Steven Hall

I love to travel, but I got the travel bug a little later in life than most since I have my own business and never felt that I could get away. For the first seven years of operating The Hall Company I never left New York City until I realized … Read more

Scott Haas

Although I travel on average two months each year outside the country, ironically I still consider myself a homebody.  Few things on the road beat my dull, daily routine here in Harvard Square … walking Bello, my Bernese mountain dog along the Charles River, writing in my study, reading at … Read more

Michelle Ray

As the train crept slowly out of the St. Petersburg train station I gazed out and saw her, my kind-hearted stranger. She was smiling and waving as she blew a kiss, then turned and walked back toward the city. I waived and smiled back at Katirina, knowing that our paths … Read more

Traveling Through the Ages

Changing yet Staying the Same People often ask me how a mother and her two daughters could survive in the travel industry for so many decades.  Well, in our case it came naturally and the knowledge accumulated through the years provided perspective, a rich foundation and the courage to change. … Read more

Katy Ball

Working full-time for a travel guidebook publisher can almost be painful in the wanderlust it sparks.  A quick glimpse of a European spire or glittering wilderness on the cover of a new issue will have me pining to plan a trip there. Not unlike my time put in working at … Read more

The AAdventure of a Lifetime

    After earning a position on the Executive Desk at American Airlines following a strenuous training program, I was in dire need of a vacation.  With a prime contact at a web-based travel site and six weeks off, I was ready to go.  I’d always wanted to see South … Read more

Jeanne Toulon

Jeanne Toulon Enjoying the beaches of Southern California while growing up in the 70’s, it was a lifelong dream to live in Hawaii.  I envied the island lifestyle, the ocean, sun and the surfing culture.  While in college, I was invited to spend my month long Christmas vacation with my … Read more

Michael Komarnitsky

Just Smile My life for the last several years had been like Ryan Bingham’s in Up in the Air. As a management consultant at Booz & Company, I was on the road on average 40 weeks a year.  Every Monday morning (or Sunday night) I would pack my bags, kiss … Read more

Now Boarding

I can still remember the humidity and the aroma of jet fuel on American Eagle flight #4943, as the hatch of the small propeller plane was opened. My leather seat was worn from years of use, and the tiny plastic window on my left was sporting a web of cracks, … Read more

Fogelsville, Pennsylvania

As a chef, learning about where food comes from is a vital foundation of our work in the kitchen. The opportunity to “live off the land” is something one should never take for granted and this has been a good part of my experience while working at The Glasbern Inn. … Read more

Variety is the Spice of Life

Variety is the Spice of Life I always had a strong interest in airplanes but when aviation became my business it really opened my eyes to other things rather than just the actual planes.  For example, there are many exotic airports and tricky runways around the world that are only … Read more

Drury Lane Theatre, Chicago

The Music of Something Beginning The Regeneration of Chicago’s Drury Lane Theatre Renaissance.  It’s a term one hears a lot lately on the subject of the Drury Lane Theatre, along with Legacy and, perhaps most especially, Family.  At a time when theater in general, and regional theater in particular, faces … Read more

Performance Space Talks To: Rachel Rockwell, Director

  Complete creative control. That’s the mouth-watering carrot Chicago’s Drury Lane Theatre is dangling before its directors this season.  Each will get to choose not only the show they want to do, but the design team they need to help them realize their vision, the cast they feel can best … Read more

Performance Space

The Lights that Hypnotize Electricity is in the air as I approach the Theater of Living Arts in downtown Philadelphia. TLA as it’s more commonly known to the locals, is right on South Street, a hip strip of artsy boutiques, galleries, restaurants, bars and even a condom palace. A former … Read more

San Diego, California

The San Diego Symphony   100 Years and Counting The symphony probably isn’t the first thing that comes to mind when you think of San Diego. For many visitors, palm trees, beaches and sunsets tend to overshadow theaters, museums and concert halls.  I myself had no idea that my city … Read more