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#Sarah Lockett
k4nn4-k1zu1ch1 · 2 years
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Sarah seeing her sister in the files like:
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lexxwithbooks · 2 years
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📖: 𝑬𝒏𝒋𝒐𝒚 𝒕𝒉𝒆 𝒗𝒊𝒆𝒘 (𝑀𝑜𝑜𝑠𝑒 𝑆𝑝𝑟𝑖𝑛𝑔𝑠, 𝐴𝑙𝑎𝑠𝑘𝑎 #3) 🏔⛺️❄️
✍🏽: 𝐒𝐚𝐫𝐚𝐡 𝐌𝐨𝐫𝐠𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐡𝐚𝐥𝐞𝐫
Get the book! 🌟
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Sources
Abreu, Roberto L., Jules P. Sostre, Kirsten A. Gonzalez, Gabriel M. Lockett, Em Matsuno, Della V. Mosley. 2022. “Impact of Gender-Affirming Care Bans on Transgender and Gender Diverse Youth: Parental Figures’ Perspective.” Journal of Family Psychology 36(5):643–52. 
2019. “Gender Explained CBC Kids News.” YouTube. (https://youtu.be/PzGauky20tc?feature=shared). 
Anon. 2022. “Gender-Affirming Care: What Doctors Really Think (Feat. @jackisnotabird).” YouTube. (https://youtu.be/KomI-XiiJw0).
“Attacks on Gender Affirming Care by State Map.” Human Rights Campaign. (https://www.hrc.org/resources/attacks-on-gender-affirming-care-by-state-map).
“Movement Advancement Project: Health Care / Bans on Best Practice Medical Care for Transgender Youth.” Movement Advancement Project | Health Care / Bans on Best Practice Medical Care for Transgender Youth (https://www.lgbtmap.org/equality-maps/healthcare_youth_medical_care_bans).
Cicero, Ethan C. 2023. “Anti-Transgender Legislation and Gender-Affirming Care Bans: Are Position Statements Without Subsequent Nursing Action the Equivalent of Thoughts and Prayers?” Nursing Outlook 71(4). 
Eisenberg, Marla E., Barbara J. McMorris, G. Nic Rider, Amy L. Gower, and Eli Coleman. 2020. “It’s Kind of Hard to Go to the Doctor’s Office If You’re Hated There.’ A Call for Gender-Affirming Care From Transgender and Gender Diverse Adolescents in the United States.” Health & Social Care in the Community. (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7124990/). 
Hughes, Landon D., Kristi E. Gamarel, Arjee J. Restar, Gina M. Sequeira, Nadia Downshen, Katelyn Regan, Kacie M. Kidd. 2023. “Adolescent Providers’ Experiences of Harassment Related to Delivering Gender-Affirming Care.” Journal of Adolescent Health 73(4):672–78. 
Hughes, Landon D., Kacie M. Kidd, Kristi E. Gamarel, Don Operario, and Nadia Dowshen. 2021. “‘These Laws Will Be Devastating’: Provider Perspectives on Legislation Banning Gender-Affirming Care for Transgender Adolescents.” Journal of Adolescent Health 69(6):976–82.
Kempf, Abigail M., Zackory T. urns, Carly E. Guss, Kate Millington, Sarah Pilcher, Patrick J. Boyle, Brittany M. Charlton, Daphne A Haas-Kogan, Kevin X. Liu. 2022. “Clinical Outcomes and Considerations of Gender-Affirming Care for Transgender and Gender-Diverse Pediatric and Young Adult Patients with Cancer.” Pediatric Blood & Cancer 70(1). 
Rosenthal Samantha G. 2024. “Gender-Affirming Care Has a Long History in the US – and Not Just For Transgender People.” The Conversation. (https://theconversation.com/gender-affirming-care-has-a-long-history-in-the-us-and-not-just-for-transgender-people-201752). 
Weiner, Stacy. 2024. “States Are Banning Gender-Affirming Care For Minors. What Does That Mean For Patients and Providers?” AAMC. (https://www.aamc.org/news/states-are-banning-gender-affirming-care-minors-what-does-mean-patients-and-providers#:~:text=Advocates%20of%20these%20laws%20make,to%20undertake%20such%20major%20changes). 
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kylejsimmons · 4 years
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Having another Billy Lockett induced breakdown
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polkadotpopp · 5 years
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Who: Princess Eugenie
What:
Osman Eliza Dress
Sarah Flint Perfect 100 Pumps
Jimmy Choo Lockett Petite Bag
Where: 2018 Hirshhorn Gala, New York | 5th November 2018
Photo Credits: BFA/Vogue, FarFetch, Sarah Flint, Jimmy Choo
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blackkudos · 4 years
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Eldridge Cleaver
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Leroy Eldridge Cleaver (August 31, 1935 – May 1, 1998) was an American writer, and political activist who became an early leader of the Black Panther Party.
In 1968, Cleaver wrote Soul on Ice, a collection of essays that, at the time of its publication, was praised by The New York Times Book Review as "brilliant and revealing". Cleaver stated in Soul on Ice: "If a man like Malcolm X could change and repudiate racism, if I myself and other former Muslims can change, if young whites can change, then there is hope for America."
Cleaver went on to become a prominent member of the Black Panthers, having the titles Minister of Information and Head of the International Section of the Panthers, while a fugitive from the United States criminal justice system in Cuba and Algeria. He became a fugitive after leading an ambush on Oakland police officers, during which two officers were wounded. Cleaver was also wounded during the ambush and Black Panther member Bobby Hutton was killed. As editor of the official Panthers' newspaper, The Black Panther, Cleaver's influence on the direction of the Party was rivaled only by founders Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale. Cleaver and Newton eventually fell out with each other, resulting in a split that weakened the party.
After spending seven years in exile in Cuba, Algeria, and France, Cleaver returned to the US in 1975, where he became involved in various religious groups (Unification Church and CARP) before finally joining the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, as well as becoming a conservative Republican, appearing at Republican events.
Early life
Eldridge Cleaver was born in Wabbaseka, Arkansas; as a child he moved with his large family to Phoenix and then to Los Angeles. He was the son of Leroy Cleaver and Thelma Hattie Robinson. He had four siblings: Wilhelima Marie, Helen Grace, James Weldon, and Theophilus Henry.
As a teenager, he was involved in petty crime and spent time in youth detention centers. At the age of 18, he was convicted of a felony drug charge (marijuana, a felony at the time) and sent to the adult prison at Soledad. In 1958, he was convicted of rape and assault with intent to murder, and eventually served time in Folsom and San Quentin prisons. While in prison, he was given a copy of The Communist Manifesto. Cleaver was released on parole December 12, 1966, with a discharge date of March 20, 1971. In 1968 he was arrested on violation of parole by association with individual(s) of bad reputation, and control and possession of firearms Cleaver petitioned for habeas corpus to the Solano County Court, and was granted it along with a release of a $50,000 bail.
Black Panther Party
Cleaver was released from prison on December 12, 1966. He was writing for Ramparts magazine and organizing efforts to revitalize the Organization of Afro-American Unity. The Black Panther Party was only two months old. He then joined the Oakland-based Black Panther Party (BPP), serving as Minister of Information, or spokesperson. What initially attracted Cleaver to the Panthers, as opposed to other prominent groups, was their commitment to armed struggle.
In 1967, Cleaver, along with Marvin X, Ed Bullins, and Ethna Wyatt, formed the Black House political/cultural center in San Francisco. Amiri Baraka, Sonia Sanchez, Askia Toure, Sarah Webster Fabio, Art Ensemble of Chicago, Avotcja, Reginald Lockett, Emory Douglas, Samuel Napier, Bobby Hutton, Huey Newton, and Bobby Seale were Black House regulars. The same year, he married Kathleen Neal Cleaver (divorced 1987), with whom he would have son Ahmad Maceo Eldridge (born 1969, Algeria; died 2018, Saudi Arabia) and daughter Joju Younghi (born July 31, 1970, North Korea).
Cleaver was a presidential candidate in 1968 on the ticket of the Peace and Freedom Party. Having been born on August 31, 1935, Cleaver would not have been the requisite 35 years of age until more than a year after Inauguration Day 1969. (Although the Constitution requires that the President be at least 35 years of age, it does not specify whether he need have reached that age at the time of nomination, or election, or inauguration.) Courts in both Hawaii and New York held that he could be excluded from the ballot because he could not possibly meet the Constitutional criteria. Cleaver and his running mate Judith Mage received 36,571 votes (0.05%).
In the aftermath of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4, 1968, there were riots across the nation. On April 6, Cleaver and 14 other Panthers led an ambush of Oakland police officers, during which two officers were wounded. Cleaver was wounded during the ambush and 17-year-old Black Panther member Bobby Hutton was killed. They were armed with M16 rifles and shotguns. In 1980, he admitted that he had led the Panther group on a deliberate ambush of the police officers, thus provoking the shootout. Some reporters were surprised by this move, because it was in the context of an uncharacteristic speech, in which Cleaver also discredited the Black Panthers, stated "we need police as heroes", and said that he denounced civilian review boards of police shootings for the "bizarre" reason that "it is a rubber stamp for murder". Some speculated his admission could have been a pay-off to the Alameda County justice system, whose judge had only just days earlier let Eldridge Cleaver escape prison time; Cleaver was sentenced to community service after getting charged with three counts of assault against three Oakland police officers. The PBS documentary A Huey Newton Story claims that "Bobby Hutton was shot more than twelve times after he had already surrendered and stripped down to his underwear to prove he was not armed."
Charged with attempted murder after the incident, he jumped bail to flee to Cuba in late 1968. Initially treated with luxury by the Cuban government, the hospitality ended upon reports Fidel Castro had received information of the CIA infiltrating the Black Panther Party. Cleaver then decided to head to Algeria, sending word to his wife to meet him there. Elaine Klein normalized his status by getting him an invitation to attend the Pan-African Cultural festival, rendering him temporarily safe from prosecution. The festival allowed him to network with revolutionaries from all over Africa in order to discuss the perils of white supremacy and colonialism. Cleaver was outspoken in his call to violence against the United States, contributing to his mission to "position the Panthers within the revolutionary nationalist camp inside the United States and as disciples of Fanon on the world stage". Cleaver had set up an international office for the Black Panthers in Algeria. Following Timothy Leary's Weather Underground-assisted prison escape, Leary stayed with Cleaver in Algiers; however, Cleaver placed Leary under "revolutionary arrest" as a counter-revolutionary for promoting drug use.
Cleaver also cultivated an alliance with North Korea in 1969, and BPP publications began reprinting excerpts from Kim Il Sung's writings. Although leftists of the time often looked to Cuba, China, and North Vietnam for inspiration, few had paid any attention to the secretive Pyongyang regime. Bypassing US travel restrictions on North Korea, Cleaver and other BPP members made two visits to the country in 1969–1970 with the idea that the juche model could be adapted to the revolutionary liberation of African-Americans. Taken on an official tour of North Korea, Cleaver expressed admiration at "the DPRK's stable, crime-free society which provided guaranteed food, employment, and housing for all, and which had no economic or social inequalities".
Byron Vaughn Booth (former Panther Deputy Minister of Defense) claimed that, after a trip to the DPRK, Cleaver discovered his wife had been having an affair with Clinton Robert Smith Jr. Booth told the FBI he had witnessed Cleaver shoot and kill Smith with an AK47. Elaine Mokhtefi, in the London Review of Books, writes that Cleaver confessed the murder to her shortly after committing it.
Cleaver later left the DPRK, claiming that the environment was too oppressive.
In his 1978 book Soul on Fire, Cleaver made several claims regarding his exile in Algeria, including that he was supported by regular stipends from the government of North Vietnam, which the United States was then bombing. Cleaver stated that he was followed by other former criminals turned revolutionaries, many of whom (including Booth and Smith) hijacked planes to get to Algeria.
Split and new directions
Eldridge Cleaver and Huey Newton eventually fell out with each other over the necessity of armed struggle as a response to COINTELPRO and other actions by the government against the Black Panthers and other radical groups. Also Cleaver's interest in North Korea and global anti-imperialist struggle drew ire from other BPP members who felt that he was neglecting the needs of African-Americans at home in the US. Following his expulsion from the Black Panthers in 1971, the group's ties with North Korea were quickly forgotten. Cleaver advocated the escalation of armed resistance into urban guerrilla warfare, while Newton suggested the best way to respond was to put down the gun, which he felt alienated the Panthers from the rest of the black community, and focus on more pragmatic reformist activity by lobbying for increased social programs to aid African-American communities and anti-discrimination laws. Cleaver accused Newton of being an Uncle Tom for choosing to cooperate with white interests rather than overthrow them.
Cleaver left Algeria in 1972, moving to Paris, France, becoming a born again Christian during time in isolation living underground. He turned his hand to fashion design; three years later, he released codpiece-revival "virility pants" he called "the Cleavers", enthusing that they would give men "a chance to assert their masculinity".Cleaver returned to the United States in 1977 to face the unresolved attempted murder charge. By September 1978, on bail as those proceedings dragged on, he had incorporated Eldridge Cleaver Ltd, running a factory and West Hollywood shop exploiting his "Cleavers", which he claimed liberated men from "penis binding". He saw no conflict with his newfound Christianity, drawing support for his overtly sexual design from 22 Deuteronomy. The long-outstanding charge was subsequently resolved on a plea bargain reducing it to assault. A sentence of 1,200 hours' community service was imposed.
Later life
In the early 1980s, Cleaver became disillusioned with what he saw as the commercial nature of evangelical Christianity and examined alternatives, including Sun Myung Moon's campus ministry organization CARP. He later led a short-lived revivalist ministry called Eldridge Cleaver Crusades, "a hybrid synthesis of Islam and Christianity he called 'Christlam'", along with an auxiliary called the Guardians of the Sperm.
Cleaver was then later baptized into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) on December 11, 1983, periodically attended regular services, lectured by invitation at LDS gatherings.
By the 1980s, Cleaver had become a conservative Republican. He appeared at various Republican events and spoke at a California Republican State Central Committee meeting regarding his political transformation. In 1984, he ran for election to the Berkeley City Council but lost. Undaunted, he promoted his candidacy in the Republican Party primary for the 1986 Senate race but was again defeated. The next year, his 20-year marriage to Kathleen Neal Cleaver came to an end.
In 1988, Cleaver was placed on probation for burglary and was briefly jailed later in the year after testing positive for cocaine. He entered drug rehabilitation for a stated crack cocaine addiction two years later, but was arrested for possession by Oakland and Berkeley Police in 1992 and 1994. Shortly after his final arrest, he moved to Southern California, falling into poor health.
Death
Cleaver died at age 62 on May 1, 1998, at Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center in Pomona, California. He is buried at Mountain View Cemetery in Altadena, California.
Soul on Ice (1968)
[W]hen I considered myself ready enough, I crossed the tracks and sought out white prey. I did this consciously, deliberately, willfully, methodically – though looking back I see that I was in a frantic, wild and completely abandoned frame of mind. Rape was an insurrectionary act. It delighted me that I was defying and trampling upon the white man's law, upon his system of values, and that I was defiling his women...I felt I was getting revenge. From the site of the act of rape, consternation spread outwardly in concentric circles. I wanted to send waves of consternation throughout the white race.
While in prison, he wrote a number of philosophical and political essays, first published in Ramparts magazine and then in book form as Soul on Ice. In the essays, Cleaver traces his own development from a "supermasculine menial" to a radical black liberationist, and his essays became highly influential in the black power movement.
In the most controversial part of the book, Cleaver acknowledges committing acts of rape, stating that he initially raped black women in the ghetto "for practice" and then embarked on the serial rape of white women. He described these crimes as politically inspired, motivated by a genuine conviction that the rape of white women was "an insurrectionary act". When he began writing Soul on Ice, he unequivocally renounced rape and all his previous reasoning about it.
The essays in Soul on Ice are divided into four thematic sections: "Letters from Prison", describing Cleaver's experiences with and thoughts on crime and prisons; "Blood of the Beast", discussing race relations and promoting black liberation ideology; "Prelude to Love – Three Letters", love letters written to Cleaver's attorney, Beverly Axelrod; and "White Woman, Black Man", on gender relations, black masculinity, and sexuality.
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hazelestelle · 4 years
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Top 10 Songs I’ve Been Listening to Lately
@bellakitse tagged me. Thanks dear! ♥
Ruelle - Madness
Sarah Connor - Vincent
Imagine Dragons - Natural
Chungha - Chica
Caleb Hyles - Red Like Roses (Cover)
Revolverheld feat. Antje Schomaker - Liebe auf Distanz
Fleurie - Hurricane
Billy Lockett - More
Christina Aguilera ft. Demi Lovato - Fall in Line
AKB48 -  君はメロディー
Tagging @csifan3, @obvidalous, @tabbytabbytabby, @onewhositswiththeturtles
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Patreon requests. The first two were requested by @elosoquelee, who wanted to see Diane as a roller waitress and Sarah from Hocus Pocus. The third one was requested by @frostlocke who wanted me to draw his character Demon Lockette.
Support my stuff on Patreon
Donate to my Ko-Fi
Portfolio Site Commission Prices List of Blogs Deviant Art Twitter
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nsula · 5 years
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President’s List Fall 2018
NATCHITOCHES – Six hundred and fifty-four students were named to the Fall 2018 President’s List at Northwestern State University. Students on the list earned a grade point average of 4.0. Those named to the President’s List listed by hometown are as follows.
 Abbeville – Annemarie Broussard, Heather Mayard;
 Alexandria – Eric Weinzettle, Brandi Beaudoin, Leslie Bordelon, Claudia Gauthier, Ian Grant, Angela Hardin, Martha Hopewell, Jaliyah Jasper, Kasey Lacombe, Hunter Lewis, DeShonta Manning, Allison McCloud, Jalyn Mvcneal, Madeline Mitchell, Jennifer Prevot, Jabari Reed, Sailor Reed, Shacora Simpson, Kayla Whittington;                            
 Anacoco -- Nicole Fitzgerald, Brittany Lewis, Caitlin McKee, Cassandra Osborne, Seth Ponthieux, Casey Williams, Megan Williams;
 Anchorage – Sydney Bulot;
 Arcadia – Antavious Roberson, Ralyn Simpson;
 Arnaudville -- Zachary Leboeuf, Alayna Moreau, Misti Richard;
Ashland – Victoria Roderick;
Baker – Katelyn Kennedy;
 Ball – Nickolas Juneau, Joseph Reynolds;
 Barksdale, AFB – Kimberly Ventura Gonzalez;                  
 Basile – Adam Elkins;
 Bastrop – Nikkia Lewis;
 Baton Rouge – Meagan Barbay, Diamanisha Betts, Madison Harris, Hannah Knoff, Jordan Lancaster, Tremia Lockett, Henrietta Mercer, Daniel Midyett, Emma Rivet, Victoria Simmons;                              
 Belcher – Sierra Lang;
 Belgrade, Serbia -- Emilija Dancetovic;
 Belmont – Kelly Bass;
 Benton – Victoria Berry, Tamara Korner, Bridget Miller, Jessica O’Neal, Finnley Plaster, Comis Waddell, Kathryn Watts;
 Bienville – Julie Martin;
 Boise, Idaho – Jessica Anderson;
 Bossier City – Maddison Abreo, Jayde Barnett, Brittany Batchelor, Hannah Brooks, Kendall Caple, Izabela Carabelli, Callie Crockett, Peyton Davis, Hannah Gates, Joshua Greer, Jada Grigsby, Peyton Harville, Caylin Head, Savanna Head, Nicholas Hopkins, Kijah Johnson, Brandon Larkin, Chelsea Laverdiere, April Lebick, Katherine Parson, Colby Ponder, Taylor Powell, Jade Reich, Jami Rivers, Jalyn Robertson, Reid Rogers, Madison Rowland, Donna Spurgeon, Savannah Stevens, James Taylor, Kaitlyn Walker, Eric Zheng;
 Boutte – Samantha Vernor;
 Boyce – Katelyn Brister, Dylan Frazier, Sonya Hill;
 Breaux Bridge – Beyonkan Heine, Emily Roy;
 Broussard – Dylan Dunford;
 Brownsville, Texas – Emily Saldivar;
 Brussels – Leyla Fettweis;
 Bunkie – Emily Arnaud,
 Burleson, Texas -- Addison Pellegrino, Cassandra Smith;
 Calhoun – Grace Cummings, Robert Mccandlish;
 Calvin – Erin Price;
 Campti – Alisha Bedgood, Rebekah Cole, Madelynne Greer;
Carencro – Melody Woodard;
 Carrollton, Texas – Victoria Miller;
 Cartagena, Colombia – Aura Hernandez Canedo, Jorge Ojeda Munoz, Hassik Vasquez Narvaez;
Cheneyville -- Katelyn Baronne;
 Clarence – Jalicia Small;
 Clifton – Brittany Shackleford;
 Colfax – Alyssa Coleman, Lessie Rushing, Elizabeth Slayter, Morgan Vandegevel;
 Conroe, Texas – Sidney Salmans;
 Converse – Shayna Brown, Hayley Farmer, Wade Hicks, Mallory Mitchell, Hannah Womack, Logan Woodward;
Cotton Valley -- Nicholas Smith;
 Coushatta – Sydney Anderson, Kaylee Antilley, Debra Hanson, Jon Hester, Mary James, Cynthia Lawson, Baley McAlexander, Precious Smith;
 Covington -- Henri Blanchat, Justin Brogdon, Rachael Coyne, Sarah Shiflett;
 Crowley -- Ma'Kayleen Milson;
 Custer, South Dakota – China Whitwer;
 Cypress, Texas – Alexis Warren;
Dakota Dunes, South Dakota – Eryn Sandwell;
 Denham Springs – Joni Burlew;
DeRidder – Delia Amadiz, Lauren Callis, Tabitha Deer, Colten Denning, Falon Drake, Rebekah Frantz, Shydae Hammond, Karli Kennedy, Briana March, Brittney March, Shayla Miller, Jessica Mullican, Hannah Plummer, Rebecca Richmond, Cheyenne Vander, Michael Waryas;
 Des Allemands – Emily Blanchard, Claire Schouest;
 Destrehan – Hannah Boquet, Stephanie Webre;
 Deville – Briana Ashley, Allison Deglandon, Amber Kreideweis, Aubree Lampert, Kenedy Lampert, Madison Lejeune, Maci Mayeux, Caleb Rhodes;
 Diamondhead, Mississippi – Melissa Boyanton;
 Dodson – Rachel Broomfield;
 Doyline – Lucas Darbonne;
 Dry Prong – Jared Boydstun, Ashlee Elliott;
 Edmond, Oklahoma – Payton Hartwick, Ashley Medawattage;
 El Paso, Texas – Christopher Barron;
 Elizabeth – Amanda Cloud, Sadie Perkins;
 Elton – Kayla Bellard;
 Endicott, New York – Tonya Rackett;
 Evergreen – Walter Armand;
 Falfurrias, Texas – Marco Arevalo;
 Farmerville – Malissa Loyd;
 Florien – Shayla Duhon, Amber Lewing, Caroline Matthews, Dylan Roberts, Jordan Weldon;
Folson – Shaylee Laird, Sarah Moore;
 Forest Hill – Rafael Sierra;
 Forney, Texas – Jobey Rusk, Jared Walker, Jayden Wheeler;
 Fort Polk – Brittany Chadwick, Kyley Cole, Shaunda Gordon, Miranda Illsley, Cynthia Schwartz, Sasha Trevino, Cherie Martel;
 Fort Worth, Texas – Corban James;
 Franklin – Emily Kutchenriter;
 Franklinton – Crystal Newman;
 Frisco, Texas – Caroline Shepherd;
 Garland, Texas – Sierra Stone;
Glenmora – Alan Crowder, Reagan Humphries, Melissa Lanier, Faith Lawrence;
 Goldonna – David Day, Harley Godwin;
 Gonzales – Rebecca Marchand, Nicole Moody, Molly Moran, Bailee Ramey, Denee Smith;
 Grand Prairie, Texas – Clayton Casner;
 Grapevine, Texas – Margaret Black;
 Greenwell Springs -- Cheramie Kravitz;
Greenwood -- Char'Tarian Wilson;
 Gretna – Nadia Johnson;
 Haughton – Luther Cain, Jessica Chase, Brittony Cole, Randi Corley, Bethanie Couch, Alexis Hoeltje, Victoria Lodrini, Savanah Molina, Amber Simmons, Heather Wooden, Dawn Young;
 Heath, Texas – Megan Lohmiller;
 Henderson, Texas – John Floyd, Emily Ortiz;
 Hermon, Maine -- Allessa Ingraham-Albert;
 Hessmer – Ryan Armand, Lacee-Beth Cazelot;
Hineston – Gabrielle Merchant Langley, Tylee Stokes;
 Hope Mills, North Carolina -- Taylor Camidge;                          
 Hornbeck – Brandy Alford, Lane Alford, Kimberly Runyon;
 Houma – Alexis Dardar, Billy Gorr, Sarah Lajaunie, Corinne Paris;
Houston, Texas – Kendall Westfall;
 Humble, Texas – Aiyana Bean;
 Huntington, Texas – Travis Carrell;
 Iowa – Keiona Guy, Matthew Phillips;
 Irving, Texas – Darria Williams;
 Jacksonville Beach, Floria – Katherine Medlin;
 Jefferson – Jaleia Parker;
 Jena – Christian Aymond, Alanna Hailey;
 Jennings – Aimee Boothe, Alyson Brown, Janee Charles, Rachel Edwards, Rachelle Edwards, Wesley Simien, Lydia Williams;
 Jonesboro – Jordan Winston;
 Kaplan – Gabriel LeMoine;
 Katy, Texas – Erik Carver;
Keithville – John-David May, Cora Procell, Janae Richardson, Joanna Sims;
 Kenner -- Brooke Petkovich, Parul Sharma;
 Kentwood – Jenna Morris;
Kileen, Texas - Temitope Buraimoh, Arlyn Johnson;
 Kinder -- Jonathon Villareal;
 Lacombe – William Simpson;
Lafayette -- Jeffrey Blossom, Abbey Broussard, Luke Dupre, Michael Joseph, Emilee Leger, Robert Middleton, Andrea Saelios, Dante Saelios, Forest Strang;                            
 Lake Charles – Jovan Avery, Abigail Brady, Shawn Becton, Ashtyn Heap, Amanda Mustian, Sarah Sargent;
 Larose – Eric Bourg;
 Las Vegas, Nevada – April Ficarrotta;
 Lawtell – Karoline Guidry;                            
 Lecompte – Hannah Glaze;
 Leesville – Sara Bishop, Autumn Boggs, Anthony Cantrell, Raven Collins, Carter Coriell, Junette Cutshaw, Cameron Davis, Chloe Dowden, Sarah Gibbs-Jarrell, Geoffrey Goins, Jessica Gray, Cheyenne Grigg, Jessica Herring, Ashley Hunt, Leigha Jackson, Bethany Kay, Emilee Keuten, Mercedes Mattes, Kelsea Mckinney, Paula Pilkenton, Linsey Preddy, Danielle Smyth, Peggy Stanley, Linda Strauss, Megan Tucker, Kristin Whistine;
 Little Elm, Texas – Hunter Gagnon;
 Logansport – Trenton Timmons, Rebecca Tomlin;
 Longview, Texas – Gustavo Corrales, Kelli Hickerson, Samantha Morris;
 Lyons, Kansas – Jennifer Rogers, Mary Rogers;
Machesney Park, Illinois – Alicia Teran;
 Mamou – Alex Chapman, Meggie Granger, Nicholas Saucier;
 Mandeville -- Shannon Roussell;
Mangham -- Rebekah Aultman;
Mansfield – Brooke Smith, Madylin Sullivan;
 Mansura – Bailey Quebedeaux, Distiny Thompson;
 Many – Skyler Ezernack, Heidi Knight, Jaleah Lee, Lathan Meyers, Xavier Montgomery, Chas Pilcher, Tessa Reeves, Samantha Simmons;
 Marksville – Zachary Moreau, Paulette Thomas;  
 Marrero – Lorn Bourgeois;
 Marshall, Texas – Laurann Graham, D’Sherrick Williams;
 Marthaville – Emeri Manasco, Hanna Pardee;
Maurepas – Cameron Mayfield, Abigail Smith;
 Maurice – Adam Courville;
 Melissa, Texas – Kylah Banasky;
 Merryville -- Kalan Townsley;
 Metairie – Kaitlyn Arena, Morgan Nuss, Holly Schiler, Mary Strickland, Sadye Treadway;                          
 Minden – Aubrey Dennis, Jess Easley, Laura Gryder, Taya Hester, Kiara Jenkins, Abigail Reynolds, Amanda Rogers, Heather White;
 Mississauga, Ontario, Canada – Kayla Bomben;
 Mobile, Alabama – Emily Cristina;
 Monroe – Demonta Brown, Aaron Hunt, Grace Underwood;
 Montgomery -- Shelly Crew, Katelym Feazell;
 Mooringsport – Abigail Wolfe;
 Mora – Gracy Rowell;
Moreauville – Sean Casey;
 Morgan City – Allie Atkinson, Jeremy Orgeron;
 Morse – Kierra Linden;
 Mount Hermon -- Warren McFarlain;
Muleshoe, Texas -- Caitlyn Barber;
 Murphy, Texas – Bronte Rhoden;
 Murrieta, California – LaQuitta Wilkins;
Napoleonville – Elizabeth Coleman;
Natchitoches -- Austin Aldredge, Ragan Aple, Luz Arrieta Jimenez, Rebecca Autrey, Sarah Aviles, Francisco Ballestas-Sayas, Joshua Below, Dylan Bennett, Sarah Bergeron, Allison Berry, Sara Coates, Anna Coffey, Fabian Correa Guette, Haley Dahlhoff, Elliot Davis, Ruth Garcia Rodriguez, Samantha Hall, Kaitlin Hatten, Taylor Johnson, Anthony Jones, Mary Keran, Colby Koontz, Scott Macqueen, Miranda Mayeaux, Rylie Mcfarlain, Jordan Mitchell, Maina Ibn Mohammed, Kaitlyn Nieman, Brooklyn Noe, Abigail Poe, Jonah Poe, Melissa Remo, Shelby Riedel, Alyssa Roberts, Kayla  Roquemore, Emily Ryder, Emily Salter, Madison Shade, Melissa Slaughter, Madeline Taylor, David Thibodaux, Kristan Valdez, Lantz Vercher, Elizabeth Vienne, Madysen Watts;
New Iberia -- Jaci Jones, Grace Kerns, Payton Romero:
 New Llano – Nicole Naral;
New Milford, Connecticut -- Lisa Rosenberg;
 New Orleans – Jerome Baudy, Haleigh Giorlando Wall, Jaime Hendrickson, Tayla Oliver;
Noble – Allie Ebarb, Collin Procell;
Noyen sur Serthe, France -- Emma Miachon;
Oakdale -- Cheyenne Bertrand, Alyssa Cole, Katelyn Johnson, Coriana Moreaux, James Obrien;
 Oil City – Ryan Connella;
 Olla – Brianna Corley, Kristen Smith;
Opelousas -- Lauren Hebert, Keshayla Jackson, Alexia Rubin, Jaylen St. Romain;
Pacifica, California -- Nicholas Pierotti;
Palmetto, Florida --   Cindy Hernandez;
 Paris, Texas -- Jordan Whatley;
 Pearland, Texas – Tanisha Williams;
 Pelican – Mary Myers;
Pereira Risaralda, Colombia -- Mariana Ospina Rivas;
 Pineville – Malek Abdelhadi, Taylor Bailey, Riley Bell, Tasha Blanchard, Christian Boudreaux, Latasha Cain, Noelle Carruth, Amber Edmisson, Erin Fallis, Kara Johnson, Michael Martin, Emily McCarty, Cade Mitchell, Wendi Powell, Morgan VanBuren, Corbi Walters, Wesley Williams, Alan Winegeart;                        
 Pitkin – Mattie Stewart;
 Plaquemine – Kameron Landry;
 Plaucheville -- Brooke Dauzat;                            
Pollock – Jadynn Giles;
 Pontotoc, Mississippi – Elizabeth McCullar;
 Port Allen – Makayla Lacy;
 Port Barre – Madison Estis;
 Port Orange, Florida – Sean Logan;
 Prairieville – Rebekah Bonner, Colleen Carline, Roy Cobb, Andrea Gathercole, Sarah Makin;
Princeton – LeKayla Smith;
 Provencal – Kara Gandy, Rebekah Orsborn, Bailey Scarbrough;
Ragley – Elizabeth Jaycox, Cole Spponer;
 Raleigh, North Carolina – Aleida, Alfonso;
 Ringgold – Regan Edwards;
 Riverview, Florida – Robyn Larson;
 Robeline – Jessica Clark, Patricia Goodwin, Alyssa Maley, Bergen Oge, Caleb Wester;
 Round Rock, Texas – Evan Nafe;
 Ruston – Jena Green;
 Saint Francisville – Sara Baggett, Jordan Bringedahl;
 Saint Martinville – Blake Blanchard, Alli Douet;                        
 Saint Rose – Alexis Mancuso;
 Saline – Madelyn Cheatwood;
 San Antonio, Texas – Tiffany Rubin;
 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan – Loren MacLennan;
 Scott – Sydni Larriviere, Kristen Prejean;
 Seabrook, Texas -- Amy Whitecotton;
 Searcy, Arkansas – Lora Wood;
 Shenzhen, China – Yinglin Yuan;
Shreveport -- Lindsey Adkins, Mackenzie Allen, Hannah Angell, Yasmeen Bader, James Baldwin, Katelynn Benge, Maddison Benge, Hallie Bloxom, Erin Brown, Kaysie Burgess, Abigail Davis, Jackson Driggers, Jennifer Eaves, Jennifer Elliott, Samantha Freeman, Peyton Gamble, Leah Gould, Melina Johnson, Tatyanna Kinsey, Kaitlyn Knighton, Katherine Mckay, Maxey McSwain, Madison Milligan, Myles Mitchell, Cayla Morris, Megan Osborn, Mallory Parker, Bailey Patton, Zachary Person, Haley Pickett, Taylor Poleman, Patricia Reed, Madelyn Ruiz, Catherine Shaw, Shelby Sowers, DeAndre Stevenson, Khaila Tucker, Ansonia Wisner;
 Sibley – Julianna Schober;
 Simmesport – Bailie Marsh, Elise Normand;
 Simsboro – Autumn Smith, Shelby Wall;
 Slaughter – Ciara Gibbs;
 Slidell – Ayrianna Edwards, Katherine Gallinghouse, Parker Gwaltney, Abigail Miller, Sabrina Miller, Holly Penta, Rachel Reed, Jourdan Waddell, Olivia Warren;                      
 Spring, Texas -- Sydney Normand;
 Stinnett, Texas – Dalin Williams;
 Stonewall – Mildred Hooper, Mallory McConathy, Emily McConnell, Brooke Meade, Clinton Oliver, Mackenzie Panther, Kassidy Parker;                          
 Stuttgart, Germany -- Antonia Blattner;
 Sulphur – Tiffany Lyons, Bryttani MacNamara;
 Sunset – Lindsay Thibodeaux;
 The Woodlands, Texas – Tyler Rapp;
 Thibodaux – Sheridan Duet, Maegan Davis;
Tool, Texas – Kimberly Kidney;
 Toronto Ontario – Rhea Verma;
 Trout – Makayla King, Zachary Long, Deana Poole, Devon Smith, Andrea Walters;
 Venice, Florida – Alexis Weaver;
 Ventress – Racheal Gaude;
 Ville Platte – Gabrielle Chapman, Joshua Galland, Alex Gautreaux;
 Waco, Texas – Isabella Hudson;
 Walker – Johnny Brister;
 Washington – Tarik Andrus;
 Welsh – Alisha Ledoux;
 West Helena, Arkansas – Brittani Arana;
 West Monroe – Julianne Cousans, Laura Lovell;
 White Castle – Cassidy Blanchard, Gavin Landry;
 Whitehouse, Texas – Jackson Allen;
 Wilmington, Delaware – Amy Bourett;
 Winnfield -- Tamierrea Alexander, John Collins, Simona Curry, Michael Duke, D’Tyria Duncan, Joshua Goins, Kassidy Grantadams, Kelsey Jordan, Elizabeth Parker, Caroline Womack, Maggie Womack;
 Winnipeg, Manitoba – Tyra Duma;
Woodworth – Christian Jeansonne, Jonathan Magnano;
Wylie, Texas – Alexis Perry;
 Yaroslav, Russia -- Polina Mutel;
Youngsville – Jessica Gilmore, Brandon Granger;
 Zakopane, Poland -- Patrycja Polanska;
 Zwolle – Shakelia Maxie, Holden Rivers.                          
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blackyote · 5 years
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Seahawks Playlist
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Uptown Funk - Bruno Mars get hyped song
Dangerous - Big Data, Joywave Russell Wilson
Boom - P.O.D. Legion of Boom
Lionhearted - Porter Robinson 2014 NFC Championship
Work This Body - Walk the Moon Richard Sherman
The Man - Aloe Blacc Doug Baldwin
Bullet Soul - Switchfoot Tyler Lockett
This is War - Thirty Seconds to Mars Niners rivalry
Learn to Fly - Foo Fighters
The Man - The Killers Earl Thomas
Dark Horses - Switchfoot underdog song
Legendary - Welshly Arms 2013 NFL Season
24K Magic - Bruno Mars Russell Wilson crack song
Natural - Imagine Dragons Kam Chancellor
High Hopes - Panic! At The Disco 2012 draft class
It’s Got My Name on It - Tommee Profitt, Sarah Reeves
What’s Up Danger - Blackway, Black Caviar Bobby Wagner
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3thurs · 3 years
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Third Thursday events and exhibitions for September 16
The next Third Thursday — the monthly evening of art in Athens, Georgia — is scheduled for Thursday, September 16, from 6 to 9 p.m. All exhibitions are free and open to the public. This schedule and location and hours of operation information for each venue is available at 3thurs.org.
Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia
Yoga in the Galleries, 6 p.m. — Join us via Zoom for a free yoga class surrounded by works of art in the galleries. Led by instructors from Five Points Yoga, this program is free and open to both beginner and experienced yogis. This program is available both in-person and via Zoom. Email [email protected] to reserve an in-person spot or join us on Zoom.
Film Series: The Crime of Art: “Stolen,” 7 p.m. — It was the most expensive art heist in American history. In March 1990, two thieves disguised as Boston police officers gained entrance to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and successfully plundered $500 million worth of art. Among the 13 priceless works stolen were Rembrandt’s “The Sea of Galilee” and Vermeer’s “The Concert,” one of only 35 of the master’s surviving works. Filmed 16 years after the heist, the film raises a new magnifying glass to this crime, following the renowned art detective Harold Smith as he pursues the mystery of the stolen works. With Smith as a guide, it journeys into the mysterious and surreal world of stolen art and examines the many possibilities as to where the art might be today. 2005, NR, 85 min. This film series is presented in conjunction with the exhibition “Kota Ezawa: The Crime of Art” and is sponsored by the UGA Parents Leadership Council.
On view:
“Inside Look: Selected Acquisitions from the Georgia Museum of Art” — With more than 21,000 objects in its collection, the museum cannot show everything all the time. This exhibition features new gifts and purchases across our curatorial departments that have filled critical gaps in the permanent collections.
“Kota Ezawa: The Crime of Art” — This exhibition brings together new and recent works related to Ezawa’s “The Crime of Art” series, a group of light boxes and video animations that chronicle some of the most infamous and high-profile museum heists in history.
“Neo-Abstraction: Celebrating a Gift of Contemporary Art from John and Sara Shlesinger” — “Neo-Abstraction” highlights the resurgence of abstract art among contemporary artists, drawing from a recent major gift
“In Dialogue: Artist, Mentor, Friend: Ronald Lockett and Thornton Dial Sr.” — This exhibition focuses on one work by each artist, both gifts from Ron Shelp, comparing their approach to their work and examining the shared relationship that sustained their creativity.
“Whitman, Alabama” — This ongoing documentary project by filmmaker Jennifer Crandall brings Walt Whitman’s words to life through the voices of modern-day Alabama residents.
“Contemporary Japanese Ceramics from the Horvitz Collection” — This exhibition presents Japanese pottery and porcelain created by three generations of master ceramic artists. Made with both ancient and modern materials and methods, their works are exceptionally diverse. They share the exceptional craftsmanship and sophisticated design characteristic of Japanese contemporary ceramics.
“Power and Piety in 17th-Century Spanish Art” — Works by premiere Spanish baroque painters such as Francisco de Zurbarán, Bartolomé Murillo, Pedro Orrente and others, on loan from Bob Jones University Museum & Gallery.
“Modernism Foretold: The Nadler Collection of Late Antique Art from Egypt” — An extraordinary assembly of Coptic objects dating from the 3rd to the 8th century CE belonging to Emanuel and Anna Nadler.
The museum’s days of operation are Tuesday – Sunday. Reserve a free ticket and see our policies at https://georgiamuseum.org/visit/.
The Porcelain and Decorative Arts Museum at the Center for Art and Nature
The Porcelain and Decorative Arts Museum at the Center for Art and Nature at the State Botanical Garden of Georgia will be opening its doors for timed ticket access (https://botgarden.uga.edu/porcelain-and-decorative-arts-museum-timed-access-now-available/). The newest building at the garden holds the personal porcelain and decorative arts of Deen Day Sanders, a longtime supporter of the State Botanical Garden. The space is designed to draw environmental and conservation connections to the collections in the museum.
Eight different gallery spaces blend conservation, botanicals, art, beauty and curiosity. Adjacent to the building is the Discovery and Information Garden, where visitors can connect to the living botanical collection that is represented in many of the porcelain works in the museum. Please join staff and docents for a time in the Porcelain and Decorative Arts Museum to develop your own ideas on art and nature and become inspired to see the natural environment through the lens of the many artists on display.
ATHICA: Athens Institute for Contemporary Art
ATHICA@675, Pulaski St., Suite 1200 
“LIGHT: 2021 Juried Exhibition” — ATHICA’s annual juried exhibition features contemporary art in all media that explores or references light, which is found all around us, around our planet, and throughout art, nature, literature, science, society and language as a concept and a construct with many different connotations. Without light there is no color and art would not exist. Work was juried by guest juror Matt Porter, curator at the Morris Museum of Art in Augusta, Georgia.
ATHICA@CINÉ Gallery
“Remembering Chatham Murray and Her Art” — Works of the late, beloved Athenian and painter Chatham Murray, organized by her friends Charles Warnock, Juana Gnecco and Anne Sears and featuring 14 paintings that span six decades. A number of works in the exhibition illustrate Murray’s love of home and table. Favorite subject matter included the bounty of the garden and home interiors and exteriors, the latter inspired perhaps by her daily walks.
Lyndon House Arts Center
3THURS Artist Talk with Andy Cherewick & Jeffrey Whittle, 6 p.m. — Join the artists and Curator Beth Sale for a gallery walk-through and discussion about the works in the exhibition “I vs. Me.” Reserve your free ticket. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/artist-talk-jeffrey-whittle-and-andy-cherewick-tickets-168152154621
On View:
“Willow Oak Tree Exhibition with Guest Curator Abraham Tesser” — In honor of the willow oak tree that graced the lawn of the historic Ware–Lyndon House for over a century, this exhibition features works created with and inspired by the tree. Each of the participating artists received reclaimed wood from the tree to incorporate into a work of art.
“Inside Out: Expressing the Inner World” — Abstract paintings from a group of women artists working primarily in the Southeast.
“Modernist Sculptures from the Legacy of Loyd Florence” — Florence’s life was marked by a lifelong passion for aviation. He graduated in 1939 from the first civilian pilot training program, sponsored by the University of Georgia and served as president of Athens Aviation, which operated the Athens Airport in the early 1950s. Later in his life, he began making metal sculpture.
“Something I’ve Been Meaning to Tell You: Brian Hitselberger and Julie Wills” — For this exhibition, the artists worked independently in their respective studios while maintaining an active dialogue through correspondence and video conferencing.  
“I vs Me: Andy Cherewick and Jeffrey Whittle” — Two beloved Athens artists’ paintings in one gallery.
“Arts Center Choice Award: A Lot More Than It Seems by David Froetschel” — With structures found at thrift stores and imagery taken from fiction, Froetschel balances between order and chaos, dreams and reality, imagining what could be and depicting “a lot more than it seems.” 
“Window Works: AJ Aremu” — Using the banks of windows as a palette, AJ Aremu represents Black bodies in motion and states of repose. Their contemporary clothing blends with African patterns in Aremu’s exploration of the melding of cultures.
“Collections from our Community: Oscar’s Godzillas” — “I always admired the idea of something unbelievable and wonderful hidden out in the world. Godzilla holds a great example. It shows how small we really are as a species and how our actions have great effects.” – Oscar Justus
Lamar Dodd School of Art Galleries, University of Georgia
“Dawn Williams Boyd: Woe” — A series of textile works by the Atlanta-based artist that reflect a lifelong critique of social injustices and racial violence. Using scraps of fabric, needles, and thread as her tools, Boyd painstakingly “paints” the entire surface of her quilts, layer upon layer, cutting, sewing, endlessly repurposing, building the surface into a formidable, authoritative source that pulls no punches. The exhibition is organized by Daniel Fuller and will travel to the Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York, and the Galleries at Sarah Lawrence College.
“Time at the Tableæ — Features the work of Dodd undergraduate students Alan Barrett, Alex Barrett and Massie Herlihy. In this intersection of performance, installation, ceramics and photographs, the artists hope to bring a better understanding of what it means to pursue and use ceramics in the ritual of our daily lives.
“Flex·i·ble Architecture: we’re not trying to be heavy, we’re trying to be light” — Dodd MFA candidate Rachel Seburn and Alberta, Canada–based artist Sarah Seburn created this exhibition that investigates materials and their malleability. The artists pull from architectural lineages as they create an installation that acts as a mock-up showroom, an investigation into a new kind of interior building that allows for floors and walls to sink, rock and tilt.
“Waste Creation” — Mickey Boyd, a Dodd MFA candidate, presents a collaborative exhibition with Max Yarbrough, an artist working and living in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The artists present a series of images and sculptures that explore how exponential growth equals exponential waste. 
The Atheaneum
“Trevor Paglen: Vision After Seeing” — An exhibition of photographs and a video by internationally renowned artist Trevor Paglen explores an essential question at the heart of Paglen’s recent work: “Are vision and seeing the same thing?” Paglen investigates this question as it relates to the long history of technologies that have aided, and perhaps even eclipsed, the human eye. 
tiny ATH gallery
“Davy Gibbs: ‘Empires’” — “Empire” is a word we associate with a powerful sense of place, with both glory and decay, rise and fall. The Deep South, if never quite an empire in the formal sense, has always been a land of little empires. Athenian Davy Gibbs examines this idea through photographs.
Safety precautions in place for tiny ATH gallery:
Unless vaccinated, please wear your mask
Please consider parking up Pulaski/Cleveland to alleviate parking issues   
If you feel unwell, or have been in touch with anyone who has been sick, please stay home
Enter through front porch door
Hotel Indigo, Athens
ArtWall@Hotel Indigo: Considering the intersection of natural and industrial beauty, “All or Nothing” juxtaposes organic abstractions and lush landscapes with historic structures and decimated buildings. Featured artists include Alexa Rivera, Christina Matacotta and Zahria Cook. 
BARBAR
“Uncaged” — Work in oil and watercolor by Helen Kuykendall, a largely self-taught artist originally from Venezuela who combines natural motifs in unsettling ways. Opening party from 7 to 9 p.m. as part of Third Thursday. 
The Classic Center
No programming for this month’s Third Thursday.
Creature Comforts Brewing Co.’s CCBC Gallery
Artist-in-Residence Noraa James’s painting-in-progress on display in the CCBC Gallery. Plus: How do you contribute creativity to your community? Let us know on the interactive chalkboard installation! 
Third Thursday was established in 2012 to encourage attendance at Athens’ established art venues through coordination and co-promotion by the organizing entities. Rack cards promoting Third Thursday and visual art in Athens are available upon request. This schedule and venue locations and regular hours can be found at 3thurs.org.
Contact: Michael Lachowski, Georgia Museum of Art, [email protected].
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kylejsimmons · 4 years
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tuseriesdetv · 3 years
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Guía de series: Estrenos y regresos de febrero 2021
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Este pasado enero no ha sido tan largo como el del año anterior, ¿verdad? Seguro que os han quedado series pendientes. Corred, porque este febrero viene cargadito.
¡Feliz febrero!
Leyenda:
Verde: series nuevas.
Negro: regresos de otras series.
Naranja: miniseries o series documentales.
Amarillo: tv movies, documentales, especiales o pilotos.
Morado: season finales.
Púrpura: midseason finales.
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Calendario de series
1 de febrero: The Drowning (1T) en Channel 5
3 de febrero:
Firefly Lane (1T completa) en Netflix
The Expanse (5T finale) en Prime Video
5 de febrero:
Hache (2T completa), Cidade invisível (1T completa), Malcolm & Marie, Seungriho y Strip Down, Rise Up en Netflix
The Snoopy Show (1T) en Apple TV+
Pequeñas coincidencias (3T y última completa) y Bliss en Prime Video
7 de febrero:
The Equalizer (1T) en CBS
Vitals en HBO Europe
8 de febrero: Black Lightning (4T) en The CW
10 de febrero: Crime Scene: The Vanishing at the Cecil Hotel y En Passant Pécho: Les Carottes Sont Cuites en Netflix
11 de febrero:
Clarice (1T) en CBS
Layla Majnun y Red Dot en Netflix
12 de febrero: To All the Boys: Always and Forever y Odio en Netflix
14 de febrero: The Great North (1T) en FOX
15 de febrero: The Crew (1T completa) en Netflix
16 de febrero:
Young Rock (1T) y Kenan (1T) en NBC
Queen Sugar (5T) en OWN
The Oval (2T) en BET
17 de febrero:
Behind Her Eyes (1T completa) en Netflix
Good Trouble (3T) en Freeform
19 de febrero:
For All Mankind (2T) en Apple TV+
Hierro (2T) en Movistar+
Tribes Of Europa (1T completa), Héroes: Silencio y Rock&Roll y I Care a Lot en Netflix
Tell Me Your Secrets (1T completa) y El Internado: Las Cumbres (1T completa) en Prime Video
Flora and Ulysses en Disney+
21 de febrero: When Calls the Heart (8T) en Hallmark
23 de febrero:
Superman & Lois (1T) en The CW
Pelé en Netflix
24 de febrero:
Snowfall (4T) en FX
Ginny & Georgia (1T completa) en Netflix
25 de febrero:
Punky Brewster (1T completa) en Peacock
Geez & Ann en Netflix
26 de febrero: Loco por ella en Netflix
28 de febrero: The Walking Dead (vuelve) en AMC
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Estrenos de series
The Drowning (Channel 5)
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Thriller sobre una mujer (Jill Halfpenny; Humans, Liar) que conoce a un adolescente (Cody Molko) y cree que ha encontrado a su hijo desaparecido hace ocho años. Su esperanza crece de tal manera que toma un peligroso y transgresor camino que la llevará hasta el borde de la razón. Completan el reparto Jonas Armstrong (Hit & Miss, Ripper Street), Rupert Penry-Jones (Lucky Man, The Strain) y Deborah Findlay (The Split, Collateral).
Creada por Francesca Brill (Crossroads) y Luke Watson, director de Britannia o Shameless; y escrita por Tim Dynevor (Emmerdale Farm). Cuatro episodios.
Estreno: 1 de febrero
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Firefly Lane (Netflix)
Tully (Katherine Heigl; Grey's Anatomy, Roswell) y Kate (Sarah Chalke; Scrubs, How I Met Your Mother), amigas desde la adolescencia, son inseparables gracias a años de éxitos, fracasos, depresiones y decepciones, pero rompen su relación por culpa de una traición impensable. Con Ben Lawson (Designated Survivor, 13 Reasons Why), Beau Garrett (Girlfriends' Guide to Divorce, The Good Doctor), Ali Skovbye (Breaktrough), Roan Curtis (The Magicians), Yael Yurman (Once Upon a Time, To All The Boys I've Loved Before), Jon Ecker (Narcos, Queen of the South), Brandon Jay McLaren (UnREAL, Girlfriends' Guide to Divorce), Jenna Rosenow (Mako Mermaids, Neighbours), Patrick Sabongui (The Flash, Homeland), Chelah Horsdal (The Man in the High Castle, You Me Her) y Brendan Taylor (The Arrangement).
Adaptación de la novela de Kristin Hannah (2008). Escrita por Maggie Friedman (Witches of East End, Dawson's Creek). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 3 de febrero
Estreno en España: 3 de febrero en Netflix España
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Cidade invisível (Netflix)
Mientras investiga la muerte de un extraño animal en una playa de Río de Janeiro, un detective del departamento de Medio Ambiente (Marco Pigossi; Alta mar, Tidelands) se encuentra de pronto en el centro de una batalla entre nuestro mundo y otro subterráneo habitado por criaturas mitológicas evolucionadas de un antiguo linaje del folclore brasileño. Completan el reparto Alessandra Negrini (Paraíso Tropical, Cleópatra), Julia Konrad (Malação), José Dumont (Kenoma, Velho Chico), Tainá Medina (O Doutrinador), Victor Sparapane (Malação), Fábio Lago (O Outro Lado do Paraíso, Cheias de Charme), Jéssica Córes y Jimmy London.
Basada en las historias de los escritores Raphael Draccon y Carolina Munhóz. Escrita por Mirna Nogueira (Carrossel, O Doutrinador), Antonio Arruda (Casa Kadabra), Marco Borges (Topíssima), Regina Negrini (Casa Kadabra) y Ludmila Naves (Escola de Gênios, Gaby Estrella) y dirigida por Júlia Pacheco Jordão (O Negócio, Julie e os Fantasmas) y Luis Carone (Pico da Neblina). Ocho episodios.
Estreno: 5 de febrero en Netflix
Estreno en España: 5 de febrero en Netflix España
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The Equalizer (CBS)
Reimaginación de la serie emitida en CBS entre 1985 y 1989 en la que una mujer enigmática con un misterioso pasado (Queen Latifah; Star, Chicago) usa sus extensas habilidades para ayudar a los que no tienen a quien recurrir. Le acompañarán Chris Noth (The Good Wife, Sex and the City), Lorraine Toussaint (Orange Is the New Black, Into the Badlands), Adam Goldberg (Fargo, Joey), Tory Kittles (True Detective, Colony), Liza Lapira (Unbelievable, Apartment 23) y Laya DeLeon Hayes (Raven's Home, Just Add Magic).
Escrita y producida por Andrew Marlowe (Castle, Take Two) y Terri Miller (Castle, Take Two).
Estreno: 7 de febrero
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Clarice (CBS)
Secuela de The Silence of the Lambs ambientada en 1993 y centrada en la detective Starling (Rebecca Breeds; Pretty Little Liars, The Originals) mientras persigue a asesinos en serie y depredadores sexuales en Washington D.C. Con Kal Penn (Designated Survivor, House M.D.), Michael Cudlitz (The Walking Dead), Nick Sandow (Orange Is the New Black), Lucca de Oliveira (Animal Kingdom, SEAL Team), Devyn A. Tyler (The Purge, Watchmen), Jayne Atkinson (Criminal Minds, House of Cards), Marnee Carpenter, Shawn Doyle (The Expanse, Impulse) y Tim Guinee (Homeland, Revolution).
Escrita y producida por Alex Kurtzman (Fringe, Alias) y Jenny Lumet (Star Trek: Discovery).
Estreno: 11 de febrero
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The Great North (FOX)
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Comedia de animación centrada en las aventuras en Alaska de la familia Tobin. Beef es un padre soltero que hace lo que puede para mantener cerca a sus hijos, especialmente desde que los sueños artísticos de su única hija, Judy, la dirigen lejos del barco pesquero familiar y el centro comercial del pueblo. Con las voces de Nick Offerman (Parks and Recreation, Devs), Jenny Slate (Big Mouth, Bob's Burgers), Megan Mullally (Will & Grace, Parks and Recreation), Paul Rust (Love), Aparna Nancherla (Corporate, Crashing), Will Forte (The Last Man on Earth, 30 Rock) y Dulcé Sloan (The Daily Show).
Escrita por Wendy Molyneux (Bob's Burgers, The Megan Mullally Show), Lizzie Molyneux (Bob's Burgers) y Minty Lewis (Regular Show). Ya está renovada por una segunda temporada.
Estreno: 14 de febrero
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The Crew (Netflix)
Comedia ambientada en un taller de NASCAR, donde la hija del dueño (Jillian Mueller, Porno) hereda el negocio y el jefe del equipo técnico (Kevin James; Kevin Can Wait, The King of Queens) debe aceptar a regañadientes a sus nuevos compañeros millennials aunque choque con ellos en su forma de trabajar. Con Freddie Stroma (UnREAL, Bridgerton), Sarah Stiles (Billions, Get Shorty), Gary Anthony Williams (I'm Sorry, Malcolm in the Middle), Dan Ahdoot (Cobra Kai, Bajillion Dollar Propertie$) y Mather Zickel (Masters of Sex, Better Things).
Escrita y producida por Jeff Lowell (The Ranch, Two and a Half Men). Producida por James (Kevin Can Wait, The King of Queens). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 15 de febrero
Estreno en España: 15 de febrero en Netflix España
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Young Rock (NBC)
En 2032, el actor Dwayne Johnson, también conocido como "The Rock" se presenta a las elecciones de Estados Unidos. Dwayne creció en una familia fuerte y resiliente, se rodeó de personajes salvajes en su trabajo en la lucha libre y jugó al fútbol americano en la Universidad de Miami. La serie contará estas etapas que le han convertido en quien es hoy. Protagonizada por Dwayne Johnson (Ballers, The Scorpion King), Adrian Groulx, Bradley Constant (Following Phil), Uli Latukefu (Marco Polo, Harrow), Joseph Lee Anderson (American Soul, Harriet), Stacey Leilua, Ana Tuisila (Harry), Fasitua Amosa (Harry, The Tattooist), John Tui (Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw, Solo), Taj Cross (PEN15) y Lexie Duncan.
Creada por Dwayne Johnson, Nahnatchka Khan (Fresh Off the Boat, Apartment 23) y Jeff Chiang (Fresh Off the Boat), que producen junto a Dany García (Ballers, Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle), Hiram García (Ballers, Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle), Brian Gewirtz (WWE) y Jennifer Carreras.
Estreno: 16 de febrero
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Kenan (NBC)
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Comedia familiar sobre un padre (Kenan Thompson; Saturday Night Live, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt) que acaba de enviudar y está decidido a serlo todo para sus dos hijas (Dani y Dannah Lockett), aunque no le quede más remedio que dejar a su hermano (Chris Redd, Saturday Night Live, Disjointed) y a su suegro (Don Johnson; Miami Vice, Nash Bridges) involucrarse más en sus vidas, mientras trata de compaginar sus tareas familiares con su trabajo como presentador de un programa de televisión matinal. Con Kimrie Lewis (Single Parents, Scandal) y Punam Patel (Special, The Cool Kids).
Escrita y producida por Thompson, David Caspe (Happy Endings, Black Monday), Jackie Clarke (Happy Endings, Superstore), Lorne Michaels (Saturday Night Live), Ken Whittingham (Suburgatory) y Andrew Singer (30 Rock, The Other Two). 
Estreno: 16 de febrero
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Behind Her Eyes (Netflix)
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Una madre soltera con un trabajo rutinario de secretaria (Simona Brown, The Night Manager, The Little Drummer Girl) conoce una noche a quien resulta ser su nuevo jefe casado (Tom Bateman, Vanity Fair, Da Vinci's Demons) y se obsesiona con su matrimonio y sus secretos y se hace amiga de su esposa (Eve Hewson, The Knick, The Luminaries). Con Robert Aramayo (Game of Thrones, Harley and the Davidsons), Tyler Howitt (His Dark Materials) y Ashton McAuley (Trigonometry, Rocketman).
Adaptación de la novela de Sarah Pinborough (2017). Escrita por Steve Lightfoot (Hannibal, The Punisher). Seis episodios.
Estreno: 17 de febrero
Estreno en España: 17 de febrero en Netflix España
Tribes of Europa (Netflix)
En el año 2074, Europa está dividida en muchos estados tribales que luchan por dominarla. Los hermanos Kiano (Emilio Sakraya, Warrior Nun), Liv (Henriette Confurius) y Elja (David Ali Rashed) se ven atrapados en medio de una sangrienta guerra y lucharán por cambiar el destino del continente mientras toman sus propios caminos. Con Oliver Masucci (Dark, The Girlfriend Experience), Melika Foroutan, James Faulkner (Game of Thrones, Da Vinci's Demons), Alain Blazevic, Hoji Fortuna, Jeanette Hain, Robert Maaser, Anon Mall, Kendrick Ong, Leona Paraminski, Christoph Rygh, Ana Ularu y Adam Vacula.
Creada por Philip Koch y dirigida por Koch y Florian Baxmeyer (Die rote Jacke, Tatort). Seis episodios.
Estreno: 19 de febrero
Estreno en España: 19 de febrero en Netflix España
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Tell Me Your Secrets (Prime Video)
Thriller en el que los límites morales se difuminan centrado en tres personas dañadas con pasados problemáticos que quieren empezar de cero pero serán llevados al límite. Emma (Lily Rabe, American Horror Story, The Undoing) es una joven que una vez miró a los ojos a un peligroso asesino y acaba de salir de prisión con una nueva identidad; Mary (Amy Brenneman; The Leftovers, Private Practice) es una madre obsesionada con encontrar a su hija desaparecida (Stella Baker); y John (Hamish Linklater; The Newsroom, Fargo) es un antiguo depredador desesperado por encontrar la redención. Completan el reparto Enrique Murciano (Bloodline, Without a Trace), Chiara Aurelia (Gerald's Game), Charles Esten (Nashville, The Office), Xavier Samuel (Twilight, Adoration), Marque Richardson (Dear White People, True Blood), Kat Willis (Friday Night Lights, Queen of the South) y Chase Stokes (Outer Banks, Daytime Divas).
Creada y escrita por Harriet Warner (Call the Midwife, Mistresses) y dirigida por John Polson (The Wilds, Elementary). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 19 de febrero
Estreno en España: 19 de febrero en Prime Video España
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Superman & Lois (The CW)
Spin-off del Arrowverse en el que Superman (Tyler Hoechlin; Teen Wolf, 7th Heaven) y Lois (Elizabeth Tullock; Grimm, The Artist) trabajan y tienen dos hijos adolescentes, Jonathan (Jordan Elsass, Little Fires Everywhere) y Jordan (Alexander Garfin). Con Dylan Walsh (Nip/Tuck, Unforgettable), Emmanuelle Chriqui (Entourage, Murder in the First), Erik Valdez (Graceland, General Hospital), Inde Navarrette (13 Reasons Why), Wolé Parks (Devious Maids, The Vampire Diaries), Sofia Hasmik (Mad About You), Stacey Farber (Saving Hope, UnREAL), Adam Rayner (Tyrant, Mistresses).
Escrita y producida por Todd Helbing (The Flash, Spartacus: Blood and Sand).
Estreno: 23 de febrero
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Ginny & Georgia (Netflix)
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Ginny (Antonia Gentry, Raising Dion), de quince años, a menudo se siente eclipsada por su madre treintañera (Brianne Howey, The Passage, The Exorcist) y también más madura que ella. Viven junto a su hermano Austin (Diesel La Torraca) en un pueblo de Nueva Inglaterra, donde Georgia quiere asentarse y dar a sus hijos una vida normal mientras su pasado no la encuentre y destroce sus planes. Completan el reparto Jennifer Robertson (Schitt's Creek), Felix Mallard (Locke & Key, Happy Together) y Sara Waisglass (Degrassi: Next Class), interpretando a los vecinos; y Scott Porter (Friday Night Lights, Scorpion) y Raymond Ablack (Narcos, Shadowhunters), dando vida al alcalde y al dueño de un restaurante local.
Creada y producida por Sarah Lampert y escrita por Debra J. Fisher (Being Mary Jane, Criminal Minds). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 24 de febrero
Estreno en España: 24 de febrero en Netflix España
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Punky Brewster (Peacock)
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Revival de la serie emitida en NBC entre 1984 y 1988 en la que Punky (Soleil Moon Frye) es ahora madre soltera de tres hijos e intenta reconducir su vida. Es entonces cuando conoce a Izzy (Quinn Copeland, Waitress), una niña del sistema de acogida que le recuerda a ella cuando era joven. Con Cherie Johnson (Punky Brewster, Family Matters), Freddie Prinze Jr. (I Know What You Did Last Summer, Scooby-Doo), Lauren Lindsey Donzis (No Good Nick, Liv and Maddie), Oliver de los Santos y Noah Cottrell (Skyscraper).
Escrita por Steve y Jim Armogida (School of Rock). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 25 de febrero
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ktliterary · 3 years
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Happy Book Birthday to ENJOY THE VIEW!
“Morganthaler’s strong hero and unconventional heroine immediately appeal, and the climbing plot is refreshing and authentic. Both existing Morganthaler fans and new ones will devour this sweet and occasionally spicy romance—and laugh out loud at an unexpectedly hilarious guest: a lovesick marmot.” – Publishers Weekly
Please help us congratulate Sarah Morgenthaler on today’s release of ENJOY THE VIEW!
Available today in print, ebook and audiobook (narrated by the brilliant Elise Arsenault)!
ENJOY THE VIEW A grouchy mountaineer, a Hollywood starlet And miles of untamed wilderness… What could possibly go wrong?
Former Hollywood darling River Lane’s acting career is tanking fast. Determined to start fresh behind the camera, she agrees to film a documentary about the picturesque small town of Moose Springs, Alaska. The assignment should have been easy, but the quirky locals want nothing to do with River. Well, too bad: River’s going to make this film and prove herself, no matter what it takes.
Or what (literal) mountain she has to climb.
Easton Lockett may be a gentle giant, but he knows a thing or two about survival. If he can keep everyone in line, he should be able to get River and her crew up and down Mount Veil in one piece. Turns out that’s a big if. The wildlife’s wilder than usual, the camera crew’s determined to wander off a cliff, and the gorgeous actress is fearless. Falling for River only makes Easton’s job tougher, but there’s only so long he can hold out against her brilliant smile. When bad weather strikes, putting everyone at risk, it’ll take all of Easton’s skill to get them back home safely…and convince River she should stay in his arms for good.
Amazon Best Book of the Month
Learn more about Moose Springs at: www.sarahmorgenthaler.com
Say hi and congratulations on twitter @SEMorgenthaler
Happy Book Birthday to ENJOY THE VIEW! was originally published on kt literary
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Lookingglass Theatre Company
In Collaboration with WBEZ Chicago present the World Premiere Audio Play of
Her Honor Jane Byrne
Written and Directed by Ensemble Member J. Nicole Brooks
Thanksgiving Day at 11am and Saturday, November 28 at 2pm
Chicago, IL–Lookingglass Theatre Company, in collaboration with WBEZ 91.5 Chicago, presents a World Premiere audio play of Her Honor Jane Byrne, written and directed by Ensemble Member and Mellon Playwright in Residence J. Nicole Brooks. Her Honor Jane Byrne will air on Chicago’s NPR news station WBEZ 91.5 FM and wbez,org on Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, November 26 from 11am-1pm CT and Saturday, November 28 from 2pm-4pm CT.
Chicago is “The City That Works”—but does it work for everybody? It’s 1981, the city’s simmering pot of neglected problems boils over, and Chicago’s first woman mayor is moving into Cabrini-Green. Is this just a P.R. stunt, or will it bring the City together? For the next three weeks, residents, activists, media, the “Machine,” and the Mayor herself will collide as the City’s raw truths are exposed. Tune in to find out who will come out on top in Lookingglass Ensemble Member J. Nicole Brooks’ bold new work, Her Honor Jane Byrne?
Her Honor Jane Byrne premiered on the Lookingglass stage in March 2020 just five days before the Theatre had to close due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Lookingglass Theatre Company has partnered with WBEZ, Chicago’s National Public Radio Station, to present Her Honor Jane Byrne as a radio play.
The cast features Ensemble Members Christine Mary Dunford (Jane Byrne), Thomas J. Cox (Alderman Roti, Swibel, Photographer, Evidence Tech) and Tracy Walsh (Reporter, Kathy, Claudia) with Robert Cornelius (Black Che, Seller), Nicole Michelle Haskins (Tiger, Rival Kid), Renee Lockett (Mabel Foley), Frank Nall (O’Donnell, Jay McMullen, Daley, Spilotro), Josh Odor (Superintendent Brzcek, Tavern Owner, Bodyguard, Pilot, Host), Taron Patton (Marion Stamps), Willie “Mudlife Roc” Round (Kid, Tral).
The creative team includes Michael Huey (composer), Christopher M. LaPorte (sound designer), Artistic Associate Wendy Mateo (associate director) Jason K. Martin (dialect specialist), Sarah Burnham (production manager), Jeremy Phillips (production assistant) and Ensemble Member Philip R. Smith (casting).
“Our play joins history to myth. Some of it is dramatic interpretation, and some of it is real,” comments J. Nicole Brooks. “When you grow up in a city that’s hyper segregated, run amuck with corruption, and political stunts and discord, you have to work hard to love it. I love the city of Chicago. I love the history. I’m fascinated by ethnic clans. I’m curious about patronage, councils, aldermen, and committeemen. Who gets elected and how? Who gets to lead us, and will they actually listen to us? Though I was very little, I can remember when it was announced that Mayor Jane Byrne was moving into Cabrini-Green. Can she stop the violence? Well, no one person can. Here we are decades later, asking the same questions. I hope our audiences walk away with a bit of the past, so they may know how to shape our future.”
““It was devastating to close Her Honor Jane Byrne last Spring just after it opened.  A play takes years of work to get it to the point of production, and this play was speaking directly to our city about our city.  So we are thrilled and grateful to WBEZ for giving us a new platform to share J. Nicole Brooks’ timely and brilliant play in its new audio form,” comments Artistic Director Heidi Stillman. “Over the past months since the show closed, it’s subject matter has only become more relevant. Her Honor Jane Byrne is ambitious, timely, and an important piece of work about the way geography, race and inequality line up in Chicago – and how choices made in the past are still playing out in our city today.”  
This project is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts. The following sponsors generously supported the premiere of Her Honor Jane Byrne on the Lookingglass stage last spring: Production Sponsors—National Endowment for the Arts and Edgerton Foundation; Lead Sponsors—Melinda McMullen and Duncan Kime; Production Support—Leigh and Henry Bienen, Linda Karn, Rachel E. Kraft and Douglas R. Brown, and Abbie Roth.
About the Artists
J. NICOLE BROOKS (Playwright/Director/Lookingglass Ensemble Member) is an actor, playwright, and director. Recent theatrical credits include Lottery Day (Goodman Theatre), Beyond Caring (Lookingglass Theatre Company), and Immediate Family (Mark Taper Forum, Goodman Theatre). Directing credits at Lookingglass include: Thaddeus & Slocum: A Vaudeville Adventure (co-directed with Krissy Vanderwarker), Mr. Rickey Calls A Meeting, and Black Diamond. J. Nicole is author of Fedra: Queen of Haiti, Black Diamond: The Years the Locusts Have Eaten, The Incredible Adventures of Yuri Kochiyama, HeLa, and Her Honor Jane Byrne.
ROBERT CORNELIUS (Black Che, Seller) is making his Lookingglass Theatre debut with the world premiere of Her Honor Jane Byrne. Other Chicago credits include the world premiere of Lottery Day at Goodman Theatre; The Total Bent at Haven Theatre in association with About Face Theatre; Rightlynd, Spiele 36, On the Block and Whitley at Victory Gardens Theater; Picnic with American Theatre Company, W;t with The Hypocrites, Raisin with Court Theatre, Taming of the Shrew at First Folio Theatre, Hamlet at The Gift Theatre, and Aida at Drury Lane Theatre. Regionally, Robert has worked at Indiana Repertory Theatre, Milwaukee Repertory Theater, Madison Repertory Theatre, Montana Repertory Theatre, and St. Louis Black Repertory Theatre. Film/TV credits include: Chicago PD, South Side, Shameless, Hoodlum, and The Chi.
THOMAS J. COX (Alderman Roti, Swibel, Photographer, Evidence Tech/Lookingglass Ensemble Member) most recently appeared at Lookingglass in 20,000 Leagues Under the Seas. A founding Ensemble Member, Thom has appeared in many productions since 1988, including: Cascabel, The Jungle, The Odyssey, West, The Arabian Nights, The Master and Margarita, The Great Fire, Nelson Algren: For Keeps and a Single Day, 1984, The Old Curiosity Shop, and Peter Pan (A Play). Regionally, he has appeared at Goodman Theatre, Writers Theatre, Steppenwolf Theatre Company, Northlight Theatre, The House Theatre of Chicago, Court Theatre, The Gift Theatre, Victory Gardens Theater, and Milwaukee Repertory Theater. Most recently, Thom was seen in Bernhardt/Hamlet and A Christmas Carol (Goodman Theatre) and Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom (Writers Theatre). TV/Film: Brotherhood (Showtime), Chicago Fire (NBC), Since You’ve Been Gone (Miramax).
CHRISTINE MARY DUNFORD (Jane Byrne/Lookingglass Ensemble Member) has appeared in nearly two dozen Lookingglass productions. Christine’s three most recent productions include Blood Wedding, Trust, and Our Town. For Lookingglass’ 25th Anniversary Season in 2013, she directed her own original adaptation (Jeff nominated) of Still Alice, based on the book by Lisa Genova, which has been translated into multiple languages and is being produced in small theatres across the world. Over the years Christine has served the company as managing director and director of development, and she co-founded and taught with Lookingglass’ Education and Community program. Christine is Director of the School of Theatre and Music at the University of Illinois at Chicago; and she co-founded and helps run the Memory Ensemble—a partnership between Lookingglass and Northwestern’s Alzheimer’s Disease Center (CNADC)—that uses improvisational performance activities to improve life for people with memory loss.
NICOLE MICHELLE HASKINS (Tiger, Rival Kid) is making her Lookingglass debut! Acting credits include: The Color Purple (Drury Lane Theatre), U.S. Premiere of Hopelessly Devoted (Piven Theatre Workshop, Jeff nomination: Best Actor in a Play), Caroline, or Change (Firebrand Theatre, Black Theatre Alliance Award nomination: Best Supporting Actress in a Musical), Spitfire Grill (Refuge Theatre Project, Jeff Award Nomination: Best Supporting Actress in a Musical), World Premiere of HeLa (Sideshow Theatre Company); Music Man, Father Comes Home from the Wars Parts 1,2 & 3, and How to Catch Creation (Goodman Theatre), The Wiz (Kokandy Productions, Jeff Award nomination: Best Supporting Actress in a Musical), Parade (Writers Theatre), and RENT (Theo Ubique Caberet Theatre). Proudly represented by Shirley Hamilton. School at Steppenwolf Acting Fellow 2014, Associate Artist with Black Lives, Black Words, International Theatre Collective, and MOSAIC Youth Theatre of Detroit Alum.
RENEE LOCKETT (Mabel Foley) is making her Lookingglass debut. Last seen in First Floor Theater’s Jeff recommended Sugar in our Wounds. Other Chicago credits include: Familiar (Steppenwolf Theatre Company, Jeff nomination: Ensemble), Surely, Goodness and Mercy (Redtwist Theatre, Jeff nomination: Performer in a Drama, Black Theatre Alliance Award nomination: Best Actress), A Wonder in My Soul (Victory Gardens Theater), Crowns (Fleetwood-Jourdain Theatre, Black Theatre Alliance Award nomination: Best Ensemble). Renee has also worked with Babes with Blades, Court Theatre, Northlight Theatre, MPAACT, Prologue Theatre, Collaboraction Theatre Company, Three Cat Productions, Black Ensemble Theater, ETA  Creative Arts, and Black Lives, Black Words. Renee is an ensemble member of MPAACT and an Artistic Associate with Black Lives, Black Words. Most recent Film credits include: The Plow and Freelancers Anonymous, as well as TV roles on The Chi and a recurring guest star role on Comedy Central’s South Side. Renee is represented by DDO Artists Agency.
FRANK NALL (O’Donnell, Jay McMullen, Daley, Spilotro) is making his Lookingglass debut in this powerful piece by J. Nicole Brooks. A member of the Artistic Home Ensemble, Frank was last seen in their production of Vanya on the Plains as Elijah. Other Chicago credits include: Frankenstein (Remy Bumppo Theatre Company, Jeff Award winner) and Traitor as Howard (A Red Orchid Theatre, Jeff Award winner). Film and TV credits include: the CNN reporter from Spygame, Transplant surgeon on Empire, Carlisle on Boss, and assorted commercials. Frank has an MFA from the University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign.
JOSH ODOR (Superintendent Brzcek, Tavern Owner, Bodyguard, Pilot, Host) is working with Lookingglass for the first time. Chicago credits include: To Catch a Fish and Blood and Gifts (TimeLine Theatre), El Grito del Bronx (Goodman Theatre/Collaboraction Theatre Company), Oorah! (Steppenwolf Theatre Company/LiveWire Chicago), Scientific Method and The Firebirds Take the Field (Rivendell Theatre Ensemble), Welcome to Jesus (American Theater Company), Moment, The Last Days of Judas Iscariot, and The Resistable Rise of Arturo Ui (Steep Theatre), You on the Moors Now (The Hypocrites), Life On Paper (Jackalope Theatre), Hit the Wall (The Inconvenience), Winterset (Griffin Theatre), The Nutcracker (The House Theatre of Chicago) and Sweet Bird of Youth and The Time of Your Life (The Artistic Home). Regionally Josh has worked at the Long Wharf Theatre. TV/ Film credits: The Chi, Chicago Med/PD/Fire, Boss, Betrayal, Janie Jones, Empire, and The Express.
TARON PATTON (Marion Stamps) returns to the stage in Her Honor Jane Byrne. Producer credits includes: N (Greenhouse Theater Center) and Misty Tanner (Q&A Productions). Directing credits: N (Greenhouse Theater Center) Saturday Night, Sunday Morning (Steppenwolf Garage Rep), Bulrusher and Nativity Tribute (Congo Square Theatre). Acting credits: Meet Vera Stark (Goodman Theatre), Hot L Baltimore (Steppenwolf Theatre Company); The Bluest Eye (Steppenwolf Theatre Company and New Victory Theater), King Hedley II (Congo Square Theatre), and Joe Turner’s Come and Gone (Goodman Theatre). Television credits: The Chi, Empire, Chicago PD, Chicago Fire, Chicago Med, A Different World.
WILLIE "MUDLIFE ROC" ROUND (Kid, Tral) is a songwriter, playwright, videographer, mentor, and hip-hop artist hailing from the West Side of Chicago, who has performed across the country and opened for Grammy Award-winning artist Lil Wayne as well as Gucci Mane. He does extensive outreach in the North Lawndale neighborhood in Chicago (also known as “The Holy City”) and has mentored inner city youth as part of the College Mentoring Experience, as well as his own youth movement called MUD LIFE (Motivating the Urban to be Determined). He holds a B.A. in Communications, Radio, and Television Broadcasting from Central State University. His play Broke Down Drone (also co-written with G. Riley Mills) played during the 2019 Peacebook.
TRACY WALSH (Reporter, Kathy, Claudia/Lookingglass Ensemble Member) is a Lookingglass Ensemble Member where she has performed in, choreographed, directed, and written many plays on the Main Stage and for the Lookingglass Young Ensemble. In recent seasons at Lookingglass, Tracy provided dances for The Steadfast Tin Soldier, wrote, directed, and choreographed Cassandra for the Young Ensemble, provided intimacy choreography for Beyond Caring, movement for Acts of God, and choreographed Blood Wedding. She appeared in and choreographed Iphigenia in Aulis (Court Theatre/Getty Villa in Los Angeles), choreographed Agamemnon (Court Theatre) and appeared in and choreographed Electra (Court Theatre). Other Chicago choreography credits include: Arcadia and All’s Well that Ends Well (The Goodman Theatre), The Jewel Box and Don Giovanni (Chicago Opera Theatre), Carmen (Court Theatre) and the Napoleonade (Eclipse Theatre Company). Tracy and her husband own and teach at Lighthouse Yoga in Evanston.
FACT SHEET
Her Honor Jane Byrne will air on Chicago’s NPR news station WBEZ 91.5 FM and wbez,org.
Title:                                        Her Honor Jane Byrne
Written and Directed by:         Ensemble Member J. Nicole Brooks
Featuring:                               Ensemble Members Christine Mary Dunford, Thomas J. Cox and Tracy Walsh with Robert Cornelius, Nicole Michelle Haskins, Renee Lockett, Frank Nall, Josh Odor, Taron Patton, and Willie “Mudlife Roc” Round.
Creative Team:                        Michael Huey (composer), Christopher M. LaPorte (sound designer), Artistic Associate Wendy Mateo (associate director) Jason K. Martin (dialect specialist), Sarah Burnham (production manager), Jeremy Phillips (production assistant) and Ensemble Member Philip R. Smith (casting).
Dates:               Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, November 26 from 11am-1pm CT and Saturday, November 28 from 2pm-4pm CT.
                      Also happening online with Lookingglass
The Steadfast Tin Soldier
Lookingglass Theatre Company presents the holiday stream of Ensemble Member Mary Zimmerman’s The Steadfast Tin Soldier. Experience Chicago’s beloved holiday tradition with your family this holiday season, as the production streams into your home this December! Based on Hans Christian Andersen’s story about a little tin soldier who never gives up, this production is a gorgeous spectacle of music and movement that is perfect for the whole family.
Online access to the production is $25 and includes Livestream and On Demand. An Opening Night Livestream will take place December 1, 2020 at 6:30PM Central. Opening night is $75 and includes a pre-show event with live music hosted by Ensemble Member Kasey Foster, who plays the Ballerina in The Steadfast Tin Soldier. Following the show, Artistic Producer Kareem Bandealy will host a Q&A with Adaptor/Director and Ensemble Member Mary Zimmerman, Co-Sound Designer, Composer and Ensemble Member Andre Pluess, and Costume Designer Ana Kuzmanic.
Tickets are on sale now at www.lookingglasstheatre.org.                                                                    
The cast of The Steadfast Tin Soldier features Ensemble Members Kasey Foster (Ballerina) and Anthony Irons (Goblin), with Joe Dempsey (Nursemaid), John Gregorio (Rat), and Alex Stein (Steadfast Tin Soldier).
Original music for The Steadfast Tin Soldier is composed by Ensemble Member Andre Pluess and Amanda Dehnert. Musicians include Leandro López Várady (Music Director/Piano), Greg Hirte (Violin), Juan Horie (Cello), and Constance Volk (Flutes).
The creative team includes Todd Rosenthal (scenic design), Ana Kuzmanic (costume design), TJ Gerckens (lighting design), Ensemble Member Andre Pluess and Christopher M. LaPorte (sound design), Leandro López Várady (associate arranger), Ensemble Member Tracy Walsh (choreography), Ensemble Member Sylvia Hernandez-DiStasi (circus choreography), Chicago Puppet Studio (puppet design), Amanda Herrmann (properties),Rigability Inc. (rigging design), Katrina Herrmann (stage manager) and Liz Anne Larsen (assistant stage manager). The production was filmed in 2019 by HMS Media.
The Secret Passage
The Secret Passage is a digital membership that reveals a corridor of hidden doors. And behind each door lives an exclusive peek into the Lookingglass process. From mind-expanding artist conversations to first-ever play workshops to archival audio recordings of our former glories to discounts on classes and public Lookingglass events, the perks of the pass will cast you as a true “insider” and a key player in preserving our future.  
The Secret Passage memberships are $50, for access through August 2021, or $8 monthly. Members will receive a discount to The Steadfast Tin Soldier, along with access to the following monthly programming, plus more to be announced:
The Jungle Radio Play by Upton Sinclair, adapted and directed by Ensemble Member David Schwimmer
The Master and Margarita Radio Play, by Mikhail Bulgakov’s adapted by Artistic Director/Ensemble member Heidi Stillman, directed by Heidi Stillman and Ensemble Member David Catlin, featuring many Ensemble Members including David Schwimmer, Philip R. Smith, Joy Gregory, and our beloved friend and Steppenwolf ensemble member Mariann Mayberry.
           The Scarlet Letter Radio Play by Nathaniel Hawthorne, adapted by Ensemble Member Thomas J. Cox
Lucy and Charlie’s Honeymoon Sneek Peek, a new musical by Artistic Associate Matthew C. Yee
The Hidden Door: Artist Conversations: Online conversations featuring exclusive conversations with Ensemble Members David Schwimmer, Kevin Douglas, Mary Zimmerman, Mellon Playwright in Residence J. Nicole Brooks, Anthony Fleming, Kareem Bandealy, and David Catlin, among others.  
Live Concerts: Coffeehouse and House Party, features Artistic Associates Matt Yee and Sully Ratke, with a special appearance by Ensemble Member Kareem Bandealy. House Party is an intimate concert by Ensemble Member Kasey Foster and partner Charlie Otto.
For more information on The Secret Passage, visit lookingglasstheatre.org/secret-passage
About Lookingglass Theatre Company Inventive. Collaborative. Transformative. Lookingglass Theatre Company, recipient of the 2011 Regional Theatre Tony Award, was founded in 1988 by eight Northwestern University students. Now in its 32nd Season, Lookingglass is home to a multi-disciplined ensemble of artists who create story-centered theatrical work that is physical, aurally rich and visually metaphoric. The Company, located in Chicago’s landmark Water Tower Water Works, has staged 70 world premieres, received 161 Joseph Jefferson Award Nominations, and produced work all across the United States. In 2016, Lookingglass received the MacArthur Award for Creative and Effective Institutions and in 2017, was the recipient of the League of Chicago Theatres’ Artistic Achievement Award.  
Lookingglass continues to expand its artistic, financial, and institutional boundaries under the guidance of Artistic Director Heidi Stillman, Executive Director Rachel L. Fink, a 29-member artistic ensemble, 22 artistic associates, an administrative staff, and a dedicated board of directors led by Chair Nancy Timmers and President Richard Chapman. For more information, visit lookingglasstheatre.org.  
About WBEZ Chicago
WBEZ, Chicago’s NPR news station, serves the community with fact-based, objective news and information. WBEZ’s award-winning journalists ask tough questions, dig deep for answers and expose truths that spark change and foster understanding. In addition to its local and national news programming, WBEZ Chicago is home to a growing portfolio of popular podcasts, including the “Making” series of Making Beyoncé, Making Obama and Making Oprah; an investigative podcast series, Motive; 16 Shots: A podcast about the fatal police shooting of Laquan McDonald; Nerdette; and Curious City. WBEZ Chicago has a legacy of innovation as the birthplace of nationally acclaimed programs such as This American Life, and Wait Wait...Don’t Tell Me! and the ground-breaking podcast, Serial.
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shemakesmusic-uk · 4 years
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This segment features artists who have submitted their tracks/videos to She Makes Music. If you would like to be featured here then please send an e-mail to [email protected]. We look forward to hearing from you!
Simone
Simone is a 15 year old singer/songwriter from New York City. At an open mic in Manhattan, a producer caught the eye of Simone and ended up helping her create her debut EP Stories in My Mind (2017), a five song album that includes all original songs written by Simone at the ages of 11 and 12. Later, Simone recorded Monsters (2019) which gives off similar sounds to those of early Alanis Morissette and Taylor Swift. Her more recent EP To Be Honest (2020) showcases her genre switch from a country/rock sound to pop/alternative, as well as the switch of her artist name from “Simone Lipkin” to “Simone”. With high hopes for the future, Simone continues to write mature, intimate lyrics that she hopes people will connect to. She is just getting started, and is incredibly excited to continue her journey in the music industry. Her song ‘i can’t wait to see you again’ is “a single that came out in the midst of the current pandemic. I wrote the song to give people hope for the future and the feeling of everything getting back to normal eventually. I produced and wrote the song in my bedroom in a day, feeling inspired by all the people I had been talking to on social media and knowing that everyone was feeling the same helplessness and confusion.” Listen below.
Simone · i can't wait to see you again
Emily Lockett
Emily is an UK based independent music artist, writing and performing in the modern country/pop, Americana, singer-songwriter genres, in her spare time she is a music student at BIMM Manchester. Emily's first collection of self-penned songs, called Reflections of Me, was released in December 2016. In December 2018 a second EP called My Imagination was released and was awarded 5 stars by Maverick Music Magazine (Jan/Feb 2019 issue). Work on a 3rd EP has already commenced. Emily says: “'Front Porch' is an upbeat country pop/rock song written following a break up, about how each party should have fought harder to save the relationship (though it's not based on true events !). I worked with a number of music producers to create this track. Work on the track started shortly after meeting Tim Prottey-Jones (of Wandering Hearts / The Fatherline) when we both performed at the British Country Music Festival in 2019. Tim acted as co-producer and worked on the track remotely right up to lockdown, then I embellished the track further during lockdown with Matt Bishop (of Honey Ryder) adding electric guitar and additional co-production at his Inspire Music Studio.” Listen below.
Roma Rose
Roma Rose is a singer, songwriter and young mother, from Scotland. Having initially performed as half of London folk duo Leao, Roma returns with a new name, new sound and brand new perspective. Flitting between alternative and electro pop, her debut EP has a fresh thrumming energy, is both lyrically vibrant and fun, as well as raw and unapologetically honest, as she intricately weaves the experience of early motherhood into her music. Created with an exciting all female team, THE NORMAL EP has been co-written and produced by Jessica Sharman (Ward Thomas/Hannah Grace/Sarah Darling) and mixed by Isabel Gracefield (Tom Walker/Christine and The Queens). The EP has been created by women about a uniquely female experience, but it simultaneously explores the genderless, universal journey of growing up and reconciling who you were before with who you are now. 'In My Head' is about any situation you find yourself in, where you’re not being your truest self. For Roma, it was originally inspired by industry meetings, where she felt invisible and at the same time frustrated that she wasn’t letting her guard down. But it has recently taken on a new meaning for her, since becoming a parent. "I love being a mum more than anything, but never felt I fitted the mould of who a mother should be. I wanted so badly to connect with other new mums at awkward baby groups (who were probably feeling similar things!) but didn’t know how to connect my real self with this new life and this new person I had become - a mother.” To honour this, the track has an added surprise feature from Roma’s one year old daughter. Her interwoven, joyous sounds also speak to the inner child inside all of us, who we so often push down and don’t let burst through the surface. Listen below.
Roma Rose · In My Head
Greysha
Greysha delivers a psychedelic and dream-like composition, binding her looming melodies and soulful lyrics into her music. Her imminent electric melodies resonate softly and depict a dark, passionate presence. Greysha captures love and being, want and waiting, depicting life as if it were a dream. Born in Norfolk, Greysha, personally known as Grace Keeling-Doncaster, moved to Shropshire, UK, at the age of two where she grew up and educated at Church Stretton secondary school and Ludlow college. Greysha has always been inspired by people and emotions, along with her childhood and her being, always feeling the need to explore these attributes in her life whether that be through drawing, writing or music. At the current age of seventeen, Greysha is excited for her future as a musician. What is love? Leaving? Waiting? Greysha’s new single 'Life Goes Fluently' Is a stunning tribute to young love. Layers of clean guitars, light percussion, and a soft, droning synth create a cleverly thought out texture. ‘Life Goes Fluently’ resonates softly and leaves a lasting sense of nostalgia that is definitely worth the listen.
Greysha · Life Goes Fluently - Greysha
Hemes
Hemes is an exciting emerging UK artist born to both Arabic parents. Her love for music and songwriting stemmed from being raised around a mix of western and middle eastern music, surrounded by music and poetry from a young age. Currently based in Wales, her single ‘Who Needs Love’ debuted on the 2nd of October following a collaboration with welsh duo Two Of Us on reggaeton dance track ‘Casual’. ‘Who Needs Love’ a taste of R&B infused dark pop produced by Grammy nominated songwriter Daniel Evans (LVR) infuses Arabian scales and Harmony with modern textures and production familiar to fans of the Weeknd and Ariana Grande. Listen below.
HEMES · Who Needs Love
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