What matters to you.
0:00
0:00
NEXT UP:

GBH Search Results

GBH Search Results | GBH

  • The man argues that the jail's policy of denying certain addiction medications to inmates violates the Eighth Amendment and the Americans with Disabilities Act.
  • Head brewers from three Massachusetts beer makers — Idle Hand’s Craft Ales in Malden, Portico Brewing Company in Ipswich, and Exhibit A Brewing in Framingham — discuss all things beer and brewing. Atwood’s Interview Series is hosted by Arjun Singh and spotlights a wide array of guests, including journalists, authors, local politicians, artists, musicians and specialists of all sorts.
    Partner:
    Atwood's Tavern
  • Six people have been indicted for allegedly distributing "large amounts" of heroin and fentanyl on the North Shore.The office of Massachusetts Attorney…
  • Born in 1938, in Suffolk, England, Helen Oxenbury attended Ipswich School of Art and Central School of Arts and Crafts in London. Oxenbury is best known for her work as a writer and illustrator of children's books. She has also worked as a stage designer in Colchester, England, 1960 and a television designer in London. Her many honors include the Kate Greenaway Award, British Library Association (BLA), 1969, for *The Quangle-Wangle's Hat*; the Baby Book Award, Sainsbury's, 1999, for *Tickle, Tickle*; the Kurt Maschler Award, 1999, and Kate Greenaway Award, BLA, 2000, both for *Alice's Adventures in Wonderland*; Boston Globe-Horn Book Picture Book Award, 2003, for *Big Momma Makes the World*.
  • Pamela Wilkinson Fox discusses more than 50 great houses in Boston's North Shore, designed by such architects as McKim, Mead & White, the Olmsted Brothers, Peabody & Stearns, and Ogden Codman. Since the mid-19th century, well-to-do Bostonians have fled the sweltering city streets for the cooling breezes, gently rolling hills, and rugged coastline of the fabled North Shore. From prestigious seaside communities such as Nahant, Marblehead, and Prides' Crossing to inland villages such as Wenham, Topsfield, and Ipswich, elegant country mansions arose, growing ever grander and more elaborate as the Age of Elegance progressed. Exclusive enclaves such as the Myopia Hunt Club, Eastern Yacht Club, and the Essex Country Club endowed the North Shore with a summer playground where Boston Brahmins mingled with Midwestern moguls (Henry Clay Frick, Richard Crane, and Edwin Swift), US Presidents (William Howard Taft and Calvin Coolidge), and artists and authors, including Maxfield Parrish, Edward Hopper, and Rudyard Kipling.
    Partner:
    Boston Athenaeum
  • Restoration is complete on the 1720 first period home in Ipswich, MA. The house is toured.
      |  23:12
  • Exploratory demo is done, and a 1717 home on the oldest street in Ipswich is toured.
      |  23:42
  • The crew takes on a first period home in Ipswich, MA. They get a tour from the homeowners.
      |  23:42
  • Paddy Swanson began his career in London as an actor at the Arts Theatre in the West End. In 1969, he toured Europe with La MaMa Plexus and subsequently got his world theater education from Ellen Stewart at La MaMa E.T.C. in New York. His numerous directing projects include opera, ensemble, music theater and circus. He was a founding stage director of Circus Flora. Paddy taught acting and improvisation at the London Academy of Dramatic Art (L.A.M.D.A.), the London Drama Centre, and New York University. He served as artistic director of the Castle Hill Festival at Castle Hill in Ipswich, Massachusetts, directing and co-producing opera and theater works, including the premiere of Julie Taymor's Liberty's Taken and Peter Sellars’ production of Cosi fan Tutte. Other directing credits include Tristan and Iseult with the Boston Camerata at the Spoleto USA festival; Shirley Valentine by Willy Russell at Houston's Alley Theatre and Boston's Charles Playhouse; Happy Days by Samuel Beckett, The Caretaker by Harold Pinter, and two stage premieres at Gloucester Stage Company; Talking Heads by Alan Bennett; and Fighting Over Beverley by Israel Horowitz . His Actors' Shakespeare Project (A.S.P.) production of Shakespeare's King Lear with Alvin Epstein was nominated for three 2006 Elliot Norton awards. For A.S.P. he subsequently directedThe Tempest, The Coveted Crown (Henry IV parts one and two) and A Midsummer Night's Dream. His most recent acting performance (after a thirty year hiatus) was for Gloucester Stage in their 20th anniversary production of Fighting over Beverley.
  • It’s Steve Lesnikoski’s first day as the outreach worker at the Ipswich Police Department. How he came into this role may have seemed implausible a few…