The day after Judith Light‘s bathtub scene became available on Amazon, it was the talk of Hollywood. The second episode of Season 2 of “Transparent” will likely go down as one of TV’s most ...
The notion that we carry the scars of our forebears was an underlying theme in the second season of Amazon’s “Transparent,” and it seems the forthcoming third season will continue that exploration. At ...
Advances in transparent solar cells mean that soon we might be able to install them into windows and greenhouses. But in the latter case, would they deprive plants of vital sunlight? To find out, ...
Can Transparent have a future following the departure of its star Jeffrey Tambor? Actress Judith Light, who plays the Shelly Pfefferman, ex-wife of Tambor’s character, Maura, opened up to ET’s ...
The secret desire of urban daydreamers staring out their office windows at the sad brick walls of the building opposite them may soon be answered thanks to transparent light shutters. A novel liquid ...
The former '80s sitcom star and two-time Tony winner joins #THRpodcasts to talk about her character's revelatory, awards-nominated season on 'Transparent.' By Jessie Katz “We were a bona fide hit with ...
After revealing a deep-seated trauma from her past, Shelly (Light) moves her family to tears with her take on "Hand in My Pocket" during the debut of her one-woman show, 'To Shell and Back,' in the ...
Judith Light ends her solo run this week in the Off-Broadway production of “All the Ways to Say I Love You.” Not surprisingly, the stage veteran has received a thunderous applause for her portrayal of ...
Wood already has plenty to offer conventional construction methods as an inexpensive and bountiful resource, but it may soon have a new trick up its sleeve. Scientists have come up with a way to turn ...
At 70, Light is busy as ever. The actress talks to ET about her newest film premiering at SXSW and the upcoming ‘Transparent’ finale. There’s no shortage of Judith Light (and that’s far from a ...
Neutral atoms were formed just a few hundred thousand years after the Big Bang. The very first stars began ionizing those atoms once again, but it took hundreds of millions of years of forming stars ...
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