THE
BLUE &GRAY
THE UNIVERSITY OF MARY WASHINGTON STUDENT NEWSPAPER
PRESS
February 21, 2019
VOLUME 92 | ISSUE 17 SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE
1922
UMW Theatre partners with local children’s program Their family has been a part of Stage Door for about four years now, and recently, Liss was chosen to be the director of the youth division. A group of theatre students at At the same time, Liss was the University of Mary Washington also chairing for the Committee of are taking their skills out into Community Engagement at UMW. Liss the Fredericksburg community; was motivated to get more involved specifically, to the younger members. because of the University’s push Starting in January and ending toward community engaged learning. in March, the University of Mary “President Troy Paino had a faculty Washington has joined forces with meeting with Stage Door the University Productions “My favorite part about leading in the fall, to teach Stage where he the workshops is seeing Door Youth stressed Workshops, a people’s reactions when they community ten week long start to recognize the value and engagement, program for having our youth, ages the fun in what they are learning.” and college more 5-16, interested involved in the in acting. These community,” -Victoria Fortune workshops said Liss. cover a variety Liss of topics, approached the chair of UMW’s including improvisation, scene study, Department of Theatre and Dance, movement, stage combat, character Gregg Stull, with her idea and he work, Shakespeare, and many others. immediately loved it. While the UMW The idea to get UMW theatre theatre department is very involved in students more involved with Stage the Fredericksburg community, “[they] Door was first introduced by Dr. don’t do very many activities with Miriam Liss, a professor in the school aged children, and this was an Psychology department of UMW. opportunity to connect with that part of Liss’s two children, Emily, 10, and the community,” said Stull. Daniel, 12, are both aspiring actors. Taylor Mooney Staff Writer
UMW Theatre students lead acting workshops for children.
Stull recruited students within the theatre department to lead the classes and he received an overall positive response from students. Students expressed interest in the program, and they also took the initiative to schedule and run the workshops without much guidance. “[The workshops] are completely student driven,” said Stull. “We love that.” One of the student leaders involved is junior theatre major Victoria Fortune. Fortune was approached by Stull about the program and she jumped at the opportunity. Fortune has been involved in teaching other acting classes, and she hopes teaching the Stage Door Workshops will expand her knowledge and help her to become a better teacher and actor. So far, Fortune has been an instructor for a couple of workshops,
Suzanne Rossi / University Relations
one of which was improvisation. During this workshop, she worked with the children to teach them the basic rules of improvisation and how to execute them. This was accomplished by having the children participate in a variety of games where they got to practice these skills, while also having a great time. Along with improvisation, Fortune was an instructor for the workshop on body movement. In this workshop, the children were taught about the three basic body movement energies: potency, radiancy, and buoyancy. According to Fortune, “these movements can really help with on stage performances.” Fortune’s experience partnering with Stage Door has been a really positive one. “My favorite •THEATRE | 11
Marshall Hall to be replaced by new theater under President Paino’s ten-year plan Hannah Galeone Senior Writer
As the community at the University of Mary Washington expands and grows, so will the campus and University facilities. Recently, UMW President Troy Paino announced a 100 million dollar, ten-year plan for updating and changing the campus. Included in this decade long project are the plans for the demolition of Marshall Hall and the addition of a new theater to the lower section of campus. The plan to add a new theater to the University’s property will go hand-inhand with other changes to the campus.
The potential addition of a new performance space is part of a larger initiative to renovate the complex made up by DuPont, Melchers, and Pollard Halls. Planned to be placed on the south end of campus near the corner of Sunken Road and William Street, the new theater will “probably seat 300-400 people,” according to a Free Lance-Star article. A University appointed committee worked alongside a team of architects in order to determine the best possible location for a new theater on campus. “After identifying about three possible locations, the corner of
Part of Paino’s ten-year plan is to replace Marshall Hall with a theater.
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Sunken Road and William [Street] seemed like an ideal place [for the theater],” said Paino. “It not only offer[s] sufficient space, it serv[es] as a very visible and strategic gateway to downtown [and] it is also directly across the street from a parking lot.” The proposed venue would become the primary space for the UMW theatre program’s rehearsals and performances. This addition of theater space would free-up the current Klein Theatre for use by other fine arts programs such as music and dance. These renovations to the fine arts complex will cost an estimated 75 million dollars. Along with being given a new purpose, the Klein Theatre, DuPont, Pollard, and Melchers Halls will be renovated and updated. These changes are necessary to assure that the buildings are both up-to-date and brought up-to-code. “Pollard right now is not [American Disabilities Act]-compliant and it is in desperate, desperate need of attention,” President Paino said, according to the Free Lance-Star article. The new theater space will help broaden the accessibility of performing
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arts to students with disabilities. “I’m disabled [and] right now the theatre is not up-to-code,” said sophomore theatre major Maddie Neilson. “As an actor, I have to walk up a flight of stairs to perform. This new building would provide other disabled actors and disabled students the ability to perform.” The Klein Theatre has been the University community’s main stage for the theatre and dance department since 1952 and is becoming out-of-date. “Everything that needs to be accessed on [the new] stage is on one level,” said sophomore theater major Tommy Kelleher. “It’s a lot more accessible and easier for people to get around. The Klein theatre is very old. At this point, it’s completely necessary for the department to get a new space.” The proposed new theater would be a more inclusive space for all students at the University and could be accessed by a greater number of people. “Mary Washington’s big thing is inclusion and that’s not being upheld right now,” said Neilson. Although the expansion of the fine arts department •MARSHALL | 10
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Men and women’s swim teams win the CAC finals.
SPORTS | 12