She Just Won’t Give Up: The Life, Times, and Tenacity of Vinie Burrows
The actor and activist looks back on a career that began on Broadway in 1950 and took her around the world to tell Black women’s stories.
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The actor and activist looks back on a career that began on Broadway in 1950 and took her around the world to tell Black women’s stories.
Black trauma demands and deserves creative expression, but our lives are about so much more than tragedy.
From a socially distanced staging of ‘Lobby Hero’ to a TYA event addressing racism, there’s no shortage of theatre for your screen this week.
In this solo episode, Brian reflects on the podcast’s origins, frets about the future, and finds hope in an elder’s advice.
While this influential new-play conference developed plenty of new work, it also developed racist and sexist practices, say many artists and staff, necessitating a change of leadership.
The arts are not a luxury but a huge economic engine for America’s cities and towns, and a reflection of our national culture. They deserve your unstinting support.
How a cross-cultural collaboration took shape over video call, then in person, affirming universal truths about both human experience and theatre practice.
What does the future of theatre look like to a freelance general technician? It may be time to build that camper van and hit the road.
The critics return to consider when theatre will return, how to cover it when it does, and how not to succumb to Zoom despair.
American Shakespeare Center and Berkshire Theatre Group will soon open full-scale productions, but only one has Actors’ Equity’s approval.