A not-to-miss conversion between actor/photographer Brooke Smith and author Laura Albert, in celebration of the publication of Smith's book of photography Sunday Matinee. The book gathers together Smith's extensive photo documentation of the New York Hardcore scene of the 1980s, the bands that played CBGB's notorious Sunday afternoon gigs as well as the young people who followed them and hung out in Manhattan's Lower East Side.
Smith and Albert, both native New Yorkers, discuss the hardcore scene from a range of perspectives, social and aesthetic. Through their experiences of the music and personalities that defined this era, they will examine the social movements that fed into hardcore; the role of women in this male-dominated, often misogynistic world; and the nature of the youth who defined the scene-their disaffection from the political and artistic trends of the day, the large numbers of homeless and runaways who populated the scene and their incessant battles with an adult world that sought to silence and erase them.
Long before Smith appeared as Catherine Martin in the iconic The Silence of the Lambs, she was one of the Hardcore punk kids hanging out on Manhattan's Lower East Side. Growing up in Rockland County, just north of New York City, Smith always felt like an outsider. The Lower East Side, Alphabet City and Tompkins Square park is where she found her family. And she always had her trusty Minolta with her.
This book, like an intimate family album, documents the day-to-day life of her friends and acquaintances as they create and embody a community around Hardcore music. Brooke went on to become a highly respected actor starring in many films and TV shows. But she never forgot her roots, and the people she still calls her family.
This is a hybrid event. Registration is required for Zoom attendance. In-person attendance does not require registration; seats available first come, first served.
Free; Registration is required for Zoom attendance
Presented by San Francisco Public Library
A not-to-miss conversion between actor/photographer Brooke Smith and author Laura Albert, in celebration of the publication of Smith's book of photography Sunday Matinee. The book gathers together Smith's extensive photo documentation of the New York Hardcore scene of the 1980s, the bands that played CBGB's notorious Sunday afternoon gigs as well as the young people who followed them and hung out in Manhattan's Lower East Side.
Smith and Albert, both native New Yorkers, discuss the hardcore scene from a range of perspectives, social and aesthetic. Through their experiences of the music and personalities that defined this era, they will examine the social movements that fed into hardcore; the role of women in this male-dominated, often misogynistic world; and the nature of the youth who defined the scene-their disaffection from the political and artistic trends of the day, the large numbers of homeless and runaways who populated the scene and their incessant battles with an adult world that sought to silence and erase them.
Long before Smith appeared as Catherine Martin in the iconic The Silence of the Lambs, she was one of the Hardcore punk kids hanging out on Manhattan's Lower East Side. Growing up in Rockland County, just north of New York City, Smith always felt like an outsider. The Lower East Side, Alphabet City and Tompkins Square park is where she found her family. And she always had her trusty Minolta with her.
This book, like an intimate family album, documents the day-to-day life of her friends and acquaintances as they create and embody a community around Hardcore music. Brooke went on to become a highly respected actor starring in many films and TV shows. But she never forgot her roots, and the people she still calls her family.
This is a hybrid event. Registration is required for Zoom attendance. In-person attendance does not require registration; seats available first come, first served.
Free; Registration is required for Zoom attendance
Presented by San Francisco Public Library
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