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Stephen
Sondheim's contributions to the
American musical theatre are legendary. The recipient of the Pulitzer
Prize for Drama in 1985, Sondheim has been dazzling audiences ever
since he wrote the lyrics for West Side Story at the
age of 25.
He wrote the music and lyrics for Passion which
received Tony Awards for both Best Musical and Best Score of a Musical
for 1994. He also wrote the music and lyrics for: Assassins
(1991), Into the Woods (1987), Sunday in the
Park with George (1984), Merrily We Roll Along
(1981), Sweeney Todd (1979), Pacific
Overtures (1976), The Frogs (1974),
A Little Night Music (1973), Follies (1971,
revised in London, 1987), Company (1970),
Anyone Can Whistle (1964), and A Funny Thing Happened
on the Way to the Forum (1962), as well as the lyrics for
West Side Story (1957), Gypsy
(1959), Do I Hear a Waltz? (1965), and additional
lyrics for Candide (1973). Side By Side By
Sondheim (1976), Marry Me A Little (1981),
You're Gonna Love Tomorrow (1983), and
Putting It Together (1992) are anthologies of his work as
composer and lyricist. For films, he composed the scores of
Stavisky (1974) and Reds (1981), and songs
for Dick Tracy (Academy Award 1990). He also wrote
songs for the television production Evening Primrose
(1966), co-authored the film The Last of Sheila
(1973) and provided incidental music of the plays The Girls of
Summer (1956), Invitation to a March (1961)
and Twigs (1971). He won Tony Awards for Best Score
for a Musical for Into the Woods, Sweeney Todd, A Little Night
Music, Follies, and Company. All of these
shows won the New York Drama Critics Circle Award as did
Pacific Overtures and Sunday in the Park with George;
the latter also receiving the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1985. Mr.
Sondheim was born in 1930 and raised in New York City. He graduated
from Williams College, winning the Hutchinson Prize for Music
Composition, after which he studied theory and composition with Milton
Babbitt. He is on the Council of the Dramatists Guild, having served
as its president from 1973 until 1981, and in 1983 was elected to the
American Academy of Arts and Letters. In 1990 he was appointed the
first Visiting Professor of Contemporary Theatre at Oxford University
and in 1993 was a recipient of the Kennedy Center Honors. On Friday,
April 17 Sondheim participated in the discussion "A Conversation with
Stephen Sondheim" at 9:30 a.m. - 10:45 a.m. in the Inge Theatre and
the panel discussion "Musical Theatre: 1998" at 11:00a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
in the Inge Theatre. Mr. Sondheim was presented with the William Inge
Theatre Festival's "Distinguished Achievement in the American Theatre"
award at the "Tribute to Stephen Sondheim" on Saturday 18 at 8:00 p.m.
at the Independence Memorial Hall.
Schedule of Events
The Seventeenth Annual
William Inge Theatre Festival and Conference
Schedule of Events
April 15, 16, 17, & 18, 1998
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15
7:30 P.M.--BUS STOP
by William Inge. Performed by the University of Kansas Theatre
Department. Adults $8.00 Students $5.00
(ICC students free). All seats reserved. William Inge
Theatre, Fine Arts Building.
THURSDAY, APRIL 16
8:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M.--REGISTRATION
in the Margaret Goheen Foyer of the William Inge Theatre, Fine Arts
Building. FILM FESTIVAL featured "Penn Avenue to Broadway"
(documentary on Inge) and other Inge films: Splendor in the
Grass, Picnic, Bus Stop, The Dark at the Top of the Stairs, and Come
Back, Little Sheba. Fine Arts Room114, Fine Arts Building.
FREE
8:00 A.M. - 9:00 P.M.--THE
WILLIAM INGE COLLECTION opened to visitors. College Library, Academic
Building.
12:00 P.M. - 1:00 P.M.--Tour
of "WILLIAM INGE’S INDEPENDENCE." Sign up was at the Registration desk
in the Margaret Goheen Foyer, Fine Arts Building. Fee: $2
1:00 P.M. - 2:30 P.M.--"DIRECTING
BUS STOP." Director Jack Wright and the cast of the University of
Kansas production of Bus Stop participated in a panel discussion.
Lecture Hall, Academic Building.
2:45 P.M.- 4:00 P.M.--"SCHOLAR'S
CONFERENCE: SESSION I." Scholarly papers on Inge and/or Sondheim.
Conference Director: Dr. Jackson Bryer, The University of Maryland.
Lecture Hall, Academic Building.
4:00 P.M. - 5:00 P.M.--Tour
of "WILLIAM INGE’S INDEPENDENCE." Sign up was at the Registration desk
in the Margaret Goheen Foyer, Fine Arts Building. Fee: $2
7:30 P.M.--BUS STOP
by William Inge. Performed by the University of Kansas Theatre
Department. Adults $8.00/Students $5.00 (ICC students
free). All seats reserved. William Inge Theatre, Fine
Arts Building.
9:30 P.M.--"MOONGLOW
AT THE HOTEL BOOTH." After-theatre party at the historic Hotel Booth,
8th & Main, Independence, with the jazz band, Plush. TICKETS:
$12.00 (Includes light hors d'oeuvres and wine)
FRIDAY, APRIL 17
8:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M.--REGISTRATION
in the Margaret Goheen Foyer of the William Inge Theatre, Fine Arts
Building. THE WILLIAM INGE COLLECTION opened to visitors. College
Library, Academic Building. FILM FESTIVAL continued in FA114, Fine
Arts Building. (Check schedule at Registration Desk) FREE
8:00 A.M. - 9:15 A.M.--Workshops:
AUDITIONING FOR MUSICAL THEATRE with Luke Yankee (Music Hall, Fine
Arts Building), and THE WRITING PROCESS with playwright Jason Milligan
(Lecture Hall, Academic Building).
9:30 A.M. - 10:45 A.M.--"A
CONVERSATION WITH STEPHEN SONDHEIM." Mr. Sondheim discussed the
theatre and responded to questions. Inge Theatre, Fine Arts Building.
11:00 A.M. - 12:00 P.M.--"MUSICAL
THEATRE: 1998." A panel discussion with playwrights and special
guests. Inge Theatre, Fine Arts Building.
12:00 P.M. - 1:00 P.M.--"A
MOVEABLE FEAST" LUNCH. A keepsake lunchbag with contents that could be
eaten at numerous locations. Margaret Goheen Foyer, Fine Arts
Building. Fee: $7.50
1:00 P.M. - 2:30 P.M.--"ROBERT
ANDERSON-A CLOSER LOOK." A look at playwright Robert Anderson's plays
and career, his collection at Harvard University, and a video
retrospective. Cessna Learning Center classroom, ICC campus.
2:45 P.M. - 4:00 P.M.--"DIRECTING
ON BROADWAY WITH SCOTT ELLIS." Cessna Learning Center classroom.
2:45 P.M. - 4:00 P.M.--"SCHOLAR’S
CONFERENCE: SESSION II." Conference Director: Dr. Jackson Bryer, The
University of Maryland. Lecture Hall, Academic Building.
3:00 P.M. - 4:00 P.M.--Tour
of "WILLIAM INGE’S INDEPENDENCE." Sign up was at the Registration desk
in the Margaret Goheen Foyer, Fine Arts Building. Fee: $2
7:00 P.M.--"A GALA
DINNER Party at the Independence Country Club." The awarding of the
1997 Margo Jones Award and Medal. All seats reserved. $50.00
(RESERVE EARLY-LIMITED SEATS AVAILABLE)
SATURDAY, APRIL 18
8:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M.--REGISTRATION
at the Independence Museum, 8th & Myrtle,
Independence.
10:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.M.--THE
WILLIAM INGE COLLECTION opened to visitors. College Library, Academic
Building, ICC campus. FILM FESTIVAL continues in the College Library,
Academic Building.
8:30 A.M. - 10:00 A.M.--"THE
ART OF THE VOICE-OVER." Janet Waldo Lee, well-known as the voice of
"Judy Jetson" discussed the background and techniques associated with
character voice-overs. Independence Museum, 8th & Myrtle.
10:00 A.M. - 11:45 A.M.--"NEW
VOICES IN AMERICAN THEATRE:1998." Scenes from playwright David Ives'
new plays with discussion afterwards. Directed by 1993 "New Voices"
playwright Jason Milligan. Independence Museum, 8th & Myrtle.
11:45 A.M. - 1:00 P.M.--"PICNIC
LUNCHEON" at Riverside Park, 4-H Building. Fee: $7.50
1:30 P.M. - 2:30 P.M.--"MEMORIES
OF WILLIAM INGE'S BOYHOOD HOME." Inge family members gathered in the
house Bill Inge grew up in which is now owned by the William Inge
Theatre Festival Foundation. Inge Home, 514 N. 4th St., Independence.
2:45 P.M. - 4:00 P.M.--"GETTING
MEDIA COVERAGE FOR YOUR ARTS EVENT." A panel discussion with
representatives from various media. Independence Museum, 8th & Myrtle.
3:00 P.M. - 4:00 P.M.--TOUR
OF "WILLIAM INGE’S INDEPENDENCE." Sign up at the Registration desk at
the Museum. Fee: $2
8:00 P.M.--"TRIBUTE
TO STEPHEN SONDHEIM." Presentation of "THE DISTINGUISHED ACHIEVEMENT
IN THE AMERICAN THEATRE AWARD." William Inge Theatre. All
seats reserved. $15.00 (ICC STUDENTS $5.00)
Festival Participants
1998 Special Guests and
Festival Participants
Robert Anderson's
(Inge
Award Recipient in 1985) plays have
been produced professionally and in community and college theatres all
over the world. His most famous plays include Tea and
Sympathy (1953), Silent Night, Lonely Night
(1959), You Know I Can't Hear You When The Water's Running
(1967), I Never Sang For My Father (1968), and
Solitaire/Double Solitaire (1971). Anderson has
also written extensively for motion pictures, radio, and television.
His film credits included Tea and Sympathy, (1956)
Until They Sail, (1957), The Nun's Story,
(1959), The Sand Pebbles, (1966), and I Never
Sang For My Father, (1970), (nominated for the Academy Award
and winner of the Screenwriter's Guild Award). In 1980 Anderson was
nominated for the Writer's Guild Award for his television drama,
The Patricia Neal Story, and was elected to The
Theatre Hall of Fame. The Kissing Was Always The Best
is one of his more recent plays and I Never Sang For
My Father enjoyed a successful revival in 1987 and 1988. In
1991, two of Anderson's works were shown on television, The
Last Act Is A Solo, which won an Ace Award, and
Absolute Strangers. Anderson previously served as President
of the Dramatists Guild and is now on the Dramatists Guild Council.
Also a novelist, Anderson was Vice-President of the Authors League of
America and is the author of two novels: After and
Getting Up and Going Home. He participated in the
panel discussion "Musical Theatre: 1998" on Friday, April 17 at 11:00
a.m. - 12:00 p.m. in the Inge Theatre. He also participated in the
panel discussion "Robert Anderson-A Closer Look" on Friday, April 17
at 1:00 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. in the Inge Theatre where he was awarded
Harvard University's "David Garrick Award."
Wayne Bryan
began his career as both actor and director with San Diego’s Old Globe
Theatre. He made his Broadway debut in the revival of Good News!
Richard Rodgers personally selected him for the Broadway revue of
Rodgers and Hart. Other New York appearances include Tintypes,
We Write the Songs, Lyrics and Lyricists, and the national tour of
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. Currently in his
11th year as Producing Director for Music Theatre of
Wichita, he has appeared locally in The Will Rogers Follies, Me and
My Girl, 1776, Where’s Charley?, The Music Man, and Into the
Woods. Wayne recently co-stared with Megan Drew in the new musical
version of Paper Moon for Stage One productions.
Scott Ellis
is the director of the Broadway hit revival of 1776,
currently playing at the Gershwin Theatre in New York City. He was
nominated for the 1997 Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle and Tony
awards for the Kander and Ebb musical Steel Pier.
He directed the Broadway revival of William Inge's Picnic,
starring Polly Holliday and Ashley Judd, in 1994 at the Roundabout
Theatre. Other Broadway credits include She Loves Me
which earned him a Tony nomination for Best Director, A Month
In the Country with Helen Mirren, and the revival of Stephen
Sondheim's Company. He received Drama Desk Awards
for Best Director for two productions: And The World Goes
'Round: Songs of Kander and Ebb, and the New York City
Opera's A Little Night Music. He made his
off-Broadway directing debut with Kander and Ebb's Flora, The
Red Menace. He directed and co-conceived "Sondheim: A
Celebration at Carnegie Hall" for PBS Great Performances. He is a
graduate of the Goodman Theatre School at DePaul University in
Chicago. He participated in the panel discussion "Musical Theatre:
1998" on Friday, April 17 at 11:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. in the Inge
Theatre. He also conducted "Directing on Broadway with Scott Ellis"
on Friday, April 17 at 2:45 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. in the Inge Theatre.
Governor Bill Graves
is the 43rd Governor of Kansas. A
native of Salina, he grew up in the family business, Graves Truck
Line. He earned a degree in Business Administration from Kansas
Wesleyan University in Salina and attended graduate school at the
University of Kansas. Prior to his election as Governor, he served
two terms as Kansas Secretary of State. He serves as chairman of the
Midwest Governors' Conference and serves on the Economic Development
and Commerce Committee and the Education Goals Panel of the National
Governors' Association. The Governor and his wife, Linda Richey
Graves, are the proud parents of 2 1/2 year old daughter, Katie.
Governor Graves and Mrs. Graves were special guests at the Gala Dinner
on Friday, April 17.
The Inge Family:
The William Inge Theatre Festival welcomed the Inge Family back to the
Festival this year. They took part in the Saturday afternoon panel
"Memories of William Inge's Boyhood Home," at the home located at 514
N. 4th street in Independence. Niece Jo Ann Kirchmaier, of Perrysburg,
Ohio, chaired this panel and was joined by her brother, Jim Mahan of
Simsbury, Connecticut. Jo Ann and Jim's mother, Lucy, was William
Inge's older sister.
David Ives,
chosen as the Inge Festival's "New Voice in American Theatre for
1998," was born in Chicago and educated at Northwestern University and
Yale School of Drama. He is a former Guggenheim Foundation Fellow in
playwriting and is probably best known for his evening of one-act
comedies called All in the Timing, which ran for over
600 performances off-Broadway. The show won the Outer Critics Circle
John Gassner Playwriting Award and was included in "The Best Plays of
1993-94." In the 1995-96 season, All in the Timing was the most
performed play in the country after Shakespeare. Mere Mortals
is another collection of Ives' one-acts and recently ended another
long run off-Broadway. Three of his short comedies have been included
in the "Best Short Plays of the Year" volume. Among his full-length
plays are Ancient History, Don Juan in Chicago, The Red
Address, and the libretto to an opera of The Secret
Garden. He has adapted four classic American musicals for
the celebrated Encores series and in 1996 wrote Ira
Gershwin's 100th birthday celebration at Carnegie Hall. He has taught
at New York University and Columbia University, and for three years
was an editor at Foreign Affairs Magazine. He participated in the
"New Voices in American Theatre: 1998" on Saturday, April 18 at 10:00
a.m. - 11:45 a.m. at the Independence Museum where two of his plays
were read: Degas-C'est Moi and Time Flies
Janet Waldo Lee
is best known for her voice portrayal of the flighty, futuristic
teenager Judy Jetson on the popular television cartoon The
Jetsons. She also voiced the perpetually imperiled
Penelope Pittstop, and the 80-year-old motorbike freak Granny
Sweet on the same show. She was the voice of the slinky, svelte
Morticia and the cackling Granny on the cartoon version of the
The Addams Family, starred as the lead in Josie and
the Pussycats and worked in The Flintstones
as Fred's battle-ax mother-in-law. Feature animation credits include:
The Jetsons Meet the Flintstones, Rockin' with Judy Jetson,
Once Upon a Forest, Alice in Wonderland, Jack and the Beanstalk,
Beauty and the Beast, The Trouble with Miss Switch, Heidi,
and The Flintstone Feature. She is an expert at
looping, and has duplicated the voices of many film personalities for
Universal Studios. She began her career in radio, where she won
stardom as the irrepressible and never-without-a-sponsor teenager,
Corliss Archer, and as the teenager Emmy Lou on the radio and
television series The Ozzie and Harriet Show. She is
currently a member of California Artists Radio Theatre (CART), where
she performed in The Lost Letters of General Robert E. Lee,
the last work of her late husband, Robert E. Lee, who also coauthored
many Broadway hits with Jerome Lawrence and was the 1988 recipient of
the Inge Award, see updated bio in (TEXT LINK) 1988 - Robert E.
Lee. She conducted "The Art of the Voice-Over" on Saturday,
April 18 at 8:30 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. at the Independence Museum.
David E. LeVine
is a theatrical lawyer, consultant and lecturer. He is Chairman of
the Margo Jones Award Committee, and trustee of the Eugene O'Neill
Theatre Center. He was Executive Director of the Dramatists Guild,
Inc., from 1966 to 1992. He was a founding member of the Broadway
Alliance Committee and a member of the Tony Awards Administration
Committee. He is a graduate of Harvard University and Columbia
University Law School and is counsel to the law firm of DaSilva and
DaSilva in New York City. He was the moderator for the panel
discussion "Robert Anderson-A Closer Look" on Friday, April 17 at 1:00
p.m. - 2:30 p.m. in the Inge Theatre.
Jason Milligan's
plays have been produced throughout the United States and Canada, and
twenty of them are now published by Samuel French Inc., including
...And the Rain Came to Mayfield, The Prettiest Girl in
Lafayette County and Walking on the Moon.
He has also written five collections of original audition monologues
for Samuel French, including Next!, His & Hers, and
Going Solo. Most recently, his drama Navy
Wife received a World premiere at the Pacific Theatre in
Vancouver, BC and his play Men in Suits was presented
at the historic Westport Country Playhouse in Westport, Connecticut,
starring Charles Durning, Dan Lauria and James Handy. Scenes from his
play Men in Suits were presented in 1993 at the
William Inge Festival when Milligan was the first playwright chosen
for the Festival's "New Voices in the American Theatre." He currently
works as a writer of live entertainment for the Walt Disney Company.
He conducted the workshop "The Writing Process" with his wife
Stephanie on Friday, April 17 at 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 a.m. in the Lecture
Hall of the Academic Building. He directed the discussion "New Voices
in American Theatre: 1998" on Saturday, April 18 at 10:00 a.m. - 11:45
a.m. at the Independence Museum.
Stephanie Milligan
has worked extensively as an actress, although her most recent "role"
is mother to Madeline, now age one. She has worked in New York and
Los Angeles, and in various theatres around the country. Favorite
roles include Pat in the world premiere of Lanford Wilson's
The Bottle Harp, and Annie in Horton Foote's Spring
Dance. Stefanie trained at Actors Theatre of Louisville and
with Kathryn Gately and Loyd Williamson at the Gately-Poole Studios in
New York. She conducted the workshop "The Writing Process" with her
husband Jason on Friday, April 17 at 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 a.m. in the
Lecture Hall of the Academic Building.
James Naughton
most recently starred in the Broadway hit Chicago,
where he won a 1997 Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical for his
role as media-savvy lawyer Billy Flynn. In 1990, he won the Tony
Award and Drama Desk Award for Best Actor in a Musical for his
portrayal of the film-noir detective in City of Angels.
He also directed Johnny on a Spot at Williamstown
Theater Festival in 1997 and Filumena for the Blue
Light Theater Company last fall. A graduate of Brown University and
the Yale School of Drama, Naughton made his New York debut as Edmund
in Arvin Brown's production of Long Day's Journey Into Night
and received the Theatre World, New York Drama Critics and Vernon Rice
Awards for his performance. Additional Broadway credits include
Four Baboons Adoring the Sun, I Love My Wife and
Whose Life is it Anyway? with appearances
off-Broadway in E.L. Doctorow's Drinks Before Dinner
and Losing Time. Naughton's film credits include
The Good Mother opposite Diane Keaton, The
Glass Menagerie with Joanne Woodward, The Paper
Chase, Cat's Eye, A Stranger is Watching and Second
Wind. His movies of the week for TV include Travelin'
Man, Necessity, Sins of Innocence, Last of the Great Survivors, The
Bunker, and Look Homeward Angel. More
recently, he starred in The Birds II for Showtime and
the return of Cagney & Lacy. He has also starred in
several network television series, including Who's the Boss?,
Making the Grade, Planet of the Apes, Faraday and Co., Brooklyn Bridge
and the Cosby Mysteries. Naughton will also debut a
musical act, "James Naughton Live," for three weeks in June of 1998 at
the Manhattan Theater Club. He hosted the "Tribute to Stephen
Sondheim" on Saturday, April 18 at 8:00 p.m.at the Independence
Memorial Hall.
Bernadette
Peters
recently made her solo debut at Carnegie Hall in an exclusive benefit
concert and released her best-selling live recording of that concert
entitled Sondheim, Etc: Bernadette Peters Live at Carnegie Hall.
Peters began her performing career at the age of 3 1/2 with
appearances on Juvenile Jury and the classic TV game
show Name That Tune. She made her theatrical debut
in This is Goggle.
Still in her teens, she appeared in The Most Happy Fella
and The Penny Friend, and in the national touring
company of Gypsy. She made her Broadway debut in
1967 in Johnny No-Trump, and in 1968 starred with
Joel Grey in the musical George M!, earning a Theatre
World Award. The same year she received a Drama Desk Award for her
performance in the musical Dames at Sea. She
received Tony Award nominations for On the Town, Mack and
Mabel, Sondheim's Sunday in the Park With George,
and Neil Simon's The Goodbye Girl. She was nominated
for the Drama Desk Award for her portrayal of the Witch in Sondheim's
Into the Woods and won the Tony Award, the Drama Desk
Award and the Drama League Award for her critically-acclaimed
performance in Andrew Lloyd Webber's hit musical Song and
Dance. Film credits include: Pennies from Heaven,
for which she received a Golden Globe Award; The Longest Yard,
Silent Movie, The Jerk, Annie, and Pink Cadillac.
Television credits range from The Kennedy Center Honors
to an Emmy-nominated performance on The Muppet Show.
She appeared in Sondheim: A Celebration at Carnegie Hall
and in Terrence McNally's The Last Mile, both for
PBS. She is also the voice of Rita the Cat in the popular animated
program Animaniacs and has starred in several
TV-movies, among them Hallmark's What the Deaf Man Heard.
Peters has recorded three solo albums, including Bernadette Peters,
Now Playing and I'll Be Your Baby Tonight. She
performed at the "Tribute to Stephen Sondheim" on Saturday, April 18
at 8:00 p.m. at Independence Memorial Hall.
Dan Sullivan is associate
director of the National Critics Institute, a "boot camp" for young
critics at the O'Neill Theater Center in Waterford, Connecticut. For
twenty years he was theater critic for The Los Angeles Times.
Earlier he wrote for The New York Times and
The Minneapolis Tribune.
He is a founding member of the American Theater Critics Association
and a past president of the Center for Arts Criticism. He conducted
the panel discussion "Getting Media Coverage for Your Arts Event" on
Saturday, April 18 at 2:45 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. at the Independence
Museum.
Robert Trussell
has been the Kansas City Star's theater critic since
1989. Trussell is a native of Texas and a second-generation
journalist. He studied drama at the University of Texas and for
twenty years has been a reporter and critic at the Star,
covering at various times police news, politics, jazz, pop music,
movies, theater and the history of Kansas City's jazz era. In 1997 he
won an award for enterprise reporting covering African Americans and
other people of color from the Kansas City Association of Black
Journalists. He participated in the panel discussion "Getting Media
Coverage for Your Arts Event" on Saturday, April 18 at 2:45 p.m. -
4:00 p.m. at the Independence Museum.
Ralph Voss,
a professor of English at the University of Alabama, is the author of
the William Inge biography, A Life of William Inge: The
Strains of Triumph. A native of Lyons, Kansas, Voss holds B.A
and M.A. degrees from Ft. Hays State University and a Ph.D. from the
University of Texas at Austin. He has published biographical and
critical articles about Inge and his works in The Dictionary
of Literary Biography, The Dictionary of American Biography, Kansas
Quarterly and The Library Chronicle. He also
teaches and publishes in the field of rhetoric and composition. He
participated in the panel discussion "Robert Anderson-A Closer Look"
on Friday, April 17 at 1:00 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. in the Inge Theatre.
Steve Walker,
who has written about theater, film and art for over 15 years, is the
arts reporter for KCUR-FM, Kansas City's National Public Radio
affiliate. His work has appeared in Theater Week
magazine, The Advocate, The Kansas City Star, Kansas City
Magazine, and Missouri Magazine. He was the
drama critic for The New Times, a Kansas City weekly,
for seven years and was Kansas City editor for The
News-Telegraph, a regional publication based in St. Louis.
He participated in the panel discussion "Getting Media Coverage for
Your Arts Event" on Saturday, April 18 at 2:45 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. at the
Independence Museum.
Fredric Wilson
is the Curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, which is the oldest
theatre collection in the United States and one of the oldest and
largest in the world. He began at Harvard University in 1996,
following 15 years as Curator of the Gilbert and Sullivan Collection
in the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York City. Wilson is a
musicologist and for many years was a conductor and music editor,
having published more than 50 musical editions and arrangements. He
is a specialist in the choral music of the Renaissance, in the music
and theater of the Victorian period, and in English and American opera
and musical theater. In 1996, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship
for research in the history of Victorian theatrical publishing. He
has served as consultant to a number of professional opera companies,
including the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company in London, the Kentucky Opera
in Louisville, and the Performing Arts Center in Purchase, New York.
He has written and lectured widely, and has organized more than a
dozen exhibitions and several conferences on music, theater, and
opera, at the Pierpont Morgan Library, the Kentucky Center for the
Arts in Lousiville, and at Harvard University. He is also a computer
specialist and author of "DataKit" text utility programs, which are
widely used in academic circles. He participated in the panel
discussion "Robert Anderson-A Closer Look" on Friday, April 17 at 1:00
p.m. - 2:30 p.m. in the Inge Theatre.
Mike Wood,
Executive Director of Media Resources at Wichita State University, has
an MFA from the University of Southern California in Cinema
Production, and has served as producer of the tribute to the
playwright for the Inge Festival eleven times. In 1987 he received
the Outstanding Alumnus Award at Independence Community College. He
is the writer and producer of "William Inge: Penn Avenue to Broadway,"
a documentary on Inge's life, and is a recipient of the Margaret
Goheen Award. He presented a video retrospective at the discussion
"Robert Anderson-A Closer Look" on Friday, April 17 at 1:00 p.m. -
2:30 p.m. in the Inge Theatre and produced the "Tribute to Stephen
Sondheim" on Saturday, April 18 at 8:00 p.m. at Independence Memorial
Hall.
Jack Wright
is a professor of theatre and film at the University of Kansas and
director of the production of Bus Stop. He received
his undergraduate degree in theatre from Otterbein College in Ohio and
his Masters and Ph.D. degrees from K.U. He has been invited to become
a Fellow of the College of Fellows of the American Theatre in 1998.
Jack is a former national chair of the American College Theatre
Festival and in 1983 his production of Buried
Child was selected for the national ACTF at the Kennedy
Center. In 1987 he received the John F. Kennedy Center Medallion of
Excellence for his work with ACTF. Wright, who has directed over 80
productions, has been a teacher and director at KU since 1976 and
productions include Grease, Sweeney Todd, 1776, You Can't Take
it With You with guest artist Pat Hingle, and All In
The Timing, to name a few. He also acts and directs for
professional theatre, television and film and has been responsible for
local casting on several films shot in the area including Hallmark
Hall of Fame's Sarah, Plain and Tall and
Skylark, both with Glenn Close. Since 1981, he has appeared
as William Allen White in a one-man show called The Sage of
Emporia. He participated with the cast of the University of
Kansas production Bus Stop in the
panel discussion "Directing Bus Stop" on Thursday, April 16 at 1:00
p.m. - 2:30 p.m. in the Lecture Hall.
Luke
Yankee is a teacher and director and
has served as Artistic Director at the Struthers Library Theatre in
Pennsylvania and at the Long Beach Civic Light Opera in California,
one of the biggest musical theatres in the United States. He has
directed regional theatres throughout the country including a
production of Driving Miss Daisy in Florida and in
Columbus, Ohio which starred his mother, Eileen Heckart. Mr. Yankee
has been an assistant director for six Broadway shows including
Grind and The Circle. He has been
on the faculty at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York
and Pasadena, the American Musical and Dramatic Academy in New York,
Columbia College in Hollywood, and at Northwestern University. He
recently formed his own production company in Los Angeles and has two
film projects in development. He conducted the workshop "Auditioning
for Musical Theatre" on Friday, April 17 at 8:00 a.m. - 9:15 a.m. in
the Music Hall of the Fine Arts Building. He also participated in the
panel discussion "Musical Theatre: 1998" on Friday, April 17 at 11:00
a.m. - 12:00 p.m. in the Inge Theatre.
Margo Jones
Award
George C. White
recipient of the 1997 Margo Jones Award
presented at the Independence Country Club
on Friday, April 17
George C. White is
the Founder and President of the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center.
Located on a 90-acre estate overlooking Long Island Sound in
Waterford, Connecticut, the Center was founded in 1964 to foster the
growth of theater in America through the development of new writing
and training of theater people. The Center hosts The National
Playwrights Conference, The National Critics Institute, The National
Music Theater Conference, Monte Cristo Cottage, The National Puppetry
Conference, and the Cabaret Symposium. Mr. White received a B.A. from
Yale University and a M.F.A. from the Yale School of Drama. He began
his career in theater at the age of 19 managing the International
Ballet Festival in Nervi, Italy. From 1978 to 1992, he co chaired the
Theater Management Program at the Yale School of Drama. He is
founding chairman of the Sundance Institute and a board member of the
Metropolitan Opera Guild, the Arts and Business Council, New
Dramatists, and the International Theater Institute. He has served as
a commissioner for the Connecticut Commission on the Arts for 14
years. He received a presidential appointment as a member of the
National Council on the Arts and currently is also a member of the
Antoinette Perry (Tony) Awards Nominating Committee. Mr. White has
directed numerous off-Broadway, regional, and international theater
productions. He participated in the panel discussion "Musical
Theatre: 1998" on Friday, April 17 at 11:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. in the
Inge Theatre.
Conference Scholars
1998 Conference Scholars
Conference Director:
Jackson R. Bryer, Ph.D is a
Professor of English at the University of Maryland, College Park. In
1981, he served as a consultant to the National Endowment for the
Humanities for the William Inge Archives at Independence Community
College. He is the editor of The Theatre We Worked For: The
Letters of Eugene O'Neill To Kenneth MacGowan (1982) and many
other publications. In 1988 he published "An Interview with Robert
Anderson" in Studies In American Drama and most
recently edited The Playwright's Art: Conversations With
Contemporary American Dramatists, published by Rutgers
University Press, and New Essays On F. Scott Fitzgerald's
Neglected Stories.
Scholars:
John Bell, James Madison
University, Harrisonburg, VA presented "Stasis, Compromise and Happily
Ever After: A Comparison of Sondheim's Company and
Inge's Picnic."
Craig Clinton, Reed College in
Portland, Oregon presented "Politics and Difference in Robert
Anderson's Tea and Sympathy."
Richard A. Davison,
University of Delaware, Newark, DE presented "What is Dated and What
is Not: Inge's The Dark at the Top of the Stairs in
1957/58 and Today."
David Finkle, a freelance journalist, who
specializes in writing about the arts presented "The Illumination at
'the Top of the Stairs'." He also participated in the
panel discussion "Getting Media Coverage for Your Arts Event" on
Saturday, April 18 at 2:45 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. at the Independence
Museum.
Mark K. Fulk, John Brown University, Siloam
Springs, AR presented the work "Who Killed the Baker's Wife? Sondheim
and Adultery."
Matt Hampel, a senior at the University of
Kansas, Lawrence, KS presented "Sondheim's Carnival: Language,
Identity, and Anyone Can Whistle."
Susan Halloran, a doctoral candidate in English
at the University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK presented "Self and Other:
Community and Identity in Inge's Picnic and
Sondheim's Into the Woods."
Michael M. O'Hara, Ball State University,
Muncie, IN presented "Out of the Bus and Into
the Woods: Connections Between Inge and Sondheim."
Beth C. Rips, a PhD student in English at the
University of Nebraska, Omaha, NE presented "Deanie Loomis: Inge's
Jazz Age Ophelia."
Alisa C. Roost, a doctoral candidate at the
Graduate School and University Center of City University of New York,
New York City, NY presented "Stephen Sondheim and The Beauty
Myth."
Jim Stacy, Northwestern State University of
Louisiana, Natchitoches, LA presented "Sondheim and the Matter of
Perspective(s)."
Brian Warren, South Texas Community College,
McAllen, Texas presented "Marriage: Paradise or Perdition? Matrimony
in the Art of William Inge and Stephen Sondheim."
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