New York City - The Museum of the City of New York (MCNY) has announced its new exhibition "
Joel Grey/A New York Life," which examines the enduring impact the legendary actor and his adopted city have made on each other.
Through rare artifacts from his stage and screen career, objects from his personal collection, and his own photography, MCNY offers a unique look at New York through Grey's eyes as well as a visual retrospective of his career. The exhibition's opening night reception will take place on the evening of Monday, April 11, which is also Grey's 79th birthday. It will open to the public the following day, and remain on display through Monday, August 8.
Susan Henshaw Jones, the Ronay Menschel Director of the Museum commented "Joel Grey has transformed himself, through his extraordinary talent, into characters that seduce, surprise, and amaze us. This exhibition provides a rare glimpse into the performer's psyche, in which we can see that New York City has seduced, surprised and amazed him. We are thrilled to share this work with our audiences."
The exhibition will be an overview of Grey's artistic life in New York City. It will include photographs, posters, playbills, and costumes from several of Grey's productions, including the iconic Emcee costume from "Cabaret," a crown worn in "Goodtime Charley," and an original costume sketch for "George M!." Original caricatures of Grey by legendary artist
Al Hirschfeld will also be on view.
Selections of Grey's extensive work as a photographer will also be on display. His New York photographs, which will be featured in the exhibition, focus lovingly on small details of the urban environment, including graffiti, architectural details, and sidewalks. In accentuating the forgotten detritus and the multitude of everyday details of the city, Grey's photographic work provides a quiet and poignant counterpoint to his life in the spotlight.
The exhibition will cap a landmark year for Grey, who will be represented in two concurrent Broadway productions this spring: starring in the Roundabout Theatre Company's production of "Anything Goes" and directing the all-star Broadway premiere of "The Normal Heart."
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