Moses Goods is current CAATA Board Member
NEW YORK, NY – The William & Eva Fox Foundation and Theatre Communications Group (TCG), the national organization for theatre, are pleased to announce the fourteenth round of Fox Foundation Resident Actor Fellowships recipients. Included is Moses Goods, Hawaii artist and current CAATA Board member.
The goals of the program are: to further an actor’s artistic and professional development in live theatre; to deepen and enrich their relationship with a not-for-profit theatre; place actors as the nexus between theatres and communities, serving the community’s needs in a meaningful way; and to encourage actors to work outside their comfort zone. Funded by the Fox Foundation and administered by TCG, the fellowship is one of only a few programs of its kind for actors in the country.
“The Fox Foundation expresses our continued appreciation of the long-term collaborative relationship between Fox and TCG,” said Robert P. Warren, president of the Fox Foundation. “This program has provided extraordinary opportunities for Fox Fellows to further their artistic development.and is especially important to the field in these troubled times. The proposals from this year’s recipients hold great promise, not only for them personally and professionally, but also for their sponsoring theatres and the communities they so richly serve.”
The Fox Foundation Resident Actor Fellowships awarded grants totaling $195,000 in awards and student loan repayments through two categories:
- Exceptional Merit: $15,000 (with an additional $10,000 available to relieve student loan debt) supports actors who are established in their careers as working professionals with 10 years or more of professional experience. Funds will support actors who are evaluating the current state of their career and envisioning what their career could be as they continue to grow in their artistry.
- Distinguished Achievement: $25,000 supports actors with 20 years or more of experience who have amassed a substantial body of work. Funds will support recipients who are looking for opportunities to continue growth and sustain the longevity of their careers. Actors may use these resources to adapt to physical changes later in their career, as well as changes in casting.
TCG Member Host Theatres each receive $7,500 to be applied to expenses associated with the actor’s fellowship activities.
“At a time when the COVID-19 global pandemic has shuttered so many of our stages, the support for actors provided by the Fox Foundation is even more important,” said Teresa Eyring, executive director of TCG. “When our theatres reopen, the visionary work of this latest round of Fox Fellows will help knit communities back together.”
The Fox Foundation fellows and host theatres are:
Distinguished Achievement
AYANNA BERKSHIRE, Artists Repertory Theatre (ART), Portland, OR
Ayanna will focus her fellowship on advanced education and research related to career success for performers of color. She will begin her fellowship by taking workshops at Shakespeare & Company and Arthaus Berlin. In cooperation with Dr. Barbara Ann Teer’s National Black Theatre in Harlem and The National Black Theatre of Sweden, she will focus her studies on racial identity and the success inhibitors which may be specific to theatre artists of color working in predominantly white communities.
With the support of ART and local theatre professionals, she will design workshops and initiative groups to further the discussion of racial identity in the performing arts in Portland, Oregon. Ayanna will channel these discussions into the development of devised works. Ayanna currently resides in Portland, Oregon, where she is a Resident Artist at Artists Repertory Theatre. She enjoys creating community in the theatre and film industries and teaching actors how to build large careers in smaller markets. In addition to theatre, Ayanna has over 50 film and television credits, including one of her most popular roles to date, playing Cora in the movie Twilight. Theatrical highlights include performing in The Scottsboro Boys by Kander and Ebb, directed by Susan Stroman and originating the role of Robin in the world premiere of Wolf Play by Hansol Jung. www.ayannaberkshireinfo.com
TONIA JACKSON, True Colors Theatre Company, Atlanta, GA
Tonia will use the fellowship to study movement for the aging actor as well as immerse herself in Shakespeare, storytelling and voice/dialect techniques to gain more skills and employment as an actor. Her new studies will allow her to mount master classes and panel discussions with other veteran actors, allowing young performers to gain knowledge and mentorship. She will deepen her relationship with True Colors Theatre Company and offer artistic input in their process. Her ultimate goal is to build a bridge between young disenfranchised African American youth and the world of theatre at two critical stages of their lives: their first introduction to theatre and starting a career.
Tonia will provide a safe space for actors of color to learn to connect their personal narrative and physicality to plays that are foreign to their experiences and use art as a means for social change, healing and self-discovery. Tonia attended the Goodman School of Drama. She has been a company member at Penumbra Theatre for over 20 years. She has worked at Steppenwolf Theatre, Guthrie Theatre, Mixed Blood Theatre, American Stage, Lorraine Hansberry, True Colors Theatre, Magic Theatre, Alliance Theatre, Center Stage, Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Pan Asian Theatre and Trinity Rep. She’s a five-time Suzi Bass nominee, winning one for best ensemble for Shakin’ the Mess Outta Misery at Horizon Theatre. She was also nominated for a Jeff Norton Award for Frankie and Johnny. www.toniajackson.com/
STEPHAN WOLFERT, Syracuse Stage, Syracuse, NY
As a military veteran turned classical actor, Stephan Wolfert’s fellowship will focus on healing-centered engagement with the veteran community and their families. At the crux of this project will be community engagement events and workshops centered around theatre as a means to create space for and support veteran voices and experiences. Stephan will also rehearse, workshop and perform an adaptation of Shakespeare’s Richard III, as well as his critically-acclaimed and award-winning solo show CRY HAVOC! for the community.
CRY HAVOC! has been performed over 500 times for thousands of veterans and their families in six countries and is part of the DE-CRUIT program, which Stephan founded to help treat trauma in military veterans through Shakespeare and science. For this work, he has received numerous awards from the mental health community and has been published in the fields of both theatre and psychology while lecturing and performing throughout the U.S., the U.K., Canada, Australia, Italy and The Netherlands.
Stephan will continue research on the role of trauma on veterans and how touring adaptations of theatrical works can best engage veteran communities across the nation. Stephan brings over two decades of professional experience to his fellowship at Syracuse Stage. After receiving his Master of Fine Arts degree from Trinity Rep Conservatory in 2000, Stephan helped create the military segments for Twyla Tharp and Billy Joel’s Tony Award-winning Broadway hit Movin’ Out. Learn more about Stephan’s work, using theatre as medicine, at www.DECRUIT.org.
Exceptional Merit
LEILA BUCK, En Garde Arts, New York, NY
Leila’s fellowship will focus on the development of her piece Mix & Match, commissioned by En Garde Arts – a theatrical event that invites the audience into the journey of two families – one Lebanese and (mostly) Muslim, one Irish and (mostly) Catholic – being joined in marriage. As guests at the wedding, and witnesses to the families’ struggles before, during, and beyond, audiences are invited to eat, dance and engage in an immersive, interactive exploration of the challenges and joys of connecting across all kinds of borders.
Leila will continue writing the piece in collaboration with director Tamilla Woodard and the team, and develop the role she will play as M.C./HOST– the audience’s guide between time, place, reality, memory and dreams. She will also hone her vocal and musical training and Arabic language skills, travel to Lebanon for research and study expressive arts therapies in service of this piece and all of her work as an actor, writer, facilitator and educator. Leila has performed and developed her work and others at The Public Theater, New York Theatre Workshop, Cleveland Public, Brooklyn Museum, Mosaic, Arena Stage, the U.N., and the Wilma (Barrymore Award) and across the U.S., Europe, China, Australia, Tunisia, Saudi Arabia and Lebanon.
Her other current projects include American Dreams – a theatrical game show directed by Tamilla Woodard where the audience decides who will be the next U.S. citizen – which begins touring this fall, and 1001 Nights (A Retelling), a California Shakespeare Theater commission co-written with and directed by Evren Odcikin. Leila is a member of the Public’s first Emerging Writers Group, a Usual Suspect with NYTW and an adjunct professor at NYU. www.leilabuck.com
SHANNON DORSEY, Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, Washington, DC
The Fox Fellowship will support Shannon’s dedication to understanding, deeply connecting and reflecting the vast, varying, African parts of her Black Womanhood. Shannon will learn different aesthetics and physical theatre practices within the African Diaspora through time and immersion directly on the continent. She will study intimacy work with a mentor and with different organizations focusing on the best ways to stage theatrical intimacy. She will also invest in sharpening her physical, vocal, language and puppetry skills within the spectrum of her performance artistry.
This experience will contribute to her personal healing and growth, as much as it will contribute to her career. The Fellowship will provide this support and help give her the tools needed to become an intuitive and effective intimacy choreographer/director, especially for Black Women. Through Woolly Mammoth, she will host a series of workshops focused on actors of color and other marginalized performers. She looks to give performers the gift of movement, touch, combat and violence in a story without jeopardizing their personal sense of safety and integrity. Shannon received dual degrees in theatre (SCAT) and African American studies (AAS) from Temple University.
Shannon has also trained in many styles of dance and physical theatre. A DC native, she performs with Woolly Mammoth Theatre, where she is a Company Member. She has also performed at 777 Theatre (Off Broadway), NYC Central Park SummerStage, Arena Stage, Cincy Playhouse, Round House, Ford’s, Kennedy Center and Studio Theatre. She has received several Helen Hayes Award nominations, including one for Outstanding Lead Actress, two for Outstanding Supporting Actress, and jointly won an Outstanding Ensemble Award. www.shannd.com
MOSES GOODS, Honolulu Theatre for Youth, Honolulu, HI
Mosesʻ long-term project Two Ships will follow the two lineal journeys that converge to form his unique identity. One journey begins on an ancient Polynesian voyaging canoe navigating the waters of the Pacific, and the other in the bowels of a slave ship crossing the Atlantic. This fellowship will take place in three distinct phases. First, Moses will return to the source of his Black heritage by connecting with family and roots in the Southeastern United States.
Based in Hawaiʻi, Moses’ current body of work is rooted almost entirely in Hawaiian culture and has thus far been void of representation from his Black heritage. Phase two will be to connect with other Black artists and theatres nationally and to explore various Black artforms. The third phase will be to establish relationships within Hawaiʻi’s Black community and develop work based on those relationships. Moses will work with Honolulu Theatre for Youth to create a piece documenting the history of Black people in Hawaiʻi. The population of Black people in the islands has never exceeded 4%, but historically there have been a number of significant Black figures who have lived in Hawaii.
Moses is one of Hawaiʻi’s most prominent theatre artists. His career began in the University of Hawai‘i’s Department of Theatre and Dance in 1998. Since then he has traveled the globe performing his original work to a wide range of audiences. His body of work ranges from full length plays to theatrical storytelling pieces. www.actormosesgoods.com
The Fox Foundation Resident Actor Fellowships selection panel included Susan Booth, artistic director, Alliance Theatre; Michelle Shay, actor; Godfrey L. Simmons, Jr., artistic director, HartBeat Ensemble; Victor Vazquez, founder, X Casting NYC; and M. Burke Walker, founding artistic director, Empty Space Theater. The panel’s recommendations were presented to Robert P. Warren, President of the Fox Foundation. The Fox Foundation reviewed the panel recommendations and made the final selection of the Round 14 recipients.
The William & Eva Fox Foundation was established in 1987 by Belle Fox in honor of her parents, who founded the Fox Film Corporation. The Foundation has awarded nearly $5 million in fellowships to 372 actors since 1994. The Fox Foundation is the largest U.S. grantmaker dedicated to the artistic and professional development of theatre actors, and one of very few that provides direct financial support to individual actors. In 2017, the Fox Foundation was awarded TCG’s National Funder Award. For more information, visit http://www.tcg.org/Grants/GrantsAtAGlance/FoxFoundationResidentActorFellowships.aspx and www.thefoxfoundation.org.
Theatre Communications Group (TCG) exists to strengthen, nurture, and promote professional theatre in the U.S. and globally. Since its founding in 1961, TCG’s constituency has grown from a handful of groundbreaking theatres to over 700 Member Theatres and affiliate organizations and nearly 10,000 Individual Members.
Through its Core Values of Activism, Artistry, Diversity, and Global Citizenship, TCG advances a better world for theatre and a better world because of theatre. TCG offers its members networking and knowledge-building opportunities through research, communications, and events, including the annual TCG National Conference, one of the largest nationwide gatherings of theatre people; awards grants and scholarships, approximately $2 million per year, to theatre companies and individual artists; advocates on the federal level; and through the Global Theater Initiative, TCG’s partnership with the Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics, serves as the U.S. Center of the International Theatre Institute.
TCG is North America’s largest independent trade publisher of dramatic literature, with 17 Pulitzer Prizes for Drama on the TCG booklist. It also publishes the award-winning American Theatre magazine and ARTSEARCH®, the essential source for a career in the arts. In all of its endeavors, TCG seeks to increase the organizational efficiency of its Member Theatres, cultivate and celebrate the artistic talent and achievements of the field, and promote a larger public understanding of, and appreciation for, the theatre.www.tcg.org.
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