Fiona Guidice, who hails from Lakeland, Florida, has been a hairdresser for two decades, first entering the industry at the age of 16. She started doing hair and makeup for theater as a teen and participated in a two-year-long hairdressing program at a vocational school. She passed the Florida cosmetology board exams and became fully licensed by the time she […]
Day: April 3, 2019
Red Hook’s Summit Academy is in danger of closing
Red Hook’s Summit Academy is in danger of closing or restructuring at the end of this school year. Every two, three or five years, charter schools have to submit an application to the New York City and State departments of education. [pullquote]Official Notice: There will be a public hearing at Summit Academy Charter School (27 Huntington Street) authorized by the […]
Kirsten Gillibrand’s Period of Adjustment
Like the majority of people these days, New York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand has announced her candidacy for President of the United States in 2020. According to most polls, zero to three percent of Democratic voters would choose Gillibrand among the slate of likely primary candidates. Her unpopularity may seem strange to prognosticators who initially saw the senator as a plausible […]
On the (Queer) Waterfront
It was a night of firsts at the Brooklyn Historical Society. On March 5, nearly 200 city residents gathered in the Great Hall to celebrate the launch of “When Brooklyn was Queer,” a new book by historian and curator Hugh Ryan that traces the untold history of the borough’s LGBTQ+ community – from the publication of Walt Whitman’s “Leaves of […]
Book Review: The Question Authority
“Does anyone remember the counselor…?” began the post on my old summer camp’s social media page. I did not know the former camper who was asking, nor did I recognize the vague description of the young adult being accused of allegedly taking advantage, but I was spooked to realize that while I was playing dodgeball and enjoying free swim, someone […]
TFANA’s lucid take on The Tragedy of Julius Caesar
Through April 28, Theatre for a New Audience presents a clear and forceful production of Shakespeare’s 1599 tragedy, “The Tragedy of Julius Caesar.” Director Shana Cooper’s take is a great lucid rendering that accentuates the plays core themes and conflicts, even as the production careens into one too many air-knife-fights that turn the tragedy into a Mortal Combat training site. […]