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Podcast with TODD GLASS

Podcast with Comedian TODD GLASS 

Comedian Todd Glass discusses his career, including coming out as a gay man, his heart attack and the importance of stand-up comedy. Todd will be performing at the Chicago Theatre on Thursday, June 13, 2013 @ 7:30pm with David Cross & His Super Duper Pals.  

Comedian, actor, and podcasting superstar Todd Glass is one of America's busiest touring comics, performing alongside Louis CK, David Cross, David Spade, Daniel Tosh, Jim Gaffigan, and Sarah Silverman. Todd's extensive television credits include appearances on Louie, Jimmy Kimmel Live, The Sarah Silverman Program, Mr. Show with Bob and David, Politically Incorrect with Bill Maher, Tosh.0, Conan, as well as his own half-hour Comedy Central special. He recently starred in two pilots, Todd's Coma, produced by Adam Sandler's Happy Madison productions, and Dinner With Todd, co-starring Sarah Silverman. Todd can also currently be heard hosting his critically acclaimed podcast The Todd Glass Show, available on iTunes.

For tickets and schedule information visit  justforlaughschicago.com.

In 2009, Just For Laughs, the world’s biggest comedy brand, partnered with TBS, one of American television’s leading purveyors of comedy, to produce a comedy festival in Chicago, the nation’s cradle of comedy. Five years later, TBS Just For Laughs Chicago is America’s single largest comedy festival, showcasing the industry’s biggest stars and brightest emerging talents at some the city’s most iconic venues. Presented in collaboration with two of the nation’s largest independent promoters, Chicago-based JAM Productions and Outback Concerts, this annual event has established itself as an integral component of Chicago’s rich cultural heritage, and a must-see for thousands of comedy fans and industry executives alike. This year, State Farm will serve as the presenting sponsor of TBS Just For Laughs Chicago.

About Just For Laughs

Founded in 1983, the Just For Laughs Group’s growth is concentrated on four major focal points: Festivals (in Montreal, Toronto and Chicago); television production (most notably Gags seen in 135 countries and on 95 airlines); live shows (Canadian tour dates for Jerry Seinfeld, Jeremy Hotz, John Pinette, Louis C.K., the Capital One Just For Laughs Comedy Tour, North American dates for Family Guy Live!); and talent management. Its inaugural Montreal Festival 31 years ago is now the world’s largest and most prestigious comedy event welcoming 2 million people each summer. The Group has offices in Montreal, Paris, Los Angeles, Toronto, and London, as well as a small apartment on the Internet.

About TBS

TBS is basic cable’s reigning champion among young adults in primetime. Available in 100 million households, TBS features original primetime comedy series like Cougar TownMen at WorkSullivan & Son, King of the NerdsWho Gets the Last Laugh?and the upcoming Deon Cole’s Black BoxDeal With It and Trust Me, I’m a Game Show Host. In late night, TBS is home to the Emmy®-winning series CONAN, starring Conan O’Brien, which will be followed by a new series starring Pete Holmes this fall. TBS also features an outstanding slate of contemporary comedies, such as The Big Bang Theory and Family Guy, along with blockbuster movies and championship sports. In addition, TBS produces special live comedy events, like the star-studded TBS Just for Laughs Chicago comedy festival.

 
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Podcast with Ross Mathews

Ross Mathews discusses his new book Man Up!: Tales of My Delusional Self-Confidence and his upcoming performance at Park West on May 28, 2013.  For tickets click here.  


Man Up!, with an introduction written by Gwyneth Paltrow, and afterword from Chelsea Handler, takes readers inside Mathews’ personal journey as a super fan, revealing the most embarrassing and hilarious moments of his small town life and big city adventures, and how he managed to turn an obsession with pop culture into one on one interactions with celebrities like Paltrow, Tiffani-Amber Theissen, Madonna, and Michelle Kwan [to name a few] without ever having a single restraining order issued against him.


Ross first arrived on the scene in 2001 as a correspondent for NBC's "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" and over the past 10 years he has become known for his endearing, witty, and undeniably funny personality.  Mathew's can be seen as a regular panelist and occasional guest host on E!’s late-night talk show “Chelsea Lately,” and is a fixture on E! News and E! Network’s live red carpet awards show coverage In March 2013 Mathews will shoot his first talk show pilot, produced by Chelsea Handler’s Borderline Amazing Productions, that he will host, write, and co-produce. The show will be a celebration of all things pop culture, and will include celebrity guests, audience interaction, and field pieces.


Mathews currently lives in Los Angeles with his partner, Salvador, and their two rescue dogs, Louise and Mijo.  When not working on his many projects, Mathews is a strong supporter of the Human Rights Campaign, speaking at many of their nationwide events and he received their Visibility Award in 2011.



 
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Interview with David LaSalle

Mentored by the fabulous Tabatha Coffey of Bravo’s Tabatha Takes Over, David LaSalle is celebrating the Menz Room’s one year anniversary with a fashion and hair show on March 23, 2013 at Hydrate to benefit OVAH! and TPAN.   Recently I spent the afternoon at David’s amazing salon and found out exactly why the Menz Room has been such a success.

For more information on the Menz Room One Year Anniversary Benefit visit www.hydratechicago.comor www.MenzRoomChicago.com

MJR: (Michael J. Roberts) Your salon is absolutely fabulous!!  How did you first get involved in the industry?

DL: (David LaSalle) A.   Well thank you Michael.   I grew up in Fort Wayne, Indiana and received a degree in social work but I wasn’t making any money.  I come from a family of surgeons, so my father told me I had to find something I couldn’t get fired at.  I walked into Ravenscoft Beauty College and that was it!  I graduated nine years ago and headed to Chicago.    I worked for a few salons in the area and became artistic director for Regis Salon.

MJR: How did you meet Tabatha Coffey?

D.L.: I was in Dallas for a show and Nick Arrojo and Tabatha Coffey where there.  I just started talking with Tabatha who told me she just finished filming an episode of her show Tabatha’s Salon Takeover, and that they needed some stylists. So I was there when they filmed the first one and was there for 2 1/2 years.  When Tabatha came back the second time and saw that nothing had changed in the salon, she told me to get out of there and open my own place.  She said that not only do I create technically strong haircuts but I create an environment and that is what can make money.

MJR: What do you think is the biggest misconception about the haircutting industry?

D.L: I think it is that it just shouldn’t just be a haircut.  You should be going to a professional to explain everything about your hair.  What we do at the Menz Room is to educate and to tell you why your hair is that way it is.   From the texture to the diameter of your hair; to what you are doing daily that is effecting it.  We talk about diet, how often you shampoo and things of that nature.  If you are at a salon and they begin speaking “Pantene” to you, get out.

MJR:  How much of learning the art of hairstyling is natural and how much can be taught?

D.L:  Wow, that is a great question.  I do think a lot of it is natural to the person, much like a dancer or an actor.  Sure, the technique is there to be taught but some people just have an innate talent and those are the people I have always gravitated to.   I have also stood next to technically strong people but for whatever reason, or whatever demons they had, never excelled in the business aspect of it.   So you have to have both to be successful in this business.  Bottom line is that everything that is taught, has to be taught from the standpoint that this is a business.

MJR: What is the biggest lesson Tabatha has taught you?

D.L.: That I am my business and that I am representing it 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.  So whether I am out with my friends at the bars in Boystown or just at a friend’s get together, whatever I do and how I act is a reflection on my integrity that absorbs into my business.   So you would never see me topless or drunk outside a bar.   I want people to know that I will be around for the long term.

MJR: What has the hardest part about opening the Menz Room?

D.L.: The biggest thing, and it is also what Tabatha told me, is once you get the salon open, how do you get butts in chairs?  That was the most difficult thing.  I have worked in this neighborhood, but where the Menz Room is located is about 50% in Boystown and 50% outside of it.  We have a lot of visibility being in this location so we took advantage of that and worked with Yelp and various social media.

MJR: Let’s talk about that special relationship and bond between a stylist and client.

D.L: You have to form that trust very quickly.  You have to ask specific questions to figure out their lifestyle, which impacts how you are going to proceed with their hair.   Then we can relax and talk.  A lot of my closest friends are clients.  But trust never happens right away.  It usually takes three times before a real relationship takes hold.  But after that bond is established you become very attached and can end up being a matchmaker, a counselor and friend.

MJR: Tell us about the upcoming show at Hydrate.

D.L: It our one year anniversary show and I wanted to put something together as a charity benefit that would also educate the people on what the upcoming styles in both hair and fashion would be for 2013.  I went to Cram to see if they would be interested in doing the fashion portion of the show and they agreed.  We also wanted it to be a mix of straight and gay boys of different shape and sizes so everyone could be included and find their own style.  So if you are going to Hollywood Beach, this is the look you should have and how to achieve that look through the cut, clothes and products.

MJR: What are the charities that you picked for this years fashion and hair show?

D.L:  At the outset of this I contacted CyonFlare and told him I wanted to pick some organizations that he was a part of.  That is how we chose both OVAH! and TPAN as our recipients.  OVAH! is CyonFlare’s main charity which was established a few years ago to help homeless gay youth and of course TPAN has been a staple in our community for HIV education and outreach.

MJR: How have you changed and grown in the last year since the Menz Room has been open?

D.L.:   I worry a lot more.  I realize that I have a responsibility to my client’s, my staff and my neighborhood that I will never take for granted.   With this salon, I have the ability to make a difference in people’s lives and I take that responsibility very seriously.  When I see people just coming in to hang out and have a good time, I know that I have created an environment that is goes beyond just a salon, and that is something that I am so very proud to have been a part of creating.

Menz Room is located at 3437 N. Sheffield, Chicago, IL 60657.  Telephone: 773.880.7350  www.MenzRoomChicago.com

 
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Podcast with PATRICIA BARBER

Patricia Barber from Michael Roberts on Vimeo.

Jazz great Patricia Barber discusses her critically acclaimed new album SMASH.  For more information visit www.PatriciaBarber.com

On Smash, her debut on Concord Jazz, Patricia Barber reiterates her unique position in modern music as a jazz triple-threat - imaginative pianist, startling vocalist, and innovative composer. With a new band and a dozen new compositions, she also continues her two-decade crusade to retrieve the ground that jazz musicians long ago ceded to pop and rock: the realm of the intelligent and committed singer-songwriter, tackling even familiar subjects (like love and loss) with a nuance and depth beyond the limits of the Great American Songbook.

Once again - in the crisp chill of her vocals, as well as the fiery feminine intellect that informs her music and lyrics - Barber makes most of her contemporaries sound like little girls.

A prime example is the title track, where Barber paints the end of a love affair with subtly stated allusions to destruction: the erosion of edifices; a bloody road accident. The lines are more akin to poetry than conventional song lyrics, as she depicts "the crumbling of tall castles built / on kisses and blood / and dreams so like sand." The song's reprise compares "the sound of a heart breaking" to "the sound of / the red on the road" - a devastatingly effective mélange of synesthetic imagery. Aided by a raw, forceful guitar solo, the performance illuminates a counter-intuitive realization about loss:

"It just struck me, as it does everyone who experiences great loss, that on the outside, no one can tell," Barber explains. "You go to the grocery store, and everything's the same, which is shocking. It struck me that this is the sound of a heart breaking: silence. You're alone. And I felt that this was an interesting juxtaposition, since the sound of a heart breaking should be the loudest, screamiest, shriekiest combination of sounds there could be."

Barber has another song on the subject of "loud, shrieky" emotion: "Scream," paradoxically set to a gentle, quiet melody that belies its message, and which has proved extremely popular with those audiences hearing it prior to this recording. "Scream / when Sunday / finally comes / and God / isn't there . . . . the soldier / has his gun / and the war / isn't where / we thought it would be." As Barber points out in conversation, with only the slightest sarcasm, "It's an angry song - and everyone wants that."

Her anger finds a more whimsical (but no less impactful) outlet in the catchy "Devil's Food," written specifically from Barber's perspective as a gay woman: "boy meets boy / girl meets girl / given any chance / to fall in love / they do . . . / like loves like / like devil's food / like chocolate twice / I'm in the mood / for you . . . ." She wrote the song in reaction to last year's highly publicized efforts to quash gay-marriage initiatives around the country:

"It made me mad, and it made me want to make a declaration - but to make it fun. I find one of the best ways to bring people to your perspective is of course to charm them, and music can always do that. That's how I get a lot of people thinking about a lot of things. I mean, the lyrics are fairly graphic - ‘sweet on sweet, meat on meat' - but the music is so beguiling, I think I make the case. And when it becomes clear that it's turning into a gay disco song, it's really fun watching people's reaction, which is surprise and mostly delight."

It's not the usual territory trod by jazz singers and songwriters; we're a long way from "The Man I Love." ("Smart songs about the way we think and live, not just about the way we love," wrote Margo Jefferson in The New York Times.)

Much of Barber's magic lies in setting these words to music as fully evocative as it is coolly provocative. Many of her arrangements attain a thrilling friction between style and substance. (For a defining example, turn to "Redshift," in which Barber weds the science-geek lyric - itself a miraculous marriage of physics and love - to the gentle lull of a bossa-nova beat.) Throughout the album, her Chicago-based quartet - comprising the superlative rhythm team of bassist Larry Kohut and drummer Jon Deitemyer, with the edgy and arresting John Kregor on guitars - functions as a translucent extension of Barber's own musicality, while her piano work enjoys a prominence that some of her newer fans may not previously have experienced.

One song, "Missing" - perhaps the album's most indelible portrait of heartache - came about in an unusual way: "This was a commission, I guess you could call it. A woman sent me a letter and her story, and a very small check, and asked if I could turn it into a song. It was sort of an outrageous request, but it really hit me, so I wrote it; it was my idea to take the story through the four seasons. In some ways, it's the sleeper of the record. When I play this in concert, a lot of people cry at this one."

The other songs on Smash represent the fruit of Barber's decision to write what she calls a "syllabic song series"; these pieces resulted from a disciplined framework, based on the number of beats in each poetic line. (For instance, "The Swim" consists entirely of two-syllable lines; "Spring Song" has three such phonemes per line; "The Wind Song," six.) "I studied the songwriters, but now I just study the poets," she explains. "I'm trying to make the poetry of a finer order. But I still need to rhyme, because rhyme is rhythm, and rhythm is music."

Audiophiles will be especially glad to know that Smashreunites Barber with her long-time recording engineer Jim Anderson (with whom she first worked in 1994, on her Premonition Records debut Café Blue.) Anderson - who is Professor of Recorded Music at New York University's Tisch School for of the Arts - has again captured Barber's music with the clarity and presence that led Stereophile Magazine to label Café Blue a "Record To Die For." HDTracks and Mastered for iTunes versions of Smash are also available.

After her long association with Premonition and then Blue Note Records, Barber self-released her two most recent albums - recorded at Chicago's legendary Green Mill, her weekly showcase for more than two decades - and had no plans to sign with anyone else at this point in her career. "I didn't have a contract, or even a recording in mind," she states. "I assumed that when I had a group of ten or so new songs I would probably put it out myself." Halfway through this process, Barber received an offer from Concord, which she promptly turned down: "I was really enjoying the freedom of not having a label, especially in this environment, and just doing what I always do - trying to advance myself musically, practicing a lot, and locking in on what I consider a really good band."

But the persistence of Concord producer Nick Phillips won out. "He came to see me, and he reminded me so much of Bruce Lundvall," Barber recalls, referring to the former Blue Note president with whom she worked closely. "I had been grieving the loss of that professional relationship. And then Nick mentioned that he has great respect and admiration for Bruce. So we hit it off personally, and that's what it takes for me."

That, and the chance to take her time - to read poetry, practice piano, and do some gardening on a tract of farmland she owns in Michigan, a welcome getaway from city life in Chicago. That's how Barber's ideas take root and bloom. She remains an electrifying performer, but performance is not the most important aspect of her art. "My favorite part is the internal part - the research," she points out. "All the interesting stuff happens inside your head and at the piano."

Fortunately, those of us not in Patricia Barber's head or at her piano still get to enjoy the fruits of that labor.

 
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Podcast with LIAM BENZVI

Actor LIAM BENZVI discusses his role as Gabe in the Goodman Theatre’s World Premiere production of TEDDY FERRARA by playwright Christopher Shinn.

LIAM BENZVI (Gabe) makes his Goodman and Chicago debut. Regional credits include A Streetcar Named Desire, Roman Holiday and a workshop of Long Day’s Journey Into Night (Edmund) at the Guthrie Theater, and as Le Chevalier Danceny in Les Liaisons Dangereuses at Torch Theater in Minneapolis. New York credits include Ross at the Storm Theatre (off off Broadway). Film credits include Joshua Sanchez’s Four, based on the play by Christopher Shinn. Mr. Benzvi received his training from the University of Minnesota/Guthrie Theater BFA Actor Training Program and LaGuardia Arts at Lincoln Center.

Teddy Ferrera Information:

Rehearsals are underway for the world-premiere production of the Goodman-commissioned Teddy Ferrara by Pulitzer Prize finalist Christopher Shinn, praised as “among the most provocative and probing of American playwrights today” (The New York Times). Evan Cabnet directs this stirring exploration of an on-campus tragedy with a cast that includes Liam Benzvi (Gabe), Patrick Clear (University President), Rashaad Hall (Nicky), Ryan Heindl (Teddy Ferrara), Christopher Imbrosciano (Jay), Jax Jackson (Jaq), Dev Kennedy and Fawzia Mirza (Campus Police), Paloma Nozicka (Jenny), Adam Poss (Drew), Josh Salt (Tim), Kelli Simpkins (Ellen) and Janet Ulrich Brooks (University Provost). The design team includes Jenny Mannis (Costume Designer), Keith Parham (Lighting Designer), Lee Savage (Set Designer) and Richard Woodbury (Sound Designer). Teddy Ferrara runs February 2 – March 3, 2013 in the Owen Theatre. Tickets ($14 – $45; subject to change) are now on sale and are available at GoodmanTheatre.org/Teddy, by phone at 312.443.3800 or at the box office (170 North Dearborn).

In conjunction with the production, Goodman Theatre hosts its first-ever student press conference including cast members from Teddy Ferrara on February 7 from 5:30 – 6:30pm. Chicagoland college and high school students are invited to join participants of the Goodman’s Cindy Bandle Young Critics program (CBYC) in this unique opportunity to interview the cast. To make arrangements, student journalists should call 312.443.5152 or email Press@GoodmanTheatre.org.

Students can also take advantage of “10Tix” tickets – $10 tickets exclusively for students, now available for advance purchase – at GoodmanTheatre.org using the promo “10Tix” or at the box office (170 N. Dearborn). Previously, 10Tix were only available day-of show. A valid Student ID must be presented upon pickup, and limit four tickets per student. All tickets are subject to availability and handling fees apply.

“I was teaching undergraduates just as I was beginning to work on Teddy Ferrara and really observing them and measuring my own experiences against that,” says playwright Christopher Shinn. “It’s an entirely different social world today as mediated through media and technology, and it’s rare to see college students represented truthfully. I’ll know I have achieved this if college-aged students respond to this play.”

Other special events for audience members include:

Artist Encounter

Wednesday, February 6 | Polk Rehearsal Room
6pm, FREE for Subscribers, Donors and students with ID; $5 for the general public (reservations required)
Join us for an intimate conversation with Teddy Ferrara director Evan Cabnet before the 7:30pm performance that evening. Moderated by Adam Belcuore. To reserve tickets, call the box office at 312.443.3800.

PlayBack

Following each Wednesday performance of Teddy Ferrara, audiences are invited to attend free post-show discussions with members of the Goodman’s artistic staff.

Teddy Ferrara takes place during Gabe’s senior year of college. His future looks bright: he runs the Queer Students Group, he finally has a single room and he recently started dating a great guy. But when a campus tragedy occurs that makes national headlines it ignites a firestorm and throws Gabe’s world into disorder. When new evidence surfaces, Gabe discovers that the events surrounding the tragedy aren’t as straightforward as they seem, and he is forced to question popular assumptions—and his own life’s contradictions.

Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP is the Corporate Sponsor Partner for Teddy Ferrara. The Time Warner Foundation is the Major Supporter of New Play Development and The Glasser and Rosenthal Family and the Harold and Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust are Supporters of New Work Development. The Davee Foundation is the Major Contributor to Research and Development for New Work. The Joyce Foundation is the Principal Supporter of Artistic Development and Diversity Initiatives.

About Goodman Theatre

The Goodman’s 2012/2013 Season features 11 productions on its two stages—six in the 856-seat Albert Theatre and three in the 400-seat flexible Owen Theatre, plus a Latino Theatre Festival that includes two additional productions. Still to come in the 2012/2013 Season are Other Desert Cities by Jon Robin Baitz, directed by Henry Wishcamper (now through February 17, 2013); Teddy Ferrara by Christopher Shinn, directed by Evan Cabnet (February 2 – March 3, 2013 in the Owen); a Latino Theatre Festival in the Owen, including Cuba’s Teatro Buendía’s production of Pedro Páramo by Raquel Carrió, co-directed by Flora Lautén and Henry Godinez and produced in association with the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (March 22 – March 31); The Happiest Song Plays Last by Quiara Alegría Hudes, directed by Edward Torres (April 13 – May 12, 2013) and Albany Park Theater Project’s production of Home/Land, written collectively by the Albany Park Theater Project teen ensemble and directed collectively by the Albany Park Theater Project artistic staff (June 20 – June 30, 2013); By the Way, Meet Vera Stark by Lynn Nottage, directed Chuck Smith (April 27 – June 2, 2013 in the Albert); and The Jungle Book, a new musical based on the Disney animated film and the stories of Rudyard Kipling, adapted and directed by Mary Zimmerman (June 21 – July 28, 2013 in the Albert).

Goodman Theatre, “the leading regional theater in the nation’s most important theater city” (Time), is a major cultural, educational and economic pillar in Chicago, generating nearly $250 million in economic impact over the past decade in its state-of-the-art two-theater complex on North Dearborn Street. Founded in 1925 and currently under the leadership of Artistic Director Robert Falls, “Chicago’s most essential director” (Chicago Tribune), and Executive Director Roche Schulfer, Chicago’s oldest and largest not-for-profit resident theater has welcomed nearly two million patrons to productions and events—including 10 festivals celebrating playwrights such as David Mamet, August Wilson and Horton Foote, as well as the biennial Latino Theatre Festival—and served legions of students through its Education and Community Engagement programs (including the FREE Student Subscription Series and other interactive programs). The Goodman has earned more than 90 awards for hundreds of productions, including the Pulitzer Prize for Ruined by Lynn Nottage—one of 25 new work Goodman commissions in the last decade. American Airlines is the Exclusive Airline of Goodman Theatre. Ruth Ann M. Gillis is Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Sherry John is President of Women’s Board and Lauren Blair is President of the Scenemakers Board, the Goodman’s young professionals auxiliary group.

Visit the Goodman virtually: watch artist interviews, view production photos, catch the latest news and more at GoodmanTheatre.org. Like us on Facebook.com/GoodmanTheatre; follow us atTwitter.com/GoodmanTheatre; and peek behind the scenes at YouTube.com/TheGoodmanTheatre.

 
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PODCAST WITH TODD GLASS
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PODCAST WITH LIAM BENZVI
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WCL INVTERVIEW WITH JESSE TYLER FERGUSON
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INTERVIEW WITH LAURY SHELLEY
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PODCAST WITH RACHAEL SAGE
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