Re:sound #68 The Big Show Show (rebroadcast)

Third Coast International Audio Festival : Re:sound #68 The Big Show Show (rebroadcast) Image
Third Coast International Audio Festival : Re:sound #68 The Big Show Show (rebroadcast) Image

Re:sound #68 The Big Show Show (rebroadcast)

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This hour, we’re bringing you a favorite from our archive… the Rockettes, the opera, congress, and other spectacles!

To find out what these producers have been up to since we first aired the show, visit ThirdCoastFestival.org

Backstage With the Rockettes

by Dean Olsher and Emily Botein (The Next Big Thing, 2004)

Manhattan has plenty of icons: the Empire State Building, the Statue of Liberty, the Broadway marquee. But come December, there’s really only one show in town: the Radio City Music Hall Christmas Spectacular, featuring fireworks, a flying santa, an indoor snowfall, and of course the world-famous Rockettes.

The Tristan Mysteries: The Five-Hour Mystery

by Amy O’Leary and Limor Tomer (WNYC, 2007)

Opera, by its very nature, is synonymous with extravaganza: the huge voices, the sweeping music, the epic story-lines, the performance that lasts hours. Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde, a five-hour opera, is no exception and it has one of the most colorful histories around.

Tristan und Isolde Act 1

by Ed Herrmann (2007)

For someone who doesn’t like opera, there is nothing worse than sitting through Wagner. For those who just can’t take it, here’s act one of Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde in three minutes, plus a summary of the action.

What Brought Down the House

by Brendan Greeley (2004)

In our country, one of the biggest shows around is a constitutionally mandated annual spectacle starring one of the biggest actors around, the President of the United States. Each year he (or she) is required to give a State of the Union address to Congress. In 2004, producer Brendan Greeley decided to do a brief analysis of the address to see what kind of sentiment got what kind of response.

Saturday Night Klein

by Sean Cole (Weekend America, 2007)

One of the hottest tickets to one of the longest running shows in New York is absolutely free. All you have to do is wait in line. Louis Klein usually arrives at the line for standby seats to Saturday Night Live by Friday afternoon. The tickets are given away at 7 AM the next morning. And he’s pretty used to the all-night sitting. He’s been waiting on the line since the show was popular enough to merit a line.

This episode of Re:sound was produced by originally produced Roman Mars and updated by Isabel Vázquez.

Image by ChrissyJ, music in this hour by Genki The Producer.

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