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A sneak peek into Black Theatre Ensemble’s spring season
A sneak peek into Black Theatre Ensemble’s spring season Courtesy of / BTE Black Theatre Ensemble shares its thoughts about adapting to a virtual landscape, as well as its plans for the spring season.
Black Theatre Ensemble, like all theater groups on campus, has been faced with the difficult task of reimagining theater as a digital medium. Unlike other theater troupes, however, BTE is a unique, artistic social group on campus dedicated to celebrating Black art and culture.
“We’re here to be a resource,” Kay Kemp, CC ’22, BTE’s executive playwright and art director, said in an interview with Spectator. “We’re here to be teachers and to be a group of people you can talk to on campus and make friends. . We would love to have perfect productions everyone would but we are not solely focused on the product, we’re more focused on the process.”
‘STUFF’ exhibit confronts pressing issues of racism and gender inequality
‘STUFF’ exhibit confronts pressing issues of racism and gender inequality Temi George / Columbia Daily Spectator Barnard’s Milstein Center for Teaching and Learning presents Dianne Smith’s installation “STUFF,” which celebrates the legacy of renowned playwright Ntozake Shange, BC ’70. By highlighting the voices of women of color, the exhibit confronts social issues of racism and gender inequality. By Vincent Hou | December 14, 2020, 2:45 PM
A massive installation created from brown butcher paper weaves throughout the lobby of Barnard’s Milstein Center for Teaching and Learning. It encases three television screens featuring videos of six women of color sharing experiences of their “stuff” being taken away. Alongside the installation, archival materials, including photos and manuscripts, are displayed.