Word: nyc
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...after he graduates. The most recent president of Hasty Pudding Theatricals can already spell out what it will be like. “It will last anywhere from several months to the rest of my life,” he says. “It will happen either in NYC or LA. Regardless, I’m going to be hungry...I don’t know how food stamps work, but I’ll figure that out, I think.” For Brener, unemployment will mean the chance to write or act for TV or theater, which...
Hometown: Suburbs of NYC, Born in Kiev...
...because you want to do the show. You have a lot more experimental things happening.”Cozzens says, “In Boston, it took me about two years, but I just about knew of everyone who was doing theater. Same way at Harvard. And here, [in NYC] I am not remotely close to knowing maybe even five percent of the people who are doing the work here. It’s just a huge, huge difference.” “Clearly, here you can make money doing it,” he says.The competitive nature...
...graduation day, I have to go to New York very fast because that evening, I’m performing at the NYC Ballet in honor of Lincoln Kirstein. I’ll get my diploma, grab a box lunch, and head to New York. After that, I’ll dance for another year, and I’m running the arts festival and my school. I want to start bridging these worlds where I can use the skills and interests that have been awakened by my time here...
...said. “It’s in local governments where maybe we are making some progress.” Bloomberg received the Pathfinder Award for blazing the trail for technology-enabled improvements in America’s most populous city; his initiatives as mayor have included the NYC 311 Citizen Service Center and a new wireless public safety network. “The city and the mayor have done amazingly important things in terms of technology,” said Jerry E. Mechling ’65, a lecturer in public policy at the Kennedy School and faculty...