Most Emerson students know Visual and Media Arts Senior Distinguished Director-in-Residence Theodore “Regge” Life for his work behind the camera, but earlier this month, Life was honored for his direction on the stage.
Growing up in Wyoming, Gregory Asay had never heard about the Wagon Wheel Project.
Emerson College and Massachusetts Literary Education & Performance (Mass LEAP) are entering a new partnership and relaunching a poetry and spoken word festival that for the past seven years has showcased the talents of Boston youth.
Being a first-generation low-income student comes with its own set of challenges.
With industry trends on gender stalled or going in the wrong direction, and a new crop of students studying to enter careers in a media making, Cornejo decided to reprise the summit with three panels, an Industry Luncheon open exclusively to students, and an Emerson-only pre-release screening of Nicole Dorsey’s Black Conflux.
The Boston Globe recently reviewed Cannupa Hanska Luger’s Future Ancestral Technologies: nágshibi, a multi-media Indigenous-centered science fiction exhibition using creative storytelling to radically reimagine the future and promote a thriving Indigeneity.
Soon-to-be graduates of Emerson’s Comedic Arts major, the first degree of its kind in the nation, joined four alumni working in comedy for a discussion filled with laughs and advice at Emerson College Los Angeles on November 2.
While there weren’t any actual lions in ABC’s The Little Mermaid Live, which aired November 5, there sure were a lot of Emersonians who worked on the show.
For the past year, four Emerson College students have spearheaded something called The Big Ugly Show, an uncommon and unforgettable collection of stand-up events, including students, faculty, and professional comedians from Boston and Los Angeles.
Award-winning novelist Tayari Jones talked to Emerson students and faculty last week about how she became the author she is today as she navigated through the writing and publishing world.