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Fax (212) 972-8554
Kathie Ambrose
General Manager
(313) 827-9920
1-800 729-9820
Fax (313) 355-1701
Lincoln Center features many summer festivals.
New York In Summer
Beckons Travelers
ROSE KLEINER
Special to The Jewish News
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Call: 354-6060
THE JEWISH NEWS
nlike many large
cities, where the pace
slows down in sum-
mer, New York takes on new
life during this time of year.
One reason is that cultural
attractions are often free dur-
ing July and August. This is
the season for free New York
Philharmonic Parks concerts,
free Summerpier Concerts at
the South Street Seaport, and
free Summergarden Concerts
at the Museum of Modern
Art, as well as free
Shakespeare Theater in Cen-
tral Park.
This year New York is run-
ning several plays of Jewish
interest, and the kosher din-
ing scene continues to expand
and diversify. Visitors to New
York can now enjoy a kosher
dinner cruise.
The 92nd Street Y has come
up with another way of ex-
ploring the city. This time it
is by ferry, which some call
the future of New York's
transportation system. The
Y's Ferry Renaissance Series
of tours take place July 11,
August 8, August 29 and
September 12, and explore
different parts of the city.
Each tour will be conducted
on a different type of the new,
and technologically advanced
ferries such as the Metro
Marine Express, a private
high-speed ferry, or a
catamaran express.
The Y also features great
walking tours on different
dates in July. You can visit
the Jewish Lower East Side,
view Frank Lloyd Wright's
Architecture, examine the
Art Deco of Midtown, or
spend some time at Brighton
Beach, for a Russian Ex-
perience tour. You can even
have a little bit of England in
New York, with the After-
noon Tea Thur at the Waldorf-
Astoria.
Elsewhere in the city, sum-
mer attractions include the
1990 Snug Harbor Sculpture
Festival, in Staten Island,
which runs all summer, and
the 20th Annual Lincoln
Center Out-of-Doors Festival
in August. New York's
largest, and most diverse, out-
door arts Festival, the latter
presents hundreds of free per-
formances all around Lincoln
Center's plaza daily and
nightly. A special feature are
the many attractions here for
children and families.
Jewish
theater
is
flourishing in New York, even
in summer. Carbondale
Dreams, at the Kaufman
Theater, is a drama about a
young Jewish family. The
Rothschilds is at the Circle in
the Square Theater, and
Family Matters: An Im-
migrant Memoir is at the
Lower East Side Tenement
Museum. Filled with univer-
sal appeal, though not a
Jewish play, is the musical
Fantasticks, which is the
world's longest-running play,
at the Sullivan Street
Playhouse.
Joseph Papp and the New
York Shakespeare Festival
present free performances of
the Taming of the Shrew (un-
til July 22) and Richard III
(August 3-September 2) at the
Delacorte Theater, in Central
Park.
For accommodation in New
York, near the theaters, the
Parc 51 Hotel (formerly the
Grand Bay) has a special low
summer rate that is available
to guests on a one-time basis
only. Another hostelry, off
Park Avenue, is the Doral
Tuscany.
For proximity to the 92nd
St. Y the reasonably-priced