Essays

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Page 1
On a torso mannequin, a two-piece halter-and-shorts swimsuit made from a vintage WWII pilot’s map.

The PMA’s BOOM sparks a closer look at women in the art and design of the 1940s

What did the transformative decade of WWII mean for women artists?

BOOM, a new exhibition at the PMA surveying American art and design in the global tumult of the 1940s, also offers a chance to reflect on evolving roles for women in American art history. Wendy Univer considers.
Wendy Univer

Wendy Univer

Essays 7 minute read
View from the ground floor of the grand multi-story hall of Macy’s, crowded with people listening to the organ.

Could the Wanamaker Building become a hub for Philly’s 250th anniversary events?

Let’s meet at the Eagle for the Semiquincentennial

When plans got underway for Philly’s celebration of America’s 250th birthday, organizers didn’t know that the beautiful and historic Wanamaker Building would go empty with the closure of Macy’s. Walt Maguire asks if 2026 events could fill it up.

Walt Maguire

Essays 4 minute read
View from the back of a small bare classroom with rows of empty desks facing a blank green chalkboard.

Can you pass this quiz on the first 100 days of Trump’s second term?

See how your knowledge stacks up before education is banned in the US

Essayist Anndee Hochman challenges those of us who may need a break from the news with this quiz about our current federal government.
Anndee Hochman

Anndee Hochman

Essays 5 minute read
A multiracial group of protestors carry a large sign reading “SANCTUARY It’s a Philly Thing” outside City Hall.

If it "didn’t accomplish anything" last time, why do I keep marching?

“We’re gonna keep on moving forward”

Anndee Hochman has spent years protesting for human rights. This year, some people are discouraged. A friend told her it doesn't make a difference. So Anndee shares the reasons she isn't going to stop marching.
Anndee Hochman

Anndee Hochman

Essays 5 minute read
Carrie, a white woman in her 40s with glasses, stands smiling with her teen daughter. Both wear turquoise dresses.

Remembering Carrie Gorn, Philly theater publicist extraordinaire

The woman who powered Philly theater from behind the scenes

For more than 10 years, theater critic Cameron Kelsall heard from publicist Carrie Gorn each week, tirelessly pitching clients’ work with her distinctive joy for the art form. Here at BSR, it’s painful to imagine our job without her.
Cameron Kelsall

Cameron Kelsall

Essays 4 minute read
Perkins, an elderly Black man wearing a patterned button-down, sits at a desk smiling and holding a vinyl jazz album.

Remembering beloved WRTI jazz announcer Bob Perkins

The coolest cat in the world

Composer Kile Smith worked with Bob Perkins in the studio at WRTI. He remembers the legendary Philly jazz announcer as an unwitting mentor who imparted the knowledge and the feeling of great music for 25 years at the mic.
Kile Smith

Kile Smith

Essays 5 minute read
Sitting in a large black chair, wearing a black suit and brown scarf, Jones smiles with one hand touching his chin.

I met James Earl Jones when I was six, on TV together thanks to our shared language

In the lap of James Earl Jones

By the time she started grade school, Anndee Hochman was known as the girl who learned
to read when she was three—and whose talent landed her (literally) in the lap of iconic actor James Earl Jones.
Anndee Hochman

Anndee Hochman

Essays 5 minute read
In front of a huge Chinatown protest march, 3 young Asian people hold a banner saying No arena in the heart of our city

I won’t turn my back on Chinatown: Black and Asian people must stand together in Philly

A Black elder protests the proposed Sixers arena

As a woman in her 70s, West Philly native Constance Garcia-Barrio finds protest marches challenging, but she knew she had to turn out for Chinatown at the No Arena in the Heart of Our City rally on September 7, 2024.
Constance Garcia-Barrio

Constance Garcia-Barrio

Essays 4 minute read
Les Mis hero Jean Valjean, with long hair and grimy 19th-century clothes, kneels on the stage and sings passionately.

I loved Les Misérables as a teenager. Now it’s back in Philly, and I want to rediscover it.

Singing the desire for a better world

Gabrielle Kaplan-Mayer spent her teen years devoted to big books and theater. Seeing Les Misérables all by herself in Philly in 1988 was a formative experience. Now she’s going back to explore what it still means to her.
Gabrielle Kaplan-Mayer

Gabrielle Kaplan-Mayer

Essays 6 minute read
Photo of Margaret, a white woman in her 60s with shoulder-length gray hair. She is smiling and wearing a red shirt.

Remembering BSR writer Margaret Darby

Musician, linguist, writer, librarian, and beloved friend

Cameron Kelsall remembers BSR writer Margaret Darby, who died in April. She was a musician, linguist, and librarian; an astute yet generous journalist and critic; and a beloved colleague and friend.
Cameron Kelsall

Cameron Kelsall

Essays 3 minute read