The play Safe House by Keith Josef Adkins, directed by L. Peter Callender, at Aurora Theatre in Berkeley through December 4, 2016 is reviewed by KPFA chief theatre critic Richard Wolinsky.
The play Safe House by Keith Josef Adkins, directed by L. Peter Callender, at Aurora Theatre in Berkeley through December 4, 2016 is reviewed by KPFA chief theatre critic Richard Wolinsky.
James Gleick, whose latest book is Time Travel, is interviewed by Richard Wolinsky. The author of The Information returns with Time Travel, which focuses on the history of time travel in literature and physics, and on the various paradoxes and possibilities of the idea.
Nomi Prins
Ed Decker, founder and artistic director of New Conservatory Theatre Center in San Francisco talks with KPFA’s Richard Wolinsky. The New Conservatory Theatre Center in San Francisco focuses on queer and allied theatre and has been around since 1981.
IGD had the opportunity in the past few days to travel up to Standing Rock and speak with a few folks about the current struggle against the Dakota Access Pipeline or DAPL, where indigenous peoples and those allied with them have been encamped since April with the intention of blocking the pipeline from crossing the Missouri … Continued
Review of Seared by Theresa Rebeck, directed by Margarett Perry, at San Francisco Playhouse through November 12th. Reviewed by Richard Wolinsky.
Review of The Last Tiger in Haiti by Jeff Augustin, directed by Joshua Kahan Brody, at Berkeley Rep’s Peets Theatre through November 27, 2016. Reviewed by Richard Wolinsky.
Review of Tom Stoppard’s play, The Hard Problem, directed by Carey Perloff, at A.C.T.’s Geary Theatre through November 13, 2016. Reviewed by Richard Wolinsky.
Marisa Silver, author of the novel Little Nothing is interviewed by Richard Wolinsky. Marisa Silver, who began her artistic career in her twenties as a film director (Permanent Record, He Said She Said), and then turned to novels (The God of War, Mary Coin), discusses her latest novel, Little Nothing, a fantasy set in Eastern Europe in the early years of the twentieth century, and involves a girl who changes form and identity as the world becomes modern. Marisa Silver is the daughter of noted film director Joan Micklin Silver.
Jeff Chang interview on UpFront with Mitch Jeserich and Cat Brooks.