Marching Out of the Sweatshop
SOLO SHOWS
- April 15, 1912–Memories of the Titanic
- Heroes of 9/11
- 72 Years to Women’s Suffrage
- Straight on Till Morning
- The Extraordinary Ordinary!
- A Tribute to Teachers
- Mothers, Daughters, Wives, Women
- Marching Out of the Sweatshop
- L.B. 4:15
- Woman’s Work
- Angels and Troublemakers
- Saints, Soldiers and Spies: Women and War
- Women Who Changed The World
- Far as the Eye Can See
- Voices from the Resistance
- Civil War Women
- Love in Action
- Into Possession of Myself
- The Story of the Orphan Train
- I Can’t Give You Anything But Songs: The Life and Work of Dorothy Fields
- Voices from Ellis Island
“At the age of 10, I worked from 7:30 in the morning to 9 o’clock at night, 7 days a week, for $1.50 a week.” The words of a child laborer. Come and hear why there was a Labor Movement.
Running time : 65 minutes
Beyond excellent. Storytelling at its best.”
“Chock full of history – very uplifting.”
“Riveting presentation Entertaining and informative.”
“Wonderful, Inspiring, Enlightening.”
“Excellent, excellent, excellent way to review the history of the Labor Movement. Many do not know what it took to get here. We are still fighting the same fight.