On Indigenous People’s Day, William Warrener, Lead Producer of Arts in Action, invited three recent graduates and a current USC student to talk about how they use their respective art forms to advance racial justice.

On Indigenous People’s Day, William Warrener, Lead Producer of Arts in Action, invited three recent graduates and a current USC student to talk about how they use their respective art forms to advance racial justice.
Elementary students dance like no one’s watching as they step into their virtual studio, taking part in a key program that’s expanding during a tough time.
Scholar, activist, playwright, artist, and one of the original organizers of Black Lives Matter Funmilola Fagbamila will perform The Intersection: Woke Black Folk, her acclaimed one-woman stage play about the complexities of Black political identity and how humans navigate difference.
As a follow-up to an interactive theatrical production presented February 8 through 10, this community dialogue will offer a space for open reflection on identities, attitudes, and feelings about race, one of the defining aspects of our society and our individual lives.
As a follow-up to an interactive theatrical production presented February 8 through 10, this community dialogue will offer a space for open reflection on identities, attitudes, and feelings about race, one of the defining aspects of our society and our individual lives.
Combining recollections of real personal experiences and projected images from various media, this immersive theatrical experience is a vulnerable, humorous, and real look at one of the defining aspects of our society and our individual lives. Presented at CAAM by USC Visions and Voices. Performances on Feb 8, 9 and 10.