If you were out and about over the weekend, you saw Halloween hijinks rise with each descent into night. That continues for one more evening, before sweets defer to substance, horror succumbs to comedy and costumes leave the street for the stage.
Monday, October 31 โ Halloween
Starting at 6 p.m., have a round and play around during Elm City Gamesโs BYO Halloween party. Held at the Happiness Lab (756 Chapel St, New Haven), attractions include a screening of Hocus Pocus (1993), tacos, โsugar-filled treatsโ like caramel apples and, of course, โspooky board games,โ with โcostumes highly encouraged.โ
Or, at 7 p.m., return to the stylized 1940s, โ50s and โ60s with An Atomic Age Halloween at Lyric Hall (827 Whalley Ave, New Haven; 203-389-8885), where a $10 ticket ($15 at the door) โgets you food, live music, a DJ and other surprises,โ with a cash bar.
Or, at 8, join the theatrical, costumed, makeup-caked, fluid-spraying metal band GWAR as it headlines a โHalloween Spectacularโ at Toadโs Place (300 York St, New Haven; 203-624-8623). In addition to three openers, all with roots in Meriden, CTโthrash metal act PUS, โstraight metalโ-ers Revenge Against God and pop punk trio Zombiiโthereโs a costume contest incentivized by โgreat prizes!โ $25, or $22.50 in advance.
Tuesday, November 1โจ
The latest New Haven Restaurant Week began Sunday and ends Friday. With three-course, prix-fixe lunches and dinners for $20.16 and $34, respectively, at 28 of New Havenโs finer eateriesโlike 116 Crown, Harvest, Miyaโs, Olea and Tarry LodgeโTuesdayโs suddenly a very good day to dine out.
Wednesday, November 2
Of a slew of films screening this week at Yale, one of the most compelling-sounding is JALANAN (2013), a.k.a. โStreetside,โ which examines the lives of three buskers eking out a living in Jakarta, Indonesia. โUsing the powerful soundtrack of the musiciansโ original compositions,โ the documentary โtraces their elusive quest for identity and love in the day-to-day of a city overrun by the effects of globalization and corruption.โ Attending the screening, which starts at 6:30 p.m. inside the Sterling Law Building (127 Wall St, New Haven), is the filmโs director and producerโand one of Yaleโs current Greenberg World FellowsโDaniel Ziv, โwho will talk about the ideas and messages behind the film and its unique social and political resonance.โ Free.
Thursday, November 3
On consecutive nights, College Street Music Hall (238 College St, New Haven; 203-867-2000) hosts two of the countryโs top comedians. Tonight itโs former SNL standout Fred Armisen (8 p.m.; $35), whoโs become a star in his own right by creating, producing, writing and acting in the hit TV show Portlandia. Tomorrow night itโs Patton Oswalt (8 p.m.; $35-55), whose career is built around standup, at least when heโs not making scene-stealing contributions to TV shows like Veep, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and Archer.
Friday, November 4
From 6 to 8 p.m., businesses in or near downtown New Havenโs 9th Square are โpairing wine and food from California, Italy, Argentina, Spain, Portugal, France and moreโ for Wine On9. Itโs a โwine strollโ where $18 gets you a glass and a map of the participating locations, whichโll be serving up wine, โsnacksโ or both. Check-in, which begins at 5:30, happens at Baobab Tree Studios (71 Orange St, New Haven).
The massive voices normally kept tucked away in Yale School of Musicโs opera program issue forth from the stage of Morse Recital Hall tonight and tomorrow night during the programโs annual Opera Scenes performances. Tonightโs show, happening at 7:30, draws from Handelโs Rodelinda, Massenetโs Thaรฏs, Gounodโs Faust, and Donizettiโs Lโelisir dโamore. Tomorrowโs, also at 7:30, includes scenes from Mozartโs Cosi fan Tutte, Smetanaโs The Bartered Bride and Tchaikovskyโs The Maid of Orleans and Eugene Onegin. Tickets start at $10, or $5 for students. 470 College Street, New Haven. (203) 432-4158.
Saturday, November 5
With a free opening reception from noon to 2, the Institute Libraryโs upstairs gallery welcomes Out of the Fog, a new five-artist exhibition of photographs showing you things you canโt entirely see (like Marion Belangerโs Rift #20 [Hveragerdi, Iceland], pictured above). Up through January 15, the show โchallenges the expectations of veiled images, encouraging viewers to examine interpretations of what cannot be seen and what remains visible.โ 847 Chapel Street, New Haven. (203) 562-4045.
Sunday, November 6
The Jewish Community Center of Greater New Haven (360 Amity Rd, Woodbridge; 203-387-2424) highlights โa variety of cultural traditionsโ today during its family-oriented International Festival. Lasting from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., it features โarts and crafts, delicious foodsโฆ performances, games and more,โ with participation from groups and vendors like โAlisaโs House of Salsa, Kahana Lula, The MILLA Project (Israeli Cuisine), Tinkle Toes Dance Academy and CT Capoeira and Dance Center.โ Free and open to the public.
Written by Dan Mims. Photo, titled Rift #20 (Hveragerdi, Iceland), by Marion Belanger. Readers are encouraged to verify times, locations and prices before attending events.