Hear all stories from this pageadd all to playlist
Actor, director, producer and comedian Mel Brooks talks about his new Broadway musical Young Frankenstein, the movie and potential stage production of Blazing Saddles, and his long and successful career.
James Earl Jones helps explain the unforgettable tragic hero of August Wilson's Fences.
He's back on Broadway, playing a washed-up thespian with a dubious gift and a yen for the bottle.
April 19, 2008 · Three years ago, Kent Thompson became the artistic director of the Denver Center Theatre Company. Under his leadership, the company has become one of a handful of regional theaters around the country committed to developing new work.
In Character
April 13, 2008 · Gypsy's antiheroine is a woman boiling over with frustrated ambition, who channels all her energies into turning her daughters into stars — woe be to anyone who gets in her way. Jeff Lunden has an appreciation.
Climate Connections: Profiles
April 7, 2008 · Ruslana, Ukraine's biggest pop star, switches between two roles on stage: a limp, pale, synthetic woman chained to a machine for energy and a vibrant warrior whose energy comes from clean, renewable resources. But in post-Soviet Ukraine, her fans are more interested in capitalist consumption than conservation.
Nation
April 7, 2008 · For his Pulitzer-prize winning feature story, Gene Weingarten of The Washington Post convinced world-class violinist Joshua Bell to play beautiful music in a Metrorail station to gauge commuters' reaction.
Music Interviews & Profiles
March 29, 2008 · When your stock in trade is your voice, the slightest tickle in the back of your throat is scary. An opera singer gives advice about how to preserve and protect your voice.
CD Reviews
March 26, 2008 · The keyboardist delivers a historically informed performance worthy of the passion behind Handel's Organ Concertos on a new CD. Egarr possesses a remarkable gift for combining subtle musical gestures with forward–moving, irrepressible rhythms.
Arts & Culture
March 16, 2008 · For the first time, August Wilson's famed Century Cycle — a series of 10 plays about the African-American experience — will be presented under one roof. The Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., will stage the works in chronological order this month.
In Character
March 15, 2008 · She's one of theater's Everest roles, exhausting, perilous — and irresistible to any actress with a sense of adventure. Even Marge Simpson couldn't resist her. NPR's Lynn Neary asks why Streetcar is such a wild ride.
Arts & Culture
March 8, 2008 · Solas Nua is perhaps the only theater group in the country that produces nothing but contemporary Irish plays. Linda Murray, its founder and artistic director, talks with Jacki Lyden about how rapidly Irish identity is changing and how that is reflected in a new "Golden Age" of Irish drama.
Interviews
March 8, 2008 · Victoria Wood wrote and starred in Housewife 49, a film that follows one woman's life amid the challenges of wartime England.
March 1, 2008 · The famous Chicago improvisation comedy troupe is taking shots at the presidential candidates. Its most recent revue, Between Barack and a Hard Place, got a pretty good review from Obama himself: He was seen belly laughing from the audience.
March 1, 2008 · Three new off-Broadway musicals are pushing boundaries in terms of subject matter and style. Even if shows based on, say, indie cartoons or expressionism generate only a mixed response, they're more thought-provoking than such spectacles as The Little Mermaid and Young Frankenstein.