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One on OneChristopher Harwood – professor of Czech at Columbia University

26-09-2011 | Ian Willoughby

Christopher Harwood Christopher Harwood is a lecturer in Czech at Columbia University in New York. When I met him at his office on Columbia’s Upper West Side campus, we discussed Czech literature, the difficulties of learning Czech, and how Professor Harwood himself had become good enough at the language to teach it at one of the world’s leading universities. More

SpecialSome highlights of our Czechs in New York series

26-12-2008 | Ian Willoughby

Earlier this year I flew to New York to record a series of special reports about Czechs in the city, visiting several important Czech institutions and speaking to dozens of interesting individuals. This special programme revisits some of those places and people. More

ArtsPetr Kotík – Part 2

17-10-2008 | Ian Willoughby

Petr Kotík, photo: www.semensemble.org The minimalist composer and conductor Petr Kotík has led the S.E.M Ensemble since soon after he arrived in the United States at the very end of the 1960s. In this, the second of two editions of the Arts dedicated to the Prague-born musician, he explains why he considers his hometown a musical “garbage heap” and lauds Ostrava, the city where he established an institute and festival dedicated to new music.  More

ArtsPetr Kotík – Part 1

10-10-2008 11:56 | Ian Willoughby

Petr Kotík Petr Kotík is a Prague-born composer and conductor based in New York. He is the founder and artistic director of the S.E.M. Ensemble, a group that performs modern classical music, both by Kotík himself and others including John Cage and La Monte Young. In 1999 he established the Ostrava Centre for New Music, which runs the biennial Ostrava Days institute and festival in the north Moravian city.  More

PanoramaFocus on both language and culture at weekly Czech school in Queens

02-10-2008 14:50 | Ian Willoughby

Bohemian Hall Every Friday evening during the school year, children from all over New York (and sometimes even further afield) gather for Czech lessons at the Bohemian Hall in Queens. As well as improving their Czech, the school’s pupils learn about various aspects of Czech culture, while their parents get to catch up on what’s happening in the community.  More

One on OneChristopher Harwood – professor of Czech at Columbia University

22-09-2008 11:57 | Ian Willoughby

Christopher Harwood Christopher Harwood is a lecturer in Czech at Columbia University in New York. When I met him at his office on Columbia’s Upper West Side campus, we discussed Czech literature, the difficulties of learning Czech, and how Professor Harwood himself had become good enough at the language to teach it at one of the world’s leading universities. More

SpecialThe Jan Hus Church in New York – a remnant of the Upper East Side’s Czech past

16-09-2008 13:49 | Ian Willoughby

Jan Hus Church The Jan Hus Presbyterian Church and Neighborhood House is to be found on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. It takes its name from the great Czech religious reformer Jan Hus, who was burned at the stake in 1415 and influenced the later Protestant movement. When the church was established in the 1870s, it was one of the hubs of a large Czech community that in those days totalled thirty or forty thousand people.  More

One on OneAntonín Kratochvíl – Part 2

02-09-2008 14:42 | Ian Willoughby

Photo: Antonín Kratochvíl Before he ever picked up a camera, the internationally renowned Czech photographer Antonín Kratochvíl led a colourful life to say the least. After escaping from Czechoslovakia in 1967, he spent time in an Austrian refugee camp, was imprisoned in Sweden and joined the French Foreign Legion, with whom he fought in a war before later deserting. In the second part of an interview conducted at his long-term home in New York, Antonín Kratochvíl discusses, among other things, how his own experiences have shaped his approach to photography.  More

One on OneAntonín Kratochvíl – Part 1

02-09-2008 14:42 | Ian Willoughby

Antonín Kratochvíl Antonín Kratochvíl is one of the greatest contemporary Czech photographers. Known for both his celebrity portraits and photojournalism, he is said to have won World Press Photo awards in more categories than anybody else. Much of his work is informed by his own tough experiences, starting with the Communists’ persecution of his family, who owned a photography studio. At his apartment in New York, where he has been living for three decades, I asked Antonín Kratochvíl when he had first begun to feel his family was being treated harshly.  More

One on OnePeter Bisek – publisher of the leading Czech and Slovak paper in US

11-08-2008 15:09 | Ian Willoughby

Petr Bisek, photo: author Peter Bisek and his wife Vera edit and publish the leading Czech and Slovak newspaper in the United States, Americké listy. Mr Bisek is also the president of the Bohemian Citizens' Benevolent Society, which runs the popular Bohemian Hall and Beer Garden in the New York borough of Queens. It was in the Bohemian Hall that Peter Bisek outlined the past and present of the bi-weekly, Czech-language newspaper.  More

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