Dyson College of Arts and Sciences

Dyson Year in Review 2018-19

Dyson College of Arts and Sciences

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W W W . P A C E . E D U / D Y S O N 21 New Gallery, New Artists Celebrating new art spaces on the New York City and Pleasantville campuses, talented students, alumni, faculty, and outside artists displayed their work in exhibitions that expressed their vast creativity and skill. Penning Success Pace playwrights are shining bright with impressive and thought-provoking new work. Adjunct Professor Kate Taney Billingsley '14, MFA Acting, completed American Rot, a full-length version of her earlier one-act piece, A Man of His Time, which examines the legacy of the US Supreme Court's infamous Dred Scott decision of 1857. It's a fictional look at what happens when Walter Scott, a descendant of Dred Scott, is offered an apology by a descendant of Roger Brooke Taney, the Chief Justice who presided over the abominable decision, which propelled the nation toward Civil War and set the tone for the racism that still exists today. Taney Billingsley herself is a direct descendant of Roger Brooke Taney, and her work has inspired new connections with Scott's descendants and historic steps toward reconciliation, atonement, and education. Additionally, Pace School of Performing Arts Assistant Professor Adrienne Kapstein was commissioned by Lincoln Center Education with Trusty Sidekick Theater Company to create and direct Scurry, a new play for the very young, which premiered in the LC Kids Season on April 6. Two students also completed unique pieces. Wesley Goodrich '20, Directing/Political Science, staged a reading of his play, A Good Place to Raise a Boy, as part of the first New Works Festival at Lionheart Theatre in Norcross, Georgia, established by Sam Casey '19, Directing. The play is a look at the 1955 murder of 14-year-old Emmett Till, which became a seminal event in the Civil Rights movement. Directing student Jack McManus '21 wrote the book and lyrics to the musical Sparky, the true-life story of Charles M. Schulz. The 90-minute musical received a developmental reading last November and a fully staged production at the 2019 NY Winterfest. Kate Taney Billingsley '14, pictured standing (R) with singer, director, and Academy Award-winning actress Estelle Parsons (L) and the cast from a reading of her one-act play A Man of His Time (seated). *According to OnStageBlog.com Pace Named Amid M usi cal Thea ter BFAs*

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