Raul Julia in The Penitent

This Week in New Haven (October 20 - 26)

This week in New Haven is full of familiar formats with new particulars. Thereโ€™s an annual film festival with nearly 30 events scheduled; a monthly networking event picking back up again; a popular twice-a-year wine tasting; a yearly spelling bee that makes its own rules; and an annual parade giving chronic last-minute Halloween costumers a reason to plan ahead.

Monday, October 20
Tonight from 5:15 to 8:15, the United Way of Greater New Haven is uniting with The Group With No Name to put on the โ€œWalk a Mileโ€ experience, simulating poverty and, they hope, stimulating empathy. Organizers seem to be keeping the specifics of the occasion close to the vest, which makes sense: not knowing what to expect makes an experience like this more impactful. But we do know itโ€™s a โ€œparticipatory eventโ€ meant to โ€œchallenge your assumptions and give you a deeper awareness of the struggles many of our neighbors face on a daily basis.โ€ Free, with dinner and a discussion to follow; registration required.

Tuesday, October 21
At 7 p.m. in the Arts Hall at the Educational Center for the Arts (55 Audubon St, New Haven), the New England Festival of Ibero American Cinema kicks off its annual whirlwind showcase of films made in Latin America, Spain and Portugal. The opening film tonight is Conducta (โ€œBehaviorโ€), a drama about a troubled Cuban boy forced to take care of his mother, an addict, via rather unsavory means, finding a ray of hope in the form of his schoolteacher. After the opener, the festโ€™s other 27 eventsโ€”shorts, features and discussionsโ€”happen at the Whitney Humanities Center (53 Wall St, New Haven). One of the key items is a 6 p.m. panel/screening tomorrow night centering around famed Puerto Rican actor Raรบl Juliรกโ€”who died too young of a stroke in 1994โ€”and his film The Penitent (pictured above), with the panel including his wife Merel and two of his Penitent costars. All NEFIAC events are free and registrationโ€™s not required, though itโ€™s always smart to reserve seats in advance.

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The shops at Yale Fall Artisan Market Sunday October 26, 2014

Wednesday, October 22
The Arts Council of Greater New Haven is throwing a party at the Institute Library (847 Chapel St, New Haven) tonight to launch the sophomore season of its monthly Writersโ€™ Circle series. The plot, usually driven along by topical panel discussions, is to help wordsmiths, aspiring or otherwise, connect with good ideas relevant to the endeavor, and with each other. Marking tonightโ€™s occasion, local novelist, playwright and poet Allan Appelโ€”also well-known for his writings in the New Haven Independentโ€”is giving a โ€œlive literary performance.โ€ 5 to 7 p.m. Free to attend.

Thursday, October 23
The next Flights of Fancy, the biannual wine tasting store-hop focused around Chapel Street and Broadway downtown, gets going at 4 p.m. today. A $20 registration fee secures an emblazoned glass and a map featuring about 25 participating businesses, each offering special discounts on their wares while pouring a different wine or two furnished by The Wine Thief. (Bring an FoF glass from a previous occasion to knock $5 off the price.) Everything starts and ends at The Study at Yale Hotel (1157 Chapel St, New Haven), where prizesโ€”plus coffee and dessertโ€”are given away after the bottles get stoppered at 8.

Friday, October 24
Tonightโ€™s New Haven Reads Spelling Bee is bound to be pretty raucous as far as these things go. For one thing, this beeโ€™s spellers rise and fall in teams. For another, those teams often adopt themed names and costumes. For yet another, teams compete directly against one another, trying to spell the same word each round, which is also called a โ€œswarm.โ€ Though the deadline to join the competition as a speller has passed, you can still join the audience for free, or for a $5 suggested donation. Bucknall Theater, University of New Haven (300 Boston Post Road, West Haven). 7 to 9 p.m.

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Yale Opera

Saturday, October 25
Cut. It. Out! Following Gilbert Gottfriedโ€™s appearance last month, Sports Haven (600 Long Wharf Dr, New Haven; 203-946-3252) lands another well-known name in comedy with Dave Coulierโ€”you know, Joey from Full House. Unlike former costar Bob Saget, whose character Danny was a 180 from the actor, Coulierโ€™s about as clean a comic as Joey was. His relatively innocent brand of humor may not be everyoneโ€™s idea of gut-busting, but the dead-on impressions he tends to pepper throughout his routine are universally impressive and entertaining. The opener is Eric Tartaglione, who brings the edge tonightโ€”his wit is more caustic and biting. The show starts at 8 p.m., with regular tickets going for $25 and a VIP optionโ€”though itโ€™s not exactly clear what perks it providesโ€”for $30.

Sunday, October 26
Westvilleโ€™s annual โ€œGiant Puppet and People-Making-Mayhem Paradeโ€ wants wild puppetsโ€”itโ€™s even been holding sessions this month to help people make themโ€”but it probably only wants mild mayhem. The parade is a family-friendly occasion, after all, involving โ€œarts, games and snacks,โ€ with Halloween costumes heavily encouraged. The parade starts at 11 a.m. outside Manjares (838 Whalley Ave, New Haven), then traverses a route through the neighborhood, eventually combining with the nearby CitySeed Edgewood Farmersโ€™ Market to produce โ€œone gigantic outdoor Halloween party.โ€ Free to attend.

Written by Dan Mims. Image, courtesy of the New England Festival of Ibero American Cinema, depicts Raรบl Juliรก in The Penitent.

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