Coming to you this week from the Town Hall in New York City, a live broadcast performance of A Prairie Home Companion with Garrison Keillor. With special guests, innovative and magical guitar duo, Brazilian-born brothers Sergio and Odair Assad, and up from the Smoky Mountains of Virginia, old friends Robin and Linda Williams. Also with us, the Royal Academy of Radio Acting; Tim Russell, Sue Scott, and SFX man Mr. Fred Newman, maestro Richard Dworsky, a New York celebration of William Shakespeare, and the latest News from Lake Wobegon.
  • The Assad Brothers

    The Assad Brothers learned to play music as kids in their native Brazil from their mandolinist father. The youngsters went on to study guitar with Monina Tavora, a disciple of Andres Segovia, and their international career began with a major prize at the 1979 Young Artists Competition in Bratislava (Slovak Republic). Now these remarkable guitarists - Odair Assad, based in Brussels, and Sergio Assad based in Paris and San Francisco - spend most of their time on tour throughout the Americas, Europe, and the Far East. Their many recordings include the Latin Grammy-winning Sergio and Odair Assad Play Piazzolla(Nonesuch) and Originis (NSS Music), a collaboration with violinist Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg.
  • The DiGiallonardo Sisters

    The DiGiallonardo Sisters - Daniela, Nadia, and Christine - started singing together when they were kids Brooklyn. They still call Brooklyn home, and they still love stacking up those three-part harmonies. Now, Daniela teaches social studies at Brooklyn's Mark Twain Intermediate School for the Gifted & Talented; Nadia is a pianist, composer, arranger, and singer; and Christine is a singer and actor. The trio's debut album, Shout Sister Shout, was recorded with Rob Fisher live at the Virginia Arts Festival.
  • Robin and Linda Williams

    "Individually their voices can melt cheese, and in duet they can do all-purpose welding," Garrison Keillor has said of Robin and Linda Williams. Singing the music they love, be it bluegrass, folk, old-time, or acoustic country, these two have carved out a more than three-decade career that has taken them from Carnegie Hall to the Hollywood Bowl. They first appeared on A Prairie Home Companion in 1975, the same year they recorded their first album. Back 40 - marking 40 years on the road and 40 years of marriage - was released in 2013 on Red House Records.
  • Readers - April 23, 2011

    Sonnet readers: singer and actor Liz Lark Brown; actor Kristen Bush; Broadway legend Joel Grey; New York Times Executive Editor Bill Keller; Edward Koch, three-term mayor of New York City; author and educator Michael A. Morrison; and Michael Ramirez, Marina Del Giacco, and Giovanna Del Giacco, students at the High School of Applied Communication in Queens.
  • Garrison Keillor

    Garrison Keillor was born in 1942 in Anoka, Minnesota. He went to work for Minnesota Public Radio in 1969, and on July 6, 1974, he hosted the first broadcast of A Prairie Home Companion in St. Paul. He is the host of The Writer's Almanac and the editor of the Good Poems series of anthologies from Viking.
  • Richard Dworsky

    Keyboardist, composer, and arranger Richard Dworsky is APHC's music director. He leads the band, composes themes, improvises script underscores, and collaborates with such diverse guests as Yo-Yo Ma, James Taylor, Brad Paisley, Kristin Chenoweth, and Sheryl Crow. He has provided music for documentaries on HBO and PBS, and has released many recordings of original material, including his latest, All In Due Time.
  • Tim Russell

    One minute he's mild-mannered Tim Russell; the next he's George Bush or Julia Child or Barack Obama. We've yet to stump this man of many voices. Says fellow APHC actor Sue Scott, "He does a better Ira Glass than Ira Glass." A well-known Twin Cities radio personality and voice actor, Tim appeared in the Robert Altman film A Prairie Home Companion and the Coen brothers' A Serious Man. Tim has also been reviewing films professionally for over 10 years.
  • Sue Scott

    On APHC, Sue Scott plays everything from ditzy teenagers to Guy Noir stunners to leathery crones who've smoked one pack of Camel straights too many. The Tucson, Arizona, native is well known for her extensive commercial and voice-over work on radio and television, as well as stage and movie roles, including the part of "Donna" in Robert Altman's A Prairie Home Companion.
  • Fred Newman

    Sound effects man Fred Newman is an actor, writer, musician, and sound designer for film and TV. Turns out, no one is more surprised than Fred that he's made a career out of doing what he used to do behind the teacher's back -crossing his eyes, making sounds, and doing voices. He readily admits that, growing up, he was unceremoniously removed from several classrooms, "once by my bottom lip."