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#raredisease #millennial #FDA #orphandrug #advocate #EveryLifeFoundation #rarediseaseweek CONVERSATIONS WITH CALVIN; WE THE SPECIES DANIEL PEZZETTA: “A special introspective, riveting, interview with his living with a rare disease (as a millennial, college student, national advocate) 30 MILLION Americans live with RARE diseases (93-95% of the 7000 rare diseases have NO FDA approved therapy)” 193 Interviews. GLOBAL Reach. Earth Life. Amazing People. PLEASE SUBSCRIBE (You can almost find any subject you want) https://www.youtube.com/c/ConversationswithCalvinWetheSpecIEs ** DANIEL PEZZETTA; Rare Diseases Legislative Advocate; EveryLife Foundation for Rare Diseases Intern; Millennial; Author; George Washington Univ YouTube: CONTACT: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dan-pezzetta-591707216/ EveryLife Foundation: https://everylifefoundation.org/about-us/ Book Baby Purchase Book: ‘Disposed: A Story of Chronic Illness During the COVID-19 Pandemic': https://store.bookbaby.com/book/disposed-a-story-of-chronic-illness-during-the-covid-19-pandemic BIO: “Legislative advocate for those with Rare Diseases who is currently attending George Washington for Legislative Affairs. I've spoken at M.I.T, Harvard Medical School, and Rare Disease Week on Capitol Hill about policy” EVERYLIFE FOUNDATION FOR RARE DISEASES The EveryLife Foundation for Rare Diseases is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to empowering the rare disease patient community to advocate for impactful, science-driven legislation and policy that advances the equitable development of and access to lifesaving diagnoses, treatments and cures. We do not speak for patients. We provide the training, education, resources and opportunities to make their voices heard. By activating the patient advocate, we can change public policy and save lives. ** ALSO ON AUDIO: SPOTIFY http://spoti.fi/3bMYVYW GOOGLE PODCASTS http://bit.ly/38yH3yP edits by Claudine Smith- Email: casproductions01@gmail.com ** PLEASE SUBSCRIBE (You can almost get any subject you want ) #animalrescue #climatechange #womenshealth #ONEHEALTH #water #singersongwriter #branding #mindfullness #comedy #sport #infertility #racialequity #stuntwomen #comedy #environment #NASA
The Top 4 at 4 + Last night’s DateNight cruise Purity and the Pharisee culture ... GUEST Jerry Bowyer Nirvana baby story How should Christians understand the Adam & Eve story in Genesis? ... GUEST Dr S. Joshua Swamidass (MD, PhD, UC–Irvine) ... scientist, physician, and associate professor of laboratory and genomic medicine at Washington Univ in St Louis. His most recent work is “The Genealogical Adam and Eve: The Surprising Science of Universal Ancestry” Does this make Sense? Western PA Covid-19 Update GUEST Dr Rick Zimmerman ... is a COVID-19 researcher collaborating with the Centers for Disease Control ... He clinically tests and treats Coronavirus patients, and has decade-plus experience as an infectious disease epidemiologist Stefan Wisniewski retiresSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Top 4 at 4 + Last night’s DateNight cruise Purity and the Pharisee culture ... GUEST Jerry Bowyer Nirvana baby story How should Christians understand the Adam & Eve story in Genesis? ... GUEST Dr S. Joshua Swamidass (MD, PhD, UC–Irvine) ... scientist, physician, and associate professor of laboratory and genomic medicine at Washington Univ in St Louis. His most recent work is “The Genealogical Adam and Eve: The Surprising Science of Universal Ancestry” Does this make Sense? Western PA Covid-19 Update GUEST Dr Rick Zimmerman ... is a COVID-19 researcher collaborating with the Centers for Disease Control ... He clinically tests and treats Coronavirus patients, and has decade-plus experience as an infectious disease epidemiologist Stefan Wisniewski retiresSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4:10 PM - Recent Supreme Courtrulings: Surprises? … GUEST Jake Warner … Legal Counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom. 4:25 PM **Ugandan Olympian tests positive for COVID upon arrival, but Japan says they’ll allow 50% capacity at venues (AP) ... + ... The first openly transgender athlete to compete in the Olympics (The Daily Wire)** 4:35 PM - Outside the garden and after the Fall, there is BBQ … GUEST Dr S. Joshua Swamidass (MD, PhD, UC–Irvine) ... scientist, physician, and associate professor of laboratory and genomic medicine at Washington Univ in St Louis, where he uses artificial intelligence to explore science at the intersection of medicine, biology, and chemistry ... He is a Veritas Forums speaker and blogs at Peaceful Science ... his most recent work is “The Genealogical Adam and Eve: The Surprising Science of UniversalAncestry”. 4:50 PM **The world’s most premature baby has celebrated his first bday after beating 0% odds of surviving (CNN) ... + ... Carnegie Library of Pgh challenges kids to read 5 books this summer (Trib)** 5:00 PM **7 Simple Steps to feeling better and shedding the pandemic pounds (WSJ)** 5:10 PM - GUEST Jerry Bowyer ...Host of the new podcast Meeting of Minds, author of "The Maker Versus the Takers," Editor @TownhallFinance, @Affluent_Invest . former columnist @Forbes .com 5:50 PM **Streaming now exceeds broadcast TV viewing for the first time (PG).See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4:10 PM - Recent Supreme Courtrulings: Surprises? … GUEST Jake Warner … Legal Counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom. 4:25 PM **Ugandan Olympian tests positive for COVID upon arrival, but Japan says they’ll allow 50% capacity at venues (AP) ... + ... The first openly transgender athlete to compete in the Olympics (The Daily Wire)** 4:35 PM - Outside the garden and after the Fall, there is BBQ … GUEST Dr S. Joshua Swamidass (MD, PhD, UC–Irvine) ... scientist, physician, and associate professor of laboratory and genomic medicine at Washington Univ in St Louis, where he uses artificial intelligence to explore science at the intersection of medicine, biology, and chemistry ... He is a Veritas Forums speaker and blogs at Peaceful Science ... his most recent work is “The Genealogical Adam and Eve: The Surprising Science of UniversalAncestry”. 4:50 PM **The world’s most premature baby has celebrated his first bday after beating 0% odds of surviving (CNN) ... + ... Carnegie Library of Pgh challenges kids to read 5 books this summer (Trib)** 5:00 PM **7 Simple Steps to feeling better and shedding the pandemic pounds (WSJ)** 5:10 PM - GUEST Jerry Bowyer ...Host of the new podcast Meeting of Minds, author of "The Maker Versus the Takers," Editor @TownhallFinance, @Affluent_Invest . former columnist @Forbes .com 5:50 PM **Streaming now exceeds broadcast TV viewing for the first time (PG).See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4:10 - Christian shareholders engaging with corporate America to bring sanity back … GUEST: Jerry Bowyer ... is a financial economist, a public speaker for business conferences, a frequent radio & television guest, an author and a journalist. 5:10 - Adam and Eve ... GUEST: Dr S. Joshua Swamidass (MD, PhD, UC–Irvine) ... scientist, physician, and associate professor of laboratory and genomic medicine at Washington Univ in St Louis. 5:35 - Surviving Religion 101: Letters to a Christian Student on Keeping the Faith in College … GUEST: Michael J. Kruger …President and Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at Reformed Theological Seminary in Charlotte, NC.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
4:10 - Christian shareholders engaging with corporate America to bring sanity back … GUEST: Jerry Bowyer ... is a financial economist, a public speaker for business conferences, a frequent radio & television guest, an author and a journalist. 5:10 - Adam and Eve ... GUEST: Dr S. Joshua Swamidass (MD, PhD, UC–Irvine) ... scientist, physician, and associate professor of laboratory and genomic medicine at Washington Univ in St Louis. 5:35 - Surviving Religion 101: Letters to a Christian Student on Keeping the Faith in College … GUEST: Michael J. Kruger …President and Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at Reformed Theological Seminary in Charlotte, NC.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Episode 17 of Adversity University featuring our guest, Washington Univ. Biology Professor, Dr. Erik Herzog. Co-Hosts, Sean Giles and Garrett Metcalf take some time to break down Dr. Herzog's research and the adversity that comes with it. Dr. Herzog's lab studies the cellular and molecular basis of circadian rhythms in mammals. Executive Producer Sam Thrutchley.
In Episode 18, we spoke to Maurice Creek to hear his perspective on growing up in PG county and the documentary “Basketball County: It's in the Water,” choosing to hoop at the University of Indiana (even though he always wanted to be a Terp), leading all freshman in the nation in scoring his Freshman year then having to overcome injury adversity early on in his college career, transferring to George Washington and hitting a game-winning shot to beat the Terps, his pro career and playing in The Basketball Tournament (TBT) this summer, and much more. During the rest of the show, the fellas discussed all the latest news and notes from the world of sports, such as Jamal Adams requesting a trade, several professional sports teams around the country announcing that several players/ staff have tested positive for COVID-19, the NBA and its restart plan, the MLB inching closer to a return, amongst other things.
Today on the Coach and Coordinator Podcast we welcome back offensive coordinator Ian Shoemaker onto the show. Previously the head coach at Central Washington University, Coach Shoemaker took over Eastern Washington's offense last season as the OC and helped guide his unit to leading the FCS in total offense. During this episode Coach Shoemaker's philosophies on offense when it comes to using pace and tempo. 2:45 Transition to Eastern Washington 5:00 Pace and tempo philosophies 7:48 Going as fast as possible 10:28 Efficiency in play-calling 11:54 Using tempo and pace 15:12 Creative ways to use tempo 17:54 Buckets of decision 24:33 Organizing practice 26:36: Two-Ball Drill with RPO 29:41 Openers 32:46 Confidence in the game plan 33:59 Having player insight into game plan 34:36 Recruiting areas You can follow Coach Shoemaker on Twitter here: @CoachShoeEWU Related Content: - Ian Shoemaker- Central Washington: https://soundcloud.com/user-804678956/ian-shoemaker-central-washington Coach and Coordinator Podcast Main Show Links: - Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/user-804678956/tracks - iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/usa-football-coach-and-coordinator-podcast/id1216363733 - Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2FMkGaDAACBdFKWXY9WfGs?si=HmE_FNIWQtqOgIDdIWginw - Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/usa-football-coach-and-coordinator-podcast - Pandora: https://www.pandora.com/podcast/usa-football-coach-and-coordinator-podcast/PC:13373 - iHeart: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/256-usa-football-coach-and-coo-43065252/ - Google Play: https://play.google.com/music/listen?u=0#/ps/Ilnxsiopbvaqqu4p3v77g4soope Check out our systems for skill development in blocking, defeating blocks and tackling at footballdevelopment.com. Follow us daily on Twitter for content and interaction @FBDevCoach and be sure to check out X's and O's analysis at blogs.usafootball.com.
Dan Reidenberg of SAVE on the 9-8-8 suicide prevention hotline number. Anthony Brown, Univ of Texas at Austin, on how to teach about slavery in schools. Yorman Bauman of Clean Darn Air on a carbon tax. Wonder Hoodies founder Vy Tran on bulletproof hoodies. Richard Axelbaum, Washington Univ in St. Louis, on space fire. Peter Cappelli of the Univ of Pennsylvania on the problem with the hiring process.
In this episode, Dr. Copeland documents several cases of "unruly women" who disrupt Japanese social norms, from mythical goddess Izanami to popular activists and female writers in the Meiji and Taishō Periods like Kishida Toshiko and Miyake Kaho, and finally to contemporary writer Kirino Natsuo. We discuss formalist versus historicist literary analysis, questions of agency and individuality in Meiji women's cultural production, and the importance of translation in the field of literary studies. (Transcript here).
Quinn Mecham talks about the international legacy of WWI . Rob Dunn of NC State Univ. discusses home ecology. Sarah Hartz of Washington Univ. explains how no alcohol is actually healthy. Sam Payne of the Apple Seed shares a story. Michael Kardas of the Univ. of Chicago argues that video tutorials don't make you more capable of doing things. Joseph Darowski of BYU assesses Stan Lee's legacy.
Mckay Coppins of Atlantic talks about AZ senator Paul Flake and the Kavanaugh Confirmation. Michael Kinch of Washington Univ. St. Louis explains the current state of the vaccine wars. Michael Yassa of Univ. of California on mild activities. Dr. Gabriel Neal tells us how apple cider vinegar affects our organism. Author Ewelina Ochab explains the new face of genocide. Quinn Mecham of BYU on the Kurds.
Scott Atwell from GG+A sits down with Mark Wrighton, Chancellor at Washington University in St. Louis to discuss the success of the university's advancement and development during Wrighton's tenure.
Retired Army Col. Lawrence Wilkerson on the Iran nuclear deal. Bharat Bhushan of Ohio State Univ created a new leather coating that's less sticky in the heat. Alexander Jones from New York Univ describes ancient Greek "hi-tech." Calvin Lai of Washington Univ explains how to retrain "unconscious bias." Anders Winroth of Yale Univ on what Viking treasure reveals. Theresa Raymond from BYUtv explains how closed captioning works.
Valerie Hudson of Texas A&M Univ discusses harassment and the global war on women. Joshua Lloyd and Gustave Deogratiasi share SLC's Eastern Africa Refugee Goat Project. Ziyad Al-Aly from Washington Univ in St. Louis talks kidney disease and air pollution. Visit the Punderdome with author Joe Berkowitz. Univ of Massachusetts Amherst's Jon Wynn on the benefits of gentrification. Former Spanish Ambassador Javier Ruperez explains Spain's crack down on Catalonia.
The focus of Division III basketball now turns towards the second Regional Rankings. At the same time, conference regular seasons are wrapping up and the pressure of conference tournaments is increasing. Teams are still trying to jockey themselves for the chance to keep playing in March, but sometimes focusing on March causes teams to lose focus of the next game. Upsets and trip-ups seem to happen often once Regional Rankings start coming out. On Sunday night's Hoopsville, Dave chatted with teams who are hoping to remain on top of their conference standings and thus eventually punch their ticket automatically to the NCAA tournament. But what about the distractions? What about the pressures? Or has it become somewhat routine for some teams? Hoopsville is presented by D3hoops.com and airs from the WBCA/NABC Studio starting at 7:00 PM ET LIVE. You can watch the show On Demand in the video player above. If you can also listen to the podcasts (which will be uploaded at the conclusion of the show). A reminder the Sunday edition of Hoopsville primarily covers the Northeast, Atlantic, South, and Central regions, but we will answer any questions about all of Division III throughout the show. You can also send your questions to the show and have them featured on the Hoopsville Mailbag segment. Email them to hoopsville@d3hoops.com. And please consider helping Hoopsville stay on the air like you might help your public television station. The annual fundraising campaign has less than three weeks remaining, but we are no where close to reaching our goal. Click here for more information: Hoopsville Fundraising Page Guests include (in order of appearance): - Mark Edwards, No. 5 Washington Univ. men's coach - Mitch Oliver, Albertus Magnus men's coach - Judy Blinstrub, Babson women's coach (WBCA Center Court) - Darrin Travillian, Maryville (Tenn.) women's coach - Eric McNelley, Eastern men's coach
Paul Berg, Stanford Professor of Cancer Research Emeritus and 1980 winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, spoke about: his arrival at Stanford in 1959, along with six colleagues from Washington Univ. in St. Louis, who created the open, sharing environment of the new Biochemistry Department; research on genetic processes and a search to understand cancer; work developing novel tools for manipulating DNA; and his role in organizing the important, public Asilomar Conference on Recombinant DNA in 1975 where scientists evaluated risks and policy issues and agreed to voluntary limitations and guidelines.
Douglas McGrath, Gerry Goffin & Carole King, and Barry Mann & Cynthia Weil, at the Fox Theatre, (2) ELEPHANT’S GRAVEYARD, by George Brant, at Washington Univ., (3) FARCE OF NATURE, by Jessie Jones, Nicholas Hope, & Jamie Wooten, at KTK Productions, (4) THE MISER, by Moliere, at the Webster University Conservatory, and (5) JAMES JOYCE’S THE DEAD, by Richard Nelson and Shaun Davey, at Saint Louis Univ.
Nearly three weeks into the college basketball season and there is plenty to talk about. Conference action is also starting for many programs while others are still getting up to speed in their out-of-conference schedules. On the women's side, not a lot of upsets; on the men's side, no one seems safe to an unforeseen loss. On Hoopsville, Dave talked to several teams who are still working off last season's success and battling expectations this season and others who may quietly change the conversation in their regions. Hoopsville is available to watch On Demand or listen to the podcasts below! Guests include: - Mike Miller, Messiah women's coach - Nancy Fahey, No. 11 Washington Univ. women's coach - Stephen Brennan, No. 11 Babson men's coach - Mike DeWitt, No. 6 Ohio Wesleyan's men's coach
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) ANIMALS OUT OF PAPER, by Rajiv Joseph, at R-S Theatrics; (2) IRVING BERLIN'S WHITE CHRISTMAS, by Irving Berlin, David Ives & Paul Blake, at the Fox Theatre; (3) RAPTURE, BLISTER, BURN, by Gina Gionfriddo, at the West End Players Guild; (4) BETH LEAVEL: MUNY MAGIC AT THE SHELDON, The Muny at the Sheldon Concert Hall; (5) STAGE DOOR, by George S. Kaufman & Edna Ferber, at the Webster Univ. Conservatory; (6) CRIMES OF THE HEART, by Beth Henley, at Saint Louis Univ.; and (7) THE MISANTHROPE, by Moliere, at Washington Univ.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) THE SUNSHINE BOYS, by Neal Simon at the New Jewish Theatre; (2) THE KISS, by Ger Thijs, at Upstream Theater; (3) HEATHERS, by Kevin Murphy & Laurence O'Keefe, at New Line Theatre; (4) TALKIN' TRASH, by Nicholas Kryah, at Metro Theater Company; (5) DOGFIGHT, by Benj Pasek, Justin Paul, & Peter Duchan, at Stray Dog Theatre and the Webster Univ. Conservatory; (6) COMPANY, by Stephen Sondheim & George Furth, at Washington Univ; (7) TWELFTH NIGHT, by William Shakespeare, at St. Louis Shakespeare; and (8) TRASH MACBETH, by William Shakespeare, at Saint Louis University.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) AN INVITATION OUT, by Shualee Cook, at Mustard Seed Theatre, (2) ONCE ON THIS ISLAND, by Lynn Ahrens & Stephen Flaherty, at The Black Rep, (3) ART, by Yasmina Reza, at St. Louis Actors’ Studio, (4) THE ODD COUPLE (FEMALE VERSION), by Neil Simon, at Dramatic License Productions, (5) THE TRAGEDY OF MACBETH, by William Shakespeare, at the Clayton Community Theatre, (6) A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM, by Sondheim, Shevelove & Gelbart, at Family Musical Theatre, (7) CRIMES OF THE HEART, by Beth Henley, at Hawthorne Players, (8) TELEGRAPH, by Will Jacobs, at Washington Univ., and (9) THE IMPRESARIO, by W. A. Mozart, at Gateway Opera.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) VANYA AND SONYA AND MASHA AND SPIKE, by Christopher Durang, at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, (2) KINKY BOOTS, by Harvey Fierstein & Cyndi Lauper, at the Fox Theatre, (3) PARFUMERIE, by Miklos Laszlo, at The Alpha Players of Florissant, (4) BLOOD REIGNS: THE WAR OF THE ROSES TRILOGY, by William Shakespeare, at St. Louis Shakespeare, (5) AFFLICTED: DAUGHTERS OF SALEM, by Laurie Brooks, at Metro Theater Co., (6) BRIEFS: A FESTIVAL OF SHORT LGBT PLAYS, at That Uppity Theatre Co. and Vital VOICE Magazine, (7) SKY SKY SKY, by Elizabeth Birkenmeier, at Washington Univ., and (8) HONK!, by Anthony Drewe & George Stiles, at Webster Univ. Conservatory.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) OR,, by Liz Duffy Adams, at Slightly Askew Theatre Ensemble, (2) THE NINA VARIATIONS, by Steven Dietz, at Flying Blind, (3) BIG LOVE, by Charles Mee, at the Webster Univ. Conservatory, (4) ANY NUMBER CAN DIE, by Fred Carmichael, at KTK Productions, (5) RUMORS, by Neil Simon, at Saint Louis Univ., (6) BLUES FOR MR. CHARLIE, by James Baldwin, at Washington Univ., (7) THE TEMPEST, by William Shakespeare, at Univ. of Missouri-St. Louis, (8) MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET, by Floyd Mutrux, Colin Escott, et al., at the Fox Theatre.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) ALL IS CALM: THE CHRISTMAS TRUCE OF 1914, by Peter Rothstein, at Mustard Seed Theatre, (2) MOTOWN THE MUSICAL, by Berry Gordy, at the Fox Theatre, (3) BOOM TOWN, by Jeff Daniels, at West End Players Guild, (4) SPOOKY ACTION AT A DISTANCE, by Will Coleman, and ORDERS, by Kevin Ferguson, at The Tesseract Theatre Co., (5) THE RESIDENTS OF CRAIGSLIST, by Lucy Cashion & Will Bonfiglio, at Equally Represented Arts, (6) SPRING AWAKENING, by Steven Sater & Duncan Sheik, at the Webster Univ. Conservatory, (7) SHE KILLS MONSTERS, by Qui Nguyen, St. Louis Univ., and (8) BLOODY BLOODY ANDREW JACKSON, by Alex Timbers & Michael Friedman, at Washington Univ.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK, by Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett, & Wendy Kesselman, at the New Jewish Theatre, (2) ANTIGONE, by Sophocles, at Upstream Theater, (3) AND THEN THERE WERE NONE, by Agatha Christie, at Stray Dog Theatre, (4) BONNIE AND CLYDE, by Ivan Menchell, Frank Wildhorn, & Don Black, at New Line Theatre, (5) SIDE SHOW, by Bill Russell & Henry Krieger, at Over Due Theatre Co., (6) STOP KISS, by Diane Son, at the Webster Univ. Conservatory, (7) NICE WORK IF YOU CAN GET IT, by George & Ira Gershwin & Joe DiPietro, at the Peabody Opera House, (8) ANON(YMOUS), by Naomi Iisuka, at Washington Univ., and (9) BUS STOP, by William Inge, at Saint Louis Univ.
Gerry Kowarsky and Mark Bretz review (1) JOSEPH AND THE AMAZING TECHNICOLOR DREAMCOAT, by Andrew Lloyd Weber and Tim Rice, at the Fox Theatre; (2) MAKE HAMLET, adapted from Shakespeare by Lucy Cashion et al., at Equally Represented Arts; (3) WINDMILL BABY, by David Milroy, at Upstream Theater; (4) MEDEA, by Euripides, at Saint Louis Univ.; (5) THE UNEXPECTED GUEST, by Agatha Christie, at Clayton Community Theatre; (6) LEADING LADIES, by Ken Ludwig, at KTK Productions; (7) INTO THE WOODS, by Stephen Sondheim & James Lapine, at the Webster Univ. Conservatory; and (8) TWELFTH NIGHT, by William Shakespeare, at Washington Univ.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) NOISES OFF, by Michael Frayn, at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis; (2) ROMEO AND JULIET, by William Shakespeare, at St. Louis Shakespeare; (3) THE PRICE, by Arthur Miller, at the New Jewish Theatre; (4) GHOST THE MUSICAL, by Bruce Joel Rubin, Dave Stewart & Glen Ballard, at Peabody Opera House; (5) BETRAYAL, by Harold Pinter, at Washington Univ.; (6) BRIEFS: A FESTIVAL OF SHORT LBGT PLAYS at That Uppity Theatre Co. & Vital VOICE Magazine; (7) RECKLESS, by Craig Lucas, at the Webster Univ. Conservatory; and (8) FIVE WOMEN WEARING THE SAME DRESS, by Alan Ball, at St. Louis Univ.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky interview Bobby Miller and Wayne Salomon after reviewing (1) SHIRLEY VALENTINE, by Willy Russell, at Dramatic License Productions; (2) THE HOUSE OF THE SPIRITS, adapted from Isabel Allende by Caridad Svich, at Webster Univ. Conservatory; (3) JERSEY BOYS, by Marshall Brickman & Rick Elice, Bob Gaudio & Bob Crewe, at the Fox Theatre; (4) MIDDLETOWN, by Will Eno, at Saint Louis Univ.; and (5) YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU, by George S. Kaufman & Moss, at Washington Univ.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review SISTER ACT THE MUSICAL, by Alan Menken, Glenn Slater, Douglas Carter Beane, and Cheri & Bill Steinkellner, at the Fox Theatre; GODSPELL, by Stephen Schwartz & John-Michael Tebelak, at the Peabody Opera House; I LOVE YOU, YOU'RE PERFECT, NOW CHANGE, by Joe DiPietro & Jimmy Roberts, at Kirkwood Theatre Guild; MY CHILDREN! MY AFRICA!, by Athol Fugard, at Washington Univ.; VERONICA'S ROOM, by Ira Levin, at Theatre Guild of Webster Groves; MORNING'S AT SEVEN, by Paul Osborn, at Hawthorne Players; and A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM, by Stephen Sondheim, Larry Gelbart & Barry Shrevelove, at Saint Louis Univ.; and THE COUNTRY WIFE, by William Wycherley, at the Webster Univ. Conservatory.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review FLY, by Trey Ellis and Ricardo Khan, at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis; SPRING AWAKENING, by Steve Sater & Duncan Sheik, at Washington Univ.; THE TRIVIA JOB, by Dan Rubin, at OnSite Theatre Co.; PETER PAN, by James M. Barrie et al., at Variety Children's Theatre; YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN, by Mel Brooks, at Over Due Theatre Co.; LES MISERABLES, by Alain Boublil, Claude-Michel Schonberg,& Herbert Kretzmer, at Take Two Productions; THE COMEDY OF ERRORS, by William Shakespeare, at St. Louis Shakespeare; and THE ODD COUPLE, by Neal Simon, at KTK Productions.
On this episode, Gerry Kowarsky and guest host Mark Bretz review 1) WAITING FOR GODOT, by Samuel Beckett, at St. Louis Actors' Studio, (2) THREE SISTERS, by Anton Chekhov, at Saint Louis Univ., (3) MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET, by Colin Escott & Floyd Mutrux, at the Fox Theatre, (4) LEGALLY BLONDE THE MUSICAL, by Laurence O'Keefe, Nell Benjamin, & Heather Hach, at Webster Univ. Conservatory, (5) SMASH/HIT!, by Steve Broadnax and Michael Bordner, at The Black Rep, (6) IN THE NEXT ROOM (Or the Vibrator Play), by Sarah Ruhl, at Washington Univ., (7) FOOL FOR LOVE, by Sam Shepard, at Tesseract Theatre, and (8) TROUBLE IN TAHITI, by Leonard Bernstein, at Union Avenue Opera.
On this episode, Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) SENSE AND SENSIBILITY, adapted from Jane Austen by Jon Jory, at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, (2) THE MOUNTAINTOP, by Katori Hall, at The Black Rep, (3) SPEED-THE-PLOW, by David Mamet, at the New Jewish Theatre, (4) PSYCHO BEACH PARTY, by Charles Busch, at Stray Dog Theatre, (5) CONNECTED, by Lia Romeo, at HotCity Theatre, (6) THE BALLAD OF BABY DOE, by Douglas Moore, at Winter Opera St. Louis, (7) ENGAGING SHAW, by John Morogiello, at West End Players Guild, and (8) OEDIPUS AT COLONUS, by Sophocles, at Washington Univ.
Before interviewing Mark Wilson of Saint Louis University's theatre department, Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) BLUE MAN GROUP, at the Fox Theatre, (2) IMAGINARY JESUS, by Matt Mikalatos, adapted by Deanna Jent, at Mustard Seed Theatre, (3) LYSISTRATA, by Aristophanes, at Clayton Community Theatre, (4) A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, by William Shakespeare, at Webster Univ. Conservatory, and (5) THE NIGHT SEASON, by Rebecca Lenkiewicz, at Washington Univ.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) CLYBOURNE PARK, by Bruce Norris, at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis Studio Theatre, (2) A RAISIN IN THE SUN, by Lorraine Hansberry, at Unity Theatre Ensemble, (3) MOONLIGHT AND MAGNOLIAS, by Ron Hutchinson, at Dramatic License Productions, (4) ANNE AND EMMETT, by Janet Langhart Cohen, at the Black Rep, (5) A CELTIC NIGHT CIRCUS: Tir na nOg, at Circus Flora, (6) ANNIE, by Charles Strouse, Martin Charnin, & Thomas Meehan, at Variety Children's Theatre, (7) IN THE BLOOD, by Suzan-Lori Parks, at at Univ. of Missouri-St. Louis, and (8) CABARET, by John Kander & Fred Ebb and Joe Masteroff, at Washington Univ.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) MEMPHIS, by Joe DiPietro & David Bryan, at the Fox Theatre, (2) ANGELS IN AMERICA, by Tony Kushner, at Stray Dog Theatre, (3) VINEGAR TOM, by Caryl Churchill, at Saint Louis Univ., (4) I DO! I DO!, by Tom Jones & Harvey Schmidt, at Dramatic License Productions, (5) LADY WINDERMERE'S FAN, by Oscar Wilde, at Webster Univ. Conservatory, (6) THE NEW WORLD, by Nancy Bell, at Shakespeare Festival St. Louis, (7) AS YOU LIKE IT, by William Shakespeare, at Washington Univ., and (8) THE FOREIGNER, by Larry Shue, at Clayton Community Theatre.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) FIDDLER ON THE ROOF, by Jerry Bock, Sheldon Harnick, & Joseph Stein, at the Peabody Opera House, (2) CRUEL TO BE KIND?, by Christopher Limber, & OTHELLO IN A BREATH, by Elizabeth Birkenmeier, at Shakespeare Festival St. Louis, (3) BRING IT ON: THE MUSICAL, by Jeff Whitty, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Tom Kitt, & Amanda Green, at the Fox Theatre, (4) YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU, by Kaufman & Hart, at Alpha Players, (5) ALL IN THE TIMING, by David Ives, at the Theatre Guild of Webster Groves, (6) EDGAR ALLEN POE'S NEVERMORE, by Edgar Allen Poe, Grace Barnes, & Matt Conner, at Webster Univ. Conservatory, (7) CAMDEN & LILLY, by Carter W. Lewis, at Washington Univ., (8) 100 SAINTS YOU SHOULD KNOW, by Kate Fodor, at Webster Univ. Conservatory, and (9) DONNA WEINSTING AND LARA BUCK: BOLD. BAWDY. BLONDE., at The Presenters Dolan.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) RACE, by David Mamet, at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, (2) A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, by William Shakespeare, at The Black Rep, (3) THE MAIDS, by Jean Genet, at Upstream Theater, (4) WEST SIDE STORY, by Arthur Laurents, Leonard Bernstein, & Stephen Sondheim, at the Fox Theatre, (5) LOVE LETTERS, by A.R. Gurney, at Avalon Theatre Co., (6) AUTOBAHN, by Neil LaBute, at Soundstage Productions/R-S Theatrics, (7) RADIO FREE EMERSON, by Paul Grelling, at Washington Univ., and (8) HELLO AGAIN, by Michael John LaChiusa, at Webster Univ. Conservatory.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) RACE, by David Mamet, at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, (2) A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, by William Shakespeare, at The Black Rep, (3) THE MAIDS, by Jean Genet, at Upstream Theater, (4) WEST SIDE STORY, by Arthur Laurents, Leonard Bernstein, & Stephen Sondheim, at the Fox Theatre, (5) LOVE LETTERS, by A.R. Gurney, at Avalon Theatre Co., (6) AUTOBAHN, by Neil LaBute, at Soundstage Productions/R-S Theatrics, (7) RADIO FREE EMERSON, by Paul Grelling, at Washington Univ., and (8) HELLO AGAIN, by Michael John LaChiusa, at Webster Univ. Conservatory.
Bob Wilcox and Gerry Kowarsky review (1) THE WHO'S TOMMY, by PeteTownshend, Des McAnuff, John Entwistle & Keith Moon, at Stray Dog Theatre, (2) GOD OF CARNAGE, by Yasmina Reza, at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, (3) HAIRSPRAY: THE MUSICAL, by John Waters et al., at The Black Rep & Washington Univ., (4) BLOOD WEDDING, by Federico Garcia Lorca, at Upstream Theater, (5) JUST A SONG AT TWILIGHT, book by Chuck Lavazzi, at West End Players Guild, (6) NUTS, by Tom Topor, at St. Louis Actors' Studio, and (7) SPECTRUM 2011, by various playwrights, at First Run Theatre.