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We’re looking at the center of a couple of venn diagrams and the overlapping circles that bring those centers together.
For instance, the artistic circles often overlap through the fantastic venues we have in the area. At the Shea theater, Nero Orchestra will conclude its season tomorrow night, and on that same stage the next night, Eggtooth Productions will bring in partners in unconventional theater, Karen Montanaro and Jack Golden. Additionally, Eggtooth will soon host a production of Sarah Ruhl’s “Orlando” at the Academy of Music.
So we chat with Cailin Marcel Manson of Nero Orchestra, Linda Tardif of the Shea Theater and Linda McInerney of Eggtoth Productions about the performances and art spaces that have crossed their respective streams.
And in Amherst, some intrepid art students are taking on a daunting task of making picture books about slavery. We head to UMass Amherst to meet a handful of students with books that are a part of the exhibit, “Sowing History, Reaping Justice,” to hear about their experiences in creating these works. Plus, we gain insight from some of the academic stewards in the topic of slavery in children’s books, Clark University professor Raphael Rogers, and the history of enslavement Canada and the U.S. north, UMass professor and Slavery North Initiative Director Charmaine Nelson.
5
3232 ratings
We’re looking at the center of a couple of venn diagrams and the overlapping circles that bring those centers together.
For instance, the artistic circles often overlap through the fantastic venues we have in the area. At the Shea theater, Nero Orchestra will conclude its season tomorrow night, and on that same stage the next night, Eggtooth Productions will bring in partners in unconventional theater, Karen Montanaro and Jack Golden. Additionally, Eggtooth will soon host a production of Sarah Ruhl’s “Orlando” at the Academy of Music.
So we chat with Cailin Marcel Manson of Nero Orchestra, Linda Tardif of the Shea Theater and Linda McInerney of Eggtoth Productions about the performances and art spaces that have crossed their respective streams.
And in Amherst, some intrepid art students are taking on a daunting task of making picture books about slavery. We head to UMass Amherst to meet a handful of students with books that are a part of the exhibit, “Sowing History, Reaping Justice,” to hear about their experiences in creating these works. Plus, we gain insight from some of the academic stewards in the topic of slavery in children’s books, Clark University professor Raphael Rogers, and the history of enslavement Canada and the U.S. north, UMass professor and Slavery North Initiative Director Charmaine Nelson.
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