Archive of pre-production information and photos 2007-2016, Humboldt State University Theatre, Film and Dance Performances in Arcata, California.
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Monday, May 2, 2011
SEE YOU IN SEPTEMBER!
FAT PIG
by Neil Labute
Sept. 15-17, 22-24
BRIGADOON
Lerner & Loewe
Oct. 13-16, 20-23
SOME ASSEMBLY REQUIRED
by Eugene Stickland
Dec. 1-3, 8-11
VENUS
by Suzan Lori-Parks
Feb. 8-12
BLITHE SPIRIT
by Noel Coward
Feb. 29- March 4
Spring Dance Production
April 11-15
10 Minute Play Festival
April 25-29
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Permission Granted: HSU Theatre Project Gets Rumi Poems

Virtually unknown in the West until recent years, the 13th century Sufi mystic known as Rumi is now one of the most popular and best-selling poets in America. Some say a principal reason is The Essential Rumi, a collection of verses translated by Coleman Barks.
HSU Theatre, Film & Dance emeritus professor John Heckel wanted to gather interested students and community members to create a theatre piece based on Rumi’s poems. But they would first need legal access to the poetry in order to explore, select and dramatize appropriate verses. “The whole project was dependent on getting the rights to these translations,” Heckel said.
But what could have been a complicated negotiation turned out not to be. Coleman Barks promptly responded to Heckel’s email inquiry with permission to use his translations from The Essential Rumi, as well as his many other volumes of Rumi’s work.
So now the Rumi project is on the HSU Theatre, Film & Dance performance schedule for December.
“The plan is to get a group of about eight students and some community members, read these translations and put together an evening of theatre, based on the life and works of Rumi,” Heckel said.
Coleman Barks was educated at the University of North Carolina and the University of California at Berkeley, and taught poetry and creative writing at the University of Georgia for 30 years. At the suggestion of poet Robert Bly, he began translating Rumi’s verses each day after teaching his classes, at first with no thought of publication.
Coleman Barks’ new compendium of translations from the past 34 years, Rumi: The Big Red Book, will be published in the fall.
There is keen interest in Rumi’s visionary poetry of peace and ecstasy on the North Coast, including among HSU students and alumni, John Heckel believes. “We’re inviting the community to participate in this project,” he said, “and we invite their help in bringing Coleman Barks to campus as part of it.”
Media: Humboldt State Now
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Play Chosen for National Conference

The ten minute play, Outside Inside, concerns families of prisoners.
Margaret Kelso’s plays produced at HSU were the full lengths Relative Captivity in 2007 and The Sex in Question, as well as the one act plays, Medical Court and Bea. The children’s musical she co-wrote, The Big Bad Wolf and the Endangered Forest, was produced by the Portland Opera in Portland, Oregon. Several of her short plays were performed at Plays in Progress in Eureka.
The 24th annual ATHE conference will be held August 3 through 6 in Los Angeles.
Thursday, December 17, 2009
THE MARRIAGE OF BETTE AND BOO: Reno Bound!
The Marriage of Bette and Boo, a recent production of HSU's Department of Theatre, Film and Dance, has been invited to perform and compete at the regional Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival [KCACTF] competition in Reno, Nev. in February. This is the first time since 1997 that HSU has gone to the regional festival and the play is one of only four productions chosen from thirty-two entries to compete at this level for the opportunity to perform at the national festival at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington D.C. this April.
In addition to the entire 'Bette and Boo' production traveling to Reno to compete, student members of the cast, crew and design team have been selected to compete in their individual areas. Lanelle Chavez, Kyle Ryan, and Brittany Williams have been invited to compete for the Irene Ryan Award in Acting. Ali Beltramo and Genneveve Hood have been selected for their lighting and scenic design work to participate in the Barbizon Design competition. Awards of recognition of Meritorious Achievement were given to Henry Echeverria (Prop Master), Brian Pike (Stage Manager), and Gabriel Holman (Assistant Director).
KCACTF is a national theater program involving 18,000 students from colleges and universities nationwide that has served as a catalyst in improving the quality of college theater in the United States. The KCACTF has grown into a network of more than 600 academic institutions throughout the country, where theater departments and student artists showcase their work and receive outside assessment by KCACTF respondents. The United States is divided into eight regions and HSU is part of Region 7, which encompasses colleges and universities from Northern California (San Francisco, Sacramento and north), Northern Nevada, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska. Two respondents from Washington state evaluated HSU's production of 'The Marriage of Bette and Boo.
'A benefit performance will be held February 11th in JVD theatre to raise travel funds and to prepare the cast, crew, designers, and technicians to travel to Reno the week of February 14th through the 20th.
The play was written by Christopher Durang and directed by HSU Associate Professor Jody Sekas. It has been heralded as "one of the best productions ever staged on campus--or for that matter, anywhere in Humboldt County" by Beti Trauth, correspondent for the Humboldt Beacon. More information in posts below.
In addition to the entire 'Bette and Boo' production traveling to Reno to compete, student members of the cast, crew and design team have been selected to compete in their individual areas. Lanelle Chavez, Kyle Ryan, and Brittany Williams have been invited to compete for the Irene Ryan Award in Acting. Ali Beltramo and Genneveve Hood have been selected for their lighting and scenic design work to participate in the Barbizon Design competition. Awards of recognition of Meritorious Achievement were given to Henry Echeverria (Prop Master), Brian Pike (Stage Manager), and Gabriel Holman (Assistant Director).
KCACTF is a national theater program involving 18,000 students from colleges and universities nationwide that has served as a catalyst in improving the quality of college theater in the United States. The KCACTF has grown into a network of more than 600 academic institutions throughout the country, where theater departments and student artists showcase their work and receive outside assessment by KCACTF respondents. The United States is divided into eight regions and HSU is part of Region 7, which encompasses colleges and universities from Northern California (San Francisco, Sacramento and north), Northern Nevada, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska. Two respondents from Washington state evaluated HSU's production of 'The Marriage of Bette and Boo.
'A benefit performance will be held February 11th in JVD theatre to raise travel funds and to prepare the cast, crew, designers, and technicians to travel to Reno the week of February 14th through the 20th.
The play was written by Christopher Durang and directed by HSU Associate Professor Jody Sekas. It has been heralded as "one of the best productions ever staged on campus--or for that matter, anywhere in Humboldt County" by Beti Trauth, correspondent for the Humboldt Beacon. More information in posts below.
Labels:
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THE MARRIAGE OF BETTE AND BOO
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
HSU Film Professor Wins Outstanding Faculty Award

More on her award here at Humboldt State Now.
Dancers in Percussion Concert December 6
Dancers led by HSU Theatre, Film and Dance faculty member Deborah Ketelsen will perform traditional dances of the Anlo-Ewe people, when the World Percussion Group performs as part of the all-percussion concert in the Van Duzer Theatre on Saturday, December 6.
The World Percussion Group, directed by Howard Kaufman, completes the first half of the program with traditional Anlo-Ewe dance drumming from Ghana in West Africa. The concert also features the HSU Percussion Ensemble and the Humboldt Calypso Band, both directed by Eugene Novotney.
The concert begins at 8 p.m. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students/seniors, from the HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. First 50 HSU students Free with ID. http://HSUMusic.blogspot.com.
The World Percussion Group, directed by Howard Kaufman, completes the first half of the program with traditional Anlo-Ewe dance drumming from Ghana in West Africa. The concert also features the HSU Percussion Ensemble and the Humboldt Calypso Band, both directed by Eugene Novotney.
The concert begins at 8 p.m. Tickets are $7 general, $3 students/seniors, from the HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. First 50 HSU students Free with ID. http://HSUMusic.blogspot.com.
Sunday, March 2, 2008
Kennedy Center Festival Honors HSU Faculty and Students
Assistant Professor Rae Robison and several Humboldt State University students were honored for their achievements at the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival held at California State University at Los Angeles.
Robison, who teaches costume design and has designed several recent HSU shows as well as directing Urinetown this fall, received the Kennedy Center National Artist Teaching grant, one of seven given to educators in the United States.
Two students won Merit Awards for their work on Urinetown: Maria Meyer for Choreography and Lela Annotto-Pemberton for Dance Captain. Students Julia Chase (makeup design for Urinetown) and Becky Parker for costume technology (Urinetown and last spring’s The School for Scandal) won invitations to the Design and Technology Exhibit, a seven-state regional competition.
Genneveve Hood was one of five regional finalists for the Barbizon Achievement in Costume Design, for her Urinetown designs. Katherine Bickford placed third in the regional Stage Management competition for her work on Relative Captivity this fall.
Fourteen HSU students were invited to the festival in Los Angeles for their achievements. They include the nominees for the Irene Ryan acting scholarship, which selects 2 student nationally to study in Europe: Joseph Castro, Johanna Hembry, Megan Hughes, Erik Rhea and Lindsey Tewksbury. Also attending were Clayton Cook, Chris Hatcher, Leslie Ostrom and Kelly Whitaker, as their partners for the acting competition.
The students were accompanied in Los Angeles by HSU Theatre, Film & Dance faculty members Rae Robison and Jody Sekas, and staff member Catherine Brown.
Robison, who teaches costume design and has designed several recent HSU shows as well as directing Urinetown this fall, received the Kennedy Center National Artist Teaching grant, one of seven given to educators in the United States.
Two students won Merit Awards for their work on Urinetown: Maria Meyer for Choreography and Lela Annotto-Pemberton for Dance Captain. Students Julia Chase (makeup design for Urinetown) and Becky Parker for costume technology (Urinetown and last spring’s The School for Scandal) won invitations to the Design and Technology Exhibit, a seven-state regional competition.
Genneveve Hood was one of five regional finalists for the Barbizon Achievement in Costume Design, for her Urinetown designs. Katherine Bickford placed third in the regional Stage Management competition for her work on Relative Captivity this fall.
Fourteen HSU students were invited to the festival in Los Angeles for their achievements. They include the nominees for the Irene Ryan acting scholarship, which selects 2 student nationally to study in Europe: Joseph Castro, Johanna Hembry, Megan Hughes, Erik Rhea and Lindsey Tewksbury. Also attending were Clayton Cook, Chris Hatcher, Leslie Ostrom and Kelly Whitaker, as their partners for the acting competition.
The students were accompanied in Los Angeles by HSU Theatre, Film & Dance faculty members Rae Robison and Jody Sekas, and staff member Catherine Brown.
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