Kendell Pinkney: Judaism Unbound Episode 329 - Workshopping Judaism
Kendell Pinkney is a theatre-artist, creative producer, and rabbi. He serves as the Artistic Director of The Workshop, a newly launched arts and culture fellowship for professional JOCISM (Jews of Color, Indigenous Jews, Sephardi, and Mizrahi) artists. Pinkney joins Dan Libenson and Lex Rofeberg for a conversation exploring big-picture questions of Jewish art, along with specific questions about The Workshop in particular.
[1] Learn more about Kendell Pinkney by clicking here, and learn more about The Workshop by heading to TheWorkshopNY.com. Follow The Workshop on instagram via @TheWorkshopArtist.
[2] Click here to check out an article about The Workshop, entitled The Workshop: An Arts and Culture Fellowship for JOCISM (Jews of Color, Indigenous Jews, Sephardi, and Mizrahi). To learn more about the A Walk on the Moon Fellowship, a recent partnership between The Workshop and George Street Playhouse in New Jersey, click here.
[3] To view the monologue that Pinkney references, from one of The Workshop’s Fellows — Rebecca S’manga-Frank — click here. This monologue was a component of a broader event called “Art and Artists on Being Black and Jewish,” which you can view in full via this link.
[4] Learn more about A Strange Loop, a Tony Award-nominated show (MANY nominations) referenced by Pinkney, by heading to StrangeLoopMusical.com.