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The Three P’s with Tamara Tunie: Preparation, Persistence, and Perseverance
ORAL HISTORY PROJECT

The Three P’s with Tamara Tunie: Preparation, Persistence, and Perseverance

Tamara Tunie was center stage May 17 at the Lincoln Center Library for the Performing Arts for the League of Professional Theatre Women’s Oral History Project. She answered interviewer David Gordon’s thoughtful questions with honesty and reflection, heart and humor. “What I think a lot of people don’t understand about directing is it’s not just about … Continue reading

International Cultural Exchange – The Benefits and Challenges by Kalina Wagenstein
Features

International Cultural Exchange – The Benefits and Challenges by Kalina Wagenstein

Does one even have to make an argument for the rewards of working internationally? The merits are easily grasped. It broadens horizons, changes perspective, helps you leave your comfort zone and stretch yourself.  It introduces you to new people, builds friendships and creative interactions that may last for years, and, besides, traveling is really fun. … Continue reading

Crossing the Ocean: How Irish Theatre-Makers in NYC Mentor the Next Generation of Female Voices
Features

Crossing the Ocean: How Irish Theatre-Makers in NYC Mentor the Next Generation of Female Voices

By Heather O’Donovan Nestled unassumingly on a Chelsea side street sits New York’s Irish Repertory Theatre, or, as most call it, Irish Rep. It’s an inconspicuous space: no Broadway-style marquees, only a suitably green banner poking out from the facade alerting in-the-know theatre-goers to its presence. It was in the basement blackbox studio of this … Continue reading

Given Circumstances: Actors Play a Role in Academic Settings
Series

Given Circumstances: Actors Play a Role in Academic Settings

Series Part Two: Actor Simulations Help Train Future Doctors and More By Dara O’Brien How do you tell a parent that their five-year-old’s cancer is inoperable? Or a mother of five that she has early-onset Alzheimer’s Disease? All doctors, whatever their specialty, will have to communicate traumatic news to some of their patients. In order … Continue reading

­­­­­­­Acting “As if” – Role Play Simulations in High Stakes Police Encounters­­­­­­­
From the Field / Series

­­­­­­­Acting “As if” – Role Play Simulations in High Stakes Police Encounters­­­­­­­

by Dara O’Brien PART ONE I once served as the General Manager of the Italian branch of a multinational financial services firm. I held the job for about five hours. The brevity of my tenure had nothing to do with my performance. It also had everything to do with it. Because I wasn’t a manager … Continue reading

VIEWPOINT: A Vote for the Outliers                                                                              by Magdalena Gomez
Viewpoint

VIEWPOINT: A Vote for the Outliers by Magdalena Gomez

Theater as activism is not a modern invention, nor is the need for pro-active civic engagement to sustain it. In 425 B.C. when Athenian playwright, Aristophanes, called out the bumbling power plays of magistrates and war mongers in his play, Archarians, he was essentially the (documented) founder of activist theater. The first documented public poet, … Continue reading