MTSU Theatre offers classic ‘A Funny Thing Happened’

Whether you’re looking for something familiar or something peculiar, MTSU Theatre will have the answer beginning Thursday, April 4, with a new production of the Stephen Sondheim musical comedy classic, “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.”Forum poster web

Directed by speech and theatre professor Kristi Shamburger, the beloved Tony Award-winning musical features a cast of 18.

“A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum” will carry the audience all the way back to ancient Rome to follow a slave named Pseudolus and his various machinations to win his freedom.

Its most recognized song is its opening number, “Comedy Tonight,” which is regularly used in revues and charity performances.

Pseudolous, portrayed by MTSU sophomore Matthew Hunter, left, tries to persuade Hysterium, played by junior Christian McLaurine, to pretend to be a corpse in the upcoming Tucker Theatre production of "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum." (photo courtesy of MTSU Theatre and Dance)

Pseudolous, portrayed by MTSU sophomore Matthew Hunter, left, tries to persuade Hysterium, played by junior Christian McLaurine, to pretend to be a corpse in the Tucker Theatre production of “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.” (photo courtesy of MTSU Theatre and Dance)

Performances are set at 7:30 p.m. April 4-6 and again April 10-13 in Tucker Theatre inside MTSU’s Boutwell Dramatic Arts Auditorium.

A matinee also is scheduled for 2 p.m. Sunday, April 14.

General admission tickets are $10 each, and tickets for students in kindergarten through 12th grades are $5 each. MTSU students with valid IDs will be admitted free.

“I love Stephen Sondheim’s music and lyrics and am really thrilled with our cast and the way they are handling the material,” said Shamburger. “It is a farce, which I like to say is ‘comedy on steroids.’”

The show, which opened in 1962 with Zero Mostel in the lead role, won Best Musical, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actor, Best Book and Best Director trophies at the 1963 Tony Awards and continues to be performed all over the world.

A 1966 film version also starred Mostel, and Broadway revivals featuring Phil Silvers in 1972 and Nathan Lane in 1996 also won Tony Awards.

The Tucker Theatre Box Office will open one hour before each show, and the theatre will open for seating 30 minutes before curtain time. The box office will close promptly when each show begins, and no tickets will be sold during the shows.

For more information about the show, or to buy tickets online, visit www.mtsu.edu/tuckertheatre. You also can call the Tucker Theatre Box Office at 615-494-8810. A map of MTSU arts venues is available at www.mtsu.edu/socialmedia/docs/mapforweb.jpg.

 

MTSU Theatre traces family ties in ‘Beauty Queen of Leenane’

MTSU students will take audiences to the Irish village of Leenane, Connemara, in County Galway when Tucker Theatre lifts the curtain on “The Beauty Queen of Leenaneon Wednesday, Feb. 27.

Beauty Queen of Leenane poster web

Directed by Professor Kyle Kennedy, “The Beauty Queen of Leenane” features a cast of four, including Nashville actress Kelly Lapczynski, an MTSU alumna, as guest artist.

“The Beauty Queen” performances at MTSU are scheduled Feb. 27-March 2 at 7:30 each evening. One matinee performance is planned at 2 p.m. Sunday, March 3.

Kelly Lapczynski

Kelly Lapczynski

“The Beauty Queen of Leenane,” set in the 1990s, depicts Mag, a 70-year-old woman, and Maureen, the 40-year-old daughter who takes care of her. With deception, manipulation and heartbreak hovering over Maureen’s life, her last chance of happiness lies in the hands of Pato, the man with whom she’s fallen in love.

Nominated for an Olivier Award as Best Play for its London production and a four-time Tony Award winner for its 1998 Broadway production, “The Beauty Queen” is “a dark, sardonic comedy … that keeps the audience enthralled and at the edge of their seats,” said director Kennedy.

General admission tickets are $10 each, and tickets for students in kindergarten through 12th grades are $5 each. MTSU students with valid IDs will be admitted free.

The box office will open one hour before each show, and the theatre will open for seating 30 minutes before curtain time. The box office will close promptly when each show begins, and no tickets will be sold during the shows.

For more information about the show, or to buy tickets online, visit www.mtsu.edu/tuckertheatre/PurchaseTickets.php and click on the “Beauty Queen of Leenane” poster. You also can call 615-494-8810.

MTSU to host ‘Tennessee VSA Young Soloist’ event Feb. 27

Seven young musicians from across the state will perform at MTSU on Feb. 27 for the Tennessee VSA Young Soloist competition.

The musicians will take the stage at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 27, at Hinton Music Hall inside MTSU’s Wright Music Building.

VSA Young Soloists poster webThe competition, which is organized by VSA Tennessee, is open to any vocalist or instrumentalist ages 14 to 25 with any form of disability. The state event feeds into an international competition, which is hosted by the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.

All types of music are accepted, including country, classical, jazz, rap, rock, bluegrass and world music.

VSA Tennessee is a statewide nonprofit organization that provides resources, tools and opportunities for arts programming for people with disabilities. It’s also an affiliate of VSA, the international organization on arts and disabilities founded in 1974 by Ambassador Jean Kennedy Smith and formerly known as Very Special Arts.

Tennessee contestants submitted country, jazz and classical entries for the 2013 Young Soloist event, organizers said.

“The entries this year are the strongest overall group of entries that VSA Tennessee has ever seen,” said judge JP Williams, a singer/songwriter for Major Bob Music.

“Not only are they talented musicians, but the creativity and artistic expression is extremely impressive.”

Each state’s Young Soloist winner receives a small monetary award, a plaque and performance opportunities. Recordings of performances by the top two state winners are submitted to the national VSA Young Soloist Competition.

Winners at the national level receive $5,000 scholarships and the opportunity to perform at the Kennedy Center.

VSA Tennessee Executive Director Lori Kissinger, who teaches organizational communication at MTSU, has once again recruited members of her experiential learning classes to help with the event.

Kissinger’s Organizational Communication 3250 EXL class is coordinating the logistics. Last semester, her students worked in several capacities on “The Golden Ratio Project,” an arts performance that ultimately will travel to Athens, Greece, for an international arts education exchange.

“We feel honored to be involved with such a great project,” said MTSU junior Brian Schulist, who is majoring in organizational communications and is a member of the EXL class.

“These young performers are extremely talented and each bring a unique genre to the competition. With so much talent on one stage, it will be a great night of music!”

The VSA Young Soloist state competition is open to the public. Tickets are $5 each and may be purchased from students in the Organizational Communication EXL class or at the door on Feb. 27.

For more information, visit www.vsatn.org or contact Kissinger at userk7706@comcast.net or 615-210-8819.

The Tennessee VSA Young Soloist competition is sponsored by the First Tennessee Bank Foundation.

Spring Women’s and Gender Studies lectures tackle songs, sex

Work music and sex among senior citizens are the topics on tap for the Spring 2013 Women’s and Gender Studies Research Lecture Series at MTSU.

Antony & the Johnsons BMH cover

Cover art for Antony and the Johnsons’ “Be My Husband” is shown above.

Nina Simone BMH cover

Jazz great Nina Simone is shown in this cover art for “Be My Husband.”

Kara McLeland will present “Oh Daddy/Mama, Love Me Good: Work Songs, Civil Rights and a (Trans) Gendered Dialogue” at 3 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 21, in Room 100 of the James Union Building.

McLeland, a graduate student in the Department of Music, will trace a specific music dialogue that was carried on through three versions of the same tune: the 1945 African-American work song “Rosie,” Nina Simone’s 1965 adaptation of the song’s melody for “Be My Husband” and a 21st century cover of Simone’s song by Antony and the Johnsons.

On Thursday, March 21, Dr. Jessica Kratzer will present “Senior Citizen Sexuality: A Discussion of the Intersection of Sex, Communication, Gender and Aging.”

Dr. Jessica Kratzer

Dr. Jessica Kratzer

Kratzer, an assistant professor of communication studies, debuted her Sex and Communication course in the fall 2012 semester. Her students viewed and were asked to comment on “Still Doing It,” a documentary in which several elderly women discussed their sex lives.

Each academic year, the Women’s and Gender Studies Research Lectures present a wide range of feminist perspectives from MTSU faculty and students at informal gatherings.

The lectures are free and open to the public. For more information, contact Dr. Pat Bradley, professor of English, at 615-904-8128 or pat.bradley@mtsu.edu.

— Gina K. Logue (gina.logue@mtsu.edu)

Dance explores diversity in ‘Exodus Project II’ Jan. 24-25

Topics ranging from biracial identity to physical disabilities will be explored through movement as MTSU Theatre and Dance presents “The Exodus Project II: Understanding Diversity Through Dance” next week.

The performance will run two nights, at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 24-25, at Tucker Theatre inside the Boutwell Performing Arts Building on the MTSU campus.

The nationally recognized MTSU Dance Program has a commitment to multicultural and interdisciplinary education and sponsoring this dance concert is in line with fulfilling that mission, organizers say.

The concert will present works examining physical disabilities, gender, race, ethnicity, and sexuality, according to Professor Kim Neal Nofsinger, director of dance and artistic director of the MTSU Dance Theatre.

“The theme of each dance deals with diversity in a different way,” said Nofsinger, adding that some topics examine “mature subject matter” such as sexual orientation and gender identity.

Included will be performances by Stefanie Batten Bland of Company Stefanie Batten Bland in New York City; Amy Shelley and Angie Simmons of Evolving Doors Dance in Denver, Colo.; and seven members of the MTSU Dance Theatre.

Bland will perform a piece called “Weight,” which examines her biracial identity. “What is the weight of your cultural identity?” Nofsinger said of Bland’s dance. “How does that hold you back or keep you down, or does that keep you grounded?”

Performing as a special guest with Nofsinger will be Bethany Hoppe, a faculty member in the Department of Speech and Theatre who has used a wheelchair her whole life.

Following the performance will be an audience discussion facilitated by Dr. Maura Keefe, who is chairwoman of dance at The College at Brockport at the State University of New York, the Scholar in Residence at Jacob’s Pillow Dance in Massachusetts and “one of the top arts scholars in nation,” Nofsinger said.

The concert is made possible with funding from Black History Month, the Tennessee Board of Regents Diversity and Access Grant and the Distinguished Lecture Fund.

Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for students, and MTSU students are admitted free with ID. The Tucker Theatre Box Office will open one hour before each evening’s performance.

For additional information, contact Nofsinger at kim.nofsinger@mtsu.edu. For more information about the MTSU Dance Theatre, visit www.mtsu.edu/dance/dancetheatre.php.

— Jimmy Hart (jimmy.hart@mtsu.edu)

Students assist with special performance at Parthenon

Members of MTSU instructor Lori Kissinger’s Raider’s Learning Communities Speech Class pose for a photo inside Nashville’s Parthenon Dec. 5. The group provided narration for the VSA Tennessee “Golden Ratio Project.” (photos courtesy of Lori Kissinger)

MTSU students played a part in a recent arts performance that will soon be on exhibit across Tennessee and will ultimately travel to Athens, Greece, for an international arts education exchange.

Students from MTSU instructor Lori Kissinger’s Raider’s Learning Communities Speech Class provided the narration for “The Golden Ratio Project,” a Dec. 5 event at Nashville’s Parthenon presented by Tennessee students with disabilities.

An MTSU experiential-learning organizational communication class provided funding for the project and also served as volunteers during the event. MTSU fraternity Pi Kappa Phi provided T-shirts for the Movement Connection Dance Company for the performance, Kissinger said.

During the performance, young people with disabilities used music, dance, poetry and the visual arts to explain the mathematical concept of the Golden Ratio, an irrational number that has ties, either by design or coincidence, that can be found in nature, architecture, the human body and even the universe.

Members of an MTSU organizational communication class pose for a photo at the feet of the Athena statue inside Nashville’s Parthenon Dec. 5. The group provided funding for the VSA Tennessee “Golden Ratio Project” and also served as volunteers.

The performance was a result of workshops and residences conducted this fall through VSA Tennessee to help children connect to math. VSA Tennessee is a statewide nonprofit organization that provides resources, tools and opportunities for arts programming for people with disabilities.

Kissinger, who teaches organizational communication at MTSU, said the works of art from the program, as well as a DVD of the performance, will travel across Tennessee for exhibitions before heading to Athens for the international event.

VSA Tennessee is an affiliate of VSA, the international organization on arts and disabilities founded in 1974 by Ambassador Jean Kennedy Smith. VSA was formerly known as Very Special Arts.

For more information about VSA Tennessee, visit http://vsatn.org.

‘MTSU On the Record’ tackles talking — and not talking — about sex

The issues we encounter when we try to discuss sex formed the basis of discussion on a recent “MTSU On the Record.”

Dr. Jessica Kratzer

Dr. Jessica Kratzer, an assistant professor in the Department of Speech and Theatre, talked about her new course, “Sex and Communication,” with host Gina Logue on WMOT-FM (89.5 and www.wmot.org).

You can listen to their conversation here.

Students taking the course explore sexual communication in parent/child relationships, the “hookup” culture among college students, how gender affects men’s and women’s perspectives about sex, and communication about sex and intimacy between senior citizens, among other topics.

To listen to previous “MTSU On the Record” programs, go to the “Audio Clips” archives here and here.

For more information about “MTSU On the Record,” contact Logue at 615-898-5081 or WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.

Blue Raider Debaters welcome teams for memorial tournament

This weekend, MTSU’s Blue Raider Debaters will host their first tournament on campus in nearly a decade, drawing teams from across the country to compete in an event honoring a former teammate.

The 2012 Naveen “Scott” Pejaver Memorial Debate Tournament, set Oct. 19-21 in the Business and Aerospace Building, is a “double debate-till-you-drop” competition, according to Dr. Patrick Richey, team coach and director of forensics.

“Universities and colleges from as far away as Oregon will be on campus to debate National Parliamentary Debate and International Public Debate formats,” said Richey, who also is a professor of communication studies in the Department of Speech and Theatre.

“It is an honor for MTSU to host this large event, and the Blue Raider Debaters have worked hard to insure this is a memorable event for MTSU and the collegiate debate community.”

Pejaver, a popular MTSU senior involved in debate and theatre who also served as president of the university’s Intercollegiate Debate Association chapter, passed away unexpectedly in 1997 at his home in Memphis. His family established a memorial scholarship in his name that funds textbooks for debate students.

MTSU’s debate team, founded with the university in 1911, was revamped in 2011. It immediately began recruiting members and hosting special debate events on campus and participated in 11 tournaments in five states during the 2011-12 academic year.

The Pejaver Memorial Debate Tournament kicks off at 2:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 19, with registration and judges’ training and concludes Sunday afternoon, Oct. 21, with final competitions and awards.

You can learn more about the team at www.mtsu.edu/debate. Details on this weekend’s tournament are available at www.mtsu.edu/debate/MTSU%20Tournament.php.

— Gina E. Fann (Gina.Fann@mtsu.edu)

Theatre and Dance opens season in an ‘Elephant’s Graveyard’

Tennessee students will depict a tragic and confusing moment in Tennessee history when MTSU Theatre and Dance is opening its 2012-13 season with George Brant’s “Elephant’s Graveyard.”

Directed by Dr. Crosby Hunt with movement by Professor Kim Neal Nofsinger, “Elephant’s Graveyard” will feature a cast of 13 students from across the state in performances set Oct. 3-6 and Oct. 10-12 in the Studio Theatre inside the Boutwell Dramatic Arts Auditorium.

“Elephant’s Graveyard” makes use of historical facts and folklore to investigate the story of Mary, an elephant who was put to death by hanging in World War I-era Erwin, Tenn., after killing her trainer.

Dating back to 1916, Brant’s play, which earned the 2008 Keene Prize for Literature, mixes humor and tragedy to explore the conflict between a small town and the laborers in a traveling circus act.

“I like that it’s in the studio (theatre) because it’s very small and intimate,” Hunt said. “It’s an interesting read, and it’s a different kind of play. Everyone tells their own version of the story, so they don’t really have scenes. It’s altogether just a good story.”

The show’s running time is about 75 minutes. Curtain time is 7:30 each evening, and there also will be a single matinee performance at 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 7.

General admission tickets are $10 each, and tickets for students in kindergarten through 12th grades are $5 each. MTSU students with valid IDs will be admitted free.

Seating is limited to 100 people per performance, and tickets are available on a first-come, first-served basis.

The box office will open one hour before each show, and the theatre will open for seating 30 minutes before curtain time. The box office will close promptly when each show begins, and no tickets will be sold during the shows.

For more information about the show, visit www.mtsu.edu/tuckertheatre/Shows.php or call 615-494-8810.

MTSU team serves up ‘mixed plate’ of debate

The rejuvenated MTSU Debate Team is welcoming the public to its annual “Mixed Plate Debate” on Wednesday, Feb. 29, beginning at 6:30 p.m. in the State Farm Room of the University’s Business and Aerospace Building.

The event, open to the public, will split the team into three groups, each of which will represent one of the top candidates for the 2012 Republican nomination for president. The teams will then debate various political topics, defending their assigned candidates’ own views on subjects like war and the national budget.

Like the University, the MTSU Debate Team is celebrating its centennial year. Recently it’s been undergoing an overhaul under the guidance of new coach Dr. Patrick Richey, who joined the MTSU faculty in fall 2011 in the Department of Speech and Theatre as a professor of communication studies.

By attending just one of the team’s semiweekly practices, it’s apparent that MTSU’s debaters are thriving under Richey’s coaching. A stop sign that says “Don’t STOP Believin’” hangs on the chalkboard—precisely the idea on which Richey bases his coaching, believing that there’s always room for improvement.

“I’d like to see us win more speaker awards,” he says, emphasizing that MTSU’s debaters are already “arguing really well” as a team. The trophies filling the practice room’s shelves confirm that.

The team members—about 30 total, but not all compete at the same events—seem to function like a family. Richey explains that such is normal for a debate team, who spend many weekends riding in a van, eating and competing together while they travel to tournaments.

Dr. Pat Richey

Richey says the team has plans to host another “Mixed Plate Debate” this fall to coincide with the 2012 presidential election.

The Mixed Plate Debate is a great opportunity for the University community to watch hard-working team members in a more laid-back atmosphere than at their customary out-of-town tournaments. Don’t expect them to be too laid-back, however; even when they’re having fun, this group is passionate and serious about debating.

Observing the Mixed Plate Debate may expose audience members to useful knowledge, too.

“I believe it’s every citizen’s duty and obligation to be an informed voter,” Richey says, “especially college students. They are tomorrow’s leaders and it is critical that they understand and participate in the election process.”

For more information about the MTSU Debate Team, including team photos and its spring schedule, visit www.mtsu.edu/debate. A special exhibit on the Debate Team’s Centennial year, “Veneratio Pro Victoria,” will be on display at the James E. Walker Library on campus through March 1.

– Rachel Nutt (news@mtsu.edu)