Saturday 11:30AM
ENAC TV PROVIDENCE
"My R.I. TV"
(Providence RI DMA)
11:30AM

Saturday 9:00PM
WPXT TV PORTLAND
Portland's CW
(Portland ME DMA)
9:00PM

Saturday 12:00 Mid
WBZ TV BOSTON
CBS 4
(Boston DMA)
12 Midnight

Sunday 12 Noon
WSBK TV38 BOSTON
MYTV
(Boston DMA)
12 Noon

Sunday 12 Noon
WPXT TV PORTLAND
Portland's CW
(Portland DMA)
12 Noon

Sunday 12 Mid
WWLP TV-22 SPRINGFIELD
NBC
(Springfield DMA)
12 Midnight

Monday 1:00AM
WBZ TV BOSTON
CBS 4
(Boston DMA)
1:00AM

Judges

Joyce Kulhawik

On stage, on screen, or in the concert hall, arts and entertainment critic Joyce Kulhawik’s well-considered opinion spells success or failure for those hoping to capture Boston television viewers and their leisure dollars.

A fixture with Beantown audiences from her long-time association with WBZ-TV, Joyce broadened her viewer base reviewing movies on nationally syndicated programs “Hot Ticket,” co-hosting with Leonard Maltin, and “Roger Ebert & The Movies,” where Joyce served as a rotating guest co-host.

Joyce doesn’t just talk the talk: a professional vocalist and accomplished pianist, rumor has it she can yodel, and yodel well. And it’s not about the money: for seven years, during Joyce’s residence in Connecticut, she was the soloist and organist at her parish church.

The cascade of accolades that Joyce has earned include Emmys while hosting award-winning series, specials, and programs on WBZ-TV; induction into the Massachusetts Broadcasters Hall of Fame, the Boston/New England Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences’ Silver Circle, and the Boston Society of Film Critics; the Boston Theatre District Award and the Lyric Stage Company’s Arts Support Award; the New England Women’s Leadership Awards’ Community Spirit Award; an Honorary Doctorate in Communications from her alma mater, Simmons College; and the establishment, in Joyce’s name, of a $25,000 perpetual scholarship at Berklee College of Music.

And Joyce is a fighter. She stands up for grass-roots arts, ensuring that lesser-known and even-lesser-funded arts organizations get television exposure, giving her attention not just to Hollywood and Broadway fare. She even stands up to cancer: as a three-time survivor of cancer – ovarian twice, and melanoma once, Joyce has testified before Congress on behalf of cancer victims and has served for 25 years as Honorary Chairperson for the American Cancer Society’s Daffodil Days.

When not championing the arts, Joyce resides near Boston with her husband and daughter.