9 episodes

Stories from the Top is a podcast featuring people you know and people you should know. Artists, educators, and entrepreneurs linked to Southeast Michigan share stories about how they connect with others, cultivate inspiration, map out processes, or rise from failure. Each episode explores an individual at the top of their game chatting with a friend or colleague on a video call which will become the audio podcast.

Stories from The Top Ann Arbor Summer Festival

    • Arts

Stories from the Top is a podcast featuring people you know and people you should know. Artists, educators, and entrepreneurs linked to Southeast Michigan share stories about how they connect with others, cultivate inspiration, map out processes, or rise from failure. Each episode explores an individual at the top of their game chatting with a friend or colleague on a video call which will become the audio podcast.

    Abigail Browde & Michael Silverstone

    Abigail Browde & Michael Silverstone

    In this episode, we hear from Abigail Browde & Michael Silverstone, otherwise known as the theater company 600 HIGHWAYMEN, about their newest piece, A Thousand Ways, which A2SF and The University of Michigan Museum of Art are co-presenting. Abby and Michael make live art that, through a variety of radical approaches, illuminates the inherent poignancy of people coming together. They talk about their struggles of working during a pandemic, learning to embrace different perspectives, and diminishing the divide between people who otherwise might not talk with each other.
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    • 23 min
    Lawrence "Larry" La Fountain-Stokes

    Lawrence "Larry" La Fountain-Stokes

    Lawrence La Fountain-Stokes is a professor of Spanish, American Culture, and Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Michigan who’s main research interests are queer/LGBT Hispanic Caribbean studies, U.S. Latinx American literary, cultural, and performance studies. In his first book, Queer Ricans: Cultures and Sexualities in the Diaspora, Larry analyzed portrayals of migration, sexual diversity, and gender nonconformity in Puerto Rican cultural productions. His most recent book, Translocas: The Politics of Puerto Rican Drag and Trans Performance was published in 2021. In this episode, Larry talks about his upbringing in Puerto Rico, his journey though higher education—both as a studen t and a professor—and his own drag persona, Lola Von Miramar, who lectures and educates about queer Puerto Rican and Latinx culture in the United States.
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    • 24 min
    Heena Patel

    Heena Patel

    In this episode, Heena Patel, CEO of MELA Arts Connect, talks about her upbringing in Toronto, Canada, how she transitioned from being a sanitation engineer into a tabla player and performing arts entrepreneur, and where she is now as a cultural connector for arts organizations. Over the years and through MELA, she’s assumed the roles of producer, booking agent, manager, dancer, musician, teaching artist, and diversity and equity advocate. She serves as producer and artistic director for the immersive dance experience Garba360, which is part of the 2021 A2SF summer festival season.
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    • 22 min
    Asa Wember and Michael Rau

    Asa Wember and Michael Rau

    In this episode, we hear from the co-creators of “Temping” by the theater collective Wolf 359. The show, a theater for one production that takes people through a unique experience with no actors—puts audience members in the role of a temp, filling in for Sarah Jane Tully, a 53-year-old actuary who is taking her first vacation in years. Director Michael Rau and technical designer Asa Wember talk about their collaboration with playwright Michael Yates Crowley, how the Wolf 359 collective came to be, and why they believe so strongly in the exploration of everyday technology’s impact on our lives. “Temping” runs June 15-July 3, 2021 in partnership with the Ann Arbor District Library. Go here to sign up for the show for free. 
    https://a2sf.org/temping/
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    • 20 min
    David Zinn

    David Zinn

    In this episode Ann Arbor artist and Top of the Park regular David Zinn, reflects on his work and his imaginary friends. Thanks to the temptations of a box of sidewalk chalk on an unusually sunny day, David is known all over the world for the art he creates under his feet. David’s temporary street drawings are composed entirely of chalk, charcoal and found objects, and are always improvised on location through a process known as “pareidolic anamorphosis” or “anamorphic pareidolia.” His most frequent characters are Sluggo and Philomena, but the diversity of David’s menagerie seems to be limited only by the size of the sidewalk and the spirit of the day. 
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    • 26 min
    Mike Farah with Michael Kosta

    Mike Farah with Michael Kosta

    In this episode, Mike Farah, Chief Executive Officer of Funny or Die, a premiere comedy company with award-winning content and an audience of more than 40 million people. Farah has produced shows such as Between Two Ferns and Billy on the Street, and he continues to grow Funny or Die with his producing acumen, talent relationships, and industry leadership. Mike sat down with his childhood friend and comedian Michael Kosta, a Senior Correspondent on The Daily Show with Trevor Noah, to discuss challenges in the entertainment industry and what’s on the horizon for comedy as it relates to social justice and public health. And now Mike Farah with Michael Kosta.
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    • 30 min

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