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Calvin College's
reputation for scholarship has long been recognized. Its reputation
as a producer of top-notch theater has not. But the Grand Awards - the
Grand Rapids' version of the Tony awards -- are helping change that
perception.
This year Calvin
earned nine of a possible 15 nominations in the new college category.
And, at the October 15 ceremony, Calvin actors won three of five awards.
Calvin had won only one award in the previous three ceremonies (David
Leug's won last year's scenic design award).
A reworking of
the nomination criteria put Calvin students on a more level playing
field this year for the first time in the history of the awards. In
the past, colleges were forced to compete with not only other college
productions, but also with all of Grand Rapids' other non-collegiate
theater companies. It often put Calvin students and other schools' students
at a disadvantage.
"If a play calls
for an 80-year-old, then they (non-collegiate acting companies) can
use an actual 80-year-old, whereas we have a student playing an 80-year-old,"
said Calvin Theater Company Director Debra Freeberg. "Our students wouldn't
be considered (for awards) no matter how good their work."
This year all of
the area's college productions were pitted against each other in categories
separate from the non-college community theatre companies.
Calvin's production
of Shakespeare's "The Comedy of Errors" earned the prestigious Outstanding
College Play award. Also, Terence Schoone-Jongen (above) earned the
Best Actor nod for his work in "Translations" and Micah Green was named
Best Supporting Actor for his work in "The Comedy of Errors."
The director of
"The Comedy of Errors," Robert Hubbard, was on hand at the ceremony
to accept the Outstanding Play award. He described the Grand Awards
as "a good time" and said the award was affirmation that Calvin theatre
is on a par with "anyone else in the city." Freeberg also was gratified
by the awards. "When I arrived 10 years ago, many local folks didn't
know we had a theater program (at Calvin)," she said.
For Schoone-Jongen
the Grand Award was not of paramount importance. "I think that it's
really neat to be recognized," he said, "but the shows I was in, especially
'Translations', were the real reward." Schoone-Jongen, a veteran of
Calvin theater with five mainstage performances under his belt, is more
proud of what the awards say about the quality of acting and production
in the Calvin Theater Company (CTC).
The only thing
really lacking at the awards ceremony was a category for production
design, a consequence of financial constraints on the awards committee.
As it stands right now, the Grand Awards only acknowledge collegiate
Best Actor and Actress, Best Supporting Actor and Actress and Outstanding
Play. That disappoints Calvin's professional staff, said Freeberg, which
"has built a reputation for stellar designs." The Grand Awards hopes
to add design to next year's collegiate categories.
-- with reporting
by media relations writer Dane VandenBerg, class of 2001
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