Author: digiindie

  • Sunny Hostin, Angela Yee, Jamie Hector & More Celebrate Moving Mountains Gala

    Sunny Hostin, Rod Strickland, Jon Ledecky, Angela Yee, Jamie Hector, Michael Raymond James & More Celebrate Moving Mountains for the Arts Gala at the Brooklyn Museum

    Founded by The Wire and Bosch star Jamie Hector, Moving Mountains provides free year-round performing arts training, mentorship, and leadership development for New York City youth

    Hi-res photos from the 19th Annual Moving Mountains for the Arts Gala are available HERE

    Moving Mountains celebrated its 19th Annual Moving Mountains for the Arts Gala on Monday, June 8th at the Brooklyn Museum, bringing together leaders from entertainment, sports, media, education, philanthropy, and the Brooklyn community for a powerful evening in support of the organization’s free arts education and mentorship programs for New York City youth.
     
    Founded in 2007 by actor, mentor, and two-time Emmy Award-winning executive producer Jamie Hector (The Wire, Bosch, Ballard, Queen of the South, Cape Fear, Vacation Friends), Moving Mountains is dedicated to empowering young people through professional training in acting, dance, vocal performance, film, theater production, stage management, creative writing, mentorship, and leadership development.

    This year’s gala honored Emmy-nominated journalist, attorney, author, producer, and co-host of The View Sunny Hostin with the Power of Voice Award; NBA legend and Head Coach of the LIU Sharks Rod Strickland with the Visionary Leadership Award; and New York Islanders co-owner Jon Ledecky with the Humanitarian Trailblazer Award. The evening was hosted by award-winning media personality and entrepreneur Angela Yee.
     
    The star-studded celebration welcomed notable guests and supporters including Jamie Hector, Angela Yee, Sunny Hostin, Rod Strickland, Jon Ledecky, Lorraine Bracco, Naturi Naughton, Michael Raymond-James, Harry Lennix, Melle Mel, Mona Scott-Young, Aisha Hinds, Hisham Tawfiq, Saycon Sengbloh, Pastor A.R. Bernard, Geoffrey Canada, Renée Neufville of Zhané, and others.

    The evening opened with Moving Mountains students taking the stage for a live performance from Rent. Junior hosts McKayson Bowen and Victoria Goldsburry welcomed guests, followed by an invocation from Pastor A.R. Bernard and a special video presentation, “A Day at Moving Mountains,” highlighting the organization’s year-round work with young artists across New York City.
     
    The program continued with remarks from Moving Mountains alumna Harmony Browne, who first joined the organization at age eight, went on to graduate from Howard University in 2025 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts, and has now returned to Moving Mountains as a dance instructor. Guests also experienced live student performances featuring vocals, drama, and dance, followed by a video spotlight on alumnus Isaiah Collins and keynote remarks from nationally recognized educator and Harlem Children’s Zone president Geoffrey Canada.
     
    A major focus of the evening was the recognition of this year’s Ken Thompson Award student honoreesJewel Davis, Micah Wong, and Raquel DuvergerDavis, a vocalist, actress, songwriter, and musician from Harlem, will continue her artistic journey at LIU Post. Wong, a graduating senior from Brooklyn High School of the Arts, has already released original music on major streaming platforms and is pursuing a future as a songwriter, producer, and recording artist. Duverger, a gifted actor, vocalist, student-athlete, and trilingual student, will attend the University of Connecticut to study chemistry on a pre-med track after being accepted to 45 colleges and universities.

    One of the night’s most emotional moments came when Sunny Hostin’s daughter Paloma, a junior at Cornell University, surprised her mother onstage to present her with the Power of Voice Award. Hostin had brought Paloma as her guest for the evening, but was visibly moved when she realized her daughter would be part of the program, and spoke from the stage about how much Paloma inspires her.

    Rod Strickland received the Visionary Leadership Award after choosing to attend the gala in Brooklyn instead of an NBA Finals game. A Bronx native, first-round New York Knicks draft pick, 17-season NBA veteran, former league assists leader, and current head coach of the LIU Sharks, Strickland was honored for a career that has extended from the playground to the pros to the sideline.
     
    Jamie Hector presented Jon Ledecky with the Humanitarian Trailblazer Award, recognizing Ledecky’s work as co-owner of the New York Islanders and his broader commitment to philanthropy, education, community, and youth opportunity. The evening also included a special performance by Renée Neufville of the platinum-selling R&B group Zhané, who performed a medley of hits for the crowd.

    After Hector’s closing remarks, the energy in the room shifted into a full New York Knicks viewing party inside the Brooklyn Museum, hosted by the New York Islanders. Guests including Angela Yee, Sunny Hostin, Rod Strickland, Curtis Martin, Michael Raymond-James, Harry Lennix, Melle Mel, Mona Scott-Young, and others watched the game side by side, cheering as the gala became a spirited celebration of New York sports and community.

    For 19 years, Moving Mountains has provided a safe, rigorous, and inspiring creative home for young people across New York City. The organization serves more than 300 youth annually, has produced more than 23 youth theater and film productions, and reports a 100% high school graduation rate among its alumni. Alumni have been accepted to colleges and programs including NYU, Howard University, Buffalo, SUNY New Paltz, Morgan State, SUNY Purchase, AMDA, and others.
     
    Hector founded Moving Mountains after his own experience with arts mentorship as a young person growing up in Brooklyn, where exposure to theater helped shape his life and career. As his role as Marlo Stanfield on HBO’s The Wire brought him national recognition, Hector deepened his commitment to creating similar opportunities for the next generation.
     
    All proceeds from the gala directly support Moving Mountains’ free programming for youth.
     
    Hi-res photos from the 19th Annual Moving Mountains for the Arts Gala are available HERE.

    ABOUT MOVING MOUNTAINS
    Founded in 2007 by actor, mentor, and two-time Emmy Award-winning executive producer Jamie Hector, Moving Mountains is a 501(c)(3) theater-based youth organization providing free professional performing arts training to New York City youth. Through drama, dance, vocal performance, film, creative writing, theater production, stage management, mentorship, and leadership development, Moving Mountains helps students develop skills, talents, and abilities while building character.
     
    The organization has trained more than 5,000 students and provides year-round programming free of charge. Moving Mountains prepares young people for the stage, the screen, the entertainment industry, and life.

  • Hudson Yards’ Bella Abzug Park Announces Over 200 Free Events Bringing Wellness, Music, Film, Dance, and Family Programming

    Hudson Yards’ Bella Abzug Park Announces Over 200 Free Events Bringing Wellness, Music, Film, Dance, and Family Programming



    Bella Abzug Park, the four-block public greenway in the heart of Hudson Yards operated and programmed by the Hudson Yards Hell’s Kitchen Alliance (HYHK), has announced the return of its free seasonal programming lineup, featuring more than 200 public events running from May through October 2026.
     
    Stretching from West 33rd Street to West 37th Street between Tenth and Eleventh Avenues, Bella Abzug Park has quickly emerged as one of Manhattan’s most active and accessible outdoor programming hubs, offering a wide-ranging calendar of wellness classes, dance parties, live music, family programming, cultural events, outdoor films, and neighborhood festivals designed for New Yorkers of all ages.
     
    As the green center of the rapidly evolving Hudson Yards neighborhood, the park has become a gathering place for residents, workers, and visitors seeking affordable, community-driven experiences in the heart of Manhattan. Named after pioneering lawyer, activist, and Congresswoman Bella Abzug, the space reflects a broader spirit of accessibility, public participation, and cultural engagement.
     
    As more New Yorkers look for meaningful ways to spend time outdoors, Bella Abzug Park is embracing the role public space can play in everyday city life – transforming Hudson Yards into an active destination for culture, connection, and community throughout the warmer months.
     
    “Bella Abzug Park was designed to be an active gathering space for the community,” said Ariana Cipriani, Director of Programming and Marketing for the Hudson Yards Hell’s Kitchen Alliance. “The goal is to create a place where people can actually spend time, connect with each other, discover something new, and experience the city in a way that feels welcoming and accessible. Whether someone is coming for yoga after work, bringing their kids to a concert, dancing at Vinyl Nights, or watching a movie under the stars, we want the park to feel alive every day of the season.”
     
    The 2026 lineup reflects that vision, with recurring weekly programming and larger seasonal activations spread throughout the park’s central corridor between West 34th and West 35th Streets. Among this season’s highlights:

    Wellness Programming



    Beginning this month, Bella Abzug Park will host free outdoor yoga classes every Monday and Wednesday through September in partnership with Bien Good Well, featuring bilingual instruction in English and Spanish and an emphasis on mindful movement and accessibility for all experience levels.
     
    Saturday morning mat pilates classes will also return throughout the season, alongside Bootcamp, a HIIT-style outdoor workout series led by Hell’s Kitchen-based gym Speakeasy of Strength every Tuesday evening from June through September.

    Music & Dance



    The park’s popular music and dance programming also returns this season, led by the long-running Vinyl Nights series, which celebrates its seventh year at Bella Abzug Park with evenings dedicated to disco, funk, soul, house, Latin music, and classic hip-hop played entirely on vinyl.
     
    This year’s lineup includes a special Pride Ball-themed edition in June featuring drag performances and expanded partnerships with the Colored Colors festival series.
     
    Starting June 17, Pa’ La Calle Wednesdays will bring free weekly salsa and bachata nights to the park in partnership with Somos Latin Dance, featuring beginner dance lessons followed by open-air social dancing with live DJs throughout the summer.

    Kids & Family Programming



    Family programming remains a major focus of the 2026 season.
     
    Every Tuesday morning, Mike Messer Music will host acoustic sing-along concerts designed for babies, toddlers, and young children, while the House of SpeakEasy Bookmobile returns twice monthly with free books and literacy programming for all ages, transforming the park into an open-air community library.


    Spring Fling Arts & Music Festival



    One of the season’s largest recurring activations, the Colored Colors Spring Fling Arts & Music Festival, returns for its sixth year with expanded programming across multiple weekends in May and June.
     
    What began as a grassroots neighborhood arts festival has evolved into a major public celebration featuring local artists, independent vendors, live music performances, food programming, and community-driven cultural activations.
     
    This year’s expanded “Spring Forward” edition takes place May 30, June 6, June 13, and June 27–28.


    Movies Under the Stars



    Returning in August, Bella Abzug Park’s “Movies Under the Stars” series offers free weekly outdoor screenings every Tuesday evening, complete with popcorn giveaways and open public seating.
     
    This year’s lineup includes Ferris Bueller’s Day OffJawsNational Treasureand Clueless.
     
    Unlike some of the city’s more crowded outdoor film series, Bella Abzug Park’s screenings have increasingly become known as a more relaxed and accessible moviegoing experience, with attendees encouraged to arrive early with blankets or claim one of the park’s Adirondack chairs.

    The Hudson Yards Hell’s Kitchen Alliance serves as the official maintenance and operations partner for Bella Abzug Park in partnership with NYC Parks. Since launching in 2015, HYHK has worked to enhance quality of life throughout the district through sanitation, beautification, pedestrian improvements, horticulture, and year-round public programming initiatives.
     
    HYHK has also continued developing Bella Abzug Park as a site for public art, cultural programming, sculpture, and community-driven activations serving the broader neighborhood and greater New York City.
     
    Located directly above the 34th Street-Hudson Yards 7 train extension, Bella Abzug Park sits at the crossroads of one of New York City’s fastest-growing neighborhoods, welcoming residents, office workers, and visitors alike into a public space increasingly defined by participation rather than passivity.
     
    Additional programming, registration links, and event updates will continue to be announced throughout the season. For the full 2026 calendar, visit HYHK Alliance.
     
    Follow updates on Instagram:
    @hudsonyardshellskitchen