Find out what’s inside LOCKER 4173b when the New York Neo-Futurists unveil its contents at The Monkey
The New York Neo-Futurists present the world premiere of LOCKER 4173b, written and performed by Joey Rizzolo and Christopher Borg, directed by Justin Tolley. Performances take place at The Monkey, a beautiful new performance space in Chelsea, located at 37 West 26th Street (between Broadway...
[read more]
Find out what’s inside LOCKER 4173b when the New York Neo-Futurists unveil its contents at The Monkey
The New York Neo-Futurists present the world premiere of LOCKER 4173b, written and performed by Joey Rizzolo and Christopher Borg, directed by Justin Tolley. Performances take place at The Monkey, a beautiful new performance space in Chelsea, located at 37 West 26th Street (between Broadway & 6th Avenues). The performance schedule is Thursday – Monday at 8 PM, with an added performance on Tuesday, May 3 at 8 PM for opening. Please note, there are no performances on Saturday, April 30, Sunday, May 8 and Saturday, May 14. The regular ticket price is $16 ($12 for students with a valid student ID).
https://www.ovationtix.com/trs/cal/28615
Joey and Borg bought a storage locker at auction. Guess who it belonged to? A hilarious and heartbreaking account of two New York Neos, who embark on an urban archeological adventure. After purchasing two storage lockers up for auction in the Bronx, Joey and Borg painstakingly examined and archived the over 1500 items they contained. Now it is time to unravel the mystery of what happened to their former owners. LOCKER 4173b is a striking look at the aftermath of “The Great Recession.” The financial meltdown just got very personal. “It took us over six months to catalogue all 1500+ items,” shares co-creator Christopher Borg. “Many weekends with a small group of volunteers around a table full of laptops and boxes and bags of ‘stuff,’ much of which was the kind of thing we all throw away at a good spring cleaning. But taken together, and looked at from afar, it paints the picture of a life, and a life examined is a life worthwhile.”