THIRTEEN
Navigating Race, Faith, and LGBTQ+ Survival | THIRTEEN
- Title
- Navigating Race, Faith, and LGBTQ+ Survival | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 26:20
- Date posted
- 11 hours ago
- Description
- "Allow yourself to be...even when the world says no!"
What does it truly mean to step out from behind the mask? Tonilyn A. Sideco (she/he/they), Aaryn Lang (she/her/hers), and Donald Shorter (he/she) of THIRTEEN's First Person host four honest conversations with LGBTQ+ activists, artists, and community builders. Facing the complexities of race, gender, faith, and chronic illness, these leaders candidly share their authentic journeys toward self-acceptance. They actively seek communities that embrace them and tirelessly combat the societal systems that undermine living their lives freely.
Playwright Donja Love (he/him/his) redefines Black masculinity as a gay man through a self-described practice called "radical softness."
Activist Eman Abdelhadi (she/her/hers) navigates her Muslim faith, queer theory, and being authentically true to herself.
Educator Ericka Hart (she/they) confronts institutional racism and a lack of representation du...
- Title
- Yoko Ono on the Trap of Trying to Fit In
- Runtime
- 1:30
- Date posted
- 17 hours ago
- Description
- "All our energy is spent on being something that we are not."
In this clip from THIRTEEN's "Free Time," Yoko Ono talks about the exhausting cycle of trying to be socially acceptable, and how true communication is the only real path to peace.
#Shorts #YokoOno #ConceptualArt #JohnLennon #JonasMemkas #ExperimentalFilm #ArtHistory #NewYorkArt #PublicTelevision #THIRTEEN #WNET #UndergroundArt #1970sArt #Philosophy #Wisdom
- Title
- Virginia Apuzzo on the Cost of Anti-Gay Rhetoric
- Runtime
- 1:31
- Date posted
- 2 days ago
- Description
- "We are not speaking here of a matter of injured self-esteem. We're talking about life-threatening despair."
In this clip from Eleventh Hour, THIRTEEN spotlights legendary activist Virginia Apuzzo as she exposes the direct line between political rhetoric and real-world violence. From her own roots inside a convent in the Bronx to fighting for basic civil rights on the streets of New York, Apuzzo breaks down how denying people their rights gives an unspoken green light to discrimination and hate.
#VirginiaApuzzo #LGBTQHistory #THIRTEEN #EleventhHour #CivlRights #Stonewall #NewYorkHistory #Shorts #PrideHistory #LGBTQ #LGBTQIA
- Title
- Virginia Apuzzo: From Bronx Convent to Front Lines of Gay Rights | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 25:54
- Date posted
- 2 days ago
- Description
- "The anger that I saw coming out of the Stonewall riots gave me permission, as it were, to get in touch with my own anger... An explosion of people who were saying, enough is enough."
This 1989 episode of THIRTEEN’s “The Eleventh Hour” commemorates the 20th anniversary of the Stonewall Rebellion, featuring a conversation between host Robert Lipsyte and the legendary activist Virginia "Ginny" Apuzzo, an early director of The National LGBTQ Task Force.
Apuzzo recounts milestones of her life journey. She hid her lesbian identity as a child in a society didn't allow LGBTQ+ adults to be out either, let alone role models. She was a teacher at a Mid-Hudson Valley school before becoming a nun at a Bronx convent. News of the 1969 Stonewall riots changed Apuzzo's life. She left the convent, connected with the lesbian feminist liberation movement and became one of the most prominent lesbian leaders in American politics.
She reflects on the casual and s...
- Title
- Sex: Unlearning What They Were Told
- Runtime
- 1:24
- Date posted
- 3 days ago
- Description
- "Sexuality is tied up with power..."
In this 1974 clip from THIRTEEN's "51st State," three women describe breaking free of society's negative and restrictive messages about sex, sexuality, pleasure, and gender roles, particularly regarding what was expected of women.
#1970s #WomensMovement #Feminism #LGBTQ #LGBTQIA #FeminismHistory #Bisexual #Bisexuality #THIRTEEN #WomensLiberation #Shorts
- Title
- Bisexual Identity & The 1970s Women’s Movement | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 17:23
- Date posted
- 3 days ago
- Description
- "The more sexually free women are getting, the more powerful they feel in their own personhood."
In this 1974 WNET segment from 51st State titled “Three,” filmmaker and correspondent Lisa Feiner explores female sexuality through personal stories of three bisexual women navigating love, independence, and identity in New York City.
From jazz singer Jewell remembering the first woman she loved, to psychology students Jane and Barbara confronting societal guilt, the Women's Liberation Movement of the 1960s and 1970s redefines what it means to be free—even as critics of the era push back.
Over 50 years later, these in-depth conversations stand as a powerful testament to the remarkable progress made in the fight for LGBTQ+ visibility and sex-positivity. They also honor the courageous individuals who dared to defy societal expectations and live authentically, despite facing criticism and opposition.
#THIRTEEN #Archives #BisexualHistory...
- Title
- Ingrid Bergman's Gravestone Wish
- Runtime
- 1:14
- Date posted
- 3 days ago
- Description
- “Here lies a good actress.”
After conquering Hollywood, three-time Oscar winner Ingrid Bergman never lost her enthusiasm for the craft of acting. In this rare interview from 1967, Bergman reflects on what she said early in her American career: she wants to act until her very last day, standing on stage until the very last audience member leaves.
#Ingrid Bergman #HollywoodGoldenAge #ClassicCinema #Casablanca #ClassicHollywood #Shorts #THIRTEEN #Archives #Broadway #Theater
- Title
- "When art hurts, that is what to remember."
- Runtime
- 1:31
- Date posted
- 3 days ago
- Description
- Playwright Edward Albee issued an unusual warning to audiences before his experimental 1968 play "Box" premiered: forget everything you know about normal theater, just let it happen.
#EdwardAlbee #TheaterHistory #AvantGarde #Playwright #ExperimentalArt #THIRTEEN #Archives #YouTubeShorts #Shorts #ExperimentalTheater #Broadway
- Title
- Ingrid Bergman Returned to American Stage for Unfinished Eugene O'Neill Play | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 58:42
- Date posted
- 4 days ago
- Description
- In 1967, Hollywood legend and Swedish actress Ingrid Bergman sits down with Los Angeles Times drama critic Cecil Smith in L.A.’s Ahmanson Theatre. This followed her historic return to the American stage after a 21-year absence. Bergman had starred in a six-week run of Eugene O’Neill’s "More Stately Mansions, the inaugural production of the Ahmanson Theatre.
Bergman shares her personal history with the late playwright, pulls back the curtain on her craft, talks about her acting career on film and stage in both Sweden and the U.S., and details the taxing process of working with an unedited script that O'Neill originally intended to be destroyed.
The play was staged posthumously, 25 years after O’Neill’s death, using a nearly-complete script written by O’Neill himself. Director Jose Quintero put the finishing touches on the script and brought the play to life on stage.
Subscribe to a THIRTEEN newsletter to stay informed: https://qrco.de/B...
- Title
- Edward Albee’s "Box": 1968 Experimental Play | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 17:37
- Date posted
- 5 days ago
- Description
- Watch American playwright Edward Albee's experimental one-act play, "Box," as seen at its debut in 1968, when it challenged the notion of what theater is. Unlike his acclaimed works like "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" or "The Zoo Story," this play has no characters.
A box-like outline fills the stage. The only human performer is a disembodied voice, recorded by the Emmy- and Obie Award-winner Ruth White. She speaks philosophically about art and life.
This production at the Buffalo Arts Festival was filmed by Richard Leacock and D.A. Pennebaker for a historic two-hour special in 1968 by the Public Broadcast Laboratory (PBL), titled "Who's Afraid of the Avant-Garde?" The special documented the exploding 1960s avant-garde movement— a global wave of artists, playwrights, musicians, and filmmakers who sought to break free from the confining standards of art that they believed were dead.
Buffalo Arts Festival, now known as "The Allentown Art Festiv...
- Title
- "Existing Is a Form of Resistance"
- Runtime
- 1:30
- Date posted
- 5 days ago
- Description
- A shared experience everyone in the LGBTQIA+ community navigates in their lives is the journey toward acceptance— whether that comes from within themselves or from the people around them. Four voices from across New York's queer community open up about the moments that shaped them.
#LGBTQIA #Pride #QueerVoices #Acceptance #Identity #Belonging #Bisexual #Bisexuality #Asexual #Asexuality #NonBinary #SexEducation #LGBTQCommunity #THIRTEEN #QueerStories #TransRights #PrideMonth #LGBTQ
- Title
- Marc Shaiman: Award-Winning Music Man
- Runtime
- 15:33
- Date posted
- 6 days ago
- Description
- Composer and lyricist Marc Shaiman tells us everything, from what inspired his new book, "Never Mind The Happy," to his iconic call-backs that started the audience participation tradition of Rocky Horror Picture Show. The interview is with WLIW-FM's "Heart of the East End" host, Gianna Volpe.
With a prolific and impactful career on Broadway and in Hollywood, Shaiman is known for Bette Midler's "The Wind Beneath My Wings," and his work in iconic films "Hairspray," "When Harry Met Sally," and "Sleepless in Seattle." He is the winner of two Emmy's, two Grammy's, a Tony, and more awards.
Marc Shaiman will be at Guild Hall on June 21, 2026, for a live talk with Susan Stroman about his memoir, and a special guest will join for a live performance celebrating Shaiman’s remarkable body of work.
Subscribe to the WLIW newsletter to stay informed: https://cloud.email.wnet.org/wliw-qr-bandb-2026
The WNET Group presents Broadway and Beyond, a spe...
- Title
- What Do Bisexuality, Asexuality, and Non-Binary Identity Experiences Feel Like? | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 25:54
- Date posted
- 7 days ago
- Description
- Kristin Russo, host of THIRTEEN's First Person, sits down with four people whose stories push back against the erasure happening both inside and outside queer communities — and who are done shrinking themselves to fit the mold that society set for them.
Vivek Shraya, author of "She of the Mountains," opens up about a decade-long relationship with a woman, the biphobia he faced from gay men, and why owning the word "bisexual" became its own act of resistance. At the time of this recording, Vivek identified with he/him pronouns, but now uses she/her.
Tom Bernardin, unofficial historian of Julius Bar in Greenwich Village, takes us back to 1966 — three years before the Stonewall Riots — when a small group of gay men walked into a bar and demanded to be served, quietly igniting a civil rights movement.
Tyler Ford, writer, activist, and performer, speaks about identifying as agender within the non-binary spectrum, what it meant to come out first a...
- Title
- Yoko Ono: We Are All Just Half a Person
- Runtime
- 1:31
- Date posted
- 9 days ago
- Description
- Yoko Ono has always believed that nothing is complete on its own — not a person, not a piece of art, not a life. Every film, every performance, every installation has been moving toward the same total picture.
This clip from "Free Time" offers an intimate look into Ono as the philosopher, filmmaker, and boundary-breaking artist she always was.
#Shorts #YokoOno #ConceptualArt #JohnLennon #JonasMemkas #ExperimentalFilm #ArtHistory #NewYorkArt #PublicTelevision #THIRTEEN #WNET #UndergroundArt #1970sArt
- Title
- Yoko Ono & John Lennon's Most Radical Live Performance | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 1:04:08
- Date posted
- 9 days ago
- Description
- Advisory: This program contains mature content — including nudity and language. Viewer discretion is advised.
She handed out hammers, screened films of body parts, and did a Q&A where every question was answered with a question.
Yoko Ono takes over public television show Free Time for a strange and riveting hour to bring her experimental art and performance pieces to a live studio audience. This is Yoko on her own terms — not as the wife of Beatle John Lennon, but as a conceptual artist, filmmaker, and philosopher who had been pushing art's boundaries since the early 1960s.
Jonas Mekas, an avant-garde filmmaker in New York City, joins Ono and John Lennon for a Q&A and a wide-ranging conversation about the subconscious. We see several of Ono's experimental films — including "No. 4" (also known as "Bottoms"), "Up Your Legs Forever," and "Fly," interstitial excerpts inspired by Yoko’s conceptual book "Grapefruit" — specifically material con...
- Title
- Broadway Critic on What Matters
- Runtime
- 1:26
- Date posted
- 10 days ago
- Description
- In 1989, former New York Times theater critic Frank Rich gives four reasons a show survives on Broadway, and none are about the reviews. Do you agree?
#Shorts #FrankRich #Broadway #TheaterCritic #NewYorkTimes #BroadwayHistory #NYC #Theater #THIRTEEN #Archives #TheEleventhHour #NYCTheater
- Title
- George C. Wolfe on Creating True American Theater
- Runtime
- 1:31
- Date posted
- 10 days ago
- Description
- What does American theater look like? For legendary director and producer George C. Wolfe, it's a collision of people, dialects, ideas, and everyone in the room creating together in the moment. In this clip from THIRTEEN's "Skyline," Wolfe shares his vision for an American theater in its "broadest, most combustible, most uncontrollable" form — while co-creating with tap dance icon Savion Glover, seen here dancing in rehearsal.
#GeorgeCWolfe #SavionGlover #AmericanTheater #TapDance #Broadway #PublicTheater #NewYorkCity #THIRTEEN #Archives #Theater #BlackTheater
- Title
- Can One Critic Kill a $1 Million Broadway Show Overnight? | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 21:41
- Date posted
- 11 days ago
- Description
- Broadway has always been expensive. In 1989, theatergoers were calling $50 tickets outrageous — and warning that a night on Broadway, with dinner, a babysitter, and transportation, could run $500 before the curtain went up. Does this sound familiar?
In 1989, The Eleventh Hour host Robert Lipsyte asked the most prominent critic in the theater world at the time – Frank Rich of the New York Times – the questions Broadway has never stopped arguing about: Who really kills a show? How much power does one review actually have? Can Broadway survive its own price tag?
Then Lipsyte turns to producer Rocco Landesman ("Big River, "Into the Woods," "Angels in America") and Daily News critic Howard Kissel to debate what sells a show, whether critics are a reliable guide for what audiences will enjoy, and why seeing Broadway regularly has become nearly impossible as ticket prices keep climbing.
Subscribe to a THIRTEEN newsletter to stay informed: https://q...
- Title
- Angel That Inspired Tony Kushner's Award-Winning Play
- Runtime
- 1:28
- Date posted
- 12 days ago
- Description
- In the early 1980s, playwright Tony Kushner kept returning to one place – Emma Stebbins' masterpiece: the Angel of the Waters at Bethesda Fountain in Central Park. He realized that the angel provided inspiration to his career when the title "Angels in America" came to him in a dream. The play would be awarded a Pulitzer Prize and a Tony.
From an upcoming episode of Treasures of New York, featuring sculptor Emma Stebbins and premiering on WLIW in Fall 2026.
Image #1 at 0:41:
Author: Anonymous Unknown author, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Link to asset: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Emma_Stebbins_(1815-1882)_circa_1875.png
Link to license: Public Domain
Image #2 at 0:55:
Author: Playbill Inc.
Link to asset: https://playbill.com/production/angels-in-america-millennium-approaches-walter-kerr-theatre-vault-0000010052
Link to license: https://playbill.com/privacy-policy
Image #3 at 1:00...
- Title
- No Stage? Build Your Own.
- Runtime
- 1:25
- Date posted
- 13 days ago
- Description
- From a bar on Avenue B to makeshift stages made of banquet tables set up in Harlem, New York City's Off-Broadway theater scene of the 1990s was led by artists who built their own sets, performed for a handful of people, and kept going anyway. In this 1996 episode of THIRTEEN's City Arts, playwrights reflect on the extraordinary range of theatrical work happening outside the bright lights of Broadway and across the city's boroughs.
#Shorts #OffBroadway #NewYorkCity #Theater #NYC #CityArts #THIRTEEN #Archives #Broadway #NYCTheater #1990s
- Title
- Tony Kushner and His Central Park Angel | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 5:10
- Date posted
- 13 days ago
- Description
- Tony Kushner, the Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning playwright of "Angels in America," recounts the vibrant moment he fell in love with Central Park's Angel of the Waters sculpture at Bethesda Fountain. It was during the AIDS epidemic and the Reagan administration, and he was young and gay. He didn't know the sculpture was by Emma Stebbins, one of the most important female sculptors of the 19th century, and a lesbian.
Kushner returned to the angel time and again, which guided him through grief and fear and gave him inspiration. When the title for his play "Angels in America" came to him in a dream, he envisioned the Angel of the Waters, which seemed to him "the paradigmatic American angel."
This exclusive interview with Tony Kushner was conducted for an upcoming episode of Treasures of New York on sculptor Emma Stebbins. The episode will premiere on WLIW in Fall 2026.
Subscribe to the WLIW newsletter to stay informed: https://cloud.email.wnet....
- Title
- Can Sabbath Be Kept in Space? Rabbis Have an Answer
- Runtime
- 1:29
- Date posted
- 14 days ago
- Description
- If the sun never sets above the Arctic Circle, when does the Sabbath begin? Jewish soldiers in World War II asked this question, and rabbis' answer became the blueprint for Jewish astronaut, Ilan Ramon, aboard the Space Shuttle. The solution: follow the closest habitable city on Earth. Watch THIRTEEN's documentary Fiddler on the Moon, to see if Judaism can survive in space.
#FiddlerOnTheMoon #JudaismInSpace #IlanRamon #Sabbath #SpaceExploration #Jewish #THIRTEEN #Documentary #SpaceShuttle #Rabbis
- Title
- Can Religion Save Us from the Loneliness Epidemic? | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 48:04
- Date posted
- 15 days ago
- Description
- Loneliness has been recognized as a public health crisis. It exists everywhere and is far more common than many will admit. In this intimate series, host Manya Brachear Pashman, an award-winning religion reporter, explores what it means to feel alone and how faith, religion and spirituality are driving both the science of belonging and the surprising ways that people are forming meaningful bonds. Through candid conversations with medical professionals, community builders, and members of the clergy, the program unpacks isolation from multiple angles and offers solutions to help navigate loneliness, find connection, and help people feel seen again.
Subscribe to the WLIW newsletter to stay informed: https://www.wliw.org/email-preferences/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=youtube&utm_campaign=description&utm_id=description
#LonelinessEpidemic #MentalHealth #SocialConnection #Faith #Community #GenZ #AMatterOfFaith #THIRTEEN #Podcast
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- Title
- Why Do Bison Face Into the Wind?
- Runtime
- 1:00
- Date posted
- 16 days ago
- Description
- Long Island's North Quarter Farm in Riverhead is raising 125 American bison. Once you hear what makes these animals tick, you'll never look at them the same way. Ed Tuccio, a 14th-generation Long Islander, shares an inside look at what makes the American bison one of the most remarkable animals in North America — right here on the East End.
#Shorts #Bison #LongIsland #EastEnd #NorthQuarterFarm #Riverhead #AmericanBison #OutEast #NewsdayTV #LongIslandFarms #WildLife #FunFacts #THIRTEEN
- Title
- Catholic Shrine and Quirky Attractions of Long Island's East End | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 27:22
- Date posted
- 16 days ago
- Description
- Out East with Doug Geed, hosted by NewsdayTV’s Doug Geed, explores Long Island’s East End. Doug begins the episode at the Roman Catholic Shrine of Our Lady of the Island, a place of guidance and solace for more than 50 years. He visits a bison farm, heads to a Riverhead farm for a horseradish harvest, and discovers quirky roadside attractions of the East End.
Subscribe to the WLIW newsletter to stay informed: https://www.wliw.org/email-preferences/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=youtube&utm_campaign=description&utm_id=description
#LongIsland #EastEnd #OutEast #NewsdayTV #LongIslandHidden #Manorville #Riverhead #Bison #LongIslandFarms #RoadsideAttractions #LongIslandShrines #Aquebogue #GrummanMemorialPark
0:00 - Intro
1:40 - Shrine of Our Lady of the Island in Manorville
9:45 - Bison on a 14th-Generation Riverhead Farm
12:05 - 1896 Bar Inspired by Tammany Hall and Boss Tweed
14:07 - Harvesting Horseradish at Schmitt's Far...
- Title
- Movement That Changed NYC's Theater Scene
- Runtime
- 1:30
- Date posted
- 16 days ago
- Description
- Before Off-Off Broadway became a staple of New York, La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club gave artists a place to take risks and reinvent theater. This 1967 clip from NET Playhouse features playwright Paul Foster and La MaMa founder Ellen Stewart discussing experimental performance, artistic freedom, and Foster's play "The Recluse" — filmed inside an abandoned hospital on present-day Roosevelt Island.
#Shorts #LaMaMa #OffOffBroadway #ExperimentalTheater #NYCTheater #TheaterHistory #PaulFoster #EllenStewart #Broadway
- Title
- 1967: An Experimental Play About Self-Destruction | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 38:07
- Date posted
- 18 days ago
- Description
- In 1967, Paul Foster’s play “The Recluse,” featuring Ruth White and Bryarly Lee, was filmed in an abandoned hospital on Welfare Island (present-day Roosevelt Island) for a TV episode of NET Playhouse.
African-American theater director and producer Ellen Stewart founded La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in 1961, and the Off-Off Broadway venue remains a hub for experimentation. Playwright Paul Foster was a founding member of La MaMa and its first president.
"The Recluse" stands out as a testament to La MaMa's commitment to pushing the boundaries of theater. It explores the depths of self-destruction and dementia, featuring two women locked in a passionate and intense battle, all governed by rules of a formal dance.
Subscribe to a THIRTEEN newsletter to stay informed: https://qrco.de/BroadwayAndBeyond2026
The WNET Group presents Broadway and Beyond, a special collection of Broadway and arts programming, and archival selections fro...
- Title
- Creating Urgent, Combustible American Theater | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 9:33
- Date posted
- 20 days ago
- Description
- In 1995, stage and screen director, playwright and producer George C. Wolfe was running two New York City theater productions simultaneously and was changing American theater.
By day, the Public Theater's producer was building tap prodigy Savion Glover's "Bring in Da Noise, Bring in Da Funk" — a tap/rap examination of African American history from the slave ships to the streets. By night, he was directing Patrick Stewart in Shakespeare's "The Tempest" on Broadway at the Broadhurst Theatre. In both shows, Wolfe is working with rhythms and seeking to create an American theater that is “broad, complicated, combustible, and uncontrollable.”
Wolfe's theater philosophy and studio rehearsal process were captured in a profile on City Arts on THIRTEEN.
Dancer Savion Glover discusses his influences and creative process before the debut of his Off-Broadway show that later moved to Broadway. Actor Patrick Stewart delves into what makes Wolfe’s product...
- Title
- Deaf Girls Learn Classical Ballet at the Joffrey School
- Runtime
- 1:41
- Date posted
- 21 days ago
- Description
- When Beverly Sills asks 8-year-old Debbie if she wants to grow up to be a ballerina, the answer is an immediate yes. In this clip from THIRTEEN's Skyline, Sills introduces the Joffrey Ballet's pioneering program for deaf children — weekly ballet classes for girls ages 8 to 11, built around body language, creative teaching accommodations, and the belief that every child deserves to pursue her dream.
#BeverlySills #DeafCulture #JoffreyBallet #Ballet #InclusiveArts #THIRTEEN #Archives
- Title
- “Power Doesn’t Come From a Job!”
- Runtime
- 1:24
- Date posted
- 22 days ago
- Description
- In this climactic scene from the Off-Broadway play N/A, Emmy winner Holland Taylor ("N") and Broadway’s Ana Villafañe ("A") confront the true cost of leadership, compromise, and political ambition. Inspired by real people and events, N/A is a battle between generations, governing styles, and visions for America’s future.
#shorts #NAPlay #HollandTaylor #AnaVillafane #Politics #Broadway #OffBroadway #Theater #TheaterTok #LincolnCenter
- Title
- Jerusalem, We Have a Problem | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 30:11
- Date posted
- 22 days ago
- Description
- With a dose of humor, the documentary, Fiddler on the Moon, investigates how religion would adapt to spaceflight and environments where tradition-setting natural events like sunsets and moon phases become inaccessible. Neil deGrasse Tyson, astronauts Jeffrey Hoffman and Jessica Meir, and a quorum of rabbis and researchers grapple with the question: will Judaism survive in space?
#SpaceExploration #IlanRamon #JessicaMeir #JeffreyHoffman#NeildeGrasseTyson #FaithAndScience #Shabbat #ZeroGravity #Documentary #JewishHistory #NASAHistory #SpaceDocumentary #ColumbiaShuttle #MarsColonization #WNET#PublicTelevision #THIRTEEN
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- Title
- Nassau Police Didn't Arrest Her Stalker. Then He Killed Her.
- Runtime
- 1:02
- Date posted
- 23 days ago
- Description
- Jo'Anna Bird's ex-boyfriend was convicted of her murder. The questions that followed were devastating: Why did Nassau police repeatedly fail to arrest Leonardo Valdez Cruz when he violated her order of protection — not once, but at least six times? Civil rights attorney Frederick Brewington says there's no question her death could have been prevented.
#Shorts #DomesticViolence #NassauCounty #PoliceMisconduct #LongIsland #PoliceAccountability #NewsdayTV #NassauCounty
- Title
- She Begged for Help. 12 Cops Failed Her. Then She Was Killed. | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 23:49
- Date posted
- 23 days ago
- Description
- A 24-year-old mother of two, Jo’Anna Bird feared her violent ex would kill her. She sought help, but a secret 781-page file reveals how Nassau County police failed her. This documentary reconstructs the warnings, missed chances, and systemic breakdowns that led to her 2009 murder.
Subscribe to the WLIW newsletter to stay informed: https://www.wliw.org/email-preferences/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=youtube&utm_campaign=description&utm_id=description
#Newsday #News #THIRTEEN #THIRTEENWNET #WLIW #JoAnnaBird #DomesticViolence #NassauCounty #PoliceMisconduct #LongIsland #DomesticViolenceAwareness #PoliceAccountability #TrueCrime#truecrimecommunity
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- Title
- Inside NYC’s Off-Broadway Theater Scene | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 25:56
- Date posted
- 24 days ago
- Description
- Look back at the Off and Off-Off Broadway theater scene of the 1990s. This 1996 City Arts episode explores the extraordinary range of playwrights, directors, and performers whose theatrical works appeared across New York City’s boroughs in venues that are not big Broadway theaters.
Off and Off-Off Broadway artists who share their insights on their creativity include Jon Robin Baitz, Amiri Baraka, Eric Bogosian, Lee Breuer, Tony Kushner, Romulus Linney, Arthur Miller, Suzan-Lori Parks, Richard Schechner, and Nicky Silver.
Go behind the scenes of Richard Foreman’s rehearsal process. Discover Dixon Place’s living-room theater experiments and Ensemble Studio Theatre’s influential playwright development program.
Subscribe to a THIRTEEN newsletter to stay informed: https://qrco.de/BroadwayAndBeyond2026
The WNET Group presents Broadway and Beyond, a special collection of Broadway and arts programming, and archival selections from the...
- Title
- Broadway's Secret Weapon: The Costumer
- Runtime
- 1:31
- Date posted
- 24 days ago
- Description
- Barbara Matera spent five decades constructing the costumes behind Broadway's most iconic shows — Wicked, The Lion King, A Chorus Line, Cabaret, Dreamgirls. In this clip from a 1996 episode of THIRTEEN's City Arts, Matera shares her philosophy of no shortcuts and jokes with Nathan Lane about his costume.
#BarbaraMatera #Broadway #CostumeDesign #BroadwayHistory #TheLionKing #Wicked #AChorusLine #NathanLane #CityArts #THIRTEEN #NewYorkHistory
- Title
- The System is "Boiling and it's Killing Us"
- Runtime
- 1:31
- Date posted
- 25 days ago
- Description
- Two women in the United States House of Representatives clash over power, compromise, activism, and political change in this scene from the Off-Broadway play, N/A. Inspired by real people and events, N/A explores the battle between generations, governing styles, and visions for America’s future.
#shorts #NAPlay #HollandTaylor #AnaVillafane #Politics #Power #Play #Broadway #OffBroadway #Theater #TheaterTok #LincolnCenter
- Title
- Woman Behind Broadway's Most Iconic Costumes | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 7:13
- Date posted
- 25 days ago
- Description
- You've seen her work. You just might not know her name. For five decades, dressmaker Barbara Matera constructed the costumes for Broadway's biggest stars, in Broadway's biggest shows. Matera's workshop created costumes for over 100 shows, including Cabaret, Wicked, The Lion King, Dreamgirls, A Chorus Line, Mamma Mia!, Aida, and Follies. Millions of theatergoers, opera fans, and film audiences have seen Matera's artistry without knowing the expert dressmaker that executed the costume designer's vision.
In this 1996 episode of THIRTEEN's City Arts, step inside Matera's legendary New York costume shop for a behind-the-scenes look at a typical day — which includes fittings with Mikhail Baryshnikov, Faye Dunaway, and Elaine Paige, and with Nathan Lane during his Tony-winning turn in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.
From Broadway to Hollywood, Matera's shop created costumes for theater, television, and film, executing designs for some of the most ce...
- Title
- Raising a Deaf Child in a Hearing Family
- Runtime
- 1:31
- Date posted
- 26 days ago
- Description
- A group of hearing parents share their experiences raising deaf and hard-of-hearing children. It's a daily challenge to make sure no one gets left out of conversations, including at the dinner table. Skyline host Beverly Sills opens up about raising a deaf child alongside hearing siblings and reflects on how it brought her family closer together.
#Shorts #BeverlySills #Deaf #HardOfHearing #Accessibility #Parenting #THIRTEEN #Archives #JoffreyBallet
- Title
- Joffrey Ballet's Groundbreaking Program for Deaf Children | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 28:07
- Date posted
- 27 days ago
- Description
- In 1979, the Joffrey Ballet School created a classical ballet program designed specifically for deaf and hard of hearing children ages 8 to 11, with the goal to eventually integrate them into hearing classes — and to give every child access to the dream she deserves.
Meredith Baylis, a ballet teacher and former ballerina with the Ballet Russe de Monte-Carlo, developed the program. She solved communication challenges with creativity, special speakers, vibrations through the floor, and a blackboard. The episode also features a performance of choreographer Gerald Arpino's L'Air d'Esprit, and a candid conversation between Sills, the students — including her own daughter Muffy — and their parents about what it means to live, learn, and dance between two worlds.
Subscribe to a THIRTEEN newsletter to stay informed: https://qrco.de/BroadwayAndBeyond2026
This 1979 episode from the THIRTEEN Vault is part of Skyline, featuring performers and artists ...
- Title
- Immigration Politics on Stage
- Runtime
- 1:28
- Date posted
- 28 days ago
- Description
- N and A confront the human cost of immigration policy and the limits of symbolic protest. Inspired by real political figures and events, the Off-Broadway play N/A follows two women in Congress as they debate power, responsibility, and what meaningful change actually requires.
#shorts #NAPlay #HollandTaylor #AnaVillafane #Politics #Immigration #Broadway #OffBroadway #Theater #TheaterTok #LincolnCenter
- Title
- Story Time With Us! Celebrating AAPI Heritage Month | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 37:32
- Date posted
- 29 days ago
- Description
- In honor of AAPI Heritage Month, we're sharing five family-friendly stories that celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander cultures, food, fashion, family, and identity.
Hari Sreenivasan reads "Chef Roy Choi and the Street Food Remix" by Jacqueline Briggs Martin and June Jo Lee — the story of a Seoul, South Korean-born, Los Angeles, California street cook who turned a food truck into a cultural phenomenon.
Author Supriya Kelkar reads her book: "The Many Colors of Harpreet Singh" — a story about identity, expression, and the colorful Patkas (a traditional Sikh head covering primarily worn by young boys) and clothing that show the world exactly who Harpreet is and how he feels.
Parisa Spitaleri from the NYC Department of Education reads "HUSH!" A Thai Lullaby by Minfong Ho — a bedtime story that will have everyone drifting off to sleep.
Emma from WCNY Reading Buddies reads "Slippers in Hawai'i" — a joyful celebration of the ...
- Title
- Are Long Island's Waterways Toxic? NewsdayTV Experts Clash
- Runtime
- 1:24
- Date posted
- 30 days ago
- Description
- Is untreated wastewater poisoning Long Island's bays and harbors — or is the science being exaggerated? An oyster farmer and an environmental advocate go head-to-head over nitrogen, cesspools, algal blooms and what the data actually shows in this heated exchange.
#LongIsland #WaterQuality #ToxicTides #Environment #AlgalBlooms #LongIslandSound #Nitrogen #NewsdayTV #IslandInsider
- Title
- Long Island's Water Problem, Maternal Care Halt at Hospital, & AI in Schools | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 26:23
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- On this episode of Island Insider: Nassau University Medical Center halts many services for pregnant women. A new report raises alarms about Long Island water pollution and environmental risks. Police confront rising teen social media meetups, while experts debate whether AI’s risks in schools outweigh its benefits.
Subscribe to the WLIW newsletter to stay informed: https://www.wliw.org/email-preferences/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=youtube&utm_campaign=description&utm_id=description
NewsdayTV’s Island Insider delivers in-depth coverage of the issues and local news shaping life on Long Island — from politics and public policy to education, safety, and community affairs. Through insightful analysis and thoughtful discussion, the program keeps viewers informed and engaged with the stories that impact their communities most.
Chapters:
Intro: 0:00
Nassau University Medical Center Halts Maternity Services: 0:55
Long Island's W...
- Title
- Yoko Ono: Scared By Her Art
- Runtime
- 1:29
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- Yoko Ono reflects on how her interactive performance, "Cut Piece" (1964) frightened her. See part of it in this 2001 clip from THIRTEEN's EGG, the Arts Show, The New York Times art critic Michael Kimmelman called "Cut Piece" one of the earliest feminist works in performance art. John Lennon called Yoko Ono the world's most famous unknown artist.
#YokoOno #CutPiece #ConceptualArt #FeministArt #EGG #THIRTEEN #Archives #JohnLennon #PerformanceArt
- Title
- Privilege, Power & Two Relentless Women
- Runtime
- 1:30
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- What would the founding fathers think of two women running the House? Holland Taylor ("N") and Ana Villafañe ("A") don't hold back. From a shocking underdog election win to the chaos of January 6th, their battle behind closed doors is inspired by real women and real events. Watch the full Off-Broadway play, "N/A" now.
#HollandTaylor #AnaVillafañe #WomenInPolitics #TheaterCloseUp #THIRTEEN #Broadway #Shorts #Congress #OffBroadway
- Title
- Yoko Ono: The World's Most Famous Unknown Artist | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 6:54
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- John Lennon once said Yoko Ono is the world's most famous unknown artist — and he wasn't wrong. In this segment from THIRTEEN's EGG, the Arts Show, Yoko Ono, a Japanese-American conceptual artist and Fluxus founding member, discusses her body of work that crosses the boundaries of performance, film, music, and other art forms. From "Cut Piece" — an interactive performance in which audience members were invited to cut expensive pieces of Ono's clothing from her body — to a chess set painted entirely white, to a ceiling painting that simply reads "Yes," Ono's work consistently challenges what art is, who makes it, and who gets to finish it.
In 2000, to honor Ono's 40 years of groundbreaking work, the Japan Society in New York organized the first major collection of her past masterpieces, touring museums across the country.
This 2001 archival segment is from "EGG, the Arts Show," THIRTEEN’s early 2000’s arts and culture series that celebrated art's powe...
- Title
- Two Women. The Future of the Country. | N/A (Full Play) Off-Broadway | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 1:21:57
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- Emmy winner Holland Taylor and Broadway's Ana Villafañe star as two U.S. Representatives, generations apart, who couldn't be more different. Inspired by real people and events, the play N/A is a battle of wills and wits between N, the first woman Speaker of the House, and A, the youngest woman ever elected to Congress.
Filmed from Lincoln Center's Off-Broadway theater in August 2024, N/A is part of Theater Close-Up, a collaboration between THIRTEEN and New York City-area Off-Broadway and regional theaters, shining a primetime spotlight on a diverse mix of innovative theater productions.
Go behind closed doors as these two formidable women debate power, ambition, and change. N/A is written by Congressional aide turned playwright Mario Correa and directed by Tony Award-winning director Diane Paulus (“Jagged Little Pill”).
Subscribe to THIRTEEN newsletters to stay informed: https://qrco.de/BroadwayAndBeyond2026
The WNET Group presen...
- Title
- Sneaking Shakespeare Into Central Park
- Runtime
- 1:29
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- Joseph Papp had no permit and no money. Just a 45-foot platform trailer, an unstable sanitation truck, and an NYPD officer on horseback who looked the other way. In this THIRTEEN Vault clip from Skyline, Papp tells host Beverly Sills the story of how he drove into Central Park one night and quietly launched what would become Shakespeare in the Park.
#JosephPapp #ShakespeareInThePark #NewYorkCity #CentralPark #Theater #PublicTheater #Archives #THIRTEEN
- Title
- Visionary Behind Shakespeare in the Park & A Chorus Line | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 27:59
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- Theater producer and director Joseph Papp founded the New York Shakespeare Festival and The Public Theater. In 1979 Papp spoke with opera legend Beverly Sills about why he believed theater should be free and accessible to everyone, how he built a mobile unit to bring Shakespeare into city parks, and why his first Central Park performance was just the beginning. Papp used his Broadway hits to fund the risk-taking work he cared about most.
Papp also reflects on The Public Theater, his year-round home for new works and diverse, non-traditional casting. Papp's landmark productions at The Public Theater include Hair, A Chorus Line, For Colored Girls, and Sticks and Bones.
Subscribe to a THIRTEEN newsletter to stay informed: https://www.thirteen.org/email-preferences/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=youtube&utm_campaign=tp_bhm&utm_id=2026_tp_bhm
This 1979 episode from the THIRTEEN Vault is part of Skyline, featuring performers and artists with interviews...
- Title
- Alice Walker & Daughter Rebecca: Motherhood, Race & Activism | THIRTEEN
- Runtime
- 27:14
- Date posted
- 1 month ago
- Description
- This Mother's Day, THIRTEEN looks back at a conversation in 1989 between Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alice Walker and her 19-year-old daughter Rebecca — then a sophomore at Yale and an emerging activist and feminist voice. The mother and daughter spoke with The Eleventh Hour host, Robert Lipsyte, about their bond, their shared activism — including marching together in Washington for abortion rights — and the complicated realities of race and education in America, and the cost of motherhood on creativity.
Subscribe to a THIRTEEN newsletter to stay informed: https://www.thirteen.org/email-preferences/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=youtube&utm_campaign=tp_bhm&utm_id=2026_tp_bhm
This 1989 episode from the THIRTEEN vault is part of The Eleventh Hour, which was a nightly news discussion program focusing on important issues affecting the New York metropolitan area.
#MothersDay #AliceWalker #RebeccaWalker #TheColorPurple #Motherhood #BlackWomen #A...

