Person Place Thing with Randy Cohen

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Author Archives: Randy Cohen

Music

527: Frederica von Stade

Posted on March 29, 2025 by Randy Cohen • Leave a comment

After fifty years as a mezzo-soprano, she still embraces this advice from her first teacher: “Sing as though it comes from the bottom of your heart, because that’s what it’s about.” Her most recent recording is And Crimson Roses Once Again Be Fair. She says it is her last. I hope not.  Photo: Jack Colver. Continue reading »

Scholars

526: Nancy Cantor

Posted on March 22, 2025 by Randy Cohen • Leave a comment

The new president of Hunter College is a champion of “social infrastructure,” describing it as “A public good. Everybody uses it, nobody owns it.” Libraries, schools, parks, or, in a decent society, healthcare. That’s nostalgia! Or hope. Continue reading »

Theater / Uncategorized

525: Zalmen Mlotek, Steven Skybell

Posted on March 15, 2025 by Randy Cohen • Leave a comment

“Isaac Bashevis Singer called my mother the Sherlock Holmes of Yiddish songs,” says Zalmen. His family heritage and Steven’s splendid singing were big factors in the triumph of Fiddler on the Roof in Yiddish. Presented by the National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene and the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research. Continue reading »

Theater

524: Charles Busch

Posted on March 8, 2025 by Randy Cohen • Leave a comment

“My life was a bit like the plot of Auntie Mame,” says this actor, writer, and drag legend. He’s got stories about Linda Lavin, Christopher Isherwood, Lily Tomlin, Angela Landsbury, Vivien Leigh, Marlene Dietrich. Plus, he sings. Accompanist: Jono Mainelli. Produced with 54 Below. Continue reading »

Miscellaneous

523: Peter Fong

Posted on March 2, 2025 by Randy Cohen • Leave a comment

He led an expedition down Mongolia’s Selenge River, described in his book Rowing to Baikal. “To me the river is like a god, a god that I can be in conversation with. I feel like it’s alive. I don’t always understand it, but I don’t understand God either.” A conversation at the Explorers Club. Continue reading »

Fiction

522: Ann Patchett

Posted on February 23, 2025 by Randy Cohen • Leave a comment

This much-admired writer owns Parnassus Books, in Nashville. “Because I own a bookstore, I get a copy of just about every book that comes out. It’s like being pelted to death with books.” Like that Shirley Jackson story but more ironic. The author of Bel Canto, on friendship, fathers, writing, and reading. Continue reading »

Television

521: Andy Breckman

Posted on February 15, 2025 by Randy Cohen • Leave a comment

This movie and TV writer—he created Monk—loves his local public radio station in Jersey City. “If you tune into WFMU, and you don’t like what you hear, just wait five minutes: you’ll hear something much worse.” Love expresses itself perversely, but it’s love. Continue reading »

Nonfiction / Uncategorized

520: Jelani Cobb

Posted on February 8, 2025 by Randy Cohen • Leave a comment

Dean of the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism and a staff writer for The New Yorker, he says, “When people ask what I think is the foundational institution of democracy, I always say: ‘the public library.’” Enjoy it while we’ve got it. And what’s left of our democracy.  Continue reading »

Architecture & Design

519: Sara Caples and Everardo Jefferson

Posted on February 1, 2025 by Randy Cohen • Leave a comment

To be a great architect—or painter or poet or almost anything—do you need a great patron? “Certainly that helps, but then you have to bring the talent and vision and invention,” she says. Oh, well, then, never mind.  We spoke at the Louis Armstrong Center, a building they designed. Produced with Open House New York. Continue reading »

Politics and Policy

518: Norman Ornstein

Posted on January 25, 2025 by Randy Cohen • Leave a comment

This political scientist sees a crisis of legitimacy. “When 90% of Americans believe there ought to be universal background checks on guns, and nothing happens, you begin to wonder if your vote matters.” Happily, he has ways to make our democracy more democratic. Unhappily, they won’t be enacted. We’re all pessimists now. (All = me.) … Continue reading »

Architecture & Design

517: Vishaan Chakrabarti

Posted on January 18, 2025 by Randy Cohen • Leave a comment

This architect, celebrated for repurposing the Domino Sugar Refinery, says that his young colleagues are eager to address the great issues of the day, “as opposed to designing spaceships in the sand built by slaves.” If that’s not the title of his next book, fire the editor. Produced with the Center for Architecture.  Continue reading »

Politics and Policy

516: Betsy Barlow Rogers

Posted on January 11, 2025 by Randy Cohen • Leave a comment

“I live overlooking Central Park, and I’m blessed at this stage in life to know that heaven is at my doorstep.” One reason it’s heavenly is that, in the eighties, as its administrator, she led the effort to restore it to its current glory. “It’s a wonderful feeling,” she adds. “For all New Yorkers,” I … Continue reading »

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Credits:

Person Place Thing is distributed by WAMC Northeast Public Radio.  An interview show, it is based on this idea: people are particularly engaging when they speak not directly about themselves but about something they care about. Guests talk about one person, one place, and one thing that are important to them. The result?  Surprising stories from great talkers.

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