Galilee Abdullah
Arts ReporterGalilee Abdullah is an arts reporter.
Originally from North Texas, Galilee was previously a production assistant and production intern at WBEZ, Chicago’s NPR member station. There, she worked on “Worldview,” a global topics talk show. Galilee has also worked as a McCarter Family Fellow at WFMT, a classical music radio station in Chicago.
She was also a storytelling fellow with the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education and attended the 2018 Third Coast International Audio Festival as an AIR New Voices scholar.
Galilee graduated from Northwestern University in 2016 with a bachelor’s degree in cultural anthropology. She is a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated.
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Concerts, world premieres, a theatrical farewell and a trippy art experience that's taking over 30 rooms in a shopping mall: Get ready for the new year, y'all.
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Check out the set, some of the crazy cakes and see Fort Worth's Tareka Lofton in the preview for Amazon Prime Video series, "Dr. Seuss Baking Challenge."
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The Amon Carter has thousands of works representing Native Americans. But very few were actually made by Indigenous people. A new photography exhibit, "Speaking with Light," at the museum attempts to address that disparity.
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The Arts Community Alliance, or TACA, is an organization that raises funds and provides grants to more than 30 arts groups around North Texas. Their executive director, Terry Loftis, is leaving and heading to the Dallas Symphony Orchestra.
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An exciting new life for this historic Oak Cliff church leaves a small congregation in a tough placeA church building in Oak Cliff has been repurposed into a space that hosts community arts events. Many have high hopes for the new plans. But they come as a result of some difficult decisions made by the congregation that has called the building home.
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Artes de la Rosa Cultural Center for the Arts in Fort Worth is just one of many groups hosting a Día de los Muertos celebration this weekend.
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Diwali, or the festival of light, officially starts on October 22nd this year, and there are celebrations starting in North Texas.
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As Dallas Children’s Theater approaches its 40th anniversary season, its co-founder and long-time leader has announced her retirement.
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Three Mexican Americans in Oak Cliff started the podcast five years ago to center Black, brown and queer voices and talk about arts and culture in all its forms.
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"The Forgotten Nine" exhibition showcases the artworks of nine Texas women who were pioneers in art, but never got proper recognition.
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More than 50 artists are expected to show off their work at The Oak Cliff Assembly Art Walk.
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Lots of local indie publications will be available at the event Saturday. Here's a sample.