Arts in the News
Speech and Debate Team’s First Tournament of the Year
The Speech and Debate Team participated in their first national level tournament of the year at Yale University the weekend of September 18th. Congrats to all the students!Nesto Gallery Features Two New England Artists

Charles Goss, Swamp Swan
On September 23, 91探花’s Visual Arts Department hosted an opening reception for the first Nesto Gallery show of the 2021鈥2022 academic year. This exhibit features two longtime New England artists and educators鈥擟harles Goss from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University and Jocelyne Prince of the Rhode Island School of Design鈥攚ho have created artwork in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Charles Goss exhibition, Over, Under, Inside, Out, is a mini-retrospective of the last 45 years of his work in sculpture, painting, drawing, installation, film-making, writing, and photography鈥攊ncluding new pieces reacting and responding to society’s recent “COVID Caves.” The show will also feature a premiere of Charles Goss’s new film Everything I Don鈥檛 Know.
The Jocelyne Prince outdoor sculpture exhibition, Crystal Chain 2.0, was created and installed on site and references 鈥淭he Crystal Chain” or “Die glaserne Kette” utopian movement that looks to this moment鈥攁 world in the grips of a pandemic, social inequities, and global warming. The icosahedron construction references both the beauty of geometric forms as well as the scarry efficiency of viral structures. This icosahedron鈥檚 seductive material qualities of translucency and transparency, realized by the use of difficult-to-recycle plastics, calls out for our attention鈥攁 moment to reflect on the complexity of our individual and collective impact in conjunction with our agency and potential for change.
Over, Under, Inside, Out will run in the Gallery through October 29 and Crystal Chain 2.0 will be on display through December 17. All exhibits are free and open to the public from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on weekdays, excluding school holidays. All visitors to 91探花’s campus are required to wear masks indoors.

Jocelyne Prince, Disco Ball for the New Millennium
All The World鈥檚 A Stage鈥擫iterally鈥擣or Fall Plays
91探花鈥檚 performing arts faculty and students found creative solutions to bridge distances and time zones to offer a full slate of performances this fall, including the plays Macbeth,听The Illustrated Bradbury, and this weekend鈥檚 Class IV play,听All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten.
Performing Arts Department faculty member Eleza Kort, who directed the Class IV play, said about one-third of the 15 cast members are international students, so meetings and rehearsals were scheduled to accommodate different time zones. Each student received a green screen and filmed themselves performing in front of it. Faculty member Shane Fuller edited the scenes together to look as if the actors were in the same place. The show opens Thursday, October 29. Details about accessing the performances are below.
鈥淭he students have been amazing, and I鈥檓 really proud of them. Performing remotely is challenging鈥攖his is the world we鈥檙e living in right now,鈥 Kort said. 鈥淲e really wanted this to be the best experience it could be for our incoming freshmen. They deserve that and we wanted them to feel special, and to meet each other. A lot of them were thankful for the shared experience.鈥
All the fall performances are recorded, instead of live. This approach, while a challenge to coordinate, provided many learning opportunities for faculty and students as they adapted to creating engaging shows during the COVID-19 pandemic.
贵辞谤听Macbeth, director Peter Parisi and production manager Evan DelGaudio split Shakespeare鈥檚 tragedy into six separate episodes. Middle School music teacher Alan Rodi provided an original score. The first episode was听听last week and new episodes will be added weekly. On Friday, December 4, at 7:30 p.m. Eastern Time, the play will end with a final, live online event.
All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten听is a series of vignettes based on the bestselling book by Robert Fulghum. The show features funny and serious stories about the themes we learn as little kids.
鈥淲e learn these values in kindergarten like sharing, and being kind, and they kind of go by the wayside as we become adults,鈥 Kort said. 鈥淭here are stories about childhood and about older people, so it鈥檚 a whole range. It鈥檚 a really sweet play.鈥
People can watch听All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten听beginning Thursday, October 29 through Saturday, October 31. Links to each performance are available on the听. Once registered for an event, viewers will receive a link and a password to access their selected performance. Links are open on the day of production for 24 hours from 8 a.m. to 8 a.m. Eastern Time the following day. Additionally, students will have access to a live watch party through their CampusGroups accounts, which will be held on Friday, October 30 at 8:30 p.m. Eastern Time. This is an opportunity for students to watch and support the performers together.
The Illustrated Bradbury, a series of 10 stories by the author Ray Bradbury, runs online from November 12 through November 14. The play is narrated by Bradbury鈥檚 famous character 鈥淭he Illustrated Man鈥 and features the author鈥檚 signature blend of fantasy and science fiction. Director Darlene Anastas went above and beyond to include student cast members from around the world, waking up at 4 a.m. to direct a student filming in Saudi Arabia as well as doing her own filming on campus, said Performing Arts Department Chair Kelli Edwards.
Fuller, as a theater designer and filmmaker, has been an invaluable resource to help translate theater productions to film, Edwards said.
鈥淥ur goal this year was to create a situation where anyone who wanted to participate could, no matter where they were, both in performing and in tech,鈥 Edwards said. 鈥淚t means that everything we鈥檙e doing, at least for the fall, is filmed. We鈥檙e using a lot of different platforms depending on what the shows need. It鈥檚 been really complicated, but we鈥檙e doing it.鈥
Tickets for听The Illustrated Bradbury听will be available on the Eventbrite page during its run from November 12 through November 14.
Student Films Recognized by Film Festival
Two student films were accepted into the in the drama category. Dash Evett 鈥21 and Jace Fuller鈥檚 鈥21 film, The Grievance, featured Conner Hartman 鈥21, Ben Simpson 鈥21, and Charlie Volpe 鈥20. Evett鈥檚’s film, Guy, featured himself and his brother Spencer Evett 鈥17. Normally, the films would be presented at a live festival in October in New York City, but this year it will be virtual.
is a story about a man named Liam, played by Hartman, who gets trapped in a supernatural cemetery. A bullying incident from his past comes back to haunt him. Evett and Fuller did all the shooting, writing, music, and editing. 鈥淎 lot of hours of shooting were outside in the cold, and sometimes in complete darkness,鈥 said Evett. 鈥淚t was my first time making something with a horror vibe, so it was cool to film in a dark cemetery.鈥
听鈥淥ne of my favorite challenges in filmmaking is giving the audience a proper scare; one that curdles the blood and raises the heartbeat,鈥 said Fuller. 鈥淲ith a low budget of zero dollars, we both agreed we couldn鈥檛 show scary monsters or frightening circumstances. Instead, we had to make a psychological horror that could play with scares without showing anything.鈥澨
Fuller said despite the less than ideal filming environment, Hartman was 鈥減atient and cooperative with us as well thoughtful and invested in his acting. He, and the rest of the cast, Volpe and Simpson, brought this film to life in a way I couldn’t have ever imagined.鈥
Evett鈥檚 film is about a young man, James, who’s stuck in life and finds a man living in his basement. This man eventually helps the main character reflect on his life. 鈥淭his film was easier to make,鈥 said Evett. 鈥淚t was a lot more of a personal film, kind of shedding a light on how people sometimes tend to ignore their own insecurities and blame things on other people. I think it’s reflective of my style as a filmmaker. I like films about people that are very raw and vulnerable. It’s more real when your characters are more human and flawed.鈥澨
Both Evett and Fuller said they are thrilled to have their films recognized and credit 91探花 and their friends with helping make their dreams a reality.听
91探花 Speechies Succeed as Nationals Go Virtual
Ordinarily, the National Speech and Debate Association鈥檚 (NSDA) year-end tournament is a blockbuster, in-person event: Thousands of students and their coaches take over a host city for a week of end-to-end competition that determines the best student speakers and debaters in the country.
This year, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the tournament was held virtually. Five thousand students from 1,300 schools competed from home for NSDA recognition. They included seven 91探花 students: Jana Amin 鈥21, Jack Burton 鈥22, Tim Colledge 鈥21, Miranda Paiz 鈥21, Nyla Sams 鈥20, Benjamin Simpson 鈥21, and Tyler Tjan 鈥22.听
Because the students pre-recorded their submissions, the adrenaline of rushing around an unfamiliar school or conference center was absent from this year鈥檚 nationals, said Paiz.
鈥淚 found online nationals to be much calmer than the in-person tournaments. Competitors were able to watch the rounds, which were judged synchronously鈥攁 benefit of the online tournament was that you could submit your recording and just sit back and see how you did,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut I missed my team. I miss warm-ups with them, check-ins throughout the day, cheering at the awards ceremony until our voices got hoarse, and going for late-night fro-yo after the tournament.鈥
Paiz was a semi-finalist in poetry reading. She performed a program called 鈥淢odern Witchcraft,鈥 a series of pieces connecting the historical persecution of witches and challenges for survivors of abuse. She spent hours on Zoom with Performing Arts faculty member Scott Caron preparing her piece, restructuring it and fine-tuning it to give it the right emotional heft.
Burton, a semi-finalist in humorous interpretation, received an automatic qualification for the 2021 national tournament with his performance from 鈥淔ather of the Bride.鈥 Leading up to this year鈥檚 NSDA tournament, Burton competed in three other virtual competitions, which helped him adjust to performing on video without audience feedback.听
鈥淭he online tournament was an opportunity to get creative with the camera,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 chose this piece because it has a wonderful balance between heartwarming moments and laugh-out-loud humor. It鈥檚 universal鈥攁ll parents have to deal with letting their children go in some capacity. Making connections is the most rewarding part of speech.鈥
In addition to Paiz and Burton, Colledge, who competed with the New England Worlds School Debate Team, was a double-octa-finalist in debate.