Steve Brown and Mike Ullstrup have been bringing original and adapted works to the radio and stage for over thirteen years. Winning over a dozen awards, including from the Wisconsin Broadcasters Association and the Wisconsin Bar Association, BrownUllstrup works provoke, compel, and challenge the audience - and sometimes just make them laugh out loud.
They bring together performances that are well written, well cast, and well managed. Historical events are thoroughly researched. Marketing and sales plans are focused, specific, cost-effective, and get done. Sound effects creation and editing are the finishing touch to their successful performances.
They bring together performances that are well written, well cast, and well managed. Historical events are thoroughly researched. Marketing and sales plans are focused, specific, cost-effective, and get done. Sound effects creation and editing are the finishing touch to their successful performances.
Services
At each episode of this situation comedy, we follow the adventures of the Edelsteins and the Greenbergs as they enjoy their retirement at Boca Del Rio - Phase 3 in central Florida having moved from New York City. A distinguished -- and single! The series was created and written by Brown and Ullstrup and they co-direct.
The words "Separate but Equal, " and "With All Deliberate Speed, " can all be applied to the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court decision in their landmark decision of "Brown v. The Board of Education. Eight-time award winning playwrights Dr. Steve Brown and Michael Ullstrup tackle another important social issue as their latest play is historically accurate, timely, and captivating.
Written by award winning playwrights Steven Brown and Michael Ullstrup, both of Salem, Wisconsin, "A Fireside Chat: A Conversation with FDR" stars Wisconsin actor Gary Stamm, who portrays our Nation's 32nd President, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. In this one-person performance, we explore President Roosevelt's personality, his younger years, his relationship with his father (James), his mother (Sara), and his wife, Eleanor.
The confrontation between Bryan and Darrow was reported by the press as a defeat for Bryan. According to one historian, "[a]s a man and as a legend, Bryan was destroyed by his testimony that day." But Bryan never delivered his closing arguments: Darrow admitted that Scopes broke the law and Bryan didn't need to present his close.
Thus opens this haunting novel in which a boy inhabits a seemingly ideal world: a world without conflict, poverty, unemployment, divorce, injustice, or inequality. It is a time in which family values are paramount, teenage rebellion is unheard of, and even good manners are a way of life. December is the time of the annual Ceremony at which each twelve year old receives a life assignment determined by the Elders.
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