Sanford’s
Caroline Ryon Receives
National Gold Key Award at Scholastic Art & Writing
AwardsDelaware
Young Playwrights Festival Winner
Presented with National Awards
Wilmington,
DE – July 5, 2006 – On Thursday, June
8, 2006, Sanford School
senior Caroline Ryon
of Kennett Square, PA crossed the stage at Carnegie
Hall to complete a journey that began over one year ago on stage at
Delaware
Theatre Company. Caroline's play Splintered,
which won the 2005 Delaware Young Playwrights Festival’s
(DYPF) highest honors,
was named a National
Gold Key Award winner in the Scholastic Art
& Writing Awards competition. Sponsored by
Scholastic Publications and
the Alliance for Young Artists & Writers, the Scholastic Art
& Writing
Awards have celebrated 80 years as a unique presence in our nation's
classrooms
by identifying and documenting outstanding achievement of young artists
and
writers in the visual and literary arts.
In addition, Caroline also won a National
Silver Key Award for
her non-fiction portfolio (which included copies of both Splintered and Rainy
Day, her 2004 DYPF winning play).
Caroline
is a three-time DYPF award recipient; her first play Rainy Day put
Caroline on the platform as a DYPF finalist when she was just a
sophomore. She followed this with another finalist win
in 2005 with Splintered. In
2006, Caroline was a semi-finalist for her play ‘Tis the
Season. Inspiration
for Splintered came from a quote in DTC’s 2004 fall
production of
Tennessee Williams’ The
Glass Menagerie: "Oh, be careful - if you
breathe, it breaks." Students were
asked to consider the many things in life, besides physical objects,
that can
be broken. Splintered
shows a
family divided by the death of a mother.
While the son tries to forge a new relationship with his father, the
father tinkers, trying to repair the family bonds embodied in a
splintered
rocking chair. “What most impressed us
about Caroline’s script,” says David Stradley,
produced of DYPF, “was her
ability to use symbolism in a dramatically effective manner.
Also, her capacity for creating empathy in
her characters is awe-inspiring in a high school student.”
DYPF
high school finalists are engaged in the complete theatrical process
–
playwrights meet with a production team of directors, set, costume,
lighting
and sound designers. Auditions are
held, sets are constructed, and countless theatre professionals are
engaged to
bring these students’ works to life.
“We check in with the playwright at every step of the way to
make
sure
that their vision is being accomplished,” says
Stradley.
“We never want it to become the play as we
see it – it is the students’ work, their vision,
their
stories.” Caroline’s honor at the
Scholastic Awards
is
shared by all those in DTC’s Department of Education and
Community Engagement
and many others who were involved in the process of refining her play
and
bringing it to the stage. She says,
“The whole Festival staff was very supportive.
They were never patronizing; they always treated me as an
equal.”
2006
marks the 17th anniversary of DYPF, and its reach continues to be
impressive. The Festival, generously
sponsored by ING Direct and the Gannett Foundation, saw the submission
of 432
plays from 582 playwrights. “The purpose of DYPF is
to give students throughout
the state of Delaware a chance to be heard,” says
Stradley. “We want
students in all three counties to know that at DTC there are people who
care
passionately about the stories they have to tell, and we want to share
those
stories with an audience in our theatre.”
Caroline’s honor testifies to the
power of DYPF to challenge students to create original and lasting
works of
literature. Director of Education and
Community Engagement, Charles Conway, affirms that “Caroline
is one of the most
hard-working students that has been involved in the Festival.
No one deserves the credit more than
Caroline, and she deserves all of the accolades and recognition that
she
receives.”
This
fall, Caroline will start a new journey at the University of Virginia
as a
Jefferson Scholar where she plans to major in English with a minor in
theatre.
For
more information on DTC’s many Education and Community
Engagement programs,
please visit www.delawaretheatre.org.
Delaware Theatre
Company’s programs are made
possible, in part, by grants from the National Endowment for the Arts
and the
Delaware Division of the Arts, a state agency committed to promoting
and
supporting the arts in Delaware. The
Delaware Division of the Arts provides technical and financial
assistance to
artists and arts programs and serves as a clearinghouse for information
on the
arts.
Delaware Theatre Company,
Delaware's
premier professional theatre, is located at 200 Water Street, on
Wilmington’s exciting Riverfront.
Delaware Theatre Company is a member of the League of Resident
Theatres,
Theatre Communications Group, the Arts Consortium of Delaware, the
Theatre
Alliance of Greater Philadelphia, the Greater Philadelphia Cultural
Alliance,
the Arts & Business Council of Greater Philadelphia, the New
Castle County
Chamber of Commerce, and the Wilmington Convention & Visitors
Bureau. #
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