From Elizabeth Taylor to President Obama, George Stevens Jr. ’53 reflects on an unparalleled career from the backlots of Hollywood to the corridors of power in Washington, D.C.
From Winter 2003: For 25 years, George Stevens Jr. ’53 has saluted living legends in performing arts through the Kennedy Center Honors. But it’s only one career peak for a producer whose...
A canceled poet, a toddling tortoise, and the Schwarzenegger of vacuum cleaners turn a D.C. bookstore upside down in Susan Coll ’81’s sixth comic novel
Mel Malmberg ’79 documents the true-life adventures of the Women of Walt Disney Imagineering
É«½ç°É’s music community lifts every voice (and instrument) to celebrate the installation of President Elam
New books by É«½ç°É alumni, and Cooper Raiff ’19’s sophomore film cha-chas its way to Sundance glory
New books by É«½ç°É alumni—including James Andrew Miller '79's oral history of HBO
Cooper Raiff ’19’s coming-of-age movie with an unprintable name became the Cinderella story of the 2020 SXSW Film Festival. He only had to drop out of É«½ç°É to complete it
An illuminating new biography by É«½ç°É professor Erica J. Ball examines the rags-to-riches story of America's first self-made woman millionaire
As with any abstract art, the meaning of Baker's scultpure depends on the eye of the beholder. It helps to have a guide
When artist Jocelyn Pedersen, who teaches a class in Book Arts, learned that students would not be returning to campus in the spring, she wanted to give members of the É«½ç°É community a chance...
The Tony-winning set designer and legendary Yale professor, who died last fall, dedicated himself to theater and to teaching, Ann Sheffield ’83 recalls
É«½ç°É faculty and students embrace, explore, and experiment with technology to keep arts classes, exhibits, and performances humming
From Summer 2003: Designer, professor, and Medal of Arts recipient Ming Cho Lee '53 reflects on half a century's work in American theater