Performing Arts

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Bertha Klausner

Bertha Klausner was an influential literary agent in New York and Los Angeles. One of the earliest female literary agents, she represented major writers and cultural figures throughout the twentieth century.

Zohra El Fassia (Re-Release)

While the podcast is on summer hiatus, we're listening back to some of our favorite Can We Talk? episodes. This time, an episode from 2021 about Moroccan Israeli singer Zohra El Fassia.

Rainbow collage with text reading "God of Vengance: A Drama in Three Acts By Sholom Asch

How A Scandalous Yiddish Play Inspires Me to Write Bold Theater

Meital Fried

Paula Vogel's play, Indecent, explores relationships against the backdrop of assimilation, antisemitism, and censorship. 

Topics: Theater

Word of the Week: Yenta (Re-release)

While the podcast is on summer hiatus, we're listening back to some of our favorite Can We Talk? episodes. First up, an episode from 2022 all about the word yenta: where it came from, what people think of it, and how its meaning changed over time. Enjoy!

Nani Vazana cropped

Q & A with Ladino Musician Nani Vazana

Shoshana McKinney Kirya-Ziraba

JWA chats with Ladino singer/songwriter Nani Vazana. 

Topics: Music

Episode 125: Making Gay History, the Nazi Era: Frieda Belinfante (Special Episode)

In honor of Yom Hashoah, or Holocaust Remembrance Day, we're sharing a podcast episode from Making Gay History’s current series about the Nazi era. Frieda Belinfante was a Dutch musician and underground activist who risked her life to help save hundreds of Jews from the Nazis. She’s one of several LGBTQ people whose testimonies are featured in this Making Gay History series. Check out the rest of the series at makinggayhistory.org.

Weber Siblings 1946 - UnBroken still

Q & A with Beth Lane, Director of "UnBroken"

Jen Richler

JWA talks to Beth Lane, director of the documentary UnBroken, which traces the extraordinary journey of seven siblings, including her own mother, who escaped Nazi Germany as children.

Topics: Holocaust, Film
Collage with image of characters from the film, Anora and Vanya, and Coney Island cyclone roller coaster

The Imperfect Feminist Politics of Anora

Sylvie Simmons

Madison’s realistic performance creates a likeable character who's hard not to empathize with. But while Baker attempts to abandon a cliché, fairytale ending, he struggles to portray his protagonist without a male-savior-counterpart.

Topics: Film
Collage with ancient Greek sculptures of Orpheus, Eurydice & Hermes, as well as as sheet music, a guitar, and flowers

See the Way the World Could Be: The Feminism of Hadestown

Margaret Lockman

Despite the misogynistic undertones of the original myth, I believe Hadestown promotes a feminist message. 

Topics: Theater
Collage of King Henry VIII's Wives and the Six Musical

Six: A Feminist Musical?

Bee Foster

While it tackles heavy subjects with sensitivity, Six unfortunately leans heavily on stereotypes in its characterization of Henry VIII’s wives.

Topics: Theater

Madame Goldye Steiner, aka Gladys Mae Sellers

Madame Goldye Steiner was the first known African-American woman singer of khazones, or Ashkenazi Jewish liturgical music. She was the only known African-American woman in the khaznte artistic movement in which non-synagogue audiences experienced khazones, sung by women in concert halls, on the radio, and on gramophone recordings.

Ladino singer and songwriter Nani Vazana releases award-winning song: “Una Segunda Piel”

March 23, 2022

On March 23, 2022, Nani Vazana released her song “Una Segunda Piel” (“A Second Skin”). For the Judeo-Spanish community, her music has great significance, uniting and enriching the culture of Sephardic Jews. 

Birth of Inez Bensusan, Australian playwright, actress, and suffragist

September 11, 1871

Inez Bensusan, an Australian and English playwright, actress, and suffragist, was born on September 11, 1871. She wrote and acted in many feminist plays and was active in multiple activist groups, often combining theater and feminism for a political cause.

Girls who were part of first transport of Jews to Auschwitz

Q & A with Heather Dune Macadam, Director of "999: The Forgotten Girls"

Jen Richler

JWA talks with Heather Dune Macadam, director of 999: The Forgotten Girls, a new documentary that tells the story of the young women who made up the first transport of Jews to Auschwitz.

2024 Highlights Photo Montage

Jewish Women Who Shaped 2024

JWA Staff

As 2024 draws to a close, the JWA team takes a moment to celebrate some of the incredible moments and achievements of Jewish women and gender-expansive people from the past year. Here are our picks for the standouts that inspired us, made us laugh, and reminded us of the power of resilience, community, and creativity.

Claude Cahun

Surrealist photographer Claude Cahun lived their life in a spirit of rebellion and defiance. From their precocious teenage years, defying conventional ideals of beauty and femininity with their shaven head and male attire, to their direct resistance of German occupying forces, they active worked against the suppression of liberty and freedom—a life of resistance. 

"A Real Pain" Film Still

"A Real Pain" Explores the Grief We Inherit

Sarah Jae Leiber

The film is at its sharpest depicting grief as a series of elephants in rooms, of ghost towns beneath well-trodden cobblestones.

Topics: Film, Holocaust
Kres Mersky in her One-Woman Show

7 Questions For Playwright Kres Mersky

Sarah Groustra

JWA chats with actor and playwright Kres Mersky about her one-woman show, The Life and Times of A. Einstein.

Topics: Theater

Charlotte Charlaque

Charlotte Charlaque was a transgender trailblazer, actress, and translator in Weimer Berlin and post-Shoah New York City. 

Kristen Bell and Adam Brody in "Nobody Wants This"

Romcom Magic Can't Save "Nobody Wants This"

Sarah Jae Leiber

Sparks fly between the charming leads, but the series too often relies on tired stereotypes and shallow conflicts. 

Topics: Film

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.  

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