Kyle Thomas Hemingway: The ephemera edit

An ongoing digital archive proving that I read, I saw, and I actually paid attention.

  • Fallen Angels

    by Noël Coward (Roundabout Theatre Company, live stream)

    “If you’ll allow me to say so, madam, several drinks never did any harm; it’s only the first drink which is dangerous; after that the damage is done.”

  • On Your Feet: The Story of Emilio and Gloria Estefan

    Book by Alexander Dinelaris Jr. / Music and lyrics by Emilio Estefan, Gloria Estefan, and the Miami Sound Machine (North Shore Music Theatre)

    Curtain call at On Your Feet
  • Big Mistakes

    Created by Dan Levy and Rachel Sennott

    “I should have never weaponized you with an education.”

  • Unlicensed : Bootlegging as Creative Practice

    Edited by Ben Schwartz

    “That’s something I really enjoy, to kind of stick your brain into somebody else’s brain and figure out how he or she did something. There is a real learning process that is happening there, and it’s how I learned about so much. There is a sort of embodied element to it, you have to actually go through the process, and I think when you do that there is a lot to be gained.”

  • Hacks: The final season

    Created by Paul W. Downs, Lucia Aniello, and Jen Statsky

    “Why am I in the rough draft of a car?”

  • Black Swan

    Book by Jen Silverman / Music, lyrics, and orchestrations by Dave Malloy (American Repertory Theater)

    Curtain call at Black Swan
  • The Clean Issue

    Kinfolk Magazine

    “We are constantly contending with algorithms of all kinds,” writes Kyle Chayka in his book Filterworld, “each one attempting to guess what we are thinking of, seeking and desiring.”

  • Swept Away

    Book by John Logan / Music and lyrics by The Avett Brothers (Speakeasy Stage Company)

    Curtain call at Swept Away
  • Ametora: How Japan Saved American Style

    by W. David Marx

    “So how did the Japanese save American style? The Americans discarded style as it became unfashionable and moved on to new things. The Japanese collected, analysed and improved it, and sold it back.”

  • The Crucible

    by Arthur Miller (Curtain Call Theatre)

    “He have his goodness now. God forbid I take it from him!”