Tribeca Film Festival 2018: Little Women
Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women is a classic piece of literature for a reason: it is a timeless and universal portrait of women. Written by a woman about women in
Continue ReadingLouisa May Alcott’s Little Women is a classic piece of literature for a reason: it is a timeless and universal portrait of women. Written by a woman about women in
Continue ReadingThe hit novel, Sweetbitter, makes its way to the small screen, premiering at the Tribeca Film Festival. Writer Stephanie Danler is a writer and producer on the new Starz series
Continue ReadingWriter-director Melissa Miller Costanzo’s feature film debut, All These Small Moments, is an exploration of the moments that define what a person is. Teenager Howie (Brendan Meyer) is trying to get
Continue ReadingDisobedience is Chilean director Sebastián Lelio’s first English language film. He’s the 2017 winner of Best Forieng Language Film (for A Fantastic Woman) so the film itself is really well
Continue ReadingThe now cult-classic Tina Fey-written film, Mean Girls, has landed on Broadway…and it’s just as you’d expect a film-to-stage musical to be: funny, a little campy, high energy, and with
Continue Reading“When I was born, the word for what I was did not exist.” Thus begins Madeline Miller’s newest novel Circe. It is a fantastic, spellbinding read. Whether or not you
Continue ReadingPlaywright Conor McPherson’s absorbing tale, The Seafarer, takes center stage at the Irish Repertory Theatre. In The Seafarer, Christmas Eve day and night unfold in a Dublin living room of an
Continue ReadingTribeca Film Festival is taking New York City by storm once again. This fantastic festival for independent films (and also featuring television, VR, industry talks, and more) is something you
Continue Reading16 year-old Bernadette is many things: a child of a marriage on the rocks, a boarding school student, a wannabe writer, a wannabe actress, a dedicated girlfriend, and, sometimes, a
Continue ReadingSharon Washington spent part of her childhood (from 1969 to 1973) living in a library. Her father, George, was charged with keeping the furnace of the St. Agnes branch of the
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