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Best things to do this week in Los Angeles and Southern California: March 23-26
I went to get my hair cut last week, and when I pulled into the driveway of the salon, I saw the biggest lizard I've ever seen in Southern California — and this was in West Adams, nowhere near a hiking trail! Turns out I’m not alone. As Jacob Margolis reported last week, alligator lizards and other scaly friends are having a field day with this weather. And while I was sufficiently freaked out by my sighting in our urban jungle, the real risk of the early warm weather is to them, not us.
Sing your lizard heart out this week with Licorice Pizza’s music calendar. On Monday, K-pop girl group Hearts2Hearts will be at the Grammy Museum as part of the museum’s Global Spin Live program, while Lady Blackbird, aka the “Grace Jones of jazz,” is at the Blue Note.
On Tuesday, there’s a very special show at the El Rey with the Dirty Three, featuring Warren Ellis of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, while country-pop troubadour Lindsay Ell is at the Troubadour.
On Wednesday, L.A. garage band ALEXSUCKS plays the El Rey, misleadingly named folk singer Skullcrusher plays the Lodge Room and there will be a rebirth of slick with alternative hip-hop legend Digable Planets at the Blue Note (they’re also there on Thursday). Also on Thursday, metal band Bad Omens plays the Forum, and veteran indie band Voxtrot is at cool new Chinatown venue Pacific Electric.
Elsewhere on LAist, you can learn about how the Iranian community in L.A. is celebrating Nowruz in wartime, head to North Hills for a late-night Filipino grocery store rave (yes, you read that right) and get a ticket for Kai Ryssdal’s special Marketplace Live event on March 29.
Events
Silent film screening with music: The Cruise of the Jasper B and The Yankee Clipper
Monday, March 23, 7:30 p.m.
Hollywood Heritage Museum
2100 N Highland Ave., Hollywood
COST: $10; MORE INFO
Catch a double feature of silent films — The Cruise of the Jasper B (1926) and The Yankee Clipper (1927) — projected from 16mm Kodascope prints, with live accompaniment by Jon Mirsalis. The two films are both part of a celebration of the DeMille Pictures Corporation (as in Cecil B.); the first is a comedy starring Rod LaRocque and Mildred Harris; the second is not about Joe DiMaggio, but is an adventure about the U.S. and Great Britain’s seafaring rivalry.
Michael Orland’s Broadway Sing-Along
Wednesday, March 25, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Three Clubs
1123 Vine Street, Hollywood
COST: $28; MORE INFO
A Broadway singalong with American Idol’s in-house pianist? Say no more. I’m prepping my best rendition of “Defying Gravity” as we speak. Sign up to sing with pianist Michael Orland, or just sing along with other Broadway fanatics.
Dolores: Group exhibition
Through Sunday, April 12
Plaza de la Raza Boathouse Gallery
3540 N. Mission Road, Lincoln Heights
COST: FREE; MORE INFO
This group exhibit honoring Dolores Huerta, a trailblazer, survivor and farmworkers’ rights activist, could not be better timed. While the news about César Chávez's history of abuse is harrowing, this show is a chance to honor Huerta and her work for the greater good of farmworkers and California writ large — and view the farmworkers’ movement through the eyes of artists of all stripes.
Sister Dreamer
Through September 2027
Wednesdays to Sundays
1810 W. 76th Street, South Central L.A.
COST: FREE; MORE INFO
Lauren Halsey, who's from South Central, had a vision to create a sculpture park in her home neighborhood for years, and it’s finally a reality. Sister Dreamer, the artist’s “architectural ode to tha surge n splurge of south central los angeles,” is a new monument, attraction, gathering spot and homage to innovation to be enjoyed by all.
Dragon Mama
Through Sunday, April 12
Geffen Playhouse
10886 Le Conte Ave., Westwood
COST: FROM $39; MORE INFO
The second installment of the popular Dragon Cycle series about a Filipina woman’s relationship with her mother, her culture, her queerness and her love life recently opened at the Geffen Playhouse to rave reviews. The one-woman show Dragon Mama follows last year’s Dragon Lady, and is written and performed by Sara Porkalob. It’s peppered with ghosts, Filipino gangsters and a '90s R&B soundtrack.
Secret Walls: Wet Paint LA
Through Saturday, April 4
2272 Venice Blvd., Harvard Heights
COST: FREE; MORE INFO
Graffiti as a movement and as an art takes center stage at Secret Walls' first Wet Paint show in Los Angeles. It features graffiti artists including CAN2, MERLOT, JOSE MERTZ, JOSHUA VIDES, YES2 and many more.
A Celebration of Ralph Steadman: A Live Show
Wednesday, March 25, 8 p.m.
Actors’ Gang
9070 Venice Blvd., Culver City
COST: $58; MORE INFO
Exhibit through Saturday, May 9
Ralph Steadman
Torrance Art Museum
3320 Civic Center Drive, Torrance
COST: FREE; MORE INFO
The writings and illustrations of Ralph Steadman (most famous for his illustrations of gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson’s work) is the focus of an evening on stage at the Actors’ Gang in Culver City. It will feature readings by Josh Brolin, Michael C. Mahon and Pat Healey; singing by Kim Chase; and an introduction by Steadman’s youngest daughter, Sadie Williams. Can’t make the stage show? Head to Torrance Art Museum through May 9 for an exhibit that features more than 140 drawings and other works of Steadman’s, including illustrations for Thompson’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. Plus, check out the Gonzo Art Trail around the L.A. area that the museum has created, which challenges users to a scavenger hunt for Steadman’s SoCal inspirations, and includes events like the Actors’ Gang show throughout the exhibition’s lifecycle.
Regarding Her reception and cooking classes
Monday, March 23, 5:30 p.m.
Maydan Market
4301 W. Jefferson Blvd., West Adams
COST: $108; MORE INFO
Rose Previte, the founder of new West Adams hotspot Maydan Market, joins women’s culinary organization Regarding Her for a cooking class and networking evening at the hip space. Several other big-name L.A. female chefs will join Previte for the event, which invites foodies to participate in an array of intimate cooking classes. You can make Guerrerense tamales with Heidie Irra from Maléna; indigenous Oaxacan chocolate and atole with Odilia Romero and chef Evelyn Gregorio from Lugya’h; market fruit hand pies with Anastashia Chavez from Inglewood’s Cadoro Bakery; Korean pork mandu with Deborah Pak from legendary Koreatown institution Soban; and gnocchetti sardi with Victoria Bermudez from Leona, a micro-batch pasta shop in Los Feliz.