Our Next Show: April 28, 2026

Hosted by Rebecca Fisher

7:00 p.m. at The Marsh Berkeley

triptych of performer headshots: Irma Herrera, Thomas Paul Wynn, Katie Macks

Music

musician Jill Roger playing guitar

Jill Rogers, singer/songwriter

Stories

Irma Herrera, The ICEmen Cometh (excerpt)
The ICEmen Cometh critiques the Trump Regime’s full-frontal attack on immigrants, and how the brutality and cruelty of ICE agents as they catch, detain, disappear, and deport people is eroding the civil rights of everyone in the United States. 

Thomas Paul Wynn, Being Revived
After 39 years of incarceration, Thomas Wynn experiences the world through the five senses in his first 72 hours of freedom. 

Katie Macks, A New Kind of Evangelism
We’re taking a ride from the confines of the patriarchal world culture to the freedom that ensues when one does their own work to get unshackled and then liberated in the most unexpected places.



About the Performers

Jill Rogers is an artist, photographer, educator, songwriter, and musician. She is half of the experimental post-rock duo Ex-Juncos.

Irma Herrera was a civil rights lawyer and journalist for three-plus decades. Her performance pieces challenge the enduring power of xenophobia, racism, sexism, and other forms of prejudice. Her first solo show Why Would I Mispronounce My Own Name? is a personal narrative that explores othering and belonging and who is valued in this country. The play has been performed at theaters, colleges, and universities around the country.

Thomas Wynn was raised in New Jersey. After coming to California, he experienced mental illness at 21 and 22 and he went to prison for 39 years. Today he’s driven towards developing a community investment program that integrates intergenerational youth diversion with elderly returning citizens.

Katie Macks is an activist, life coach and storyteller devoted to justice. She has been working throughout her life to dismantle oppressive systems that marginalize and divide. Through coaching, she brings justice home into the relationship we have with ourselves. Through storytelling, she practices activism as medicine, using narrative to restore connection and collective healing.


Ticket Information

Tickets: $23–38 general seating sliding scale (or $103, if you’re feeling really generous) for in-person, $10–25 sliding scale for the livestream.

NOTE: To increase access for our community, a limited number of lower-priced tickets ($13) for the in-person show are available (select “Ticket 10”)