
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In our second Interview-focused episode, we are joined once again by Austin Tichenor, host of the Reduced Shakespeare Company Podcast, to finish out our conversation. Austin discusses the utility of versality in the theatre, as well as the importance of not feeding your actors just before showtime. Who knew actors were so much like Gremlins?
Thanks again to Austin Tichenor for sitting down to chat. You can learn more about Austin and the entire Reduced crew at www.reducedshakespeare.com.
Thanks as always to Cullen Vance for the amazing music. You can find more of his work over at www.cullenvancecreative.com
Thanks to Daniel "Blue" Rodriguez for the thumbnail artwork
Thank you Missoula Children's Theatre for allowing me to use this audio, and for putting up with me for somewhere around 14 years.
If you enjoyed the show, please head over to Apple Podcasts or iTunes and leave us a rating and review, and then share the episode with a friend. Maybe this will be the episode that gets them to enjoy live theatre again. Or maybe they'll just enjoy the show for what it is. That's fine too.
4.8
66 ratings
In our second Interview-focused episode, we are joined once again by Austin Tichenor, host of the Reduced Shakespeare Company Podcast, to finish out our conversation. Austin discusses the utility of versality in the theatre, as well as the importance of not feeding your actors just before showtime. Who knew actors were so much like Gremlins?
Thanks again to Austin Tichenor for sitting down to chat. You can learn more about Austin and the entire Reduced crew at www.reducedshakespeare.com.
Thanks as always to Cullen Vance for the amazing music. You can find more of his work over at www.cullenvancecreative.com
Thanks to Daniel "Blue" Rodriguez for the thumbnail artwork
Thank you Missoula Children's Theatre for allowing me to use this audio, and for putting up with me for somewhere around 14 years.
If you enjoyed the show, please head over to Apple Podcasts or iTunes and leave us a rating and review, and then share the episode with a friend. Maybe this will be the episode that gets them to enjoy live theatre again. Or maybe they'll just enjoy the show for what it is. That's fine too.