Buzz 
 Celebrate the best of Harlem virtually  
 during Harlem Week 2020 in August  
 BY EMILY DAVENPORT 
 A week-long celebration of all things  
 Harlem is going digittal later this  
 month. 
 The Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce  
 announced that Harlem Week 2020  
 will  be  held  virtually,  streaming  online  
 from Aug. 16-23. The week will not only  
 celebrate art, culture, sports history and  
 entertainment that is native to Harlem, but  
 also include community building initiatives  
 around education, technology, economic  
 empowerment, systematic racism, and the  
 disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on  
 communities of color.  
 “We recognize that 2020 is a year unlike  
 anything we have ever seen.  From  
 COVID-19 ravaging our most vulnerable  
 communities to the racial reckoning in  
 America, it is important that we share  
 the  culture,  history,  resilience  and  
 strength of Harlem to the world,” said  
 Lloyd Williams, President of The Greater  
 Harlem Chamber of Commerce. “This  
 year also marks the centennial celebrations  
 of  the  Harlem  Renaissance,  the  
 Negro Baseball League and the Women’s  
 New Yorkers came out in droves to kick off Harlem Week at the “A Great Day in  
 Harlem” festival at the General Grant Memorial on Riverside Drive. 
 Suffrage Movement.  We are proud to  
 lead the way in the resurgence of sports,  
 art, entertainment and activism as New  
 York  City  recovers  from  the multiple  
 pandemics.” 
 For 46 years, Harlem Week has showcased  
 the  best  of  Harlem.  The  week’s  
 lineup of events includes: 
 Harlem  5K  Virtual  Run  and  Health  
 Walk (Aug. 16 through Aug. 23) 
 PHOTO BY TODD MAISEL 
 The  Harlem Music  Festival  (Aug.  16  
 through Aug. 23) 
 A Great Day in Harlem (Aug. 16) 
 Youth Education and Career Conference  
 & Hack-A-Thon (Aug. 16) 
 Hon. Percy E. Sutton Business Conference  
 (Aug. 19) 
 Jobs and Career Fair featuring a discussion  
 on Jobs Behind The Scenes on Broadway  
 (Aug. 19) 
 Senior Citizens Day (Aug. 21) 
 HARLEM DAY (Aug. 23) 
 Harlem Week will also include a COVID 
 19 Regional Summit (Aug. 18), the  
 fi rst-ever Hon. Charles B. Rangel Systemic  
 Racism & Economic Justice Summit (Aug.  
 20); along with panel discussions led by  
 the  Schomburg  Center  for  Research  in  
 Black Culture. 
 A number of special guests will make  
 an appearance at Harlem Week, including  
 performances and appearances by music  
 greats Dionne  Warwick,  John  Legend,  
 Nona Hendryx, Monty Alexander, Hezekiah  
 Walker and Melba Moore; hip-hop  
 icon  Doug  E.  Fresh;  Grammy  award  
 winning  singer, Stephanie Mills; Dancing  
 with the Stars musical director Ray  
 Chew; legendary actors Phylicia Rashad  
 and Danny Glover; master arranger, Jazz  
 composer, producer Nat Adderly Jr.; Alvin  
 Ailey  American  Dance  Theater,  Dance  
 Theatre of Harlem, Oyu Oro Afro Cuban  
 Dance Ensemble; music by Bob Dylan in  
 an  exclusive  performance  of  The  Girl  
 From The  North  Country;  an  exclusive  
 premiere of  Langston Hughes’ The Black  
 Clown courtesy of Lincoln Center; a celebration  
 of the 56th anniversary of Jazzmobile’s  
 Summerfest; as well as a performance  
 from legendary Wynton Marsalis. 
 For a complete list of events, visit www. 
 harlemweek.com. 
 Annual Washington Square  
 Park Folk Festival goes  
 online and is free to the  
 public this summer  
 BY EMILY DAVENPORT 
 A free online folk festival is  
 coming to the Village at  
 the end of August. 
 The Digital Washington Square  
 Park Folk Festival, normally an inperson  
 event, will stream online  
 due to the pandemic. Hosted by  
 Jalopy Theatre, the tenth annual  
 festival will  stream  on Aug.  30  
 from 2 to 5 p.m. on the theatre’s  
 Facebook page at www.facebook. 
 com/jalopytheatre. 
 The Washington Square Park  
 Folk Festival celebrates and continues  
 the  long  tradition of  folk  
 music performance in Washington  
 Square Park, dating back to the  
 1940s when Woody Guthrie and  
 Pete Seeger would play together in  
 the park. The tradition continued  
 in the 1960s with Bob Dylan up  
 until today. 
 The  festival will  be  recorded  
 live at the Jalopy Theatre with no  
 live  audience  and  a  small  crew,  
 wearing masks and practicing social  
 distancing. This year’s festival  
 will feature blues, folk and jazz  
 singer and multi-instrumentalist  
 Jerron ‘Blindboy’ Paxton, as well  
 as  acclaimed  performers  such  
 as  songwriter  Feral  Foster,  
 Flamenco  singer  Julia  Patinella  
 and La Cumbiamba NY, playing  
 traditional  Cumbia  music  from  
 Colombia. 
 The  schedule  of  the  festival  
 will be as follows: 
 Julia Patinella – 2 p.m. 
 Feral Foster – 2:45 p.m. 
 La Cumbiamba NY – 3:30  
 p.m. 
 Jerron ‘Blindboy’ Paxton – 4:15  
 p.m. 
 The festival is free to the public  
 and supported by the NYU Offi ce  
 of Community Affairs, the Washington  
 Square Hotel, the Music  
 Inn,  the  Washington  Square  
 Park Conservancy and the New  
 York City Department of Parks  
 & Recreation. 
 For  more  information,  visit  
 www.WSPFolkFest.com. 
 18     August 6, 2020 Schneps Media 
 
				
/www.WSPFolkFest.com
		/www.harlemweek.com
		/www.facebook
		/www.harlemweek.com
		/harlemweek.com
		/www.facebook
		/www.WSPFolkFest.com