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Eric Bogosian: Actor, Dramatist, Director, Author — But Not a Poet

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ERIC BOGOSIAN (b.1953) is an Armenian-American actor, dramatist, monologuist, novelist and historian.  He grew up in Woburn, Massachusetts, setting for the book and movie A Civil Action, but left his blue-collar roots to attend the University of Chicago.
Bogosian is the author of six produced plays, including Talk Radio at the New York Shakespeare Festival, which was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize and subsequently adapted to film by Oliver Stone.

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A Video Chat with Eric Bogosian — Actor, Dramatist, Director, Author — But Not a Poet

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ERIC BOGOSIAN (b.1953) is an Armenian-American actor, dramatist, monologuist, novelist and historian.  He grew up in Woburn, Massachusetts, setting for the book and movie A Civil Action, but left his blue-collar roots to attend the University of Chicago.
Bogosian is the author of six produced plays, including Talk Radio at the New York Shakespeare Festival, which was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize and subsequently adapted to film by Oliver Stone.

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Lourdes Lopez:
A Lifetime in the Ballet

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LOURDES LOPEZ became Artistic Director of Miami City Ballet (MCB) in September 2012, bringing with her a nearly 40-year career in dance, television, teaching, and arts management. As a Soloist and Principal Dancer with New York City Ballet, she danced for two legends of the art form, George Balanchine and Jerome Robbins.

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The Big Kahuna: A Video Chat with Pulitzer Prize Recipient William Finnegan

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In April, 2016 WILLIAM FINNEGAN was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for his memoir “Barbarian Days:  A Surfing Life.”  Finnegan has been a surfer since growing up in California and Hawaii.  He became a “New Yorker” magazine staff writer in 1987.  In August, 1992 “The New Yorker” published Finnegan’s masterpiece article on surfing titled “Playing Doc’s Games,” which most surfers I know agree is the best surfing article ever written.

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