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Arts in the News

Students Recognized for Excellence in Art and Writing

“homage to california” digital artwork by Claire Mallela ’22

91探花 artists and writers received dozens of honors in the Massachusetts Scholastic Art and Writing Awards, the nation鈥檚 longest-running competition to identify creative talent among students. Twenty-seven student writers received 52 awards total, including 13 Gold Key awards; 29 student artists received a total of 57 awards, 12 of which received Gold Key honors.听

Senior Samuel Dunn鈥檚 personal essay and memoir piece 鈥淥n Confession鈥 received the competition鈥檚 best in category award; jurors selected it as a piece that exceeded the expectations of a Gold Key award.听

Scholastic works in conjunction with the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University and The Boston Globe to judge regional winners. Gold Key winners are welcome to participate in the regional awards celebration, which will be held on March 14 at Tufts. Gold Key work is currently being reviewed at the national level in New York City by panels of creative professionals for National Medal honors. A full list of 91探花鈥檚 winners and honorable mentions is below:

Gold Key Winners鈥擜rt
Blake Ankner 鈥23: photography
Blake Ankner 鈥23: photography
Dingning Cao 鈥24: drawing and illustration
Dingning Cao 鈥24: digital art
Evelyn Cao 鈥22: art portfolio
Claire Mallela 鈥22: digital art
Claire Mallela 鈥22: digital art
Amara Prather 鈥26: fashion
Christopher Scanlon 鈥22: photography
Elio Thadhani 鈥23: photography
Natalie Williamson 鈥23: photography
Annie Winter 鈥22: photography

Gold Key Winners鈥擶riting
Samuel Dunn 鈥22: personal essay and memoir
Elena Ferrari 鈥24: poetry
Stephanie Fuentes 鈥22: poetry
Alec Hamblet 鈥22: short story
Melany Hirsch 鈥23: poetry
Sneha Jaiswal 鈥22: poetry
Jacob Mulliken 鈥23: journalism
Phuc Ngo 鈥23: flash fiction
Se-Aun Park 鈥24: critical essay
Katheryn Prather 鈥22: poetry
Katheryn Prather 鈥22: flash fiction
Gavin Randolph 鈥22: poetry
Elliot Smith 鈥22: poetry

Silver Key Winners鈥擜rt
Evelyn Cao 鈥22: mixed media
Isabelle Fitzgibbon 鈥23: photography
Jack Greenip 鈥23: photography
Jack Greenip 鈥23: photography
Seo Jeong Hwang 鈥23: digital art
Seo Jeong Hwang 鈥23: digital art
Christopher Scanlon 鈥22: photography
George Sherbrooke 鈥22: photography
Elliot Strauss 鈥22: photography
Elio Thadhani 鈥23: photography
Natalie Williamson 鈥23: photography
Natalie Williamson 鈥23: photography
Annie Winter 鈥23: photography
Felicity Wong 鈥25: film and animation

Silver Key Winners鈥擶riting
Alison Cao 鈥22: poetry
Alison Cao 鈥22: flash fiction
Alison Cao 鈥22: personal essay and memoir
Alison Cao 鈥22: personal essay and memoir
Michelle Chen 鈥22: personal essay and memoir
Elena Ferrari 鈥24: poetry
Elena Ferrari 鈥24: poetry
Elena Ferrari 鈥24: poetry
Elena Ferrari 鈥24: poetry
Elena Ferrari 鈥24: poetry
Lan Hai 鈥23: critical essay
Melany Hirsch 鈥23: poetry
Melany Hirsch 鈥23: poetry
Melany Hirsch 鈥23: poetry
Melany Hirsch 鈥23: personal essay and memoir
Aria Kamal 鈥23: poetry
Simone Moise 鈥22: poetry
Se-Aun Park 鈥24: critical essay
Katheryn Prather 鈥22: writing portfolio
Eliza Sadhwani 鈥23: poetry

Honorable Mention鈥擜rt
Blake Ankner 鈥23: photography
Elena Ferrari 鈥24: photography
Isabelle Fitzgibbon 鈥23: photography
Isabelle Fitzgibbon 鈥23: photography
Isabelle Fitzgibbon 鈥23: photography
Isabelle Fitzgibbon 鈥23: photography
Melanie Forney 鈥24: photography
Jack Greenip 鈥23: photography
Abby Holcomb 鈥23: photography
Isabella Kanczuk 鈥23: photography
Isabella Kanczuk 鈥23: photography
Mikka Kelechian 鈥23: photography
Savanna Leung 鈥23: drawing and illustration
Griffin MacGillivray 鈥22: photography
Dixon McClintock 鈥23: photography
Christopher Scanlon 鈥22: photography
Christopher Scanlon 鈥22: photography
Ava Scheibler 鈥22: photography
Ava Scheibler 鈥22: photography
Alden Smith 鈥23: photography
Alden Smith 鈥23: photography
Elio Thadhani 鈥23: photography
Elio Thadhani 鈥23: photography
Rajan Thakore 鈥22: photography
Zahra Tshai 鈥22: sculpture
Jack Weil 鈥23: photography
Jack Weil 鈥23: photography
Natalie Williamson 鈥23: photography
Annie Winter 鈥22: photography
Felicity Wong 鈥25: film and animation
Andy Zhang 鈥22: digital art

Honorable Mention鈥擶riting
Alison Blake 鈥22: poetry
Alison Blake 鈥22: poetry
Alison Cao 鈥22: short story
Alison Cao 鈥22: critical essay
Henry Dallman 鈥23: poetry
Teddy Ellis 鈥22: personal essay and memoir
Elena Ferrari 鈥24: poetry
Aidan Gao 鈥25: short story
Melany Hirsch 鈥23: poetry
Melany Hirsch 鈥23: poetry
Melany Hirsch 鈥23: critical essay
Isabella Kanczuk 鈥23: poetry
Simone Moise 鈥22: poetry
Jacob Mulliken 鈥23: journalism
Talia Sherman 鈥22: personal essay and memoir
John Truesdale 鈥23: poetry
Yi Yang 鈥23: poetry
Sam (Yi Xuan) Yu 鈥24: short story
Sam (Yi Xuan) Yu 鈥24: poetry

鈥淢urder, Mayhem, and Mystery鈥 Brings the Wide World of Sound to King Theatre

Record players provide just some of the sound effects for the winter play, Murder, Mayhem, and Mystery.

Rotary phones, crunchy gravel, and a tiger鈥檚 roar鈥攚ell, an overturned hand drum containing a precise number of metal nuts鈥攁re among the many objects carefully arranged on the King Theatre stage as student Foley artists and actors prepare for Thursday鈥檚 opening of the winter play, Murder, Mayhem, and Mystery: An Evening of Radio Dramas.听

The show tells four classic radio dramas and takes the performers back to the early 20th century, when radio plays were can鈥檛-miss entertainment. As students perform the stories, they use dozens of handmade sound effects. A vuvuzela, extended and retracted, becomes an elephant; a train chugs into station with a combination of metals and whistles; big band music scratches out from a vintage 78 record.听

Directed by Performing Arts Department faculty member Darlene Anastas, the show includes 鈥淪orry, Wrong Number,鈥 written by Lucille Fletcher and made famous by actress Agnes Moorehead; a Dick Tracy suspense mystery, 鈥淏ig Top Murders鈥; and two Agatha Christie stories, 鈥淧ersonal Call,鈥 and 鈥淏utter in a Lordly Dish.鈥 Like classic radio plays from the 1940s, the show has a 鈥渟ponsor,鈥 Tootsie Roll, and live ads are interspersed throughout.听

Star Bryan 鈥23 plays Ms. Stevenson, the main character in 鈥淪orry, Wrong Number,鈥 as well as Inspector Narracott in 鈥淧ersonal Call,鈥 and Julia Keene in 鈥淏utter in a Lordly Dish.鈥 Learning the different roles within separate stories provided an interesting challenge.

鈥淢s. Stevenson is angry or frustrated through basically the whole story, and Julia Keene starts out flirtatious, but then takes a turn,鈥 Bryan said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not used to playing anger or flirtation, so getting into both roles took time.鈥

Seeing how different assorted objects can be used to make realistic sounds is fascinating. [This show is] truly not like any show I have ever done at 91探花.

鈥 Manny Uzobuife ’22

The production is unlike any that 91探花 has done in a long time, Anastas said. While audio storytelling has seen a resurgence in podcast and audiobooks, the school hasn鈥檛 recently created a dramatic performance so rooted in listening and sound effects. The hand-crafted and mechanical sound effects provide warmer and richer sounds than a digital soundboard could.听 Learning how to operate some of the older objects, like rotary phones, has been a fun exercise for the students, she said.听

Manny Uzobuife 鈥22 was 鈥渟hocked鈥 upon hearing the train sounds come together for the first time, saying, 鈥淪eeing how different assorted objects can be used to make realistic sounds is fascinating.鈥 The audience will have fun guessing which objects make which sounds, Bryan said. Uzobuife noted that the play is 鈥渢ruly not like any show I have ever done at 91探花.鈥

The best part of being in the show has been connecting with castmates, said Abby Rochelle 鈥24. They鈥檝e 鈥渂onded over late nights and weird sounds,鈥 she said.

鈥淓veryone at 91探花 should see our show because it鈥檚 something they have never seen before,鈥 Rochelle said. 鈥淣obody performs radio plays in front of an in-person audience. It will be such a fun experience to see not only the actors giving the characters life, but also to see the behind-the-scenes creation of the sound effects.鈥

Murder, Mayhem, and Mystery runs Thursday, February 10, and Friday, February 11, at 7:30 p.m., and Saturday, February 12, at 7 p.m., in King Theatre. . All in-person audience members must wear masks at all times while in the theater and the Kellner Performing Arts Center. The show will also .

Mohamad Hafez is this Fall鈥檚 Gold Visiting Artist, Nesto Exhibitor

鈥淎rt is so damn powerful,鈥 Syrian American artist and architect Mohamad Hafez told students Tuesday during a Gold Fund presentation on campus. 鈥淒on鈥檛 do art just for the sake of beauty. That鈥檚 valid, but art is more than that. Art has the ability to cross borders, to cross hearts, to demolish walls between us.鈥

Hafez, who was born in Damascus and raised in Saudi Arabia, came to the United States to study architecture, later becoming a successful corporate architect. Art was initially a hobby for him and a way to process his homesickness and nostalgia when he was unable to return home following the September 11, 2001 attacks in the U.S. Then, as he witnessed the Syrian civil war wreak havoc on his homeland and his own family鈥攎any of whom fled as refugees to other parts of the world鈥攃reating art took on a deeper and more urgent purpose.

Using found objects, careful architectural details, memories, and images of the Middle East, Hafez creates surreal, sculptural pieces with political and social messages鈥攄epicting the senseless violence of war, the baggage (physical and emotional) that refugees carry from home, and the widespread cultural losses occurring in Damascus, an ancient but advanced city critical to the history of several civilizations and world religions.

鈥淲e all watched Notre Dame burn in Paris, and we all felt that pain of history being wiped out in front of our eyes,鈥 Hafez said of the 2019 cathedral fire; on screen, he shared an image of a 1,200-year-old minaret destroyed in Aleppo. 鈥淗ow does it feel for a Syrian, Lebanese, or Tunisian person to see their own history blown up out of existence? How does it feel to see all this bloody imagery over and over? What could I have done? To me, art was no longer just about beauty anymore.鈥

Although it鈥檚 in response to struggle and tragic events, Hafez said his work is not pessimistic. The streetscapes he makes often feature 鈥済raffiti” with optimistic slogans or verses from the Quran or the Bible. In his current work, Hafez accompanies visual art with audio recordings that capture life in Syria before the war: Conversations and laughter, the Muslim call to prayer, Christian churchbells, taxis, and the busy din of restaurants and businesses鈥攕ounds of a vibrant, alive city.

鈥淚t鈥檚 built to build hope,鈥 he said of his work. 鈥淟ife is not only about loss. There is rebuilding, there is moving on.鈥

Life is not only about loss. There is rebuilding, there is moving on.

鈥 Mohamad Hafez

In addition to his presentation to students Tuesday, Hafez spent the week working with visual arts classes in workshops and will be available for an open Q&A with 91探花 community members Friday. His visit is sponsored by the Melissa Dilworth Gold 鈥61 Visiting Artists Fund, which brings nationally recognized artists to campus.听

This month and next, Hafez鈥檚 work will be on display in the Nesto Gallery, beginning with an opening reception Thursday, November 4, from 5 to 7 p.m. The exhibit, called Home, will run in the gallery through December 17. The Nesto Gallery, located in the lower level of the Arts and Media Center, is open to the public from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. when school is in session.听聽聽


Students at the opening reception of the exhibit, Home.

Treasure Island Opens Thursday

A swashbuckling tale of pirates, sword fights, and buried gold will take the stage in the chapel tent this week, as the Performing Arts Department presents聽Treasure Island.

Directed by performing arts faculty member Shane Fuller,聽Treasure Island聽is based on the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson and adapted for the stage by Mary Zimmerman. It tells the story of Jim, the son of a tavern owner, who finds a mysterious treasure map among the possessions of a sailor who died at the tavern. Jim sets sail with some trusted local friends to locate the island and the treasure鈥攁nd they鈥檙e accompanied by a covertly mutinous crew of pirates, including the ship鈥檚 cook, Long John Silver.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a fun show,鈥 Fuller said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a little bit of sword-fighting, there鈥檚 pirates, there鈥檚 a lot of adventure. We didn鈥檛 want to do anything too serious or too heavy, because this is the first season that we鈥檝e had live on campus in almost two years.鈥

Because of the pandemic, all of this fall鈥檚 shows will be in tents on campus鈥攎asks are required for all audience members鈥攚hich presents an interesting challenge for the actors and crew. Faculty members Evan DelGaudio and Darlene Anastas are assisting the聽Treasure Island聽production with lighting and stage design, respectively. All 11 students in the cast each play multiple roles.

鈥淭he whole cast has to be a true ensemble,鈥 Fuller said. 鈥淭he show moves from place to place, so the cast members have to move the set pieces around and recreate the environments. It鈥檚 been fun, it鈥檚 a different kind of experience.鈥

Treasure Island聽opens in the Chapel tent Thursday, November 4 at 7:30 p.m.; it runs Friday, November 5 at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday, November 6 at 7 p.m.听.

91探花鈥檚 First Performance of the Year is 鈥淓xtra-Ordinary鈥

Live performance returns to 91探花鈥檚 stages Thursday with the Class IV Follies, an original show called Extra-Ordinary. The show, which explores the theme of superpowers, will be held in the Chapel Tent for three nights.

Extra-Ordinary has the structure of the Class IV Follies鈥攁 series of scenes around a central theme鈥攖elling stories of some characters that the audience will recognize, like Roald Dahl鈥檚 Matilda, and some that are new, said Performing Arts Department faculty member Scott Caron, who is directing the show.听

鈥淲e鈥檙e navigating through a lot of characters that we know from literature, movies, and TV shows,鈥 Caron said. 鈥淲e follow their journey over the course of one hour, as they discover and unpack their superpowers.鈥

Extra-Ordinary is a 鈥渄evised piece, meaning that it鈥檚 theater that exists, but hasn鈥檛 existed in this way, and we are creating it for the first time,鈥 Caron said. 鈥淪o, while we have some scripted scenes, what we also did that was so exciting was talk to the cast about superpowers鈥攚hat their favorite superpowers are, how they use superpowers in everyday life. We鈥檝e used some of that verbatim material to thread through the show, with our actors playing versions of themselves.鈥澛

In addition to the cast of nine actors, two members of Class IV, a pianist and cellist, will provide the score for much of the show. They will play contemporary songs arranged for a chamber combo, Caron said.

Admission to Extra-Ordinary is free. Students can register for tickets on 91探花Connect and adults and families can . Masks are required for all audience members. The show will run Thursday, October 21 and Friday, October 22 at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday, October 23 at 7 p.m.

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