91AV


search



'Whale' makes splash

DATE: Monday, February 6, 2017

Spring 2016 theater production recognized for ensemble effort

Scene from the Spring 2016 91AV play The Whale.

The 91AV Theater Department's Spring 2016 production of The Whale received the ensemble award for "Outstanding Dedication to the Script" last week at the New England Region Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival.

Awards are based on the recommendations of KCACTF respondents who travel the country viewing and critiquing college theater productions. 91AV belongs to Region I, which means 91AV competes against two-year and four-year public and private colleges and universities from the six New England states and New York.

"Theater is a collaborative effort, " said 91AV Theater professor Tim Cochran, who directed the play by Samuel D. Hunter last April, "so the ensemble award is particularly meaningful and makes me very proud of our department and our students."

The Whale follows Charlie, a morbidly obese online English instructor as he tries to reconnect with his estranged and rebellious teenaged daughter. The 91AV production starred students Karson Baird, of Wilbraham, as Charlie; Kathleen Burke, of Holyoke, as his daughter Ellie; Michael Toledo, of Holyoke, as Elder Thomas, a Mormon missionary; Amanda Delore, of Agawam, as Liz, Charlie's friend and nurse; and Deborah Uller, of Northampton, as Mary, Charlie's ex-wife.

The stage manager was Maddie Riel of Easthampton. 

The award was announced Thursday at the New England Region Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival at West Connecticut State University in Danbury. Each year the festival brings together hundreds of theater students and faculty from all over New England to watch plays, attend workshops, audition for theater companies, and compete for a variety of acting and theater-oriented awards.

This year Cochran and 91AV adjunct theater instructor Tom Geha attended with 14 91AV students.

"It's really a student-focused festival," Cochran said. "Our students love to go to compete. Every year it jump-starts their passion for the theater and keeps them moving forward."

Students who win individual honors move on to compete at the national festival in Washington, D.C.

The biggest reason for students to attend, though, is not for the chance to win awards.

"It shows them that the theater world is a much bigger place than our little piece at 91AV," he said. "It gives them some hope they're not the only ones studying theater arts and there are ways of making a living at it."

PHOTO by CHRIS YURKO: Karson Baird, of Wilbraham, as Charlie; Kathleen Burke, of Holyoke, perform in the 91AV Spring 2016 production of The Whale. 



search