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Talk to Me

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Episodes

Time and Space and Philip Glass: The Iconic Artist Talks at BAM

In 1976, the New York premiere of Philip Glass and Robert Wilson’s “Einstein on the Beach” captivated audiences, polarized critics and put both artists on the map of contemporary performance art. In four-and-a half hours, its famously reductive score, enigmatic text and limpid, tensile choreography (by Lucinda Childs) teases out the meaning of the time/space continuum.

Sep 14, 20121 hr 8 minEp. 136

Fighting Words: Churchill's Granddaughter Offers a Model for Leadership

“If you are going to go through hell, keep going.” This is just one of the many robust adages coined by Sir Winston Churchill during World War II. A new exhibition at the Morgan Library & Museum called “Churchill: The Power of Words,” which showcased his long, celebrated career as a statesman, writer, and orator, opened on Friday.

Jun 12, 201241 minEp. 133

A Reporter's Perspective on War at PEN World Voices

The PEN America Center’s organizational focus is the effect of world events on the safety and freedom of expression of writers, so the topic of war naturally looms large in its cultural consciousness. As part of the recent PEN World Voices Festival, Polish journalist and author Wojciech Jagielski was interviewed by Joel Whitney, a founding editor of Guernica: A Magazine of Art & Politics .

May 29, 20121 hr 2 minEp. 132

Rushdie Talk on Censorship Wraps Up PEN Festival

The 2012 PEN World Voices Festival ended with a talk about censorship at the Cooper Union by novelist Salman Rushdie ( Midnight's Children , The Satanic Verses ). After the speech, the PEN festival founder had a conversation with writer Gary Shteyngart ( The Russian Debutante's Handbook, Super Sad True Love Story ).

May 23, 201223 minEp. 131

Getting Your Irish On at the PEN World Voices Festival

Comparisons are invidious, but Hugo Hamilton is clearly a successor to the late Frank McCourt, author of the celebrated “Angela’s Ashes,” in the tradition of Irish memoir. Hamilton read from his book, “The Speckled People,” as part of the PEN World Voices Festival on May 3. The event was held at Ireland House, a handsome mews building off Washington Square Park that is home to NYU’s Irish studies department. Hamilton was introduced by John Waters, head of the university’s Irish literature progra...

May 16, 201218 minEp. 130

Jennifer Egan on How to Create Your Own Rules at PEN

Earlier in May, Jacob Weisberg, editor-in-chief for the Slate group, and author Jennifer Egan discussed Egan’s Pulitzer Prize-winning, genre-busting novel A Visit from the Goon Squad, and her writing process at The New School. Their conversation was part of the annual PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature .

May 15, 201251 minEp. 129

Doctorow, Atwood and Amis on America and its Role in Global Political Culture

One of the highlights of this year's PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature was a talk between writers E.L. Doctorow, Margaret Atwood and Martin Amis. New York Times chief film critic A.O. Scott asked the authors about America and its role in the global political culture at The Times Center. The Sunday before the talk, Doctorow ( Homer & Langley , Ragtime ) , Atwood ( The Blind Assassin , Alias Grace ) and Amis ( Time's Arrow, The Rachel Papers ) had written essays for The Sun...

May 11, 20121 hr 16 minEp. 128

Authors Conjure Up 'Strange Places' in Readings at Happy Ending

The theme for the Happy Ending Music and Reading Series at Joe's Pub in March was Strange Places. Listen to the extraordinary — and absurd — environments that authors Jessica Anthony, Amelia Gray and Heidi Julavitz conjured up their readings.

Mar 23, 201232 minEp. 126

Bringing At-Risk Teens Closer to Home: A Forum on Juvenile Justice at The New School

The Center for New York City Affairs hosted a forum on February 2 to review the connection between child welfare and juvenile justice in New York City and the state. The event, entitled “ Ties That Bind: Reimagining juvenile justice and child welfare for teens, families and communities, ” was intended to coincide with the implementation of key new initiatives that would bring the administration of the intertwined child welfare, juvenile justice and foster care services under New York City jurisd...

Mar 05, 20121 hr 32 minEp. 125

The Fire in Him: John Hurt Sets Krapp's Record Straight

If there is a lesson to be learned from the post-curtain talk between John Hurt — who has just finished a limited run at the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Harvey Theater in Beckett’s “Krapp’s Last Tape” — and philosopher Simon Critchley, it’s that if you throw philosophy at an actor, he’ll throw it right back.

Dec 23, 201120 minEp. 124

Talk to Me: Behaving Badly at Happy Ending

The Happy Ending Music and Reading series has formed a partnership with the arts colony Yaddo located in Saratoga Springs, New York, to present programs featuring writers who have been Yaddo fellows. On December 7th, curator Amanda Stern welcomed three Yaddo alums at the series’ performance home, Joe’s Pub , for a program entitled “Reality and Scandal.”

Dec 22, 201131 minEp. 123

Connected by a 'River of Smoke': Amitav Ghosh and Jonathan Spence at The Asia Society

The Asia Society inaugurated its new Asian Arts & Ideas series this month with “The ‘Chindia’ Dialogues,” a three-day forum that examined the confluence of the world’s two most powerful developing economies. The organizers chose an unusual point of departure for event — not a historical overview, but a conversation between Jonathan Spence, former Sterling Professor of History at Yale, and the Indian novelist Amitav Ghosh.

Nov 30, 201155 minEp. 122

Lovely Bones: Celebrating Anne Sexton at the Cornelia Street Café

The poet Anne Sexton took her own life in 1974, but had she lived, this year would have marked her 83rd birthday. Reason enough, thought the actor Paul Hecht, to organize an elegant tribute to her at the Cornelia Street Café on Nov. 14.

Nov 22, 201153 minEp. 121

The Asia Society Presents Oral Histories from Burma

While diplomats and academics met at the General Assembly of the United Nations on the East Side of Midtown Manhattan, the Asia Society hosted "Voices from Burma," an event honoring the stories of Burmese refugees and political prisoners. Actor and playwright Wallace Shawn, actor Kathryn Grody, writers Amitav Ghosh and Deborah Eisenberg, and former political prisoner Law Eh Soe read from Nowhere to Be Home: Narratives from Survivors of Burma's Military Regime . Veteran journalist, educator, and ...

Oct 24, 201124 minEp. 118

Janet Malcolm and Ian Frazier Talk Shop at The New Yorker Festival

Late last month, journalist Janet Malcolm had a conversation with New Yorker writer Ian Frazier at The New Yorker Festival . Malcolm's writing has been appearing in The New Yorker — as well as in other outlets — for almost 50 years.

Oct 18, 20111 hr 25 minEp. 117

The Call of Things: Jane Bennett Talks About Hoarders at the Vera List Center

“ Les chose sont contre nous ” ("Things are against us") is the wry slogan of Paul Jennings’ parodic philosophy resistentialism*. But Professor Jane Bennett of Johns Hopkins University doesn’t think so. (*For more on resistentialism, check out: Paul Jennings, "Report on Resistentialism," The Jenguin Pennings , 1963.)

Sep 26, 201140 minEp. 115

Game of Thrones: Sir Peter Hall and Michael Boyd in Conversation

In honor of its 50th birthday, the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) brought together company founder Sir Peter Hall and current Artistic Director Michael Boyd in conversation at the Park Avenue Armory where the RSC is currently in residence.

Aug 05, 201137 minEp. 114

'Speak the Speech I Pray You': Directors Weigh in on Bringing Shakespeare to the Stage

The second of four panel discussions held in conjunction with the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) residency at The Park Avenue Armory focused on “Directing Shakespeare." David Farr, the RSC's associate director and director of "King Lear" and "The Winter’s Tale" in the company's New York repertoire was joined by Arin Arbus, Associate Artistic Director of The Theater for a New Audience; Karin Coonrod, the founding director of the Arden Party Theater Company; and Mark Lamos, Artistic Director of t...

Jul 18, 201150 minEp. 113

Talk To Me: A Happy Beginning for Happy Ending

The Happy Ending Music & Reading Series is celebrating a happy beginning. The series performance on June 8 at Joe’s Pub marked the launch of Happy Ending’s partnership with Yaddo , an artists’ working community based in Saratoga Springs, New York. Starting next fall, the series will produce three shows featuring entirely Yaddo-affiliated artists. Wednesday night, Suzanne Bocanegra and Kyle deCamp performed a collaborative visual and performance piece, and Amor Towles read from his new novel....

Jun 15, 201128 minEp. 112

Talk to Me: New Orleans as Paradox

New Orleans manages to leave a mark, good or bad, on its tourists, natives, and those who've decided to take up roots there. Most people who visit have a great time, but many can attest to how the city's unique insular culture, history and traditions can be as frustrating as they are fascinating. As part of the 2011 Pen World Voices Festival of International Literature, five distinguished New Orleans writers — Sarah Broom, Richard Campanella, Nicholas Lemann, Fatima Sheik and Billy Sothern — rea...

May 11, 20111 hr 10 minEp. 111

Talk to Me: The PEN World Voices Festival Takes on Corporate Publishing

While PEN is often at the forefront of debates and initiatives to do with the more obvious forms of oppression against writers — isolation, censorship, imprisonment — it is also ready to tackle the more subtle deterrents that plague the publishing industry as a whole.

May 10, 20111 hr 6 minEp. 110

Talk to Me: From Russia with Love at the Greene Space

Are you craving a little continental culture? Do you need a good book recommendation? Both were on offer on Tuesday, April 26, when New York Public Radio's Jerome L. Greene Space hosted a literary salon as part of the 2011 PEN World Voices Festival . The event: “From Russia with Love,” featured Russian poetry, criticism, and classical music.

May 06, 20111 hrEp. 109

Talk to Me: China in Two Acts

China watchers and writers Ian Buruma, Yan Lianke, Linda Polman, David Rieff, and Zha Jianying spoke at the PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature about human rights in China at the Great Hall at Cooper Union.

May 05, 20111 hr 6 minEp. 108

Behind 'War Horse': The Puppeteers at The New School

One of the most powerful aspects of “ War Horse ,” which opened at Lincoln Center on April 14, is, of course, the astonishing puppets. Minutes into this riveting tale of a boy and his horse against the background of World War I ( see our feature here ), the audience has completely invested the “horses” with life.

Apr 29, 20111 hr 9 minEp. 107

Cornelia Street Café Says Happy Birthday to Shakespeare

It’s a good thing that William Shakespeare was born in the spring—April 26—because his sonnets are crammed with sumptuous images of ripe nature bursting its bounds. And for a good many years the Cornelia Street Café has celebrated the playwright’s birthday with a reading of selected sonnets.

Apr 29, 201136 minEp. 106
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