Lit Up! with Nina Alvarez

Lit Up! with Nina Alvarez

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A weekly radio show about literature and life purpose.

Lit Up with Nina Alvarez


    • Sep 20, 2015 LATEST EPISODE
    • infrequent NEW EPISODES
    • 31m AVG DURATION
    • 16 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Lit Up! with Nina Alvarez

    Part of Doing Something is Listening

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2015 31:50


    This week Nina speaks about opening The Aurora Center for Creative and Spiritual Arts and her up and down journey making the decision. And how: "Ever since I signed that lease, I've shifted." Nina talks about learning to hold creative endeavors gently, being patient, listening for guidance. What wants to happen? What wants to come through you?

    What Are My Questions?

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2015 29:35


    After a 2-month summer break, I sat down one September Saturday morning and talked with Dan about what I wanted Lit Up to be. Trying to get to something richer and more personal, more artful and fun. Not that I don't love the 14 interviews I've done, but that I knew it was time for Lit Up to take the next step in its evolution. This week's episode of Lit Up is the documentation of that conversation.

    Make Your Own Opportunities: Interview with Bookwriter Alec Michael Powell and Playwright Kate Royal

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2015 30:09


    Rochester theater up-and-comers Alec Michael Powell and Kate Royal talk about collaborating on their first musical "The Weekends," a show about the disillusionment the current crop of 20-somethings feel transitioning from college to "the real world." They discuss allowing character personalities to inform music style, and how their goal is to portray Millennials honestly and unashamedly.

    Listen to Yourself: Interview with Singer-Songwriter Susanna Rose

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2015 29:10


    Meet singer-songwriter Susanna Rose: lovely, humble, and the real deal. She's heard songs playing in her head since she was a child, but it wasn't until she learned guitar at 21 that she found a way to get them out. In this episode, Susanna Rose gives us a live performance of "Song to Myself," as well as recorded versions of the first song she ever wrote: "Christmas Eve," and one of her most recent: "Separate Ways." In between, we'll learn about her unpretentious approach to songwriting and that vulnerable feeling she gets whenever she puts her music "out there."

    I Want to Put a Different Face to Travel Media: Interview with Professional Blogger Jessica DeJesus

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2015 30:12


    Have you ever dreamed of quitting your job and becoming a professional blogger? Travel and food blogger Jessica DeJesus is making the plunge this summer. She talks to us about her #litup moment, how she got started, the ups and downs of building her visibility and audience, how Wayne Dyer's The Power of Intention inspires her to stay positive, and she even gives some practical advice to new bloggers. She is also writing a new book: The Dining Traveler's Guide to Puerto Rico.

    Some Years Are Questions, and Some Years Are Answers: Interview with Yoga Instructor Tate DeCaro

    Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2015 29:53


    Meet Tate DeCaro, a newly minted yoga instructor. In 2013, while asking the question "What do I want to do with my life," an unexpected illness struck. This started a chain of events in which she changed her diet and her relationship with exercise and yoga. In 2014 she decided to take a trip to Kalani, Hawaii to practice yoga. That trip would turn out to be life-changing, turning 2014 into a year that answered the question posed in 2013. Tate's story is particularly inspiring if you're searching for your path, dealing with body issues, or struggling with unhappiness.

    We are All Children of the Same God: Interview with Author Alan Hilfiker

    Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2015 29:58


    This week we talk with poet and fiction writer Alan Hilfiker about his newly published book MEMORIAL DAY (Meliora Publications), his formative experiences in his first English class at the University of Rochester: "I was struck, I was inspired. I never got over it." We discuss his interest in World War II, as well as the inspiration for his story "The Transplant," about a rabid racist who gets an ironic surprise after a kidney transplant. Alan's work is best described as "keenly observed encounters" and we talk about the empathy, sensitivity, and perspective that drive the work he calls "both hobbyist and compulsive" as well as his formation of scholarships for first-generation college students and minorities at the U of R. Included: listen to a 10 minute clip from his newly published story-poem book "Memorial Day," read by Jonathan Foss.

    Memorial Day by Alan Hilfiker

    Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2015 48:35


    Reading of the poem "Memorial Day" by Alan Hilfiker (published May 24, 2015). Narrated by Jonathan Foss. In this stark and solemnly paced story-poem, inspired by a New York Times cover photo of a young woman sitting by a military gravestone, poet Alan Hilfiker introduces two characters: Old Steadman, and a young widow, each keeping vigil through a long Memorial Day. As ceremonies and patriotic speeches come and go, the widow struggles to come to terms with the loss of her husband in Afghanistan. Through memories of the past and longing for a future not to be, her grief bears witness to the cost of all lives cut short by service to country. Finally she looks to the old caretaker for an answer to the question “Why?” What is left when words and rites are not enough?

    I Know How to Entertain. I Don’t Know How to Change the World: Interview with Director Melyssa Hall

    Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2015 29:58


    Spend a half-hour with the infectious spirit of young but accomplished Director/ Actor/ Producer Melyssa Hall. We talk about her booth "The Art of Conversation" at the Venice, New York Biennale, her newly minted role as an artistic intern at Ithaca's Kitchen Theater, her love of fantasy over realism, her experiences directing the vastly different play styles of "Cow Town" and "Aria de Capo," and her desire to make spaces for talented people to do the work that they do.

    Being a Conduit for Other People's Stories: Interview with Journalist Robin Flanigan

    Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2015 29:58


    Meet Rochester writer and essayist Robin Flanigan, whose words and work chronicle the deep meaning behind everyday life. Her journey from writing for free for a community newspaper to making a living as a successful writer is the blueprint every young writer needs to study. Hear about how the mind-bending coincidences that catalyzed the biography she's writing, get inspired by her upcoming children's book that teaches mindfulness, and listen to a heart-rending passage from her essay "Faith in a Folder" which chronicles her faith-filled struggle from infertility to motherhood.

    Applause is More Addictive Than Any Drug You Could Name: Interview with Actor Jack Simel

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2015 29:38


    Interview with Rochester actor/director Jack Simel on a lifetime of loving applause, the much-missed Shipping Dock theater, community theater as it's changed over the past 40 years, and why coming back to Rochester to get back into acting was a good idea. He also discusses his upcoming directorial debut "Deathtrap," produced by the Penfield Players.

    Empathy and Deep Listening in the Art of Poetry: Interview with Poet/Therapist Charlie Cote

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2015 29:58


    Poet and therapist Charlie Cote brings a sense of deep listening to his work and writing. In this interview, Charlie reads some of his recent work, we talk about how he became a poet, and we discuss Poetically Connect, Charlie's on-the-fly poems-on-demand.

    Writing & Researching Controversial Topics: Interview with Dramaturg Claudia Nolan

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2015 29:56


    This week I interview Dramaturg Claudia Nolan and Playwright Kate Royal on the dynamic, creative, and research-oriented role of the dramaturg in the production of Royal's recent play "Mammoth" and her upcoming staged reading of "Girls Can Tell," a play about sexual assault on college campuses.

    Take the Time to Step Out of Yourself: Interview with Author Julian Campbell

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2015 29:12


    Interview with novelist Julian Foster, who has a lot to say about the art of writing, and the realities we live in. Foster is one of those rare people who can speak across dividing lines of class, race, gender, We talk about his book Before I Wake, recent violence among young girls in urban environments, and his next book Beautiful Me.

    Channeling Your Characters: Interview with Playwright Kate Royal

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2015 29:52


    Interview with Kate Royal on the role of the playwright, director, and actors as conduits in a cycle of channeled humanity; and how her recent play "Mammoth" was her coming out play, even though she didn't know it when she was writing it.

    Breaking Through Creative Blocks: Interview with Writer Christine Green

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2015 30:14


    Interview with writer Christine Green on how she got through her writers block using an accountability buddy, intuition, and re-creating the conditions of the last time she felt good about herself as a writer.

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