The Library will be closed on Sunday, April 5, 2026, in observance of Easter.

Lorraine Ali

How The Handmaid’s Tale Changed the Conversation About Women

Bruce Miller
In Conversation With Lorraine Ali
Wednesday, April 13, 2022
00:48:07
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Episode Summary

Since Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale was adopted for television by creator Bruce Miller, the conversation about women in society has shifted. In some ways, women have made great strides to break that glass ceiling, and in other ways, the progress for American women has taken a retroactive turn that makes this show all the more relevant and telling of what the future could hold. This is juxtaposed against shows like VEEP, Shrill, and Killing Eve, that show how far a woman can go and the breakthrough women are making in leadership, from the boardroom to the White House. The fight for women's rights, from the wage gap to body autonomy and access to healthcare are currently facing unexpected highs and lows. Join ALOUD for a conversation with executive producer and creator of The Handmaid’s Tale Bruce Miller and television critic of the Los Angeles Times’ Lorraine Ali on the role women have politically, culturally, and economically, and how that growth could be easily threatened.


Participant(s) Bio

Bruce Miller is creator, showrunner, and executive producer of the critically-acclaimed, Emmy, Golden Globe, and Peabody Award-winning series The Handmaid’s Tale, based on Margaret Atwood’s groundbreaking novel. Miller began his writing career on NBC’s long-running hit ER and has been a writer/producer on Syfy’s Eureka and Alphas and the CW’s The 100. Originally from Stamford, Connecticut, Miller attended Brown University and currently resides in Los Angeles with his wife Tracy, with whom he has three children. Lorraine Ali is a television critic of the Los Angeles Times. Previously, she was a senior writer for the Calendar section, where she covered culture at large, entertainment, and American Muslim issues. Ali is an award-winning journalist and Los Angeles native who has written in publications ranging from the New York Times to Rolling Stone and GQ. She was formerly The Times’ music editor and, before that, a senior writer and music critic with Newsweek magazine.


Spirit Rising: My Life, My Music

Angélique Kidjo
In Conversation With Lorraine Ali, Music Editor, Los Angeles Times
Thursday, January 23, 2014
01:26:42
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Episode Summary

Hailed as one of the most inspiring women of our time, musician and activist Angélique Kidjo shares the story of her world in the memoir, Spirit Rising: from the communist regime of her native Benin to her work as a UNICEF Ambassador and activist promoting education for all girls in Africa. Kidjo’s GRAMMY-Award winning music, rich with African rhythms, speaks to her own vibrancy, resilience, and to the hope she carries for the world’s spirit rising. Kidjo brings her electrifying presence to the Library in a special evening of conversation, story and song, where she will perform excerpts from her new CD Eve, before embarking on a world tour.


Participant(s) Bio

Singer-songwriter Angélique Kidjo has been recognized as one of Africa’s "50 most iconic figures" (the BBC) and one of the world’s "100 most inspiring women" (The Guardian). Among the many honors, she received her June 2103 appointment as vice-president of CISAC, the International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers. She now makes her home in Brooklyn, New York, with her family. In 2014, she will follow up the release of her memoir with the release of a new album of original songs distributed by Savoy Records and a world tour.

Lorraine Ali is a writer and journalist who is currently serving as Music Editor for the Los Angeles Times. She was previously a Senior Writer with Newsweek, where she covered culture, music, and the Middle East. Lorraine has written for publications such as the New York Times, Rolling Stone, and GQ and is currently working on a book about the plight of her Iraqi family following the 2003 invasion.


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