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Selected Shorts
Host Meg Wolitzer presents stories of inspirations small and large. In these tales, writers investigate moments in which art inspires life, or life inspires art, especially in a visual medium. In Elizabeth Crane’s “Blue Girl,” read by Valorie Curry, a young woman's secret life is given an unusual public forum. In Jai Chakrabarti’s “Lessons with Father,” commissioned for our Small Odysseys anthology, a middle-aged child tries to connect with her late father through brushstrokes. The reader is Purva Bedi. And in William Boyd’s “Varengeville,” read by Dan Stevens, a young man strays from his famous family as he discovers himself on canvas.
Purva Bedi is an actress and writer whose theater credits include Dance Nation, for which she received a 2019 Drama Desk Award, and productions with Playwrights Horizons, Soho Rep, the Manhattan Theater Club, New York Theatre Workshop, and many more. Her film and television appearances include One of Us Is Lying, Billions, High Maintenance, She's Gotta Have It Too, Madam Secretary, Nurse Jackie, The Blacklist, The Assistant, The Surrogate, Sully, American.ish, Once Upon a Time in Brooklyn, American Desi, and Gabriel’s Rapture. Bedi is co-creator of the web series Shrinkage and has written/co-written Gorgeous Nothings, Dolly's Dream Bimari, and the feature screenplay Preeti Popped It. She is a member of The Actor's Center Workshop Company, an Associate Artist and on the Board of Directors with Target Margin Theater, and founding member of Disha Theatre. She studied at Williams College, The British American Drama Academy, and the Public Theatre Shakespeare Lab. Purva also teaches acting at the Anthony Meindl Acting Workshop and The Prep.
William Boyd is the author of sixteen novels, including The Blue Afternoon, which won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction; Brazzaville Beach, winner of the James Tait Black Memorial Prize; A Good Man in Africa; An Ice Cream War; Any Human Heart; Trio; and The Romantic. He has also published several collections of short stories, including On the Yankee Station, The Destiny of Nathalie 'X', and Fascination. He is the screenwriter of the films Stars and Bars, Chaplin, A Good Man in Africa, and The Trench, which he also directed. He also created the miniseries Spy City, which aired in 2020. Boyd adapted his own novel Any Human Heart into a four-part drama for television, which received a BAFTA for Best Drama Serial. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and an Officier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, and in 2005, he was awarded the Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire. Boyd’s most recent novel, Gabriel’s Moon, was published on December 4th.
Jai Chakrabarti is the author of the novel A Play for the End of the World, which won the National Jewish Book Award for debut fiction and was longlisted for the PEN/Faulkner Award. He is also the author of the story collection A Small Sacrifice for an Enormous Happiness which was published this month by Knopf. His short fiction has appeared in numerous journals and has been anthologized in the O. Henry Prize Stories, Best American Short Stories, and awarded a Pushcart Prize. Born in Kolkata, India, Chakrabarti now lives in New York with his family and is a faculty member at Bennington Writing Seminars.
Elizabeth Crane is the author of several short-story collections, including Turf and When the Messenger Is Hot, which was adapted for the stage by Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theater Company, as well as the novels The History of Great Things and We Only Know So Much, which was adapted into a feature film, and the memoir This Story Will Change. Crane teaches in the University of California, Riverside, MFA program.
Valorie Curry is a founding member of Los Angeles’ Ovation Award–winning Coeurage Theatre Company, with which she starred in Balm in Gilead and the West Coast premiere of Shakespeare’s Double Falsehood. Additional theater credits include One Day When We Were Young at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, The Diviners at The Kennedy Center, and The Diary of Anne Frank at La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts. On television, she has appeared in The Following, Veronica Mars, Psych, CSI: New York, House of Lies, The Tick, The Lost Symbol, and The Boys. Her film credits include Twilight: Breaking Dawn, Blair Witch, American Pastoral, After Darkness, and Inherit the Viper. Curry is the founder of the production company 26 Films and a member of New York’s Fundamental Theater Project. Curry can be seen in the forthcoming film Start Without Me.
Dan Stevens is known to fans of Downton Abbey for the role of Matthew Crawley and for David Haller on Legion. His film and television credits include The Guest, Beauty and the Beast, Marshall, The Man Who Invented Christmas, Apostle, Lucy in the Sky, The Call of the Wild, High Maintenance, The Rental, Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga, Blithe Spirit, I Am Your Man, Gaslit, Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities, Welcome to Chippendales, Cuckoo, Godzilla and Kong, and Abigail. Stevens has narrated numerous audiobooks. Upcoming projects include Zero Day, The Ritual, and The Terror.
Meg Wolitzer is the New York Times bestselling author of The Female Persuasion, The Interestings, The Ten-Year Nap, The Position, and The Wife. She is a faculty member in the Creative Writing and Literature Program at The Lichtenstein Center at Stony Brook University, where she co-founded and co-directs BookEnds, a one-year, non-credit intensive for emerging novelists. Wolitzer, who was the guest editor of The Best American Short Stories 2017, is the radio and podcast host of Symphony Space’s Selected Shorts.
CREDITS
“Blue Girl'' by Elizabeth Crane. From You Must Be This Happy to Enter: Stories (Akashic Books, 2007). Copyright © 2007 by Elizabeth Crane. Originally published as a FeatherProff mini-book. Used by permission of Jean Naggar Literary Agency.
“Lessons with Father” was commissioned by Symphony Space for the collection Small Odysseys: Selected Shorts Presents 35 New Stories, edited by Hannah Tinti, published by Algonquin Books. © 2022 by Symphony Space.
“Varengeville” by William Boyd, from Fascination: Stories (Alfred A. Knopf 2005). First published in The New Yorker (November 1998). Collected in Stories of Art and Artists (Everyman 2014). Copyright © 1998 by William Boyd. Used by permission of International Creative Management, Inc.
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