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Five Women Of Theater To Receive Awards

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  • Five Women Of Theater To Receive Awards

    LA Canyon News, CA
    March 14 2009

    Five Women Of Theater To Receive Awards

    by Tommy Garrett on Mar 14, 2009 - 4:41:50 PM


    HOLLYWOOD'My `Queen of the Lot' co-star Tanna Frederick will be
    receiving an award by the Women's Theatre Festival later this
    month. Tanna told Canyon News, `I am extremely excited about this
    honor and the amazing opportunities I've been given recently.'

    The Los Angeles Women's Theatre Festival will honor five women for
    their exceptional career and life achievements at its Opening Night
    Gala on March 26 at Highways Performance Space in Santa Monica.

    Leilani Chan will receive the Rainbow Award. She is an award-winning
    performance artist and Founding Artistic Director of TeAda
    Productions. TeAda exists to enrich the repertoire of works created
    and performed by people of color. TeAda is currently producing
    `Healing Aloud,' a festival of new works partnering women of color
    with immigrant health organizations to create multi-disciplinary
    performances. Ms. Chan is a steering committee member of the National
    Asian American Theater Conference & Festival. She has directed new
    works by Robert Karimi at OUTNORTH in Anchorage, Alaska; Kristina Wong
    at REDCAT , [INSIDE] the Ford, and at La Pena Cultural Center; and
    Shyamala Moorty at REDCAT. Her own full-length solo shows, `Tita on
    the Run' and `E Nana I Ke Kumu,' have toured nationally. She has
    worked with communities to develop community-based performances and
    has been presented at many performance venues across the
    country. Ms. Chan received her M.F.A. from UC Irvine.

    Tanna Frederick will receive the Maverick Award. In addition to
    appearing in plays at Skylight Theatre, the Coronet, Greenway Court
    Theatre (for Robey Theatre Company) and at Edgemar Center for the
    Arts, she has emerged as a queen of independent films, starring in
    `Hollywood Dreams,' `Irene in Time,' and `Queen of the Lot' as the
    leading lady of director Henry Jaglom's feature film repertory
    company. Away from stage and screen, she devotes her time to
    philanthropic pursuits. She is co-founder of Project Save Our Surf, a
    surfing event that this year will benefit Oceana, a nonprofit
    international advocacy program created with the sole purpose of
    protecting the world's oceans to sustain the circle of
    life. Ms. Frederick also founded the Iowa Film Festival. She is a
    graduate of the University of Iowa.

    Gay Iris Parker will receive the Eternity Award. At Pasadena
    Playhouse, she is responsible for cultivating and sustaining a diverse
    audience base for main stage productions, including (as of this
    writing) the hit musical `Stormy Weather.' She produces community
    outreach events, such as panels and exhibits in addition to the
    popular `Conversations With¦' programs, which have included such
    guests as Leslie Uggams, Marlee Matlin, Ruby Dee, Vernon Winfrey
    (Oprah's father), Michael York, Carol Lawrence, Marilyn McCoo, Billy
    Davis, Jr., and the late Gregory Hines. Ms. Parker has also served as
    audience consultant for Geffen Playhouse (`Ain't Nothin' But The
    Blues,' `Emergency'), Center Theater Group (Alvin Ailey American Dance
    Theatre), Cerritos Center for the Performing Arts (Three Mo' Tenors),
    and Ebony Repertory Theatre. She has also performed public relations
    duties for the Pan African Film Festival, Buskaid Soweto String
    Orchestra, artist and author Synthia St. James, French horn virtuoso
    Robert Watt (L.A. Philharmonic), and UNICEF Los Angeles. Ms. Parker
    received degrees from CSULA and Loyola Marymount. Until 2007, she was
    a part-time adjunct instructor in Communication and Performing Arts at
    Pasadena City College.

    Adriana Sevan will receive the Integrity Award. Her solo play `Taking
    Flight' debuted at the Kirk Douglas Theater in 2006 and won the San
    Diego Theatre Critics Circle Award the following year, subsequently
    being performed across the country. She has just received the 008
    Middle East America Distinguished Playwright Award which gifts her
    with a generous commission to research and write a new play about her
    grandparent's survival of the Armenian Genocide of 1915, which will be
    developed by the award's host theaters: The Lark Play Development
    Center in New York, Silk Road Theatre Company in Chicago and Golden
    Thread in San Francisco. Ms. Sevan is devoted to bringing theater and
    girls together. She currently leads transformational mentoring
    workshops for at-risk adolescent girls using creative writing and
    improvisation as tools for girls to discover their vibrant, vital and
    unique voices.

    Eartha Kitt will posthumously receive the Infinity Award. She died
    this past Christmas Day at the age of 81 after a career in which she
    enjoyed stardom in every performing arts medium. After enduring an
    impoverished childhood made bleaker by discrimination because of her
    mixed African American-Cherokee-Caucasian background, she began her
    show business career as a dancer of the famed Katherine Dunham
    Company, performing with them in her 1948 motion picture debut,
    `Casbah.' Declaring her `the world's most exciting woman,' Orson
    Welles cast her as Helen of Troy in his 1950 staging of `Doctor
    Faustus.' Cast in the hit revue, `New Faces of 1952,' she began a hit
    recording career with her biggest hit, `Santa Baby,' being released
    the following year. Hollywood beckoned, and she was cast opposite
    Sidney Poitier in 1958 in `The Mark of the Hawk.' Her busy career
    continued to flourish as she replaced Julie Newmar as Catwoman on the
    `Batman' TV series. Ostracized after her vocal opposition to the
    Vietnam War during a White House luncheon, she made a Broadway
    comeback , receiving Tony nominations for `Timbuktu' and `The Wild
    Party.' Finding a gay audience during the disco years, she returned
    their love by becoming a vocal advocate for marriage equality
    rights. In later years, she continued to perform on Broadway and in
    night clubs, and won two Daytime Emmys for the Disney Channel series
    `The Emperor's New School." She is survived by a daughter and
    grandchildren.

    The awards will be presented at Highways Performance Space , 1651 18th
    Street in Santa Monica, 90404 on Thursday, March 26 . A champagne
    reception and light buffet at 7 p.m. precedes the 8 p.m. awards
    ceremony and show. The event will be hosted by Festival honorary
    co-chair Hattie Winston (`Becker') and Pasadena Playhouse Artistic
    Director Sheldon Epps. Entertainment includes short theater pieces by
    Angela Dean-Baham and Rose Weaver. The show and ceremony are directed
    by Adleane Hunter and written by Angela Gibbs.

    Tickets for the March 26 event are $60 each or two for $100.
    Substantial discounts are available for group purchases. Reservations:
    818-760-0408. Online ticket purchases can be made at
    http://www.lawtf.com

    Sponsors of the event include California Arts Council, Los Angeles
    County Arts Commission, City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural
    Affairs, Union Bank of California, U.S. Bank and Adilah Barnes
    Productions.

    http://www.canyon-news.com/ar tman2/publish/Entertainment_1150/Five_Women_In_The ater_To_Receive_Awards.php
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