Ep. 22 - Kevin Isola on Billions, The New Bozena and Shakespearean Clowning

Ep. 22 - Kevin Isola on Billions, The New Bozena and Shakespearean Clowning

Kevin Isola is a self-described journeyman actor, who has experienced great longevity in several media, including theatre, television and film. The Pasadena native attended Duke University, and consequently studied acting at NYU-Tisch, where he discovered the value of being freed-up creatively through faculty who mentored and pushed his creative strengths. We discuss a major moment in his career, which came when he played Rev in the hit 1997 play, The New Bozena, alongside friends and Tisch classmates David Costabile (Lincoln; Billions; Breaking Bad; Low Winter Sun), Michael Dahlen (Blue Man Group; Men in Black II); and Rainn Wilson (The Office; Super; Juno), the latter serving as director. The experience was a trial by fire of navigating an original, creative property which flourished in New York to its sale to Twentieth Century Fox, and being immersed into the Hollywood system. In theatre, Kevin has appeared in WASP and Other Plays (Written by Steve Martin); Twelfth Night; Brooklyn Boy (on Broadway); Accidental Death of an Anarchist; Venus; and Everett Beekin (by Obie Award winner Evan Yionoulis). He was recently in Our Lady of 121st Street (Off-Broadway) and Life Sucks, a reimagined adaptation of the Anton Chekhov classic Uncle Vanya, in which he played Vanya. He has appeared in films such as How the Grinch Stole Christmas (Jim Carrey); Blumenthal (Brian Cox); and Academy Boyz (Ed Asner). His numerous television credits include Billions; Damages; Fringe; Boston Legal; Elementary; Bull; and Law & Order. He has returned to his alma mater, Tisch School of the Arts at NYU, where he previously earned an MFA, as Adjunct Professor in the Graduate Acting Department to teach courses on Shakespeare’s Clowns and Advanced Clowning Techniques. In our talk, we discuss his unique journey into several of these creative experiences, including developing recurring character arcs on television; finding himself on the stage through genuine mentors; the evolution of clowning; the irreverant comedy of the web-series Mommy Blogger (Tricia Paoluccio); and working with Glenn Close, Damian Lewis and C.J. Wilson.

Opening Credits: UP Paolo Pavan Pasqualino Ubaldini - 06 five special blues I Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0); Closing Credits: Another Brick - 1. Refraction I Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)

Ep. 21 - Jeremy Robbins on The Purge, Aftermath and Barry Sonnenfeld

Ep. 21 - Jeremy Robbins on The Purge, Aftermath and Barry Sonnenfeld

Writer and director Jeremy Robbins was Story Editor for two seasons of the Blumhouse horror anthology series — The Purge — based on the successful film franchise (grossing $500M+ worldwide) of the same name; he worked closely with James DeMonaco, creator of the franchise, in allowing viewers to explore a time in which all crime is declared legal for a 12 hour period. The show aired on USA Network and Hulu, and has featured actors including Gabriel Chavarria, Lee Allen Tergesen, Derek Luke and William Baldwin through its run. Prior to The Purge, Jeremy wrote and directed the acclaimed short films Newsworthy and Aftermath, both featuring his younger brother Noah Robbins (The Trial of the Chicago 7; Indignation; Miss Sloane; Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt), and the latter featuring Will Rogers (Bridge of Spies; A Rainy Day in New York), both in standout performances. He also wrote APEX, the pulse-pounding wilderness thriller about “man, woman and nature” which was featured on The Blacklist in 2021. A BA graduate from Yale, Jeremy returned to Columbia, where he earned his MFA in Film, as an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Film. We discuss his family’s encouragement for the arts; the seeds which lay the foundation for his desire to attend film school; writing for a major television show; working with Barry Sonnenfeld and Adam McKay; and retaining authenticity as an artist, writer and director.

Opening Credits: 1st Contact - Seeds of Life I Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0); Closing Credits: HoliznaCC0 - Manic WarLord Mother I CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0) Public Domain Dedication

Ep. 20 - David Klass on Out of Time, Kiss the Girls and Walking Tall

Ep. 20 - David Klass on Out of Time, Kiss the Girls and Walking Tall

Prolific writer David Klass has explored his unique, exquisite talent for storytelling throughout his career in a plethora of literary media. Since his debut publication, The Atami Dragons, David’s 20 novels have navigated the nuances of themes which include complicated father-son relationships; differences between eco-terrorism and environmentalism; and team dynamics. David’s own significant athletic background nearly always seems to make its way into his novels, which enhances the medium through which his characters communicate with each other. His bibliography includes You don’t know me, named an ALA Best Book for Young Adults; Firestorm, the first book to be endorsed by Greenpeace which was optioned by Warner Bros; Danger Zone; and the transcendent environmental thriller Out of Time. He has written over 40 Hollywood films which include Kiss the Girls (Ashley Judd, Morgan Freeman, Tony Goldwyn); Desperate Measures (Michael Keaton, Andy Garcia, Marcia Gay Harden); In the Time of the Butterflies (Salma Hayek, Edward James Almos, Demian Najera); Walking Tall (Dwayne Johnson; Johnny Knoxville); Runaway Virus; Emperor (Tommy Lee Jones); and Shelter in the Storm, which he also directed. He has written and produced Law & Order: Criminal Intent; and developed several works for television, including Austen’s Razor for CBS and ABC. He is currently the Associate Professor of Professional Practice, Theatre and Film and Co-Head of the Television Writing Concentration at Columbia University. In our conversation, we discussed the difference between writing for film and in the novelistic form; his family pedigree, which includes several accomplished writers; and his incredible journey from Yale to Hollywood.

Opening Credits: M33 Project - Obstination I Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0); Closing Credits: Hernán Samá & Marcelo von Schultz - cósmos I Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

Ep. 19 - Teresa Harris on German architecture, Marcel Breuer and Frank Lloyd Wright

Ep. 19 - Teresa Harris on German architecture, Marcel Breuer and Frank Lloyd Wright

As Head of Classics, Drawings & Archives at Avery Library of Columbia University, Teri Harris holds an important responsibility as it relates to upholding the legacy of legendary architects and artists. While she was earning her B.A. in Art History at Williams College, Teri took a class which changed her life, and established a bent toward architecture. It led her to move to New York City from the rural landscape she had been living in to work at an architectural nonprofit, where she became exposed the in’s and out’s of architectural ingenuity. She then began an MA in Art History at Columbia University in September 2001, a time she recalled during our conversation. After earning her master’s degree, Teri fled the city for greener pasturers in Syracuse, NY where she worked as a project coordinator for the “Marcel Breuer Digital Archive” at the Special Collections Research Center at Syracuse University Libraries. However, she eventually came back to Columbia to earn her PhD; joined Avery Library as Curator of the Classics Collection; which led to her current role. We discussed the formative experiences which compelled her towards art and architecture; the legacy of Frank Lloyd Wright; her doctoral thesis, The German Garden City Movement: Architecture, Politics and Urban Transformation, 1902-1931; the several exhibits she’s been involved with at Columbia; and life in New York City.

Opening Credits: Dee Yan-Key - sisyphus I Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0); Closing Credits: Dee Yan-Key - gone I Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)

Ep. 18 - Seemab Gul on Sandstorm, Zahida and The Watchmaker

Ep. 18 - Seemab Gul on Sandstorm, Zahida and The Watchmaker

Seemab Gul is the writer and director of the universally-acclaimed short film, Sandstorm, which recently qualified for Academy Awards contention after winning in categories at both the HollyShorts and Flickers’ Rhode Island International film festivals this year. The film premiered at the Venice Film Festival; follows a young Pakistani girl’s story when she is blackmailed by her virtual boyfriend after sending him a provocative video of herself dancing; and participated in, after being invited by 60 film festivals across the world. Seemab’s films ardently explore themes which include race, sexuality, existentialism and matriarchy through her own introspective lens, which is shaped by her own unique set of experiences. We discuss the origins of her passion to become a filmmaker, which led to films such as the fiction-short One Day in Whitechapel — set in the background of racially-divided London — Zahida, an Al Jazeera documentary profiling Pakistan’s first female taxi driver which won the Audience Award at the Tasveer South Asian Film Festival (whose trailer received 20M views); and The Watchmaker, which she produced. We also talked about the value of film and her experience reflecting about the Oscars.

Opening Credits: Ketsa - 03 Wind-it-Up I Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0); Ketsa - 08 Not-This-Way Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

Ep. 17 - Ben Kegan on Expiration Term of Service, The First Men and John Hughes

Ep. 17 - Ben Kegan on Expiration Term of Service, The First Men and John Hughes

Writer-Director Ben Kegan always knew he had a strong passion for character, film and storytelling. His growing up in a John Hughes-esque Chicago suburb is apt considering his eventual exploration of the sex-quest genre of teen movies in college. His evolution through the wrestling biopic short, Team Taliban, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival; the complicated love-triangle surveyed in Commencement, which he shot at Whitman College, his alma mater; the Hypocrite; and After Christmas featuring Chicago theatre legend Barbara Robertson, helped exhibit his versatility as a cleverly-synchronized writer-director. His most recent efforts include the renowned short, The First Men, which featured Maria Blasucci (Ghost Ghirrls, Family Tree, Key and Peele) and the enigmatic, menacing force of Bo Mitchell (Cobra Kai, Eastbound & Down, October Road); Fractions of Speed, a documentary short profiling the mid-distance runner and Olympic hopeful Peter Callahan, which he just shot as a feature film; and the military-themed documentary Expiration Term of Service. In our conversation, the Columbia MFA graduate remarks about the films which impacted his unique approach through the lens of Chicago, improvisational comedy and the subjects he portrays in his films.

Opening Credits: One Man Book - Scaffold of Repeated Addition I Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0); Closing Credits: Ketsa - Another-Day I Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

Ep. 16 - Jack Lechner on Good Will Hunting, Blue Valentine and Regis Philbin

Ep. 16 - Jack Lechner on Good Will Hunting, Blue Valentine and Regis Philbin

Chair of Film at Columbia University, Jack Lechner is a veteran development executive, writer, producer and lyricist behind some of the most iconic films of our time. As head of development at Miramax between 1996-1999, Jack worked on incredibly impactful films such as Good Will Hunting, Guinevere and The Cider House Rules. In 1999, he wrote Can't Take My Eyes Off of You: One Man, Seven Days, Twelve Televisions, which chronicled his experience of being fully immersed into cable and network television for a full week - remarkably, he survived this undertaking, which was inspired by Charles Sopkin’s experience in the 1960’s. Throughout the years, he has been a Drama Desk Award-nominated lyricist for The Kid; producer of the pilot episode of Mad Men; executive producer of the Oscar Winning documentary The Fog of War and the web-series Group; writer of song parodies for the Independent Spirit Awards for 7 years; and frequent contestant on game shows including Jeopardy, Wheel of Fortune and Who Wants to be a Millionaire. We discuss these topics through the lens of his book, diverse life experiences and the career undertakings which had the biggest impact on his view of the industry.

Opening Credits: Duncan Reid and the Big Heads - 77 I Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0); Closing Credits: Bisou de l'enfant sauvage - After midnight kiss I Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

Ep. 15 - Elisheva Gavra on In Procession, Eyes and Haunted Buildings

Ep. 15 - Elisheva Gavra on In Procession, Eyes and Haunted Buildings

Studio photographer and visual artist Elisheva Gavra creates art which challenges the boundaries of realism; explores the power of spirituality; and investigates the dynamic experience of questioning discord. The latter is a concept with which she has familiarity, growing up in a small Israeli town subsumed by a strong sense of cultural identity and framework. During the pandemic, she paralleled a focus aimed at exploring manifestations of what it means to manipulate reality, which she had experienced photographing others, to herself in a series of self-portraits created during a quarantine in her bedroom. We discuss these topics through the lens of what led up to works like In Procession, Self-Portraits and Eyes, among others in her new studio (which is rather old) in New York City. A Columbia MFA candidate, she received her BA in Art History and Gender Studies from Tel Aviv University, and completed her professional studio photographer training at Studio Gavra.

Opening Credits: Matte Black - 1969 I Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0); Closing Credits: Forget the Whale - 10 Days I Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

Ep. 14 - Anita Abdinezhad on POTUS, Eradication and Sideways Smile

Ep. 14 - Anita Abdinezhad on POTUS, Eradication and Sideways Smile

Actress Anita Abdinezhad tells stories which capture life and all its trimmings. After earning her MFA from Columbia, she entered her Broadway debut, POTUS: OR behind every dumbass are seven women trying to keep him alive, which has with met rave reviews, understudying for such seasoned performers as Rachel Dratch, Julliane Hough and Lilli Cooper. Her versatility encompasses a unique array of both comedic and dramatic performances in works like Sideways Smile, Eradication, Repetence and Amaceing America. We discuss our mutual upbringing as U.S. immigrants; tenets which motivate her decision-making; what it feels like to be featured in a Tony Award nominated play; and the experience of being also being a writer and filmmaker.

Opening Credits: The Unsacred Hearts - 1978 I Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 US); Closing Credits: The Special Pillow - 3rd of July I Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

Ep. 13 - Vivian Vivas on Absentia, Calcified and San Francisco

Ep. 13 - Vivian Vivas on Absentia, Calcified and San Francisco

Artist Vivian Vivas trancends trivialization. Her immense work in several genres, encompassing moving image, performance art, stop motion and installation work pushes the boundaries of what many deem possible. An MFA candidate at Columbia University, she is a finalist for the 2022 Frankenthaler Climate Award, and has an upcoming group show: In Response: Jonas Mekas at the Jewish Museum. She was the recipient of the 2018 Kodak Award from the San Francisco Art Institute and received the Best Experimental Film Award at the 2019 ARFF Barcelona Film Festival. In our conversation at her new studio in New York City, we discuss her evolution through works including Absentia, Sankofa, Calcified and Phase Three.

Opening Credits: dUASsEMIcOLCHEIASiNVERTIDAS - 01101101 I Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0); Closing Credits: mekoisu - ものしりのそらへ I Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)