OCR Text |
Show I .. - SUU THIS SUMMBR • SOUTHERN UTAH UNIVERSITY• MONDAY, JUNE 20, 1994 THE CAMPUS - - - - 51 Shakespearience (July 18-22): This workshop is Shakespearean Festival plays, led by actors, rom dance to acting and teaching, from designed for individual teachers or school planning technicians, scholars, and other members of the children to teenagers to adults, the Shakespeare Summer Series Workshops teams who are interested in producing a school or 1994 Festival company. T his course is geared for all offer somethi ng for everyone. Whether you want to classroom Shakespeare festival from start to finish. students who are at least juniors in h igh school, as learn more about the plays being presented this Work sessions on planning, adapting ideas, well as teachers and the general public. year at the Festival, whether you want to learn new activities, costuming, puppetry, feasts, exhibits, Introduction to Stage Combat (August 8-12): teaching techniques, whether you want to try your This workshop is designed for the high school or music, dance, timelines, organization, and fundhand at acting-you can do it. college actor who is beginning to work "The workshops, which can include with stage combat techniques. It is also credit from Southern Utah University, ideal for directors, technical directors, or have become extremely popular," said • stage managers desiring first-hand feeling Barbara Berrett, Festival education director. for the rigors of stage combat. "This year, in fact, we have participants Actor Combatant Training Program (August 3-27): This program includes coming from all over the United States and from Belgium and Egypt." beginning level training through "However," added R. Scott Phillips, performance in the following fight Festival managing director, "even though disciplines: unarmed, rapier and dagger, these workshops have become a very and broadsword and shield. Current Developments: Shakespeare popular part of our summer season, there is Performance (August 7-10): This program still time to enroll. " is a workshop for high school drama For information on any workshop or to coaches who utilize the works of William get registration materials sent to you, contact the Festival education office: The Shakespeare on stage. Participants will also receive information on preparing Utah Shakespearean Festival, Cedar City, students to compete in the SUU/USF High Utah 84720; telephone 801-586-7642. Registration for many of the classes School Shakespeare Competition. The Art and Craft of Medieval includes tickets to Festival plays: A Flea in Falconry (August 8-12): This course, Her Ear, A Streetcar Named Desire, A s taught by a practicing falconer, provides You Like It, Love's Labour's Lost, Richard participants with a rare opportunity to III, and The Shoemaker's Holiday. Workshops this summer include the combine the heritage, history, values, and philosophy of falconry with field study of following: birds of prey, their h abitats and nesting Shakespeare Plays (June 28- September sites, training and hunting techniques, and 3 ) and Shakespeare Forum (June the relationships of falconry to the works 28-September 3): These are self-paced of William Shakespeare. classes that enable Festival-goers to attend Falconry Field Excursions (Wednesdays the plays, se minars, orientations, and and Saturdays from June 29 through greenshows presented by the Utah September 3 ): Participants will take part in Shakespearean Festival. Participants can excursions to a variety of bird-of-prey attend all six plays and their related habitats, then return for an in-depth activities and receive three credits session in the Seminar Grove, discussing (Shakespeare Plays), or they can pick and Martin Tyner and prairie falcon Canace, the stars of the falcomy training techniques and equipment. choose which plays (along with their activities) they will attend and receive one- workshop. Shakespeare for Junior Actors (August 15-21 ): This workshop is designed to half credit per play (Shakespeare Forum). excite and motivate middle school or junior high Summer Folk Dance Workshop (August 15-19): raising are included. school students by giving them a hands-on Shakespeare for Teachers (Part I, July 29-31; This is an opportunity for participants to attend Part II, August 5-7; Part III, August 12-14): These experience with Shakespeare and his works performances of the Utah Shakespearean Festival through practical grade level appropriate workshops are designed for English teachers and and to work with various Greenshow performers, present a wealth of fresh and exciting ideas for experiences. learning dances from all over the world. bringing the Bard's plays to life in the classroom. Food As Metaphor (Part I, August 8; Part II, Actor Training (Part I, July 15- 25; Part II, The workshops may be taken individually or in any August 9; Part III, August 10): Built around Festival July 29-August 8): Participants will view the activities, each of these themed workshops season's plays, as well as participate in a number sequence. examine uses of food to describe character and Camp Shakespeare (July 25-29, senior citizens of seminars, tours, and workshops; they will also only; August 1-5, open enrollment): Class sessions culture in history, language, literature, and other prepare scenes from Shakespeare's plays with art forms-and include a meal prepared and enjoyec the coaching of Festival actors and present them each day feature lectures, discussions, and as a group, as well as an evening play. question-and-answer sessions about the Utah for Festival company members. SUU This Summer A WEEKLY PUBLICATION OF SOlTIHERN UTAH UNNERSITY Editor Associate Editors Contributors Larry Baker Lynn Dennett John McCloskey DaveMeanea Jim Robinson Neil Gardner Cal Rollins SUU This Summer is a publication of Southern Utah University, its Summer School program, its department of communication, its Office of Student Activities and the SUU Student Association. It is published eight times during the 1994 summer session: June 20, 27, July 5, 11, 18, 25 and August I. For information regarding the Almanac or advertising, please phone 586-7759 between the hours of 10 a.m. and noon, Tuesday truough Thursday. Special thanks to Sterling Church, Craig Forman, Tiffany Evans, Phillip C. Carter and David Nyman. Exhibit features women's inventions xploring the contributions of women to the history of "" ' invention will be a major theme of a traveling exhibit which will be presented at Southern Utah University June 21 -30. The exhibit, titled "Her Works Praise Her: Inventions By Women," will be displayed in the lower foyer and the Vermillion Cliffs Room of the Hunter Conference Center. In conjunction with the exhibit, a slide/lecture presentation, "Black Women's Inventions: Unsung Gifts to America," will be given June 21 by Dr. Forrest Crawford, Weber State University professor of Education. His presentation will start at 8 p.m . in the Vermillion Cliffs Room. E ""1. ·· The lecture and exhibit are both free, and the public is invited to attend both, according to Lynne Brown, director of the SUU Multicultural Center, host for the exhibit. Recent showings of the exhibit at Weber State University and Brigham Young University were very popular Brown said. The exhibit, comprised of 17 exhibit panels of photographs and graphics, is part of the traveling exhibitions of the Minnesota Historical Society. "This exhibit looks at inventions from a special point of view: the impact of women on the world of technology," Brown points out. "It also offers subtle opportunities to encourage creativity generally and invention specifically." |