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Performing Arts

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Episode 116: Jean Carroll, First Lady of Laughs

Before Joan Rivers, there was another Jewish woman who broke ground as a stand-up comedian. Her name was Jean Carroll, and although she was a household name in the 50s and 60s, today she has been mostly forgotten. Grace Kessler Overbeke hopes her new book about Jean Carroll, First Lady of Laughs, will change that. In this episode of Can We Talk?, we talk to Grace about why Jean Carroll deserves to be remembered for changing both the face of comedy and people's ideas about what a Jewish woman could be.

Episode 115: Dr. Ruth's Radical Legacy

The iconic Dr. Ruth Westheimer died earlier this year at the age of 96. Dr. Ruth was a trailblazer for her candid and joyful talk about sex, regularly using words like "masturbate" and "vibrator" on the air, and talking about sexual pleasure— including women's sexual pleasure—at a time when few others did. In this episode of Can We Talk?, we remember and celebrate Dr. Ruth. Historian and author Rebecca Davis explores Dr. Ruth's radical legacy and actress Tovah Feldshuh reflects on their friendship. Plus, archival tape of Dr. Ruth herself dishing out sex advice to her devoted listeners.

Tiffany Shlain Dendrofeminology

7 Questions For Artist Tiffany Shlain

Sarah Groustra

JWA chats with artist and filmmaker Tiffany Shlain about her new solo show, YOU ARE HERE, why nature inspires her, and why people who say they're not creative are wrong. 

Birth of Sultana Daoud

April 25, 1915

Sultana Daoud, also known as Reinette l'Oranaise, was an Algerian singer, oud player, and composer of Arab-Andalus music. For the majority of her career, she was a representative of the Hawzi folk music of Algeria. 

Birth of Bollywood Actress Nadira

December 5, 1932

Florence Ezekiel, known by her stage name Nadira, was an Indian actress who worked in the Hindi film industry, usually playing "vamp" or femme fatale roles in the 1950s and 60s.  

Elizabeth Taylor, circa 1955

The Self-Mythology of Elizabeth Taylor

Sarah Jae Leiber

The film shines brightest as a catalog of one woman’s robust self-mythology, written and rewritten to protect herself from the reality of how she was perceived by the world.

Topics: Film, LGBTQIA Rights
Ilana Diamant at bar

A Stage, a City, and the Shadows of 'Cabaret'

Ilana Diamant

Sometimes it feels easier to show up at the same bar and sing every week than to really feel the weight of the moment we live in.

Topics: Theater

Birth of Bollywood Actress Pramila

December 30, 1916

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Michelle Azar as RBG

What Would Ruth Say?

Michelle Azar

A post-show conversation about RBG and Israel leads to a moment of connection. 

Topics: Theater, Israel

Berta Singerman

Berta Singerman (1901-1998) was an Argentine actress and reciter of poetry, famous throughout the Ibero-American cultural world. Born in Russia to a family of traditional singers (chazanim), she immigrated to Buenos Aires, Argentina, when she was four years old.

Episode 110: Oral History Showcase: Leni's Ladino Legacy

Lenora LaMarche, better known as Leni, was born in 1921 in the Sephardic Jewish community in Seattle, Washington after her parents moved there from Rhodes, looking for better economic opportunities. She grew up speaking Ladino, and for over 30 years, she wrote a Ladino column in her synagogue newspaper called "Bavajadas de Ben Adam"—people’s foolish little words.
In this episode of Can We Talk?, you’ll hear excerpts from an interview she did in 2001 for the “Weaving Women’s Words '' oral history project, in which she reflects on her Sephardic heritage and peppers her stories with colorful Ladino words and sayings. Her testimony is one of hundreds in JWA’s Tanner Oral History Collection.

Eleanor Harris Headshot cropped

Where Are They Now? RVF Alum Eleanor Harris

Sarah Biskowitz

JWA talks to Rising Voices Fellowship alum Eleanor Harris for our series marking the 10th anniversary of the fellowship.

Collage of Greta Gerwig and Margot Robbie

What Was the Barbie Movie Made For?

Eva Stern

Movie-goers left screenings of the Barbie movie with a multitude of reactions. Some felt empowered to make change, others felt uncomfortable with the movie and with how it made them feel.

Topics: Film, Activism
Sabina Vajraca and a poster from Sevap/Mitzvah

Q & A with Sabina Vajraca about her New Film, "Sevap/Mitzvah"

Mirushe "Mira" Zylali

JWA chats with Sabina Vajraca about her new film Sevap/Mitzvah, inspired by a remarkable true story of female friendship and our common humanity.

Collage of Avril Lavigne

Hey, Hey, You, You, I Don't Like Your (Girlfriend) Song

Jessica Primus

The incredibly problematic lyrics Avril Lavigne and others performed reflected a cultural acceptance of sexism at the time.

Topics: Music, Feminism
Collage of "Do Revenge"

The Subtle Antisemitism of "Do Revenge"

Halleli Abrams Gerber

The film is inclusive in terms of race, sexuality, income, and more. However,  Max Broussard, the high school’s “king" embodies many of the worst stereotypes that Jews face.

Topics: Film, Antisemitism
Woman with long brown hair, dark rimmed glasses and dark shirt

Q & A with Leah Berkenwald, Co-Creator of "A Feminist Romance Novel, Podcast!"

Sarah Groustra

JWA chats with Leah Berkenwald, co-creator of the new audio-drama, A Feminist Romance Novel, Podcast! Temptations at Sweetwater Creek.

Collage of "The Believer"

Wrestling with God and Neo-Nazis

Ava Cohen

What’s frightening about 2001 film, "The Believer,"  is that struggling with the idea of God as all-powerful is far from a unique experience.

Collage of the "Barbie" Movie

Feminism, Sexism, and the "Barbie" Movie

Roz Larsen

Barbie's core message that women can transcend their “assigned” roles and defy societal double standards may not have landed with everyone.

Topics: Film, Feminism
Collage of Gretchen Wieners from "Mean Girls"

Gretchen Wieners Complicates "Good" Jewish Representation

Lucy Targum

Gretchen's Judaism is surface level at best, and yet, I can’t help but relate to her.

Topics: Film
Collage of Taylor Swift

Taylor Swift's Feminism is Death by a Thousand Cuts

Sara Weinstein

Despite my love for Swift, her music, and the community she provides, we as Swifties must recognize that her activism, and specifically her feminism, deserve our critique.

Topics: Music, Feminism
Collage of Naomi Weisstein and Megan Thee Stallion

Rock and Roll, Rap, and Women’s Rights

Roz Larsen

Simply showing up and being loud while making something beautiful was another form of protest in itself.

Topics: Music
Collage of Chelsea Handler and torn pink paper

Chelsea Handler: Modeling Activism in Comedy

Shiraz Rothschild

I admire Handler’s ability to talk about aspects of her identity that many shy away from. As a Jewish comedian that is a critical part of the rule book: lean into discomfort.

Topics: Comedy
Maestro Film Still

Beyond "Maestro's" Prosthetics and Into Bernstein's World

Sarah Jae Leiber

Bradley Cooper’s Maestro nose, in context, reads less to me like internalized antisemitism and more like Cooper’s deep, spiritual obsession with getting it right.

Topics: Film, Music

Episode 104: Crying and Doing: Iris Bahr and her Aging Mother

Iris Bahr was halfway around the world when she saw her mother having a stroke over video chat. Within days, she was on an airplane, uprooting her life to become her mother’s primary caregiver. The stroke led to vascular dementia– an irreversible condition. Iris is a writer and actor and chronicles the story in a poignant—and funny— one-woman show See You Tomorrow.  In this episode of Can We Talk?, Nahanni speaks with Iris Bahr about caring for her aging mother and about creating art from personal tragedy. Excerpts from Iris’s show are woven throughout the interview.

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