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By Make-Believe Association
4.7
4747 ratings
The podcast currently has 17 episodes available.
LAKE SONG makes its debut today on the Tribeca Audio Premieres podcast! Listen here.
Starting on October 13, listen to LAKE SONG on its own podcast feed.
Available everywhere, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, and on the web at lakesong.fm.
Follow or subscribe to LAKE SONG to hear new episodes as they appear each week.
Lake Song co-creator Nate Marshall talks about what Chicago poets have always done. . . and what they're *going* to do.
Lake Song, the epic new audio-drama series from Make-Believe Association, will debut October 12 as an official selection of Tribeca Audio.
For more, visit lakesong.fm.
OFFICIAL SELECTION - Tribeca Festival Audio Premieres. It's 2098 and the Republic of Chicago has what the world needs: fresh water. But with new opportunities come new threats, especially for a pair of siblings on the South Side. Can the people come together to save their city--and each other?
LAKE SONG is the joint creation of seven multidisciplinary Chicagoans. Combining sci-fi and music, politics and poetry, it's a collective response to our times, and a shared dream of our future.
Go to the new LAKE SONG feed to subscribe. Coming in mid-October.
Following the cancellation of Shakespeare in the Park, Oskar Eustis talks about a utopian story in one of Shakespeare's plays. A practical guide to what a vision of the future can do--and what it can't.
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Hosted by Jeremy McCarter
Music, mixing, and mastering by Mikhail Fiksel
Graphics and social media by Carly Pearlman
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Share Make-Believe on social media:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MakeBelieveFM
IG: https://www.instagram.com/makebelievefm/
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Can a new society arise from a cataclysm? Does humanity deserve a second chance? Chicago author and journalist Natalie Moore joins a virtual audience to explore utopia, dystopia, and the radical imagination while discussing the great Chicago dramatist's "What Use Are Flowers?".
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Listen to Lorraine Hansberry’s What Use Are Flowers?: https://makebelieve.fm/flowers
Listen to Natalie Moore and Jeremy McCarter’s City on Fire: Chicago Race Riot 1919: https://makebelieve.fm/city-on-fire
Credits for this episode:
Hosted by Jeremy McCarter
Music, mixing, and mastering by Mikhail Fiksel
Graphics and social media by Carly Pearlman
Credits for What Use Are Flowers?:
Directed by Daniel Kyri
Music by Mikhail Fiksel
Sound by Erisa Apantaku and Mikhail Fiksel
Production manager - Madeleine Borg
Stage manager - JC Widman
Cast:
Hermit – Billy Branch
Charlie – Daniel Kyri
Lily – Khloe Janel
William – Tevion Lanier
Narration read by Kiayla Ryann
Thank you to the Lorraine Hansberry Literary Trust for allowing us to produce the audio drama; and to the Chauncey and Marion Deering McCormick Foundation and the Poetry Foundation for making season one possible
To tide us over until baseball returns, sportswriter Will Leitch breaks down the most famous athletic contest of all time, and a lively virtual audience debates its moral today.
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Subscribe to Will Leitch's newsletter: https://tinyletter.com/williamfleitch
Consider an actual tortoise vs. an actual hare: https://metro.co.uk/2016/10/15/someone-staged-an-actual-race-between-a-rabbit-and-a-tortoise-6194091/
Hosted by Jeremy McCarter
Music, mixing, and mastering by Mikhail Fiksel
Graphics and social media by Carly Pearlman
The sky might or might not be falling, but the story that gave rise to that phrase is everywhere. In episode two of our series inspired by Boccaccio, Stephanie Ybarra and a group of fascinating people from all over the country reconsider the tale of the moment.
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Hosted by Jeremy McCarter
Music, mixing, and mastering by Mikhail Fiksel
Graphics and social media by Carly Pearlman
Join the conversation - @MakeBelieveFM
Inspired by Boccaccio, a new series of conversations in which we share a story and invite a fascinating person to talk about what it means. In episode one, Martin Edlund of Malaria No More interprets the Zen fable about the tiger and the strawberry.
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Hosted by Jeremy McCarter
Music, mixing, and mastering by Mikhail Fiksel
Graphics and social media by Carly Pearlman
Special thanks to Maria Tatar
Join the conversation - @MakeBelieveFM
A docudrama about the summer that ravaged a city--and remade it. Co-produced with WBEZ.
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CITY ON FIRE: CHICAGO RACE RIOT 1919
A co-production of WBEZ Chicago and Make-Believe Association
Written by Natalie Moore and Jeremy McCarter Original music and sound design by Mikhail Fiksel
Executive produced by Cate Cahan for WBEZ and Jeremy McCarter for Make-Believe
Recorded at WBEZ Studios and The Revival, Chicago
CAST Ayanna Bria Bakari - Mrs. Ellis, Witness Brenda Barrie - Wife Terry Bell - Ensemble Eduardo Curley-Carrillo - Ensemble Charles Andrew Gardner - Oscar Dozier, Eugene's Friend Lawrence Grimm - Officer, Alderman, Minister Francis Guinan - Motorman, The Chief Sam Hubbard - George Stauber, Alderman C. Anthony Jackson - The Reverend Timothy Edward Kane - Eugene Temple, Dispatcher Ryan Kitley - Homeowner, Husband, Minister Tevion Lanier - Eugene Williams, Civic Leader Al’Jaleel McGhee - Migrant, Son Marcus D. Moore - Ensemble A.C. Smith - Migrant, Father Andre Teamer - Witness, Husband Anji White - Migrant, Mother Jacqueline Williams - Ida B. Wells
PRODUCTION STAFF Casting director - Laura Alcalá Baker Production manager - Madeleine Borg Production coordinator - Erisa Apantaku Stage manager - Heather Sparling
SOUND TEAM Recording engineers - Adam Yoffe, DeShun Smith, Shelly Steffens, and J. Kyle White-Sullivan Editing by Mikhail Fiksel Mastering by Adam Yoffe and Shelly Steffens
Credits voiced by Melba Lara
Equipment provided by TechMagic Designs
Graphic design by Carly Pearlman
“St. Louis Blues” composed by W. C. Handy
SPECIAL THANKS Adam Green; Liesl Olson; Cindy Abbott, Betsy Berger, Steve Edwards, Janet Gould, Alden Loury, Tracy Brown, Jennifer Bell and the staff of WBEZ; the Make-Believe Writers’ Room (Sydney Charles, Nancy García Loza, Nate Marshall, and Kristina Valada-Viars); Carolyn Casselman and Rima Pancholi of Paul Weiss; Catherine Allen of The Den Theatre; John Stoops of The Revival; Giselle Castro; and Robert Hornbostel
To support Make-Believe with a tax-deductible contribution, please visit:
https://makebelieve.fm/support-us/
Does humanity deserve another chance? A fable from the great Lorraine Hansberry about a hermit and some children at the end of the world--or the beginning.
To contact Make-Believe, email us at [email protected]
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What Use Are Flowers?: A Fable
By Lorraine Hansberry
Music by Mikhail Fiksel
Sound by Erisa Apantaku and Mikhail Fiksel
Directed by Daniel Kyri
Executive produced by Jeremy McCarter
Performed and recorded live at the Harold Washington Library, Chicago
CAST
Hermit - Billy Branch
Charlie - Daniel Kyri
Lily - Khloe Janel
William - Tevion Lanier
Narration read by Kiayla Ryann
SOUND TEAM
Recording engineer - Joe Palermo
Additional recording - Scott Tallarida at Trigger
PRODUCTION STAFF
Production manager - Madeleine Borg
Stage manager - JC Widman
Community manager - LaRob Payton
POST-PRODUCTION
Editing and mixing by Erisa Apantaku and Mikhail Fiksel
Sound design by Mikhail Fiksel
Final mixing and mastering by Joe Palermo
Permission from Joi Gresham and the Lorraine Hansberry Literary Trust
Graphic design by Carly Pearlman
Equipment provided by TechMagic Designs
Make-Believe theme music by Mikhail Fiksel
“Greensleeves” - traditional English folk melody
Ludwig van Beethoven
Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 - 4. Finale (Ode to Joy)
Ludwig van Beethoven
Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 - 3. Adagio molto e cantabile; Andante moderato
Performed by Skidmore College Orchestra, via Musopen
SPECIAL THANKS
Joi Gresham, Julie McGarvie, and the Lorraine Hansberry Literary Trust; Brian Bannon and the staff of Chicago Public Library; Carolyn Casselman of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton, and Garrison; Robert Hornbostel; Nancy García Loza; Nate Marshall; SAG-AFTRA.
PRODUCTION SPONSORS
The Chauncey and Marion Deering McCormick Family Foundation, for an essential launch grant
The Poetry Foundation, our lead season sponsor
Joyce Chelberg, whose generosity supports the work of Make-Believe’s actors
All our donors and supporters
To support Make-Believe with a tax-deductible contribution, please visit:
https://makebelieve.fm/support-us/
The podcast currently has 17 episodes available.