What matters to you.
0:00
0:00
NEXT UP:
 
Top

People

  • Anne Biklé is a biologist with professional experience in watershed restoration, environmental planning, and public health. She has co-authored with her geologist husband, David Montgomery, two books: _What Your Food Ate_ and _The Hidden Half of Nature_
  • Since 1994, Anne Brengle has brought her considerable management and curatorial skills and her far-reaching vision to her position as Executive Director of the New Bedford Whaling Museum. She received her B.A. from New York University and completed coursework for an M.A. in Museum Studies at Lesley College Graduate School. She holds certificates from the Getty Leadership Institute, the Museum Management Program, University of Colorado; Project Management, Harvard University Graduate School of Design; Executive Summer Institute and Center for Creative Leadership, Jessie Ball duPont Fund Institute; Summer Institute-American Arts and the American Experience, Boston University, Museum of Fine Arts, and Yale University. Ms. Brengle served as Executive Director of the Rotch-Jones-Duff House and Garden Museum, New Bedford, 1991-94. Her awards include: New Bedford Standard Times Woman of the Year, 1999; Official Citation, State Senate of Massachusetts for Bringing a sense of dignity and culture to the city of New Bedford, 1998; Community Leader of the Year, New Bedford Chamber of Commerce, 1997; Official Citation, City of New Bedford for Significant contribution to the city's arts and culture, 1996. Ms. Brengle currently is Vice President of the Council of American Maritime Museums, and serves on the boards of the New Bedford Historic Commission, Waterfront Historic Area League, and the Massachusetts Advocates for the Arts, Sciences and Humanities.
  • Anne Kiyono Calef is a Research Fellow at Boston Indicators, where her work focuses on the social and economic impacts of the COVID19 pandemic on the Greater Boston region. She recently completed a Master of City Planning degree from MIT where her work focused on school segregation, housing, and equitable economic development. Prior to MIT, she worked as a public school teacher and leader for six years. She holds a Master’s degree in Educational Studies from Johns Hopkins University and a BA in Asian American Studies from Pomona College.
  • Anne Dolan is an historian at Dublin's Trinity College and the author of *Commemorating the Irish Civil War: History and Memory, 1923-2000*.
  • Author of *Complicity: How The North Promoted, Prolonged, And Profited From Slavery*. Anne Farrow is a veteran journalists for *The Hartford Courant*, the country's oldest newspaper in continuous publication.
  • Anne M. Finucane is president for the Northeast, Bank of America. Reporting to Bank of America Chairman Chad Gifford, Ms. Finucane is responsible for developing and executing strategic transition plans for New England, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. She also has oversight for ongoing market leadership in the region, and is responsible for managing the Northeast strategy with the overall brand efforts of Bank of America. Ms. Finucane also serves as Director of Strategic Issues Management and has been appointed to the Board of the Bank of Americ Foundation. Prior to joining Fleet, Ms. Finucane operated her own consulting firm after holding a number of executive positions during her 14-year tenure at Hill, Holliday, Connors, Cosmopulos, Inc., New Englands largest advertising agency. She launched her career in communications in the Mayors Office of Cultural Affairs, City of Boston as a public information officer. Ms. Finucane is active in many philanthropic and community organizations. She serves as a board member of the Massachusetts Womens Forum (president emeritus), former chair of the New England Council; and on the non-profit boards of the International Center of Journalists, New York Literacy Partners, The American Ireland Fund, and John F. Kennedy Library Foundation.
  • Anne Garrels is a senior foreign correspondent for NPR's foreign desk. She covered Iraq under Saddam Hussein's regime and through the U.S. invasion and its aftermath, and earned international recognition in 2003 by being one of 16 U.S. journalists to remain in Baghdad during the U.S. bombing. Her vivid, around-the-clock reports from the city under siege gave listeners remarkable insight into the impact of the war and the challenges to come. Garrels, who first arrived in Iraq in 2002 under Saddam Hussein, led NPR's coverage there until 2008. Her reports anticipated and documented the sectarian violence; she traveled the country working independently as well as embedding with U.S. forces. Since Sept. 11, Garrels has also reported from Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Middle East. Before covering the Middle East, she concentrated on the former Soviet Union and its successor states for many years, earning an Alfred I. Dupont Award for her Russia coverage of diverse topics ranging from social and economic challenges to military and cultural developments. From Tiananmen Square to the battlegrounds of Chechnya, from Bosnia to Kosovo, Israel to Iraq, Garrels has put a human face on conflict, combining experience in the field with a sharp understanding of the policy debates in Washington. Garrels graduated from Harvard University in 1972. When not on assignment she lives with her husband Vint Lawrence in Connecticut.
  • Anne Gottlieb (Catherine Givings) is delighted to return to Speakeasy, having played, Etty Hillesum in The Wrestling Patient and Mary Haines in The Women. Anne recently appeared in Blithe Spirit for Lyric Stage and as Sophie Treadwell in Nora Theatre Company’s production of Not Enough Air. Other favorite credits include, Emma in Betrayal, “C” in Crave, (Nora Theatre Company), Stevie in The Goat, (Gloucester Stage Co.) Cleopatra in Antony and Cleopatra (Boston Theatre Work), Celia in As you Like it (Shakespeare & Company) She formed FortyMagnolias Productions five years ago and co-produced the world Premiere of The Wrestling Patient with Speakeasy Stage Company and Boston Playwrights’ Theater in 2009. Her original adaptation of the myth of Gilgamesh toured to the Roy Hart International Centre in Southern France. Anne teaches with the Michael Chekhov Association. She is a Resident Scholar in collaborative theatre at the Women’s Studies Research Center at Brandeis University.
  • Stepping down after 25 years, Anne Hawley made preservation a priority, introduced meaningful ways for visitors to engage with the Museum's collection, oversaw the addition of a new wing, reenergized the music offering, and created an artist-in-residence program to support artists much in the same manner that the Museum's beloved namesake was known to do throughout her lifetime.
  • Anne Higonnet is professor of art history at Barnard College, Columbia University, where she teaches a course called “Clothing.” She has received many awards, including Guggenheim and Harvard Radcliffe Institute fellowships.
  • Anne Kelly is Director of Public Policy at CERES, a non-profit coalition of investors and businesses which seeks to promote leadership and best practices in sustainability. An environmental lawyer with more than twenty years of experience practicing in the public and private sectors, she also directs BICEP, a coalition of 23 companies, including Nike, Starbucks, and eBay, seeking to advocate for meaningful climate and energy policies at the federal level.
  • Anne Lamott is the author of several novels and a progressive political activist. She is also a public speaker and teacher.
  • Anne M. Mulcahy is chairman and chief executive officer of Xerox Corporation. In May 2009, Mulcahy announced that she is retiring as CEO of Xerox, effective July 1. She will remain as chairman. Mulcahy was named CEO of Xerox on August 1, 2001 and chairman on Jan. 1, 2002. Mulcahy was president and chief operating officer of Xerox from May 2000 through July 2001. Prior to that, she was president of Xerox's General Markets Operations, which created and sold products for reseller, dealer and retail channels. She began her Xerox career as a field sales representative in 1976 and assumed increasingly responsible sales and senior management positions. From 1992-1995, Mulcahy was vice president for human resources, responsible for compensation, benefits, human resource strategy, labor relations, management development and employee training. Mulcahy became chief staff officer in 1997 and corporate senior vice president in 1998. Prior to that, she served as vice president and staff officer for Customer Operations, covering South America and Central America, Europe, Asia and Africa, and China. Mulcahy earned a bachelor of arts degree in English/journalism from Marymount College in Tarrytown, N.Y. In addition to the Xerox board, she is a board director of Catalyst, Citigroup Inc., Fuji Xerox Company, Ltd., Target Corporation, The Washington Post Company, and is the chairman of the corporate governance task force of the Business Roundtable.