Students Receive Arts Awards at 天美影视 ceremony

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鈥淒artmouth is truly alive with artistic energy,鈥 says President Philip J. Hanlon 鈥77.

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Arts awards ceremony
Gathered on the stage following the May 31 arts awards ceremony are, from left, 天美影视kins Center for the Arts Interim Director Marga Rahmann 鈥78, Heiman-Rosenthal Award winners Brian M. Chalif 鈥16, Nikhil Arora 鈥16, Jacob Z. Weiss 鈥16, Mykel M. Nairne 鈥16, Kathryn M. Waychoff 鈥16, Nicolle C. Allen 鈥16, Katelyn E. Schultz 鈥16, and Kripa Dongol 鈥16, and Dartmouth President Phil Hanlon 鈥77. (Photo by Rob Strong 鈥04) 
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Dartmouth is a place where artists work and thrive every month in the calendar. But one day is special each year, when outstanding students are rewarded for their work, in a wide variety of media, at the annual .

Literally kicking off this year鈥檚 event at the Moore Theater in the 天美影视kins Center for the Arts was a high-stepping rendition of 鈥淎ll That Jazz鈥 from this winter鈥檚 mainstage production, Chicago. The audience also watched two animated films, by award winners Owen O鈥橪eary 鈥19 and Lizzy Rogers 鈥16, and heard a performance of Pablo de Sarasate鈥檚 Introduction and Tarantella by Robert Herbst 鈥16, violin, and Elizabeth Borowsky, piano.  

Before the awards were handed out, President Phil Hanlon 鈥77 praised the many performances and exhibits he and his wife, Gail Gentes, have attended this year. 鈥淚 would say that Dartmouth is truly alive with artistic energy,鈥 Hanlon said, noting that nearly 90 percent of students visit the HOP regularly for a performance or film, and 65 percent see it as a place to learn, practice or study an art form. About his own cameo appearance at this year鈥檚 Dartmouth Idol voice contest, he quipped, 鈥淵ou get what you pay for.鈥 

Among the was Carene Mekertichyan 鈥16. She鈥檚 performed in several plays at Dartmouth, and her culminating achievement was this spring鈥檚 production of Ntozake Shange鈥檚 For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow is Enuf. She served as dramaturg and played the Lady in Red in the production, which was her senior honors thesis.

Mekertichyan says there was much to learn in Dartmouth鈥檚 theater program. 鈥淐oming from L.A., I knew a lot about movies and film and that sort of performance, but I didn鈥檛 know that much about theater, other than having done shows in high school. I didn鈥檛 know the history, about tech, lighting, set design, the important people and eras. I hadn鈥檛 gone to see a lot of theater at home, coming from a low-income background,鈥 she said. She won a Warner Bentley/Henry B. Williams Fellowship Endowment and a Mark L. Lebowitz 1977 Memorial Prize in the Performing Arts.

Another award winner, violist and pianist Jimmy Ragan 鈥16, comes from a musical family and is carrying on the tradition in myriad ways. At Dartmouth he has sung with the Handel Society and the Glee Club, was musical director of the a cappella group the, and was a finalist in this year鈥檚 鈥淒artmouth Idol鈥 competition. Ragan was one of four winners of a Eugene Roitman 1943 Memorial Award in music, and also received the Handel Society Chorus Award. This fall he expects to earn his elementary school teaching certificate.

鈥淚鈥檓 hoping that when I鈥檓 not in the classroom, I鈥檒l be enriching the local music scene, whether through an afterschool program with kids or evening groups for adults, through religious venues or otherwise鈥攋ust trying to find opportunities to get people excited about it. There鈥檚 a lot of music than can be made in any given area if you can provide people with the opportunities,鈥 Ragan says.

There were cash prizes for acting, play writing, costume design, choreography, stage management, creating writing about the arts, film and media production and scholarship, and screenplay writing. Musicians and dancers were recognized for performance, composition, and conducting. Studio artists and graphic artists were honored, too, along with photographers, art historians and administrators.

The ceremony ended with a surprise performance by special guest Michael Rafter 鈥89, an Emmy award-winning television and Broadway music director. When it was his turn to speak, the stage curtains opened to reveal a grand piano. Rafter took a seat, and spoke from the bench about how much he learned about music at the 天美影视kins Center.

鈥淚 think I spent about half my college years here, within these walls,鈥 he said. After college, Rafter embarked on a long Broadway career, conducting and supervising music for hit shows like Violet, Thoroughly Modern Millie, The Sound of Music, The King and I, and Gypsy. Following his brief remarks, Rafter played and sang his favorite Cole Porter song, which he said sums up his feelings about the close friendships he made at Dartmouth:

鈥淐ome the wild, wild weather, come the rain, come the rain
Come the little white flakes of snow, come the joy, come the pain
We shall still be together when our life story ends
For wherever we chance to go, we will always be friends.鈥

Charlotte Albright