Warren Moffatt
Warren Moffatt, owner/operator of “Your Neighborhood Lawn Care” stops by the podcast to talk his journey from music to being an entrepreneur and how he plans to connect with his […]
play_arrow
Woke By Accident- Sambaza Podcast- S 7 234 – Renew or Let it Expire? podcast
play_arrow
Journalists Arrested And Charged After Minnesota Church Protest podcast
play_arrow
Journalists Don Lemon & Georgia Fort arrested in connection with church protest against ICE podcast
play_arrow
‘New World w/ AI & Robots’ – Karlous, DC, & Clayton in the Trap! | 85 South Show Podcast podcast
play_arrow
Episode 245: HAK-Tuah!!! podcast
play_arrow
Noem Called Out At Trump’s First Meeting Of The Year podcast
play_arrow
play_arrow
Ep. 31 – Ohio Politics, Redistricting and the Supermajority Debate podcast
About the guests:
Josh and Caitlin are theatre artists in Baltimore City dedicated to increasing diversity in classical theatre. After knowing each other through classical theatre for years, they began collaborating in 2017 to produce Shakespeare in a new way for an audience they didn’t see it serving. Together, they create hip hop adaptations of Shakespeare’s plays under the name Fools and Madmen. They are guided by their belief that Shakespeare’s plays belong to everyone and that everyone should have the opportunity to access them.
Fools and Madmen is a series of mobile hip hop adaptations of Shakespeare’s plays, touring Baltimore City Schools and communities. Their goal is to bridge hip hop and classical theatre culturally and artistically, and to combat racial disparity in classical theatre. They believe that Shakespeare’s stories and characters are for everyone to access, and hope to break the perception that they belong only to one audience or culture. Their plays integrate Shakespearean text with original hip hop songs, creating a lyrical and rhythmic mash-up of classical and modern language, of poetry and music. Performed in the round, scored by live musicians, by an ensemble of BIPOC artists, their productions show that the only thing separating Hip Hop and Shakespeare as artforms are the voices and experiences of the people telling the stories.
About the Show (Julius Caesar, running July 8-17 at Motor House):
A hip-hop adaptation of Julius Caesar, written and adapted by Baltimore artists Joshua C. Thomas and Caitlin Carbone Hernandez and directed by Mari Andrea Travis. Inspired partly by the film Moonlight, our adaptation focuses on Brutus and Cassius’ relationship, showing a male friendship as complex and intimate to challenge the idea of Roman stoicism as a pillar of masculinity.
The Truth In This Art
The Truth In This Art is a podcast interview series supporting vibrancy and development of Baltimore & beyond’s arts and culture.
Mentioned in this episode
Fools and Madmen
To find more amazing stories from the artist and entrepreneurial scenes in & around Baltimore, check out my episode directory.
Stay in Touch
Newsletter sign-up
Support my podcast
Shareable link to episode
★ Support this podcast ★
Warren Moffatt, owner/operator of “Your Neighborhood Lawn Care” stops by the podcast to talk his journey from music to being an entrepreneur and how he plans to connect with his […]
Copyright Blackpodcasting 2025