Are you addicted to your google calendar too or is it just me?
Read MoreFor five and a half years, the Brooklyn apartment I called HOME was really more of a container to keep my stuff. It was a place where I cooked food that fueled me, slept, hosted dinner parties and cookie baking, grew into my relationship and my marriage, but mostly, it was an expensive storage unit.
Read MorePART TWO: A few months ago, I took on the painfully agonizing, maddening, full of self-loathing for not having been more organized ten years ago, and dreadfully boring task of reorganizing my external hard drives. I found some incredible things.
Read MoreA few months ago, I took on the painfully agonizing, maddening, full of self-loathing for not-having-been-more-organized-ten-years-ago, and dreadfully boring task of reorganizing my external hard drives. I found some incredible things.
Read MoreI used to think every email I sent was “bothering someone”.
I used to think every email I sent had to ask for something.
I used to think every unanswered email I sent was a personal attack, a criticism, and my fault.
Read MoreIn 2022, when it comes to my creativity, I promise to constantly choose to view it as…
Read MoreA letter to resistance as we enter a new year.
Read MoreOh, self-tapes.
How we love to hate thee.
Unfortunately, and fortunately, they aren’t going away anytime soon.
Read MoreWhat would Jenna in 10 years say to you now? And if you get stuck, think about what you would say to you 10 years ago? (Thank you to Alison Novelli for this week’s inspo.)
Read MoreCongratulations, you’ve reached Chapter 26 of learning to sing.
Read MoreToday marks a full year since Broadway went dark. A lot has happened. A lot has changed. You’re in a continuously evolving production of Into the Woods. And like Sondheim says, “You’ve changed.”
Read MoreYou know what’s the best? Watching people’s eyes light up when they get excited about something.
Read More…Remember the days of eating at restaurants?
It got me thinking: Chefs, like us, are artists.
Artists with multiple artistic avenues.
Read MoreConsider inviting more curiosity into 2021 with some sage wisdom from THE Randy Graff.
Read MoreAmong many things I’ve learned over the past nine months, the most palpable lesson has been the harsh reminder that we don’t actually have as much control over things as we’d like to think.
Read MoreDuring this season of Thanksgiving and gratitude, I’ve been thinking a lot about frames. Frames being the vessels in which we contain and display something worth sharing. And I’ve been asking myself, “If you had to put 2020 in a frame, what would it look like?”
Read MoreI present this week’s blog, which is an ode to my 90s childhood as well as a metaphoric attempt at answering the question currently on the tip of many of my clients’ tongues.
Read MoreLast week, I asked a wildly successful NYC agent if he had any advice for theatrical actors living through our current theatre-less predicament. His answer shocked me.
Read MoreSix months into a seemingly never ending pandemic and theatrical pause, it feels like many of us are in creative and artistic dips. Recently, someone asked me how I navigate the dip, and I said it’s like Battleship. A good harbor maintains a balanced fleet, so to avoid getting stuck in the dip, have multiple projects on the dock. In order to win the game, you have to sink ALL of the boats, big, small, and in between.
Read MoreWhat are you curious to learn this fall? What projects, ideas, noodles, curiosities are itching for your focus and attention? What would it feel like to concentrate on spending the next few weeks creating something new? Expanding your skill set? Establishing a new routine?
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