Category Archives: Teaching

Resources for TV Writers

Over the years students have approached me from inside and outside the School of Fine Arts with requests for an independent study in film. There is no film school at UCONN and although we have classes in Drama and Art and Art History, students often want to pursue their own projects such as live action,

Serendipity takes Shape

“Everything that kills me makes me feel alive” sing One Republic in Counting Stars. It could be the theme song for Serendipity, the protagonist in my original television pilot Red Fish, Blue Fish. Serendipity is a complex woman of contrasts seeking that next dopamine rush. She is her own worst enemy, a pleasure seeker, a

The Spiral Connection

I find it humbling when I return to the yoga mat. To authentically ask my body what it needs today and then to trust it, to allow it to unfold without expectation, takes courage. I am so driven by results that I can often get in my own way, creating all kinds of unnecessary obstacles.

The Beauty of Wabi Sabi

I recently had the good fortune to spend an afternoon at the Getty Center in Los Angeles and stumbled upon a book called Wabi Sabi for Artists, Designers, Poets & Philosophers by Leonard Koren.* I was drawn to it by the simplicity of the cover: a single, faded, slightly desiccated leaf.  Upon reading, the principles

Future Actor Training

There is an economic revolution happening across the globe that changes how we think as individuals, how we perceive ourselves, how we work, where we work and how we relate to those we are working with. In my experience, start-up theater and film companies will need to be small and agile, ready to change quickly

Learn to Read

Did you know that 73% of Hartford adults are functionally illiterate? That is a shocking statistic and one that galvanized me to get involved as a literacy volunteer.  When I walked through the doors of Literacy Volunteers of Greater Hartford, I had no idea that I would leave uplifted, altered and inspired. I had the

Breathing Deeply

One of the most transformational experiences of my actor training at The Drama Studio, London was working with the Alexander Technique. A simple and powerful practice designed to help us reconnect with our “natural” alignment, it has been an intrinsic part of my life ever since. Typically we walk through life in a patterned state,

The Actor Headshot

My University of Connecticut graduate students have recently had their headshots taken and some have come to me for advice. I have to admit that I don’t mince words. What can I say? I have strong opinions on the subject and those opinions are as diverse as the individuals themselves. But the bottom line is