Lizzie Borden poem by Michael Brimbau
Archive - July 2018
News and Views that Wouldn’t Fit: Notes from the Compositor’s Bench, November, 2007
Doug Walters takes a whimsical look at modern day from the perspective of a Victorian.
Eli Bence, The Man Who Might Have
Bence was not a stranger to death, tragedy, or hard work.
Unwomanly Weapons and the Women who Wield Them Parker and Hulme: Good Imaginations Gone Wrong
But this is not the story of Henry Hulme. It is a story of the unlucky ones: the victim, Nora Parker, and her killers, daughter Pauline and Juliet Hulme.
Lizzie Borden Live Director’s Notes
I told her she should take a serious look at this, and that Lizzie was a fascinating woman.
Why Lizzie Borden?
For five years, I’ve been looking for someone to write and/or perform a piece on this fascinating and provocative woman
Interview with Jill Dalton, Writer and Performer of Lizzie Borden Live
An interview with Jill Dalton, writer and performer of Lizzie Borden Live.
Lizzie Borden Live: A One-Woman Show
The play takes place on a morning in 1905, the very day that Emma Borden, because of undisclosed irreconcilable differences, moved out of their French Street home, never to see or talk to her sister again
More is More: The Victorian Obsession with Collecting
The most affordable and common collectibles were the easily obtainable paper objects, or ephemera.
“Family Secrets”: The Spectator, 7 January 1998
Lewis “Pete” Peterson, a Fall River native, was frustrated at the way he perceived Brown had re-written history, and he aimed to set the record straight.