Audio Feb 17, 2011 Ron Carter Bassist/cellist/educator extraordinaire, NEA Jazz Master Ron Carter talks about his career playing jazz and classical music.
Audio Feb 10, 2011 Anna Deveare Smith Playwright, actor, and activist Anna Deveare Smith talks about her extraordinary career and her current one-woman show, "Let Me Down Easy."
Audio Feb 03, 2011 Isabel Wilkerson Her book," The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration," focuses on the transfer of Southern culture to the North, creating a new, vibrant culture in the country.
Audio Jan 27, 2011 Azar Nafisi Author of two memoirs about her life in Iran, "Reading Lolita in Tehran" and "Things I've Been Silent About," Azar Nafisi talks about her books, her life in Iran, her parents, the Iranian Revolution, and, of course, the power of literature.
Audio Jan 20, 2011 Bert Crenca Talking about founding the community arts center AS220, its interaction with the city Providence, and its arts education offshoot AS220 Youth.
Audio Jan 13, 2011 Luis Alberto Urrea The NEA Big Read author on the inspiration for his novel "Into the Beautiful North," which takes place from Sinaloa, Mexico, all the way north to Kankakee, Illinois.
Audio Jan 06, 2011 Dan Morgenstern The recipient of the 2007 A.B. Spellman NEA Jazz Masters Award for Jazz Advocacy discusses the 2011 class of NEA Jazz Masters.
Audio Dec 23, 2010 Molly Smith The artistic director of Arena Stage at the Mead Center for American Theater, talks about American theater, including the often-overlooked musical, her commitment to new play development, and her vision for the newly-renovated Center.
Audio Dec 16, 2010 Shirley Sneve Director Shirley Sneve talks about the mission of the Native American Public Telecommunications organization, which shares stories of Native American people through the creation, promotion, and distribution of Native media on television and radio.
Audio Dec 09, 2010 Sebastian Ruth 2010 MacArthur Fellow Sebastian Ruth talks about the community-based arts organization he founded, Community MusicWorks, which won a 2010 National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Award for its teaching, mentoring, and performing activities with urb...
Audio Dec 02, 2010 Parker Esse Choreographer Parker Esse talks about creating new choreography for Arena Stage's revival of Rodgers and Hammerstein's classic musical "Oklahoma!."
Audio Nov 18, 2010 Jeffrey Sweet Author Jeffrey Sweet talks about the revitalization of theater in Chicago through the Second City and other theater companies, as well as his own experience as a playwright and the art of theater and musical theater.
Audio Nov 04, 2010 Frank Stella One of the most well-regarded postwar American artists still working, Frank Stella discusses his five-decade career in the visual arts, from paintings to sculptures to murals to architecture.
Audio Oct 28, 2010 Chuck Brown Musician Chuck Brown talks about his career, from honing his chops in prison in Lorton, Virginia, to developing his own musical genre in DC: go-go music.
Audio Oct 21, 2010 David DiChiera The only general director to found and lead two opera companies (Michigan Opera Theatre and Opera Pacific), David DiChiera talks about his career, bringing opera to Detroit audiences, and composing his first opera in his 60s
Audio Oct 14, 2010 Martina Arroyo The Legendary soprano talks about her career in opera, including working with such luminaries as Leonard Bernstein, Plácido Domingo, and Luciano Pavarotti.
Audio Oct 07, 2010 Natasha Wimmer NEA Literature Fellow for Translation on the complexities of translating Bolaño's epic novel "2666" and other tribulations of working as a translator.
Audio Sep 30, 2010 Rudolfo Anaya Rudolfo Anaya talks about the writing of his acclaimed novel "Bless Me, Ultima" as well as in the influence of the oral tradition and folk tales on his writing and his life growing up in New Mexico.
Audio Sep 23, 2010 Judy McCulloh Awarded the 2010 Bess Lomax Hawes Award for the preservation of cultural heritage, Judith McCulloh talks about her extensive work as a folklorist and editor at the University of Illinois Press.
Audio Sep 16, 2010 Mike Rafferty The NEA National Heritage Fellow talks about growing up in East Galway, Ireland, and learning flute playing from his father, as well as coming to America and eventually returning to Irish music in his 50s as both a performer and teacher.
Audio Sep 09, 2010 Del McCoury Bluegrass legend Del McCoury discusses his 50-year career, from joining Bill Monroe’s Blue Grass Boys in the 1960s to multiple appearances at the Bonnaroo music and arts festival in the 2000s.
Audio Sep 02, 2010 Julia Alvarez NEA Literature Fellow and National Medal of Arts recipient Julia Alvarez discusses how her life as a reader led to her life as a writer and the rich source material she finds in her family's immigrant experience.
Audio Aug 26, 2010 Ed Herendeen Ed Herendeen talks about founding and sustaining the Contemporary American Theater Festival in Shepherdstown, West Virginia, committed to supporting bold, daring new works.
Audio Aug 19, 2010 Unai Elorriaga Basque writer Unai Elorriaga and Amaia Gabantxo, translator of Elorriaga's novel Plants Don’t Drink Coffee, discuss the book as well as the art of translation and the Basque language.