Adam Green's Writings
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Article
Oct.13.2010
Vogue
At the height of her movie stardom, Cate Blanchett puts her commitment to the theater center stage—and, writes Adam Green, takes on one of the great dramatic roles of all time.
Photographed by Annie Leibovitz.
Cate Blanchett may have her own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and appear on a postage stamp as one of four "Australian Legends of the...
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Article
Nov.20.2009
The New Yorker
The Human ConditionAgeless, Guiltless
The second-most-influential psychotherapist of the twentieth century, by the reckoning of the American Psychological Association, turned ninety last month. His name is Albert Ellis, and, in case you didn’t know, he is the founder of Rational-Emotive Behavior Therapy, or rebt, and the author of more than seventy books,...
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Article
Nov.19.2009
The New Yorker
Dept. of EntertainmentStandup for the Lord
How funny can a Christian comedian be?
by Adam Green
Most accounts of religious awakening feature a dark night of the soul, a moment just before God reveals his grace, when everything looks hopeless and faith seems impossible. For Brad Stine, a forty-four-year-old politically conservative, Evangelical Christian standup...
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About Adam
Adam Green is a contributing editor to Vogue magazine, for which he writes mainly about theater, and a regular contributor to The New Yorker, for which he writes about other things.
He began his journalism career, at the age of seventeen, as a summer...




