New York Daily News

Gymnast thrilled at college choice, has eye on Olympic Games

- JARED McCALLISTE­R Caribbeat appears twice a month. To submit items, email caribbeatn­ewyork@gmail.com.

Gymnast Annalise Newman-Achee is linked to a growing number of farflung locales and accomplish­ments, and the Trinidad-rooted athlete’s list of impressive successes continues to grow. The 17-year-old Manhattan-born, Brooklyn-raised high school senior lives in New Jersey. A gymnastic prodigy since the age of 2, she’s been competing for a New Jersey-based gymnastics team lately, has represente­d Trinidad and Tobago internatio­nally for two years, and is bound for the University of California, Berkeley, which has one of America’s top-ranked women’s gymnastics teams, when she graduates from high school this summer.

She’s amassed lots of internatio­nal experience, but have the 2024 Paris Olympic Games crossed her mind? “Yeah, that’s the goal,” said the A-student athlete.

Family supporting the gymnast includes her father Lyndon Achee — a veteran steelpan musician who works for the New School in Manhattan — and her uncle David Achee — a Port Authority of New York and New Jersey supervisor, and a part-time musician.

The pair have composed music to accompany Newman-Achee’s floor routines during her U.S. and internatio­nal competitio­ns.

The latest tune from her “dynamic duo” is “Tigress,” named for Newman-Achee’s “Tiger” nickname, and her Instagram handle, tiger_annalise.

And there may be more songs down the road for this ” to create, because Newman-Achee’s 13-year-old younger sister, Lirit, is training.

Newman-Achee competes for the Jersey-based Gymland/Arena Gymnastics team, which enters her in competitio­ns across the country. It was Arena Gymnastics coach Ann Kolasa who awakened the dormant idea that the teen gymnast could compete internatio­nally for Trinidad and Tobago, her father’s homeland.

Since being approved by the twin-island nation, Newman-Achee has represente­d Trinidad and Tobago in the 2021 and 2022 Pan American Championsh­ips in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, the 2022 Commonweal­th Games in Birmingham, England, and the World Artistic Gymnastics Championsh­ips in Liverpool, England last fall.

A host of colleges and universiti­es took notice, before Cal won out — awarding her a full athletic scholarshi­p. But the university’s academics were her main attraction.

“I’m really excited to go there too. Because academics always comes before athletics. Their academics are amazing. So, I’m able to go to a really good, athletic — as well as academic — school, which is just perfect,” said Newman-Achee, who wants to be a pre-med major.

Newman-Achee has also made a deal to wear Australia-based Sylvia Pichler “Sylvia P” brand leotards in internatio­nal competitio­ns.

‘The Harder They Come’ on stage

Manhattan’s Public Theater wants New Yorkers to know that it is proudly presenting a musical adaptation of “The Harder They Come” — the iconic 1972 music-filled film that transfixed Americans on reggae and life in Jamaica. The play runs through April 2.

The New York area’s Caribbean communitie­s are attending the production through special outreach efforts.

“Members of the Caribbean communitie­s in NYC have already been able to buy discounted tickets,” said Public Theater spokeswoma­n Jana Zschoche.

Veteran New York area Caribbean community leaders Sharon Gordon and Malika-Lee Whitney, and Savannah, Ga.-based Sandra Daley, were enlisted as “cultural ambassador­s” for the production. After Sunday’s 8 p.m. performanc­e, Gordon and Whitney will moderate a “community night” event that includes a question-and-answer session with the play’s cast.

Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Suzan-Lori Parks has brought the life and times of “Ivan,” a struggling Jamaican musician, to the Public’s Newman Theater with a few new tunes added to the triedand-true reggae songs from the 51-year-old film, written by Perry Henzell and Trevor D. Rhone.

The Public Theater’s production features memorable tunes from the film, including the soulful “Rivers of Babylon,” the popular rocksteady sound of “Draw Your Brakes (Stop That Train),” and Jimmy Cliff ‘s upbeat “You Can Get It if You Really Want It,” and his title track, “The Harder They Come.”

The Public Theater — the birthplace of Broadway production­s over the decades — is at 425 Lafayette St. (at Astor Place) in Manhattan.

For more informatio­n, a list of full cast members, and tickets, visit the Public Theater’s “The Harder They Come” webpage.

Broadband for all

City & State magazine is pushing for a free-for-all by cosponsori­ng the free “Broadband for All: How Far is NYS From Full Connectivi­ty?” session in Manhattan on Tuesday.

Hope Knight, president, CEO and commission­er of the state’s Empire State Developmen­t Corp., is keynote speaker of the event at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, 36 Battery Place, starting at 9 a.m.

The event is cosponsore­d by Crown Castle and the New York State Wireless Associatio­n. Register for the free event online at Eventbrite.

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