Below Is an Accompanying List for the Survey of Fiscally Sponsored Artists and Arts Projects in New York City
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Horton Foote
38th Season • 373rd Production MAINSTAGE / MARCH 29 THROUGH MAY 5, 2002 David Emmes Martin Benson Producing Artistic Director Artistic Director presents the World Premiere of by HORTON FOOTE Scenic Design Costume Design Lighting Design Composer MICHAEL DEVINE MAGGIE MORGAN TOM RUZIKA DENNIS MCCARTHY Dramaturgs Production Manager Stage Manager JENNIFER KIGER/LINDA S. BAITY TOM ABERGER *RANDALL K. LUM Directed by MARTIN BENSON Honorary Producers JEAN AND TIM WEISS, AT&T: ONSTAGE ADMINISTERED BY THEATRE COMMUNICATIONS GROUP PERFORMING ARTS NETWORK / SOUTH COAST REPERTORY P - 1 CAST OF CHARACTERS (In order of appearance) Constance ................................................................................................... *Annie LaRussa Laverne .................................................................................................... *Jennifer Parsons Mae ............................................................................................................ *Barbara Roberts Frankie ...................................................................................................... *Juliana Donald Fred ............................................................................................................... *Joel Anderson Georgia Dale ............................................................................................ *Linda Gehringer S.P. ............................................................................................................... *Hal Landon Jr. Mrs. Willis ....................................................................................................... -
July 28, 2003
July 28, 2003 BY HAND David O. Carson, Esquire General Counsel U.S. Copyright Office Library of Congress James Madison Memorial Building Room LM-403 101 Independence Avenue, S.E. Washington, D.C. 20559-6000 Re: Docket No. RM 2002-4 Exemption to Prohibition on Circumvention of Copyright Protection Systems for Access Control Technologies Dear Mr. Carson: Thank you for your letter of June 24, 2003 raising additional questions related to my May 14, 2003 testimony in the above-captioned proceeding. I have set forth my answers below, and then turn to the issues you noted were left open from my testimony. I should note at the outset, however, that because the Office’s questions were very detailed, my answers are very detailed. Thus, there is a risk of losing perspective. I caution the Office not to fall into that trap. As explained in my testimony and further explained below, the fact is that record companies have commercially distributed in the U.S. a miniscule number of CDs with technological protection measures (“TPMs”) – some 0.05% of the CDs shipped from calendar year 2001 to date (the period during which TPMs have been used on U.S. commercial releases). 1 That tiny number cannot be said to have had any material effect to date – and certainly not a substantial one – on the ability of users to make noninfringing uses of sound recordings. The proponents of the exemptions do not seriously suggest otherwise. Instead, their cases are based on an asserted fear of future harm because record companies have not forsworn the possibility of using protective technologies, which 1 Our calculations are based on manufacturers’ unit shipments for calendar years 2001 and 2002 and estimated half-year data for 2003. -
See What's on ¶O – Lelo This Week, This Hour, This Second
FOR THE WEEK OF MAY 28 - JUNE 3, 2017 THE GREAT INDEX TO FUN DINING • ARTS • MUSIC • NIGHTLIFE Look for it every Friday in the HIGHLIGHTS THIS WEEK on Fox. Jamie Foxx hosts this new game show, which TODAY TUESDAY features Shazam, the world’s most popular song identi- The Leftovers World of Dance fication app. HBO 6:00 p.m. KHNL 9:00 p.m. FRIDAY Kevin (Justin Theroux) assumes an alternate identity Extraordinary dancers from all ages and walks of life Shark Tank when he embarks on a mission of mercy in a new epi- kick off the qualifier round for the chance to win a life- sode of “The Leftovers,” airing today on HBO. altering $1-million prize in the premiere of “World of KITV 7:00 p.m. The post-apocalyptic drama follows a family of survi- Dance,” airing Tuesday on NBC. Jenna Dewan Tatum vors a few years after the mysterious simultaneous dis- serves as mentor and host, while Jennifer Lopez, Business moguls decide whether or not to invest appearance of 140 million people. Derek Hough and Ne-Yo serve as judges. their own money in new products and companies in back-to-back episodes of the critically acclaimed reali- ty TV series “Shark Tank,” airing Friday on ABC. MONDAY WEDNESDAY Hopeful entrepreneurs pitch their ideas in the hopes of Lucifer The F Word snagging a deal with a Shark. KHON 8:00 p.m. KHON 8:00 p.m. SATURDAY Charlotte (Tricia Helfer) acciden- Celebrity chef and TV personality Gordon Ram- To Tell the Truth tally charbroils a man to death say hosts as foodie families and friends compete in self-defence, and Lucifer in high-stakes cook-offs in “The F Word,” pre- KITV 7:00 p.m. -
Alumni Revue! This Issue Was Created Since It Was Decided to Publish a New Edition Every Other Year Beginning with SP 2017
AAlluummnnii RReevvuuee Ph.D. Program in Theatre The Graduate Center City University of New York Volume XIII (Updated) SP 2016 Welcome to the updated version of the thirteenth edition of our Alumni Revue! This issue was created since it was decided to publish a new edition every other year beginning with SP 2017. It once again expands our numbers and updates existing entries. Thanks to all of you who returned the forms that provided us with this information; please continue to urge your fellow alums to do the same so that the following editions will be even larger and more complete. For copies of the form, Alumni Information Questionnaire, please contact the editor of this revue, Lynette Gibson, Assistant Program Officer/Academic Program Coordinator, Ph.D. Program in Theatre, The Graduate Center, City University of New York, 365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10016-4309. You may also email her at [email protected]. Thank you again for staying in touch with us. We’re always delighted to hear from you! Jean Graham-Jones Executive Officer Hello Everyone: his is the updated version of the thirteenth edition of Alumni Revue. As always, I would like to thank our alumni for taking the time to send me T their updated information. I am, as always, very grateful to the Administrative Assistants, who are responsible for ensuring the entries are correctly edited. The Cover Page was done once again by James Armstrong, maybe he should be named honorary “cover-in-chief”. The photograph shows the exterior of Shakespeare’s Globe in London, England and was taken in August 2012. -
Janine Antoni Anna Halprin Stephen Petronio
JANINE ANTONI ANNA HALPRIN STEPHEN PETRONIO Ally EDITED BY ADRIAN HEATHFIELD PUBLISHED BY THE FABRIC WORKSHOP AND MUSEUM & HIRMER PUBLISHERS JANINE ANTONI INGESTING THE WISDOM BODY Carol Becker Such concerns and their manifestations in form bring to mind D. W. Winnicott’s seminal text Playing and Reality. Winnicott observes that children often adopt a “transitional object” — a creative solution to the originary anxiety of dependence and separation.4 In the earliest stages of development, children often create their own transitional object. It is not usually an articulated “toy” as representational as a velveteen rabbit, for example, but rather a unique condition that infants find around them and imagine into being — comforting textures such as a fuzzy bit of flannel blanket kneaded into a ball, a cord of rubber binding along the edge of a pillow, a frayed spot on the crib’s sheet. The found object is something that appeals to the child sensorially and that he or she experiences as an extension of the self, even before the child is aware of the self. As the object gains familiarity, it acquires the magical property of assuaging anxiety. Thus the child is able to sleep and play without worry, having found a creative solution to a challenging, developmental need to experience safety when apart from the mother (or the primary caregiver) and even when completely alone. Artists often are chasing after something that sometimes is also chasing after them. At As a result, the object garners the child’s total devotion. To misplace, lose, or in any way alter those moments when “the creation stands between the observer and the artist’s creativity,” it before the child is ready to permit such a transition — even by washing it and changing its it might be best, as D. -
Special Hurricaneissue
INSIDE WEEK OF JUNE 6-12, 2013 www.FloridaWeekly.com Vol. III, No. 35 • FREE What to Important Storm Pets need a Costliest eat numbers timeline plan too storms SPECIAL HURRICANE ISSUE: A12 A14 A14 A16 A16 Tale from Ireland Dramaworks scores with heartfelt “Lughnasa.” A29 w 2013 LOOKS BUSY BY MIKE LYONS Severe Weather Expert, WPBF 25 HERE WE GO AGAIN! ANOTHER HURRICANE season is upon us and it looks like another active year in the tropics. Dr. William Gray of Colorado State Uni- SOCIETY/NETWORKING versity, who pioneered seasonal hurricane See who was out and about in forecasts more than 25 years ago, predicts 18 Palm Beach County. A20-21, 37 w named storms this year, nine hurricanes and four major hurricanes. That compares to the long-term average of 12 storms, six hurricanes and two major hurricanes. “The tropical Atlantic has anomalously warmed over the past several months, and it appears that the chances of an El Niño event this summer and fall are unlikely,” said Dr. Gray. Take Lisa Marie home “We anticipate an above-average probability for major hur- She will need a calm, patient ricanes making landfall family. A6 w along the United SEE SEASON, A12 w INSET: Hurricane Wilma struck in 2005. Mike Lyons NOAA Honda Classic brings in record $2.13 million for charity _________________________SPECIAL TO FLORIDA WEEKLY Tiger Woods added the tournament to In the Kitchen his schedule, joining other such top play- The Honda Classic has shot ers as 2012 champ Rory McIlroy, Lee West- In the Kitchen with Lenore Pinello another hole in one for charity. -
Stories of Life
STORIES OF LIFE: 2017 ANNUAL REPORT Norton Healthcare has provided compassionate, highly-skilled, innovative care to adult and pediatric patients and their families for well over a century. MARY LOUISE SUTTON CHILDREN’S FREE BY THIS YEAR, NORTON AT A TIME WHEN IT NORTON DONATED HOSPITAL (NOW CALLED CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL WAS UNPRECEDENTED HER HOME TO BE NORTON CHILDREN’S HAD OPENED THE FOR A PEDIATRIC AND USED TOWARDS HOSPITAL) OFFICIALLY REGION’S FIRST AND GENERAL HOSPITAL THE CREATION OF OPENED IN LOUISVILLE ONLY BURN UNIT TO MERGE, NORTON A NEW LOUISVILLE AND BECAME THE 10TH EXCLUSIVELY MEMORIAL INFIRMARY HOSPITAL. THE JOHN CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL FOR CHILDREN, AND MERGES WITH THE N. NORTON MEMORIAL IN THE UNITED STATES. STARTED KENTUCKY’S CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL. INFIRMARY OPENED FIRST POISON IN 1886 AND WAS CONTROL CENTER. NAMED TO HONOR MARY’S HUSBAND. STORIES OF LIFE: Norton Healthcare’s mission is to provide quality health care to all those we serve, in a manner that meets the needs of our community—from the tiniest premature infants to our eldest community members, and everyone in between. For more than 130 years, the narratives of our patients’ lives have been shaped by the care rooted in this mission, and the stories on the following pages give meaning to our legacy. As a not-for-profit system, we rely on your generosity and support to continue transforming lives in our communities by helping to fund critical equipment and services that make lifesaving differences for our patients. Our legacy is driven by those who enter our doors—a legacy we hope to continue for the next 130 years and beyond. -
Qurrat Ann Kadwani: Still Calling Her Q!
1 More Next Blog» Create Blog Sign In InfiniteBody art and creative consciousness by Eva Yaa Asantewaa Tuesday, May 6, 2014 Your Host Qurrat Ann Kadwani: Still calling her Q! Eva Yaa Asantewaa Follow View my complete profile My Pages Home About Eva Yaa Asantewaa Getting to know Eva (interview) Qurrat Ann Kadwani Eva's Tarot site (photo Bolti Studios) Interview on Tarot Talk Contact Eva Name Email * Message * Send Contribute to InfiniteBody Subscribe to IB's feed Click to subscribe to InfiniteBody RSS Get InfiniteBody by Email Talented and personable Qurrat Ann Kadwani (whose solo show, They Call Me Q!, I wrote about Email address... Submit here) is back and, I hope, every bit as "wicked smart and genuinely funny" as I observed back in September. Now she's bringing the show to the Off Broadway St. Luke's Theatre , May 19-June 4, Mondays at 7pm and Wednesdays at 8pm. THEY CALL ME Q is the story of an Indian girl growing up in the Boogie Down Bronx who gracefully seeks balance between the cultural pressures brought forth by her traditional InfiniteBody Archive parents and wanting acceptance into her new culture. Along the journey, Qurrat Ann Kadwani transforms into 13 characters that have shaped her life including her parents, ► 2015 (222) Caucasian teachers, Puerto Rican classmates, and African-American friends. Laden with ▼ 2014 (648) heart and abundant humor, THEY CALL ME Q speaks to the universal search for identity ► December (55) experienced by immigrants of all nationalities. ► November (55) Program, schedule and ticket information ► October (56) ► September (42) St. -
Raquel Z. Rivera Puerto Rican Artist & Scholar
Fall–Winter 2013 Volume 39: 3–4 The Journal of New York Folklore Raquel Z. Rivera Puerto Rican Artist & Scholar Remembering Pete Seeger Irish Lace in Western NY Fair Fotos A Portrait of Karyl Denison Eaglefeathers (1952–2012) From the Director From the Editor On September 17, Henry’s nomination was supported by several What a blow to hear of 2014, Henry Arquette folklorists and folklore organizations, and it Peter Seeger’s death on received the highest was promoted by members of his Mohawk January 27, 2014 at the award that this na- community, in recognition of his importance age of 94. tion offers to folk and not only as a traditional artist but also for his I thought the man traditional artists. A prominence in teaching others to carry on would live forever. maker of utilitarian the tradition. One can’t say with certainty What a champion of so baskets held in high what the effect of this award will have for the many causes over the regard by his Haude- future. The youngest members in attendance, decades of his life, and nosaunee Mohawk community, Henry Ar- great grandchildren of Henry Arquette, made a master of weaving music into this activism. quette was one of nine award honorees for the nine-hour journey from Akwesasne to I’m so glad to have joined recent 2014, and the only artist from New York State Washington, DC, to witness the ceremony. celebrations of his life’s work. At last year’s to receive the National Endowment for the Their wide-eyed look at the ceremony and benefit concert at Proctors Theater in Arts National Heritage Fellowship Award for its trappings of splendor will without doubt Schenectady, I enthusiastically sang along 2014. -
Muskingum College Nazareth College
Year Sport Name Team Position 1990 Women's At‐Large Deena Wigger 3 Riflery Women's Volleyball Lee Ann Allen 2 ‐‐‐ 1994 Women's Volleyball Sarah Dearworth 3 ‐‐‐ 2009 Women's Basketball Amber Guffey 1 Women's Basketball Paige Guffey 1 2010 Baseball Wes Cunningham 2 Infield Muskingum College 1974 Men's Basketball Gary Ferber 2 F 1977 Men's Basketball Larry Hall HM 1978 Football Dan Radalia 1 DL 1979 Football Dan Radalia 1 DL 1983 Baseball Jim Nicholson 1 SS Men's Basketball Myron Dulkowski HM F 1984 Baseball Jim Nicholson 1 SS 1986 Baseball Brad Wilkins 2 3B Football Timothy Hiles 2 OT 1988 Women's Volleyball Toni St. Clair 1 B 1989 Women's At‐Large Kaye Matthews 1 Track & Field Women's Volleyball Toni St. Clair #1B 1990 Softball Kate Titus 2 C 1993 Football Luke Beal 2 DL 1996 Men's At‐Large Bradley Van Sickle 2 Soccer 1997 Women's Volleyball Amanda Klontz 3 S 1998 Women's Volleyball Carrie Lyons 1 OH 1999 Baseball James Grandey 1 INF Men's At‐Large Mike Schramm 3 Golf Softball Jennifer Segner 2 P 2000 Softball Jennifer M. Segner 1 P Women's Volleyball Kristen Vejsicky 3 S 2001 Men's At‐Large Bill Hockaday 3 Wrestling Softball Carla Kampschmidt 1 IF Women's Volleyball Ashley Layman 3 MH 2003 Baseball Ryan Alexander 2 OF Women's Soccer Cheryl Davies 1 Midfielder 2005 Softball Erica Hoyt 3 Pitcher 2006 Softball Erica Hoyt 1 Pitcher 2007 Men's Track/Cross Country Justin Walters 3 2008 Men's Track/Cross Country Justin Walters 1 2009 Baseball Brock Whiteman 2 Catcher 2010 Baseball Brock Whiteman 2 Catcher Nazareth College 1987 Women's Volleyball -
Aactfest History
AACTFest History AACTFest had its beginnings in 1957. At that time, the first World Festival of Amateur Theatre (Le Festival Mondiale du Théâtre Amateur) was held in the principality of Monaco under the high patronage of Their Serene Highnesses Prince Ranier and Princess Grace. The World Festival of Amateur Theatre was, and is, the official festival of the International Amateur Theatre Association (AITA/IATA). The typical American definition of amateur, implying a relative lack of skill, is not accepted by AITA/IATA. Amateur is used in the context of “to love”; thus, an amateur is one who does something for love and pleasure rather than for monetary remuneration. While AITA/IATA handles the international aspects, the festival itself is almost entirely a Monégasque production organized by the Studio de Monaco, home of the Cercle Artistique Monégasque d’Amateurs de Théâtre. Random theatres from America took turns representing the U.S. at this quadrennial international event. After eight years, the World Festival organization contacted the American National Theatre and Academy (ANTA). Through the offices of Princess Grace, ANTA was asked to provide input as to what theatres from the U.S. should attend the World Festival. ANTA felt it would be more appropriate to pass the invitation on to the American Community Theatre Association (ACTA). ACTA was the community theatre division of the seven- year-old American Theatre Association (ATA) umbrella organization. (In 1965 ACTA consisted of approximately 12 to 14 community theatres and had a membership of 40 to 50.) Howard Orms, the President of ACTA, contacted several theatres with no success. -
HOLLY ARSENAULT Playwright
[email protected] | 206.794.3299 HOLLY ARSENAULT www.holly-arsenault.com playwright FULL-LENGTH PLAYS AWARDS & RESIDENCIES National Winter Playwriting Retreat, 2018 The Great Inconvenience Workshop production, Annex Theatre, July 2018 Artist Trust James W. Ray Venture Project Award nominee, 2016 The Manor Equity staged reading, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Seattle Rep Writers Group, 2013 - 2015 June 2015 Princess Grace Award semi-finalist for Undo, 2014 The Cut Equity staged reading, Seattle Repertory Theatre, American Theatre Critics Association new play June 2014 awards nominee for Undo, 2014 Educational developmental reading, University of Theatre Puget Sound Gregory Award for Washington School of Drama, February 2015 Outstanding New Play for Undo, 2013 Seattle Theatre Writers Gypsy Rose Lee Award Marvelous for Excellence in Local Playwriting for Undo, Original adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen’s 2013 The Snow Queen, commissioned by The Drama School at Seattle Children’s Theatre Seattle Office of Arts & Culture CityArtist grant for Undo, 2012 Educational production, Seattle Children’s Theatre Drama School, July 2014, Heideman Award finalist for 24 Pictures of a Pilot, 2009 Educational production, Bainbridge Island Performing Arts Center, August 2015 PUBLICATIONS Developmental reading, Live Girls! Theater, UPCOMING: Scattered Thoughts as I Prepare March 2016 a Eulogy on the Occasion of the Tragic Death of the Royal Children (short play, full text), Undo Caffe Cino magazine, Fall 2018 Workshop production, Annex Theatre, January 2013