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On The Eve Of A Diverse Tonys, BroadwayBlack.com Is Ready To Take A Bow

Many of the actors up for awards this year are people of color, but it wasn’t always that way.

When the list of this year’s Tony Award nominees was announced last month, it sounded like the complete opposite of the Oscars. Many of the actors up for awards were people of color. Cast members from The Color Purple, Eclipsed, and Shuffle Along scored multiple nominations, along with the history-making musical Hamilton. Some of the plays are new, while others like Shuffle Along and The Color Purple had broken racial barriers in the past.

But there is a long history that precedes a moment like this, one that often excluded people of color from prominent roles on stage and backstage. And many black actors are still struggling to get attention. That neglect prompted Andrew Shade to launch BroadwayBlack.com, an online community celebrating the work of black theater performers who have been an integral part of American theater going back to the days of vaudeville.

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14 Habits Of The Most Productive Remote Workers

From hardware to soft skills, here’s what it takes to master the art of working remotely.

Working from home sounds like an idyllic situation, in theory: You can roll out of bed each morning (or afternoon, even) and get started on your day without having to dress up, brave traffic, or engage in mindless chit-chat around the communal coffee machine.

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4 Counterintuitive Tips For Raising Startup Funds

One CEO explains which investors to turn down and why it’s sometimes okay to raid your 401(k).

After 17 years in sales and marketing with AT&T, I decided it was time to strike out on my own. It was 2002 and I’d come up with a new twist on an older real estate technology. But just two years later, I’d pretty much run through all my savings trying to put it into action. I was running on fumes, and my new company needed some funding fast.

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Former Education Secretary Arne Duncan Joins Board Of Pluralsight

The former education secretary’s new role is emblematic of the migration from Obama’s White House to Silicon Valley.

Since leaving his post as U.S. education secretary, Arne Duncan has spent most of his time in his hometown of Chicago. There, as managing partner of the philanthropic organization started by Steve Jobs’s widow, Laurene Powell Jobs, Duncan is developing programs designed to help high school dropouts and former convicts find jobs.

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