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Back by Popular Demand!
Performed to overflow audiences and standing ovations at its premiere at Charter Oak Cultural Center and since, the Judy Dworin Performance Project's Time In returns to the stage at Trinity College’s Goodwin Theater on March 8th at 7:30pm. Acclaimed author, Wally Lamb will give opening remarks and will precede the performance at 6:30pm with a book signing of his latest edited collection of writings: I’ll Fly Away: Further Testimonies of the Women of York Prison.

Click here to make an e-mail reservation for the benefit performance of Time In at Trinity College on March 8th or call (860) 527-9800.

Tickets: $20 for general audiences and $10 for students. A donation of $100 or more includes a reserved seat and a signed copy of I’ll Fly Away. All proceeds will benefit a special fund for college courses for the women at York Correctional Institution and Interval House, service provider for abused women and children.

In the afternoon of March 8th from 1:00-5:00pm there will be a Symposium: Building Bridges IV: Women, Prison and the Arts held in Trinity’s Mather Campus Center that will feature an interactive art exhibit, Talking Paintings, sponsored by the Concerned Citizens for Humanity and Community Partners in action Prison Arts Program and created by the women at York that considers the impact of HIV/AIDS on the women and those around them. Other highlights of the afternoon include introductory remarks by distinguished former warden Janet S. York, conversations with authors Rena Fraden, Jean Trounstine, and PEN award winner Barbara Parsons, panels on domestic violence, children of the incarcerated and more.

Click here to register for Building Bridges IV: Women, Arts and Prison Symposium on March 8th.

Click here to learn more about the the March 8th events

The Judy Dworin Performance Project, Inc. (JDPP, Inc.) is a company of performing artists who, on stage and in the community, seek to innovate, inspire, educate and collaborate as they engage in art making rooted in the belief that the arts can be a powerful agent for change.

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"…savage wit and righteous anger…strong choreographic images that both castigated folly and comforted the afflicted."
Jack Anderson, The New York Times

"…One of the state's smartest and moodiest modern dance companies"
Chris Arnott, New Haven Advocate

Photos: Ron Compton, Phillip Fortune, and Nick Lacy

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