Celebrated for his use of light, this architect is moved by that from distant stars: “Those photons are around us—we can’t see them—but they are fundamentally carrying the history of the universe.” We spoke at 7 World Trade Center, a building he worked on, through the generosity of Silverstein Properties. Continue reading »
Monthly Archives: December 2025
560: Jonathan Bank
The heirs of deceased playwrights can be finicky about new productions—Samuel Beckett, Arthur Miller—but the head of the Mint Theater has a different experience. “What I tend to run into from estates is, ‘Really? You’re interested in that old play? Great!’” How to revive neglected plays. Continue reading »
559: Alan Fausel
The curator and executive director of the AKC Museum of the Dog recalls one owned by Charles Dickens. “It was a Maltese that was so flea-ridden, they regularly had to shave him and bathe him to get rid of all the fleas.” The dog, not Dickens. I think. Dogs in art, ethics, and history. Continue reading »
558: Peggy Gavan
We tweak our format to Cat Cat Cat for the author of The Cat Men of Gotham: Tales of Feline Friendship in Old New York. “A lot of my stories I get from going to the Hartsdale Pet Cemetery in Westchester County.” She also leads historic cat walking tours in Brooklyn and lower Manhattan—about cats not for cats. Although . … Continue reading »