- The K of D, an Urban Legend
Michael Rice interviews members of the team responsible for The K of D, an Urban Legend, which opens September 20, 2008 at the Magic Theatre.
- Flag Day
Michael Rice speaks with members of the Second Wind theater company in San Jose about their production of Lee Blessing's Flag Day.
- SF Fringe Festival 2008: There's A Monster In The Well
Michael Rice interviews Melinda Bailey, a member of Bitter Show, the sketch comedy group, whose extravaganza, There's a Monster in the Well, will be performed at the upcoming SF Fringe Festival.
- Shotgun Players: Ubu for President
Michael Rice sits down with Director Patrick Dooley to discuss Ubu For President, a very loose adaptation of Alfred Jarry's Ubu Roi.
- Roger Rees: What You Will
Michael Rice chats with Roger Rees, whose show, What You Will, is now playing at A.C.T.
- American Joe
Listen to an interview with Liza Raynal, author and star of American Joe, the story of a pair of siblings and some basic American freedoms.
- TheatreWorks: Snapshots
A brief interview with Robert Kelley, founding Artistic Director of TheatreWorks, about Snapshots, a new "collage" musical chronicling a marriage that has lost its way.
- The Notecards: A Living Museum
Michael Rice talks with Liz Lisle and Christopher White about their latest production, The Notecards: A Living Museum, an intriguing piece of work that explores the mind of a writer with a very unique relationship with her typewriter.
- Ann Randolph: Squeeze Box
Michael Rice, interviews the zany Ann Randolph about her show, Squeeze Box, a play that explores the relationships Randolph developed with the emotionally disturbed residents of a women's homeless shelter, where she worked for a number of years.
- Oakland Opera Theater: Queenie Pie
Michael Rice talks to some of the team behind the Oakland Opera Theatre's production of Queenie Pie, Duke Ellington's unfinished opera about the life of Madame CJ Walker, the first African-American female millionaire.
- Off Broadway West: The Ladies of the Camellias
Michael Rice interviews Joyce Henderson and Richard Harder, co-founders of the theater company Off Broadway West. They are producing the show The Ladies of the Camellias, a look at a fictional meeting between two 19th-century divas.
- Defending The Caveman
Michael Rice talks with Isaac Lamb, the star of Defending the Caveman, a play that explores the differences in relationships from both the male and female perspective. Listen in as he tells his personal story of how men are hunters and women are gatherers.
- Thomas Reardon: The Music Man
Does a criminal court judge, who tries murder cases, have what it takes to be a musical theater star? Michael Rice has a conversation with judge, Thomas Reardon, the star of Pleasanton Playhouse's production of The Music Man.
- RIPE Theatre: Mimetic
Michael Rice interviews McKereghan and Peter Parish of RIPE Theatre about their latest play, Mimetic, an absurdist play that explores mimicry in nature and extends its principles to the human condition.
- Jovelyn Richards: Come Home
Michael Rice has a conversation with Jovelyn Richards about her solo show, Come Home currently running at The Marsh in San Francisco. Come Home follows 26 black soldiers who leave their home in rural Arkansas to fight against Germany in WWII.
- Scrap and Salvage Theatre Company
Michael Rice talks with Jaime Mulligan, Co-artistic Director of Scrap and Salvage, a theater company that creates performances collaboratively, democratically and entirely in reaction to the space in which they are working.
- Sharon Eberhart's Savage Arts
Michael Rice interviews playwright and performer Sharon Eberhart about Savage Arts, which begins a run at The Marsh on January 18, 2008. Based on the true story of the Indian Witchcraft Trial of 1930 in Buffalo, NY, Savage Arts is the story of a naive housewife who enters a world of art, passion and Iroquois tribal lore when a French painter moves next door. His paintings of local Seneca Indians lead to a brutal crime.
- Jump! Theatre
Jump! Theatre tends to focus on the lives and stories of the depressed and dis-enfranchised. Definitely NOT light fare, but this company has found a niche. Cool as Hell host, Michael Rice, grills the company hard about their connection to depression and why they have decided to specialize in "Depression Theater."
- Elastic Future: Beautiful
Michael Rice digs down and dirty to find out what is happening with theater group Elastic Future. They are a bit strange, and one of them writes under a pseudonym and likes to wear skirts over his pants. The group talk about their latest production of Beautiful.
- A Halloween Treat: THE CREATURE Podcast
Trevor Allen, Director of Company Services at Theatre Bay Area and Artistic Director of Black Box Theatre, commissioned Cool As Hell to help produce his digital adaptation of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. Hear talented Bay Area actors James Carpenter, Andrew Hurteau, and Paul Silverman bring the characters to life.
- Mark McGoldrick, a paralyzed lawyer, performs his one-man play Countercoup.
Mark is not afraid to get down. He is an edgy guy whose legs are paralyzed. But don't let the wheel chair fool you. He is not afraid of a fight. Listen in as your host, Michael Rice, sees if he can push Mark to reveal the juicy details about Countercoup.
- Tim Sudano of AOP Pictures
Tim Sudano of Alpha Omega Pictures, is a recovering theatre addict that makes films. His latest project, Second Chance, is a film that supposedly dares to be completely original. Listen in as host, Michael Rice, tries to get to find out if Sudano is the real deal.
- Boxcar Theatre: Big Company
Michael Rice talks with Nick Olivero, Artistic Director of Boxcar Theatre about the production of Big Company.Nick opens up about his process and the show.
- Tony-Nominated Broadway Composer: Paul Gordon
Listen in as Michael Rice sits and raps with a Tony-nominated composer. Paul Gordon is a brilliant composer, a cheap-skate, and nerdy. Yet he is still interesting as hell.
- Carol Lynn Pearson on Facing East
Facing East playwright Carol Lynn Pearson sits down with host, Michael Rice, and opens up about the pain, anguish, and triumphs of having a 12-year marriage end after both her husband and religion fail to make good on the promise of change.
- Theatreworks' Leslie Martinson directs Theophilus North
Leslie Martinson hasn't directed a show at Theatreworks in 7 years, even though she is a 20 year + employee. Listen as Michael Rice explores this and other topics that revolve around Theophilus North.
- Ross Valley Players: Fully Committed
Ross Valley Players is producing a one man show with a twist. This one man show will be performed by 2 different actors on alternating nights. This show promises to be wild and fun. Listen in as Michael Rice discusses the creative process with cast and crew, while trying to maintain some semblance of control with a bunch of fun and rambunctious people.
- The Complete Works of William Shakespeare
Host Michael Rice visits the crazy world of The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, in which all of Shakespeare's plays are performed in 2 hours by the Marin Shakespeare Company. Michael gets up close and personal with the director and 3 actors as he tries to unveil the zaniness that surrounds the play.
- Mike Daisey wrestles with Great Men of Genius
Host, Michael Rice, talks about the genius of 4 men: L Ron Hubbard, Nikola Tesla, Bertold Brecht, and P.T. Barnum. Listen in as Mike discusses "genius" and the transformative powers of genius (whether good or bad), psychological engineering as well as artistry.
- John O'Keefe brings Walt Whitman to life
Host Michael Rice chats it up with internationally known playwright, soloist and director John O'Keefe as he attempts to embody the spirit of Walt Whitman in the recitation of Song of Myself.
- Shaun Landry brings MadTV's Ike Barinholtz and Emo Philips to the SF Improv Festival 2007
Listen as your host, Michael Rice, talks to Shaun Landry about the SF Improv Festival, the State of Improv in the SF Bay Area and the 2 famous people that will be in the festival (June 14-28, 2007).
- The Marsh Youth Theatre:Siddhartha, The Bright Path
Michael Rice interviews the cast and crew of Siddhartha, The Bright Path. Two adults and a bunch of kids make up this podcast. Mischevious fun ensues.
- Alison Jean White and Annette Bening: Two Peas in a Pod!
Host Michael Rice charms the hell out of Alison Jean White and gets her to open up about her successes.
- Aunt Jemima, Sports and Stereotypes
Host Michael Rice explores issues of race, identity and cultural stereotypes with playwright Kirsten Greenridge and director Raelle Myrick Hodges, the creative minds behind the Magic Theatre's production of RUST.