that! Camera acting can be very fulfilling, but there’s nothing like performing live.

Is Broadway what inspired you to move to New York?

John Sanders: Actually, it was luck that got me here. I was a working actor in Chicago back in 2012, with a gig lined up down in Indianapolis and no plans whatsoever to move to New York. Then the casting director Jim Carnahan made a trip through Chicago looking for new people, and I wound up getting cast in the Broadway premiere of Peter and the Starcatcher. They called me up and asked if I could be at rehearsal in New York in 10 days! I had to drop everything, look for a place to live, and try to find the rehearsal hall. It was a shock to the system, but I’m so happy here now.

What was the first acting credit you ever landed that made you feel like this was a career, not just working for a little bit?

John Sanders: Well, I had always been a pretty good student, but I purposefully didn’t develop a backup plan for my acting career. I knew that if I had one, that’s what I’d end up doing since starting out in this business is so difficult. So I guess I always knew I was in it for the long haul. But the impostor syndrome started to subside when I joined the union and started paying my bills as an actor, though that didn’t happen until my early 30’s.

Groundhog Day aside, do you have any projects coming up? Appearances?

John Sanders: You may be able to see a little of me in the upcoming Netflix Marvel series Iron Fist. Other than that, I’m consumed with living the same day over and over again for now!

When not busy with acting, how do you like to spend your free time?

John Sanders: My favorite thing in the world is skiing, and I just spent a week in Aspen with my dad and a few old friends before rehearsals started. I love travelling and can’t wait to hit somewhere tropical soon.

Do you have a favorite restaurant in New York?

John Sanders: There are two places on the same block in Chelsea that I love. Dinner at Salinas on the patio. Then late nite drinks at Bathtub Gin, a crazy speakeasy hidden behind a tiny coffee stand.

What about go-to lunch spots near your theater?

John Sanders: I’m a pretty utilitarian eater when I’m working, so when I want something tasty and healthy I usually head to Dig Inn on 8th & 52nd. But if I wanna relax there’s always a burrito at Blockheads. Can’t wait till the weather changes and we can all bask in that courtyard again!

Finally, John, any last words for the kids?

John Sanders: Art done well is like science. And science done well is like art. And farts are always funny.