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Bill Marx

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This article is about the theater and arts critic. For the musician, seeBill Marx (pianist).

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Bill Marx is atheater critic based inBoston, Massachusetts. Marx served as theater and arts critic forWBUR from 1982 to 2006[1] and as the host of apodcast dedicated to books in translation forWGBH (FM) andPublic Radio International'sThe World (radio program) from 2007 to 2011.[2]

Since 1982, Marx has also written about arts and culture for print, broadcast, and online media outlets includingThe Boston Globe,The Boston Phoenix,The Washington Post Book World,The Nation,The Boston Review,[3] theLos Angeles Times,[4]Boston Magazine,Columbia Journalism Review,[5]Parnassus,Ploughshares,TheaterWeek,The Village Voice,Tab Communications, andThe Boston Ledger.

Marx wonUnited Press International andAssociated Press awards for his radio reviews of Boston theater. He has been a finalist for theNational Book Critics Circle Award three times.[6] Under's Marx's leadership, WBUR Online Arts also won an Online Journalism Award for Specialty Journalism (Small Site).

Since 2007, Marx has been a full-time lecturer atBoston University,[7] teaching courses on the history of American arts criticism and the contemporary novel for theBoston University College of Fine Arts andBoston University College of Arts and Sciences.[8]

As Editor in Chief of TheArts fuse,[9] a non-profit web magazine Marx launched in July 2007,[10] Marx helped increase editorial coverage of the arts and culture across Greater Boston and New England with in-depth criticism, previews, interviews, and commentary covering dance, film, food, literature, music, television, theater,video games, and visual arts. The Arts Fuse has published more than 1,700 articles from 60 expert writers and critics. The web magazine serves as a next generation platform for arts and culture consumers acrossNew England and beyond.[11]

Marx began publishing The Arts Fuse in reaction to the declining arts coverage in newspapers, magazines, radio, and television, creating a site that could experiments with professional onlinearts criticism, looking at new and innovative ways to use online platforms to evolve cultural conversations and bring together critics, readers, and artists.[12]

The Arts Fuse's writers currently include Harvey Blume (The New York Times,[13]The Boston Globe,Wired, Agni), J. R. Carroll (WKCR,Crawdaddy!,WBUR Online Arts site), Debra Cash (The Boston Globe,WBUR),Franklin Einspruch (New Criterion,Weekly Dig, Big Red & Shiny[14]), Steve Elman (The Boston Globe,The Boston Phoenix,WBUR), Helen Epstein (author of six books of literary non-fiction), and many more.

In 2011, The Arts Fuse received a grant from Mass Humanities for its Judicial Review, an online, in-depth, and interactive discussion of the issues raised by the arts on The Arts Fuse.[15] The Arts Fuse also won CBS Boston's Most Valuable Blogger Award in 2011.[16]

Marx's professional affiliations include for the Best Translated Book Awards, Fiction judge, beginning in 2010, on the Boston Theater Critics Association's Awards Committee from 1994 to 2006, and on the National Book Critics Circle's board of directors from 1995 to 1997.

References

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  1. ^"WBUR slashes arts coverage - News Features". Archived fromthe original on December 13, 2013. RetrievedMay 13, 2013.
  2. ^"The World". Archived fromthe original on May 1, 2012. RetrievedMay 14, 2012.
  3. ^"That Sweetest Wine". Archived fromthe original on January 29, 2012. RetrievedMay 14, 2012.
  4. ^"'The Lieutenant: A Novel' by Kate Grenville".Los Angeles Times. September 6, 2009.
  5. ^"Bill Marx Archive – Columbia Journalism Review".archives.cjr.org.
  6. ^"National Book Critics Circle chooses awards nominees; winners to be announced in March".Independent Publisher – short.
  7. ^"Arts Now: Theater Now and Much More » Arts Now! | Boston University".bu.edu.
  8. ^"William Marx " Writing Program " Boston University".bu.edu.
  9. ^"Editorial and Operations".The Arts Fuse.
  10. ^"About Us".The Arts Fuse.
  11. ^"Protected Blog › Log in".wtbunews.wordpress.com.
  12. ^"In a Seriously Artistic City, a Home for Serious Discussion About the Arts - Somerville, MA Patch". Archived fromthe original on May 1, 2012. RetrievedMay 14, 2012."In a Seriously Artistic City, a Home for Serious Discussion About the Arts"
  13. ^"The New York Times – Search".The New York Times.
  14. ^"Archived copy".www.bigredandshiny.com. Archived fromthe original on June 28, 2013. RetrievedJanuary 26, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^says, Tweets that mention Great News For the ‘Fuse-Support for the Judicial Review : The Arts Fuse Blog-- Topsy com (March 27, 2010)."Great News For the 'Fuse – Support for the Judicial Review".The Arts Fuse.
  16. ^"The Arts Fuse « Most Valuable Blogger « CBS Boston". Archived fromthe original on May 10, 2012. RetrievedMay 14, 2012.

External links

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