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L.A. Theatre Works, citadel of audio drama, keeps adapting to changing times

L.A. Theatre Works, citadel of audio drama, keeps adapting to changing times

The golden age of radio drama is a memory shared by a dwindling few. But the flame has been kept alive in Britain by BBC Radio, in Ireland on RTÉ and in America by L.A. Theatre Works.
LATW celebrated its 50th anniversary last year. The company, founded by Susan Albert Loewenberg and seven other women in 1974 during the heyday of the liberation movements, was formed with a strong social conscience. A main focus of the early years was on programs that brought artists into prisons.
By the 1980s, Artists in Prison (the company's original name) had become L.A. Theatre Works and was building a reputation for its professional theater productions of classic and contemporary works. A group of prominent actors approached Loewenberg with the idea of forming a classical repertory company. And with these founding members (Ed Asner, René Auberjonois, Robert Foxworth and Marsha Mason among them), LATW transitioned again, this time from conventional theatrical presentations to audio recordings of plays.
'The idea was to form this repertory company and be like the Mark Taper Forum,' Loewenberg recalled. 'For various reasons, it didn't happen. The first big project we did was to record Sinclair Lewis' novel 'Babbitt.' Ed Asner played Babbitt. And it was done like a theater production in the sense that every time there was a character, the role was played by an actor. So we did the whole book and it was a huge success.'
'Babbitt' was recorded at KCRW in Santa Monica in 1987. KCRW founder Ruth Seymour, an early champion, broadcast the recording in serial and marathon formats.
'And then National Public Radio got in touch, and they aired it all over the country,' Loewenberg continued. 'And the whole thing took off and the company solidified around that success. We did many plays with KCRW. We recorded Arthur Miller's 'The Crucible,' which still remains our No. 1 bestseller.' (The titles, Loewenberg explained, 'were originally sold as cassettes, then CDs, then digital downloads, and now both as digital downloads and through LATW's streaming subscription service.')
I wasn't in L.A. during the glory days of KCRW Playhouse. I was introduced to the work of the company through the radio program 'The Play's the Thing,' which I would listen to on Saturday nights on KPCC-FM, usually when driving home from the theater. Transfixed by the voices of actors giving life to drama I had stumbled upon on the freeway, I would try to guess the title before an announcer would break in with the information.
Curious about the work of a local company that was drawing top-flight actors to ambitious plays, I attended a few offerings in the company's performance series at UCLA's James Bridges Theater, where the programs were recorded before a loyal audience. I liked what I heard, but it struck me that LATW was operating in an adjacent field, complementary but separate. As a theater critic surfeited with plays, radio dramas worked best for me as an unplanned diversion in my car.
But listening has never been easier. Technology has transformed audio broadcasting into an on-demand experience.
LATW streams its radio show and launched its own podcast in 2017. The podcast series, Loewenberg clarified in an email, 'has allowed LATW to reach a wider and more diverse audience because of the way it's distributed.'
Different platforms reach different sectors. 'Audiences have their preferences as to the way they look for content,' she elaborated. 'All these various platforms — radio broadcast, free streaming services like SoundCloud, podcast platforms like Apple, Amazon, iHeart, etc. — have their own audiences. We distribute to over 100 podcast platforms, each with its own constituency.'
New competitors have also unexpectedly arose. Audible, the audiobook and podcast service that's a subsidiary of Amazon, has notably entered the theatrical space, commissioning new works from playwrights and presenting productions at the Minetta Lane Theatre in Greenwich Village.
Hugh Jackman and Ella Beatty are starring in the U.S. premiere of 'Sexual Misconduct of the Middle Classes' at the Minetta Lane Theatre. The play by Hannah Moscovitch, which is alternating with Jen Silverman's 'Creditors,' a new take on Strindberg's drama starring Liev Schreiber, represents a unique collaboration between Audible and Together, a company launched by Jackman and the prolific, award-winning producer Sonia Friedman to create new models of intimate and accessible theater.
'I would say they were inspired by us,' Loewenberg said when asked whether she sees Audible as an inspiration or a threat. 'We distribute through Audible and still do, and then they decided they wanted to do plays themselves. And they've done so. They do so many things. I think they realize that recording plays is a lot more expensive and a lot less profitable than recording one person reading a book.'
Currently, LATW's program airs weekly on KPFK 90.7 in Southern California and on station affiliates serving over 50 markets nationwide. But the heart and soul of the operation is the archive of play recordings, which Loewenberg, still the company's indefatigable producing director, said is nearing 600 titles. A recently launched monthly subscription service now offers full-range access to a catalog that includes Broadway titles, world classics and docudramas and social justice plays.
The extensive collection is a tremendous resource for libraries and schools, as well as for industry professionals and play-lovers. Before I went to New York in April for my annual Broadway spring marathon, I listened to LATW's recording of Arthur Miller's 'The Crucible' to prepare for my encounter with 'John Proctor Is the Villain,' a play by Kimberly Belflower that's in conversation with Miller's classic.
I haven't seen a production of 'The Crucible' since Ivo van Hove's deconstruction on Broadway in 2016, which is probably the last time I read the play. While sitting down with my copy of the drama, I found LATW's recording online and followed along with the text as a sterling cast thunderously performed Miller's allegory of a paranoid America that had lost its way during the communist witch hunts of the McCarthy era.
LATW has had access to what is arguably the greatest acting pool in the world. Annette Bening, Nathan Lane, George Clooney, Chris Rock, Amy Irving, Alan Alda, Alfred Molina, Jimmy Smits, Matthew Rhys and Charlayne Woodard are just some of the luminaries who have lent their voices to the LATW airwaves. The glittering cast of 'The Crucible,' which included Stacy Keach, Hector Elizondo and Richard Dreyfuss, would be difficult for even a major Broadway revival to match.
'Many of the actors we work with are known by the public for their movie or TV roles, but their background is in theater,' managing director Vicki Pearlson said on a Zoom call with Loewenberg. 'They work with us because they love theater and our format allows them the opportunity to work on plays in a very compact amount of time.'
When LATW presents live recordings, the commitment for performers is about a week. For studio recordings, the actors are needed for just three or four days, although the entire process from pre- to post-production takes around three to four months.
'So actors who have very busy schedules can do this thing they love, knowing that the work is going out to the world and will reach new generations of students,' Pearlson said. 'We've worked with more than 2,000 actors over the years and we're obviously adding to our family of artists all the time.'
Bringing a stage play to an audio medium requires adjustments. 'The actors have to learn how to do this,' Pearlson said. 'Susan always used to say, 'Half the volume, twice the intensity' at the mic. Of course, we set the environment by the sound design, but it's very much about engaging the story through the dialogue of the play.'
Loewenberg said she often would tell actors: 'OK, you're smiling here, but if the smile is not in your voice, I don't know you're smiling.'
LATW has never lacked ambition. At one point, the group had extended its live shows to Chicago, Washington, D.C., and Boston. Carving such an independent path in the theater is a Herculean challenge, but the secret of longevity has been the company's adaptability.
'We've had to adapt to many changes,' Loewenberg said. 'And sometimes challenges turned into really positive enhancements.' (A new emergency has just arrived with the Trump administration's decision to cut NEA grants, as my colleague Jessica Gelt recently reported.)
When a radio station stopped broadcasting, another stepped into the breach. Live recordings, put on pause during the pandemic, haven't yet restarted. But audiences have been engaged through a panoply of digital programs and new outreach endeavors, such as the play club program with libraries that Loewenberg said she plans to introduce throughout the country.
Education is an integral part of LATW's mission. This commitment is clear in the enthusiasm with which Loewenberg reels off canonical titles (by Shakespeare, Jane Austen and John Steinbeck). She is equally ardent when talking about specialized initiatives, such as the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation-sponsored Relativity Series of science-themed plays. Database tools for higher education make it possible to search the archives for plays dealing with specific thematic topics, making it more useful for instruction across disciplines.
'As a nonprofit organization, LATW's purpose is to expand access and to introduce both the general public and students to theater,' Pearlson added in an email follow-up. 'Much of our programming is available for free through radio broadcasts, streaming, podcasts, public libraries, and the distribution of recordings and educational materials to secondary schools across the country. So those who support us by purchasing titles are not just enjoying the best of theater but are helping us bring it to people who may not otherwise have the opportunity to experience the full range of works our library offers.'
When asked to name personal highlights of LATW, Loewenberg mentioned her experience of taking the docudrama 'Top Secret: The Battle for the Pentagon Papers' to China when President Obama and China's President Xi Jinping happened to be holding a bilateral meeting in California. Pearlson joyfully recalled the sight of Neil Simon laughing in the audience during a live recording of his play 'Broadway Bound.'
In the divergence of these answers lies the company's extraordinary legacy. Art should delight and instruct, the Roman poet Horace asserted. LATW has taken an auditory approach to this challenge. But the ultimate destination of the work, like that of any long-enduring theater company, has always been the hearts and minds of the audience.
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These 15-Year-Old Twins Opened a Viral Hot Dog Stand at a Gas Station in Long Beach
These 15-Year-Old Twins Opened a Viral Hot Dog Stand at a Gas Station in Long Beach

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  • Eater

These 15-Year-Old Twins Opened a Viral Hot Dog Stand at a Gas Station in Long Beach

Skip to main content Current eater city: Los Angeles Less than a week after opening Glizzy Street, brothers Chazz and Chaze Clemens have a steadfast following and a one-hour wait by Mona Holmes Photography by Mona Holmes Jul 1, 2025, 8:10 PM UTC Less than a week after opening Glizzy Street, brothers Chazz and Chaze Clemens have a steadfast following and a one-hour wait by Mona Holmes Photography by Mona Holmes Jul 1, 2025, 8:10 PM UTC Mona Holmes is an editor at Eater Southern California/Southwest, a regular contributor at KCRW radio, and a 2022 James Beard Award nominee. It's a pleasant June evening on Long Beach Boulevard, slightly north of the 91 Freeway. A speaker blares mostly old-school R&B hits from Luther Vandross and Teena Marie, as well as early Alicia Keys. On the corner of 68th Way is the American Oil Gas Station, owned by the Clemens family. As cars cycle through to fill up on gasoline, a line of people wait patiently for a pair of teenage twin brothers to dress bacon-wrapped hot dogs from Glizzy Street, a new Long Beach hot dog stand, with grilled onions, bell peppers, jalapeños, and a choice of mustard, mayonnaise, or barbecue sauce. A heavy-set and bearded man named Joseph, who requested to not use his full name, waited an hour to take home four generously dressed hot dogs, affectionately called 'glizzies' in slang. 'I'll probably eat the first one in my car,' says Joseph. 'They're that good. But I'll do anything to support these kids.' Though Glizzy Street is a family-run operation, Chazz and Chaze Clemens are the faces of the business. The twins are the ninth and tenth out of 10 siblings. Their older brother Jay and the rest of the Clemens siblings support the entrepreneurial 15-year-olds in their new business endeavor. On the night Eater visited, the Clemens' older sister, Blanche, tended to the stand, too, pouring plastic cups of strawberry agua fresca, along with punch or blue raspberry Kool-Aid, while another brother, Dajahn, replenished supplies. The hot dogs at Glizzy Street are $5, an astounding deal in a region where Los Angeles-style danger dogs, sold from street vendors in prime locations outside of sports stadiums or densely packed nightlife strips, can run for $8 or more, easily. For their summer break, Chazz and Chaze knew that running a business was the way to go. 'My older brother asked what we wanted to do this summer and gave us some suggestions like Six Flags or amusement parks,' says Chazz. 'We wanted to be outside the house and start a business. When [Jay] was a kid, he wanted to do a hot dog business. We used social media to post a video, and then it went viral.' Before starting the business, Chazz and Chaze were required to keep a 3.85 grade point average. The brothers saved $400 after working at the gas station, developed a budget, learned about profits and losses, planned a menu, learned how to cook, secured a hot dog cart, and got to shopping and prepping. After announcing the business launch via social media on June 25, Glizzy Street saw over 213,000 likes on TikTok. On day one, Glizzy Street sold 20 dogs. As of July 1, the team prepares 150, which are typically sold out at the end of the night. Chazz says repeat customers drove from Sacramento, San Diego, and the Inland Empire to try their fantastically stacked hot dogs. Adding another food business felt like a natural fit for the Clemens family. Two years ago, the Clemens family started selling gumbo, peach cobbler, and chicken from inside the gas station. Every night from 5 p.m. until 9 p.m., Glizzy Street sets up outside next to the parking spaces facing 68th Way. Chazz handles the glizzies while Chaze grills the vegetables. 'The first day was really busy,' says Chaze. 'I don't think I was good at cooking on the first day, but I got a lot better.' The father, Bryan Clemens, started working in the oil industry in 1975, first as an oil blender for Lubricating Specialties Company. He later worked as a fuel delivery driver for ARCO, then acquired his first truck and trailer, and eventually two gas stations in Los Angeles County. In the future, Chazz and Chaze want to go into business for themselves. Chazz's favorite subjects are business and math, while Chaze is passionate about history and business. When asked how the name came to be, Chazz didn't hesitate. 'We tried to think of something with three syllables that was funny, something very catchy, and wanted to do something that goes with LA on a busy street.' See More: Dining on a Dime LA Restaurant Openings

‘Full House' child star in a ‘constant process of recovery' after finding fame at young age
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‘Full House' child star in a ‘constant process of recovery' after finding fame at young age

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Reflecting on playing Derek, the star noted he had 'a lot of similarities' to his character. 'I was very, very precocious and very able to speak my mind,' he confessed, expressing that they were both 'bossy.' Although the Hollywood vet has fond memories from his time on 'Full House,' being a child star has left him a 'Recovering Child Actor,' as noted in his Instagram bio. Advertisement 9 Blake McIver Ewing's Yankee Doddle Boy dance. Ewing starred in a slew of projects after his stint on 'Full House,' including playing Waldo in the 1994 classic 'The Little Rascals' and voicing Eugene in 2002's 'Hey Arnold! The Movie,' as well as starring in TV shows like 2001's 'Adventures in Odyssey.' 'I feel like we're all in recovery always,' Ewing shared with his former co-stars. 'It's an annoying process. People ask me about it all the time, and I'm like, 'No. It's not a negative thing. It's just like there's a constant process of recovery.'' 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Lorde's ‘Green Light' Is the Soundtrack of Youth
Lorde's ‘Green Light' Is the Soundtrack of Youth

Elle

time23-06-2025

  • Elle

Lorde's ‘Green Light' Is the Soundtrack of Youth

John Proctor Is the Villain, one of the most talked-about new plays on Broadway, follows a small-town high school class studying The Crucible at the beginning of the #MeToo movement. One of its most memorable—and cathartic—moments is set to the song 'Green Light,' Lorde's lead single on her acclaimed 2017 record, Melodrama . As we kick off a weeklong celebration of the singer in anticipation of her upcoming album release , Kimberly Belflower, the playwright behind John Proctor , reflects on the significance of 'Green Light' and why it serves as a quintessential coming-of-age anthem — especially for young women. When the pre-chorus of 'Green Light' hits, the world changes. At first, Lorde's transcendent single from her sophomore album details the pain of a relationship ending in all its jagged edges. She uses a minor key and rebels against traditional rhyme structure to prioritize emotional truth over expectation or order: 'I know about what you did, and I wanna scream the truth / She thinks you love the beach, you're such a damn liar.' When you're in the middle of pain, there is no order to it. There is no reason. The first time my heart was broken, it felt like my life changed color. The wreckage seemed to have no end. Familiar places felt foreign. I didn't recognize the landscape of my own heart. Somehow, though, time passes. Slowly, strangely, but it passes. The pain doesn't leave, at least not entirely. But pain is a path, and it leads somewhere new. It crystallizes into different shapes. And then: the pre-chorus. The shift from minor to major. 'But I hear sounds in my mind / brand new sounds in my mind.' In this single moment of 'Green Light,' Lorde captures the feeling of transformation. Within the first 48 seconds of the song, she takes us on a journey from the lows of an ending to the highs of creation, moving into a beat that makes even the most hardened heart soar. The creation I speak of is that of being an artist, but also that of being a person. As an artist, I know the particular feeling of moving through pain and arriving at the moment of hearing 'brand new sounds.' There were pains inflicted long ago that I carry still, that I'll carry forever; pains that will always be tender to the touch. ('Honey, I'll be seein' you 'ever I go.') But that pain gave me new tools, new experiences, new modes of expression that I channel into my work. I wouldn't be the artist I am without the pain I've survived. I wouldn't be able to hear or harness those 'brand new sounds.' In a single sonic moment, Lorde gave voice to an alchemy I've never been able to put into words. View full post on Youtube But you don't have to think of yourself as an artist to be a creator. We all create our identities, our directions through life. We all know that 'brand new sounds' feeling. At a certain point, we each cross the bridge of a specific pain into new territory. And it usually happens for the first time, as so many things do, when we're teenagers. 'In a single sonic moment, Lorde gave voice to an alchemy I've never been able to put into words.' 'Green Light' was released when Lorde was 20 years old and is the first song on her masterpiece Melodrama . In the last song of the same album, she sings, 'I'm 19, and I'm on fire.' It's no coincidence that 'brand new sounds' came from a teenage brain. Everything is brand-new in those years. Everything feels extreme. Sometimes there are multiple opposing extremes in a single moment. As Lorde herself described 'Green Light' in a 2017 interview with Zane Lowe : 'It sounds so happy, and then the lyrics are so intense, obviously. And I realized, I was like, 'How come this thing is coming out so joyous sounding?' And I realized this is that drunk girl at the party, dancing around crying about her ex-boyfriend who everyone thinks is a mess. That's her tonight, and tomorrow she starts to rebuild.' What If Lorde Was One of Us The reason I was asked to write this piece is because I wrote a play called John Proctor Is the Villain , now on Broadway through August 31. The play centers around a high school English class in rural Georgia studying Arthur Miller's The Crucible in the wake of the early #MeToo movement. The play also (spoiler alert!) ends with two teenage girls performing a choreographed dance to 'Green Light.' Julieta Cervantes Sadie Sink and Amalia Yoo dancing to 'Green Light' in John Proctor Is the Villain I knew from the start that the play should end with a dance sequence that doubles as an act of rebellion. This calls back to the girls in The Crucible dancing and casting spells in the woods, but it's also a way for the girls in my play to reclaim their own bodies, process their trauma, and cultivate joy in the face of a world that has never valued them and doesn't take care of them. It's sleepover dances in your best friend's basement meets ancient witchcraft meets demonic possession. I never had to think about what the soundtrack of the play's ending should be. It was always 'Green Light.' These girls have walked the path of their pain, and it led them here: harnessing their hurt and turning it into magic, into art. 'Teenage girls, in all their big feelings and extremes, are terrifying to people who aren't teenage girls.' There's a stage direction in the play's final sequence that reads, 'It starts to look less like a dance and more like an exorcism,' which I wrote from what I feel watching Lorde perform. In the 'Green Light' music video, and in her many live performances of the song, she thrashes. She shakes. She jumps. She's wild, and a little scary. She's not dancing for other people's (namely: men's) consumption of her body; she's dancing as a mode of pure self-expression. Dance as bodily autonomy. Dance as sacred ritual. Dance as spell. Neil Lupin // Getty Images Lorde during her Melodrama World Tour. Right before 'brand new sounds,' Lorde asks: 'Did it frighten you? / How we kissed when we danced on the light-up floor?' And the answer is almost definitely 'yes.' Yes, whatever kinds of kissing and dancing that happened with Lorde on the light-up floor absolutely frightened this unnamed person. Teenage girls, in all their big feelings and extremes, are terrifying to people who aren't teenage girls. Throughout 'Green Light,' Lorde invokes that ferocity in her imagery: teeth that bite and screaming truths. I've been 'that drunk girl at the party dancing around crying about her ex-boyfriend,' trying to untangle and scream my own truths. I did rebuild. And let me tell you: I needed to dance that dance to know how.

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