Read about xeloda breast cancer here

Posts Tagged ‘Brown University’

Woman Around Town: Magee Hickey—On the Scene

Sunday, December 13th, 2009 by Stephanie Russell-Kraft

Magee on Camera

By Stephanie Russell-Kraft

Magee Hickey, a reporter for WCBS-TV in New York, is such a busy Woman Around Town that we have difficulty even finding time for her interview. Several attempts to meet for lunch are cut short by stories breaking elsewhere in the city. At the earliest hours of the day, the New York native can be found covering news developments in all corners of the five boroughs, connecting with the myriad lives she encounters. And after thirty years in the industry, she remains captivated by her work.

13

Each day, Magee calls the station around 2:30 a.m., as she’s having her bowl of Special K with strawberries, to learn about her assignment. “I call in and say, `What’s it gonna be? What’s my story?’ and it’s generally something that’s happened between 11 and 2:30 in the morning. A fire, a shooting, something that I can’t have prepared for,” she explains. “It’s different every day, [and] that’s the most important thing. I’m at a different location, facing a different challenge. I could never do a job where you go to the same office every day.” It’s a demanding job, but Magee seems to thrive from it.

little-baby-face-foundationAfter some schedule maneuvering, I finally get a chance to catch up with Magee on a Thursday evening benefit for the Little Baby Face Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to providing interdisciplinary medical care and surgery for children born with facial deformities around the globe. Although Magee has been awake and working since 2:00 that morning, she arrives at the benefit full of energy, looking polished in a chic black dress and gold belt. Within moments of greeting me, she begins to sing praises of the organization, introducing me to the president and his wife and making sure I’m taking notes as we go. It’s clear to me right away that this quintessential vivacious redhead is in the right business. She’s not there to promote herself in any way. Rather, her focus is on the people surrounding her—on uncovering and connecting their stories with her own questions.

Magee, who was born in Brooklyn but raised on the Upper East Side, grew up in what she describes as a “very interesting” family, characterized by an eclectic mix of show-biz and community service. Her mother was an actress, and Magee became interested in theater at a very early age. However, while she was an undergraduate at Brown University, she began to doubt her future in both the acting and music industries. After a professor noticed her propensity for asking questions, he encouraged her to try working in the television news industry.

“The minute I walked into a news room—I was an intern in Providence, Rhode Island my junior year in college—I just loved it,” she explains, glowing. “And from then on I just worked hard to get jobs in TV news.” She tells me later that she was drawn to the field by her “curiosity about people,” adding that “if you’re a person who asks a lot of questions, journalism is the field for you.”

Magee with Woman

At the Little Baby Face Foundation benefit, Magee chats with other guests about the organization itself, about season three of Mad Men, and about the merits of voice control. She explains that her goal, when reporting, is usually to keep her voice low, to keep it musical and soothing for her audience at 5 a.m. Her aim is not to change her voice, but to relax it.

When the conversation turns to signing, Magee explains that, despite her high-profile profession, her biggest fear is singing into a microphone in front of an audience. For this reason, she tells the group, she’s enrolled in an evening cabaret class. Not only does she want to conquer her fears and learn “how to sing,” but she hopes to perform a few songs at her father’s birthday party in the spring. She tells me, “My husband was confused, he says, ‘We’ve been married for 26 years. I know you’re scared of singing. I can’t believe you’re doing this!’”

Magee and man

Nonetheless, she’s committed to the course, and plans to sing three Cole Porter songs at her class’s live performance on January 16th at the Don’t Tell Mama cabaret club in Manhattan, alongside the eight other students in the course. “The other seven are singers,” she admits, “with big voices… and then there’s me, with a little voice.” She smiles.

Kate Sullivan, a morning news anchor at WCBS-TV, takes a moment to praise Magee while she’s in conversation with another benefit attendee.”Isn’t she incredible?” she asks me. Before I can nod in return, she continues, “What’s so great about Magee is that she supports people, she’ll introduce everyone to everyone, kind of playing a public relations role.”

The two women start to look tired (and I don’t blame them) as they discuss the merits of their 5 a.m. call times and their lives on morning television. I’m still surprised that they have enough energy to even be here.

“How do you do it?” I ask incredulously.

“Oh, you just do it. And you actually get used to it, don’t you?” Magee answers, looking at Kate for confirmation.

“No,” she laughs, suddenly looking just as incredulous as I.

magee-headshot2When we finally get the chance to sit down and talk in depth about Magee’s life as a reporter, I’m curious to hear about her experiences as a woman claiming her stake in the industry over the past thirty years. Within one hour of knowing her, I’ve already come to admire her strength, and I’m eager to learn more.

Although she’s never faced explicit discrimination as a woman, she does admit that she’s always faced challenges in the field.

“There was a job I applied for at a radio station in Providence Rhode Island, I was a senior in college,” she tells me. “And they couldn’t believe that I really wanted to do this as a career, full time. They were sort of more old-fashioned men. They sort of viewed it as ‘oh I’m gonna do this until I get married.’ And I was so gung ho that it never occurred to me that after marriage I wouldn’t be working just as hard. But there was always a sense that this is something you do until you find something better…”

“And then I remember when I was at Channel 4 and I told the news director I was expecting my first child, people actually asked me—and this was 1987—if I was going to work after I had my child. And I was so shocked by that question. ‘Of course I’m going to work! This is my career! I’m going to be a mother, and I’m going to be a TV reporter….’ It never occurred to me that it’s one or the other,” she explains. And yet she never saw any of these expectations as obstacles. “I think the biggest obstacles I’ve ever faced are my own, my lack of self confidence, and just pushing myself to be more aggressive, and being surer of myself.”

Magee’s always been her own toughest critic, pushing herself to uncover the most that she can about her city and its people. When I ask her which stories have affected her most over the years, she tells me about the killing of John Lennon and the various murder trials she’s covered. But then she pauses, adding, “Every story affects me. If it doesn’t affect me there’s something wrong with the way I’m doing the story. At one point I was covering the aftermath of a fatal fire in Crown Heights Brooklyn, where a stay-at-home dad died and his two year old and his one year old died in a fire. He didn’t call 911, he had been burning incense, the mattress caught on fire… the police and fire department came, but they went to the wrong address first, because it was called in at a different intersection….” She slows down. “It all affects me. I think about that man. But that’s what I love about the job, it’s about life.”

And what better city than New York to teach you about life? Magee explains that while she began her career in television reporting while finishing college in Rhode Island, she was eager to get back to her home city as soon as she graduated. She elaborates, “The typical career path was for me to go to a medium sized market and work my way up to New York. And I was impatient. I wanted to come to New York. I didn’t want to get to know another city. I loved Providence, but it was time to come back to New York. My boyfriend at the time was here (and I knew I was going to marry him), my parents were here, my two sisters, my brother, all of my childhood friends. And I wanted to get to know the city.” Her eyes widen as she reflects on the years she’s spent both growing up and living in New York.

“To me, the greatest thing about my job is getting to know the city,” she continues with child-like enthusiasm, “and going to parts of the city that I don’t know. I can tell you the best places in the city to get breakfast,” she chuckles, and stops briefly to collect her thoughts. “All of that is really the best part, that I really know New York. And [at the same time] you can never know New York well enough, there’s always so much more to be learned.”

Woman Around Town’s Six Questions

Favorite Place to Shop: (And I am quite a shopaholic!) are Topshop on Broadway in Soho and the Pookie and Sebastian boutiques throughout the city… but particularly the one on 78th Street and Second Avenue.
Favorite Place to Eat:
There are so many. One was Hacienda de Argentina on East 75th Street, but it recently shut down. I’m hoping it will reopen soon. I also love Amber, an Asian fusion restaurant on Third Avenue and 80th Street, and I love Blue Smoke in the East 20s. Right now, I’m trying out a hot and trendy restaurant on the Lower East Side, called Marfa, where my niece Meg Lavin is a waitress extraordinaire.
Favorite New York Sight:
The Brooklyn Bridge. I love the look of it, and knowing that my ancestors helped build it. I get a thrill going to Brooklyn. At least four generations on both sides of my family lived in Brooklyn and I feel closer to my roots and personal history there.
Favorite New York Moment:
I love New York in the early morning hours. On the shift that I work on at CBS 2, I am up at work before the sun rises. And there are often these glorious moments when I watch the city wake up slowly. I love being on the Brooklyn Heights promenade and watching the day start.
What You Love About New York:
The people, our spirit, resilience and plucky personalities. Practically everyone’s a tough, independent character, tough on the outside but with a mushy heart on the inside. I also love going to movies in the daytime. The noon show at the Lincoln Plaza is always packed. I want to ask, who are these people, and how do they have time to go to movies in the middle of the day? I also love the courses at the 92nd Street Y. Right now, I am taking Cabaret and tap dancing. The teachers Collette Black and Norma Curley are fantastic and so are my classmates. I love that you can stumble your way into a class and find this wonderful community of soul mates.
What You Hate About New York:
How expensive everything is. I don’t want my life to be about making money and having money. I want it to be about something so much more spiritually rewarding. I am very aware in my job about how so many people have so much less than I have… so the inequity of life in New York is upsetting.

Woman Around Town: Florencia Lozano—Stealing the Scene

Sunday, August 9th, 2009 by Charlene Giannetti

Florencia Lozano

By Charlene Giannetti

Perfect Stranger
, the 2007 thriller starring Halle Berry and Bruce Willis, was not a box office hit. The director shot several different endings, apparently unsure himself how to end the movie. There’s one good reason to see the film, however, and her name is Florencia Lozano. As NYPD Lt. Tejada, Lozano is on screen probably less than ten minutes. But in that short span, you can’t take your eyes off her, even though she is sharing frames with the Oscar-winning Berry and then Willis. Lozano epitomizes the oft-quoted statement by the famous Russian actor and theatre director Konstantin Stanislavski: “There are no small parts, only small actors.”

OLTL Jail

Fortunately, for Lozano’s fans, her role as Tea Delgado, the take-no-prisoners lawyer on the daytime drama, One Life to Live, provides her with a larger part and longer intervals on the screen. (On Lozano’s fan page, one admirer gushes: “I’d watch Florencia brush her teeth—she’s that good!”) Lozano returned to the soap in 2008 after spending six years pursuing roles in film, television, and theater, perhaps her true love. Besides Perfect Strangers, she completed the feature films The Ministers, with Harvey Keitel and John Leguizamo, and Veronika Decides to Die, with Sarah Michelle Geller and Melissa Leo. She has a long list of television credits, including memorable roles on Ugly Betty, The Lipstick Jungle, Law & Order Criminal Intent, and Gossip Girls.

florencia-long-hairIn June, she participated in a reading of Kate Robin’s play Swimming in March, part of the Women Expressive Theater’s Inkubator Summer Series. Seven actors sat in a semi-circle on stage reading this work in progress. Once again, Lozano was mesmerizing. On a bare stage, without the benefit of make-up, costumes, or props, she captured the essence of a wife watching her husband, a veteran of the Iraq war, disintegrate before her eyes. Her heartbreak was palatable. After that reading, we approached Lozano, wanting to know more about her background and career.

We met on a sweltering July afternoon at the ABC-TV studio where One Life to Life is filmed. Fans were gathered outside holding books, including the One Life to Live anniversary album, for Lozano to sign. She was gracious, signing, posing for photographs, even waiting for a fan that left to put money in his meter. Finally we walked around the corner, found a sidewalk table at a popular deli and settled in with salads and drinks. Fans continued to walk by, staring and giving her appreciative glances.

Lozano won the role of Lt. Tejada, even though the original description called for a large African-American woman in her forties. Undeterred, Lozano roughed up her appearance, going into the audition with her hair pulled back, wearing work clothes, including construction boots. After she was cast, Lozano went to her local police precinct and found Irma Rivera-Duffy, a female homicide detective, to follow around. “I met her cop friends,” she  said. “And she set me up with a firearms specialist who taught me how to shoot.” Lozano learned how to arrest a suspect, how to use her voice to command a situation. Coincidentally, her next role in The Ministers also had her playing a police detective.

flo-in-perfect-strangerLozano’s parents, Eduardo, an architect, and Elizabeth, a Spanish teacher, are from Argentina. She was born in Princeton, N.J. and grew up in Newton Centre, Massachusetts receiving her B.A. degree from Brown University and an M.F.A. from New York University’s Acting Program. Her parents still live outside of Boston and she has two sisters, one a pediatrician living in Seattle, the other an attorney living in New York.

While work in film and television is enough to fill her time, Lozano is loyal to the theater. “It’s very important for me to act on stage where I started,” she said. “There’s nothing like a live performance.” In 1992, Lozano was one of thirteen actors who joined together to form the LAByrinth Theater Company, “a multicultural collective that produces new plays reflecting the many voices in our New York City community.” Lozano served as associate artistic director and literary manager while Philip Seymour Hoffman and John Ortiz—and later John Gould Rubin—shared artistic directorship of the company. She is passionate about the company’s mandate to support actors from diverse backgrounds. “We’ve seen the people’s perception of Latino actors change and I like to think that LAByrinth had something to do with that,” she said.

Lozano has written a play, underneathmybed about a young girl growing up in New England with parents who came from Argentina. She discovers another young girl living underneath her bed. The play, directed by Pedro Pascal and developed at LABryyrinth and with the assistance of David van Asselt at Rattlestick Theatre, will hopefully be produced first in Argentina and then in New York City next year.

While Lozano has been cast in several roles calling for Latina actors, her appeal is broader, allowing her to play Latina roles as well as those where the ethnic background is not clearly defined. She played an extreme Latina cosmetics maven wearing a green sequin turban in an episode of Ugly Betty, and also was cast as the ultimate WASP, Elaine Waldorf, mother of Blair (Leighton Meester) in the Gossip Girl pilot. She was replaced when the series began not because she looked too Latina, but because she looked too young to be Blair’s mother. “I’m fortunate that I’m not limited,” she said. “ I can play a whole bunch of different things.”

During her hiatus from One Life to Live, Lozano continued to receive fan mail. The letters are once again pouring in. “There’s lots of advice for the character,” she said with a laugh. Lozano wears her celebrity lightly, perhaps a sign of her grounded upbringing. “It’s strange to receive fan mail,” Lozano said, admitting that she doesn’t Twitter or spend time on Facebook. She also is mystified by the popularity of reality TV. “It’s such a strange phenomenon,” she said. “I hope it’s a trend that dies soon.”

Even though she might nab more film roles living in Los Angeles, Lozano said she tried that once and ended up moving back east. “It wasn’t until I came back to New York that I realized this is my home,” she said. “This is my land.”

For more information on the LAByrinth Theater Company, go to www.labtheater.org

Woman Around Town’s Six Questions

Favorite Place to Eat: Downstairs at La Esquina in Little Italy. The Mexican food is sophisticated, subtle, gorgeously presented and to die for. The atmosphere makes me feel like I’ve been transported to beachfront Mexico.
Favorite Place to Shop: I like Enz’s in the East Village: vintage-y, retro-y dresses and tops. Unique jewelry and accessories. Dresses in window always catch my eye.
Favorite New York Sight: The water that surrounds our isle. Gazing out at the Hudson or the East River calms me and gives me perspective.
Favorite New York Moment(s): The unexpected ones, where a stranger smiles back for no good reason.
What You Love About New York: I love the people in New York, our diversity and how, for good or for bad, we are all in this together.
What You Hate About New York: The pace of the city. It exhausts me and I need to find conscious ways to slow down and to prioritize the quality of my life above work and getting things don

A (Rhode) Island Getaway for Your Mind, Body, and Appetite

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009 by Rose Chen

surfers

By Rose Chen

Rhode Island is small, only 48 miles long – roughly the size of Yosemite National Park in California. Its size, however, does not diminish its unique New England cultural heritage. The Ocean State has much to offer to its visitors, from legendary clam cakes at Iggy’s Doughboys to exhibits of innovative product designs at the eclectic art museum of the renowned Rhode Island School of Design (RISD).

Transportation/Accommodation

The best way to explore the true beauty of Rhode Island is by car. Although Amtrak provides daily train service to Providence from Manhattan, Rhode Island is blessed with almost 400 miles of beautiful coastlines (including the coastlines of its 35 islands) that are best seen by car. Narragansett Bay, in particular (it means “land above the river” in Algonquian Indian), is famous for its beautiful New England beaches. The Bay is surrounded by meticulously crafted mansions that speak of the grandiose days of Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby.

There is a large and varied selection of accommodations in Rhode Island. (http://www.homeaway.com/Vacation-rentals/Rhode-Island-vacation-rentals.htm). If staying close to the beach is your idea of a dream vacation, a summer rental would be your best bet since many of them come with exclusive access to the private beaches scattered along the Coastal Drive (From Narragansett Bay to U.S. 1 and 1A). That being said, there are plenty of public beaches open to non-RI residents.

If you prefer to have someone else clean your room each day, there are plenty of hotel options, both traditional and boutique, to choose from. After reading many rave reviews, my friend and I decided to stay at the Nylo Hotel at Warwick (http://www.nylohotels.com/), part of the growing Atlanta-based boutique hotel chain. The Nylo Hotel has broken its way into the ultra chic boutique hotel scene with an edge – its hotel rooms are moderately priced and combine cutting edge design and whimsy.

nylo-hotels-warwickMy single room at the Nylo was on the small side when compared to other conventional hotel chains, but fairly decent by Manhattan standards, and the space was aesthetically detailed and creatively used. There is a lounge/restaurant on site with a nice outdoor deck dining area overlooking the Pawtuxet River. One of the hotel amenities I most appreciated was the complimentary 24-hour gym, complete with steam room – a comfort to cost-conscious travelers. Rooms at this location range from $89 to $159 per night, and many vacation packages are being offered on the hotel website.

Gourmet Local Dining

I had never heard of clam cakes until my first visit to Iggy’s Doughboys, a tiny seafood joint that is a summer destination for locals and tourists alike (http://www.iggysdoughboys.com/).

1213782504_0789

Iggy’s is famous for its clam chowder and clam cakes. The clam cakes, also known as fritters outside of Rhode Island, are best tasted by dipping them into the famous New England clam chowder.

239

After devouring my clam cakes, I moved on to Iggy’s Lobster Roll and fried clam strip; both were unbelievably fresh and rich in flavor. My first New England meal was finished perfectly with Del’s Lemonade (http://www.dels.com/). You usually can find a Del’s Lemonade pull cart anywhere in Rhode Island during the summer time. Just look out for a high school kid under a bright yellow/green umbrella.

Things to Do

The city center of Providence has been gentrified dramatically in the last decade. While once known for its infamous bureaucratic corruption, today’s Providence is like any other up-and-coming city across the United States- filled with new riverfront condominiums and revived entertainment districts.

I was surprised to discover how many liberal arts colleges and universities are situated in Providence. While the city is home to Johnson & Wales University and Providence College, perhaps its best-known colleges are those of Ivy-League Brown University and RISD. Since Brown and RISD are adjacent to each other, this vibrant and young “College Hill” section of Providence is worth a visit and easily explored on foot. The RISD Museum is an art museum with a sensible collection of artworks from different periods, but most interesting is its eclectic collection of designer products ranging from a Christian Dior cocktail dress to Marcel Breuer’s tubular steel chair. The museum also celebrates its homegrown talent with displays of design products from its own past/current school faculty and students (http://www.risdmuseum.org/).

Close to College Hill is another quaint neighborhood to visit, Federal Hill (http://www.providencefederalhill.com/). Federal Hill is the Little Italy of Providence, home of the city’s early Italian American settlement and now of a more diverse population. There are a handful of wonderful restaurants and bars here.

When you are finished exploring Providence, hop in the car for a drive to beautiful Newport, R.I. Newport is another traditional New England beach community with a variety of shops, restaurants, and yacht club. Newport also houses some of the most luxurious oceanfront mansions once owned by America’s old-moneyed families. Many of these mansions, such as the Breakers and Rosecliff (seen in the movie The Great Gatsby), were built during the Gilded Age of America. For Kennedy fans, there is Hammersmith Farm on Ocean Drive, where John and Jackie Kennedy were married (http://www.newportmansions.org/). While in Newport, it would also be  fun to visit the International Tennis Hall of Fame before the upcoming 2009 U.S. Open (http://www.tennisfame.com).

Whether you are a design junkie, foodie, or outdoor aficionado, a weekend trip to Rhode Island will definitely mesmerize you with its abundant charms. As for me, I left Rhode Island with a relaxed soul; something hard to find and appreciate in a busy urban lifestyle.

A Dating Game Not for the Faint of Heart

Sunday, March 1st, 2009 by Charlene Giannetti

Becky Shaw

Fixing up a friend is always a gamble. If the date turns into a disaster, will you be blamed? Worse yet, will you be dragged into the aftermath if the two parties go to war? Becky Shaw, now at the Second Stage Theater, will discourage even the most enthusiastic matchmaker to opt out and recommend match.com instead.

The blind date starts innocently enough. Andrew (Dashiell Eaves), an aspiring author newly married to Suzanna (Emily Bergl) arranges for one of his co-workers, Becky Shaw (Annie Parisse) to meet Max, played with relish by David Wilson Barnes. Although Andrew knows that his wife and Max are close (as a boy, Max moved in with Suzanna’s family) he doesn’t know that Max is in love with Suzanna. Anything short of Angelina Jolie would not be enough to engage Max’s interest.

At first glance, Becky seems no match for the aggressive, cynical Max. When she shows up for the blind date in a frilly pink dress, she not only seems horribly overdressed but also fragile and vulnerable. Andrew and Suzanna back out of the date and we fear that Becky will be at Max’s mercy.

The evening turns out to be the evening from hell. Max and Becky are held up at gunpoint and spend some time in the police station and then in Max’s bed. Max is ready to write off the experience and we are ready to write him off as a cad. But then the scales begin to tip and we realize we have underestimated Becky’s steely resolve. (Parisee is wonderful in transforming her character from sniveling victim into a woman with resolve). She simply refuses to be brushed off and we have a flashback to Glenn Close in Fatal Attraction (“I’m not going to be ignored!”) particularly when Becky threatens to kill herself. Our empathy for Becky now seems premature. Do we even believe her story about why she dropped out of Brown and doesn’t speak to her parents? The play turns into “Who Do You Trust?” with no ready answers.

Gina Gionfriddo, the playwright, is a graduate of Brown’s M.F.A. Playwriting Program and currently a writer/producer for NBC’s Law & Order. It’s no coincidence that the dialogue snaps and crackles the same way it does on the popular crime drama. If Law & Order is sometimes short on fleshing out its characters, Gionfriddo has the freedom to do that with this play. We understand Max’s attachment to Suzanna, someone he knew from childhood as a sister and now longs to have as a wife. Susan (an outstanding performance turned in by Kelly Bishop) although the matriarch of the family, is caught up in her own misfortunes (she has MS and is widowed), yet her keen eye misses nothing and she pulls no punches in the family encounters.

In the end, Suzanna and her mother, Susan, are forced to reconcile some unfinished business from the past involving Suzanna’s father and, of course, Max. Nothing is tied up in a neat tiny bow. But then again, relationships are like that.

Becky Shaw
Second Stage Theater
307 West 43rd Street
212-787-8302

Find out why every woman wants to be a Woman Around Town

Sign up for our Free E-mails and receive news about upcoming events and promotions

Email:

  • RSS Feeds

  • Stay up to date on everything happening around town
Floral Studio Freshman Fifteen

Register

Become a Woman Around Town! It's FREE! Receive News & Specials right to your email!

Register For Woman Around Town