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Susan Stroman receives honorary doctorate
More than 90 faculty, staff, alumni and friends of UD joined University President David P. Roselle in welcoming Stroman, a 1976 UD graduate. We celebrate all those who perform and create, and we also congratulate the rest of us who help make up an appreciative audience, Roselle said. Susan, in the words of Yogi Berra, Thank you for making tonight necessary. The reception and dinner held in Stroman’s honor followed a visit to Morris Library, a meeting with students in UD’s Professional Theatre Training Program and a hardhat tour of the Center for the Arts construction site at Amstel Avenue and Orchard Road. Roselle told those gathered for the dinner that Stroman had earlier made a major gift to UDs new Center for the Arts and said, Susan, we are deeply grateful for your assistance. Roselle also recognized the generosity of guest Eleanor Paradee, for her gift of a Steinway piano to be used in the Center for the Arts, and noted that Jewel Walker, Edward F. and Elizabeth Rosenberg Professor of Theatre, recently was the recipient of a 2005 Barrymore Award for Choreography and Movement for his original creation Tuesday. In presenting the honorary doctor of humane letters degree to Stroman, P. Coleman Townsend, a member of UDs Board of Trustees, praised her as one of musical theatres greatest treasures, one of Delawares most celebrated citizens and one of the University of Delawares most distinguished graduates The honorary degree is the highest degree the University bestows. Past recipients include artist Jamie Wyeth, documentary film director Ken Burns, then President of Ireland Mary McAleese and former President George H.W. Bush. Perhaps the biggest turn in your career came when you met your late husband, producer and director Michael Ockrent, who later guided you through your Broadway debut as choreographer for Crazy for You, which also won you your first Tony for choreography, as well as the Drama Desk Award for best choreography, Outer Critics Circle Award for best choreography and Londons Olivier Award for best choreography, Townsend said. For the successful revival of Show Boat, . . . you won a second Tony Award for best choreographer. Further stage triumphs for Stroman, Townsend noted, include Trevor Nunns revival of Oklahoma, for which she won an Olivier Award for best choreography, and Contact, for which she garnered a Tony and Drama Desk Award for choreography and the Outer Critics Circle Award for best choreography and best director. Next followed the hit revival of The Music Man, for which you received Outer Critics Circle Award for best choreography and best director, Townsend said. Then, the blockbuster collaboration with Mel Brooks--The Producers, for which you won a Tony Award for best director and best choreography; Drama Desk Award for outstanding director of a musical and outstanding choreography; Outer Critics Circle Award for best choreography and best director and Astaire Award for best choreographer. Townsend also recalled Stromans induction into the alumni Wall of Fame in 1993 and her return to UD as a Winter Commencement speaker in 1994. For Stroman, the award reception and dinner served as a personal homecoming and an example of UDs commitment to the performing and creative arts. My time here as a student was a wonderful time, and I love being here now, Stroman said. The time I spent here today walking around the campus is the highlight of my year. Stroman expressed her gratitude for construction of UDs Center for the Arts in an era of reduced budgets for the arts and the closing of many theatres nationwide. In New York City, when you walk past a theatre that is dark, it feels like a death, Stroman said. So, to actually be at the site of an arts center and see a theatre being born was very emotional. It gave me the chills. Stroman also noted that the Center for the Arts also will serve and inspire future generations of UD students to achieve their dreams in the realm of music, dance and theatre. I am so honored to be here tonight, and I cant thank you enough, Stroman said. Art nurtures the soul, and that is how you find yourself. That is the way education works. After the degree presentation, a short clip from the movie version of The Producers, scheduled for release in mid-December, was shown. Stroman is the films director. The evening was capped by performances of monologues by such authors as George Bernard Shaw and William Shakespeare by PTTP students Raymond Abdilamim Akbar, Cameron Morris Knight, Mike Matarrese, Gisela Lynn Chipe, Michael Joseph Midyett and Kelsey Jay Nash. Family members attending the event included Stromans sister, Deborah Parsons, niece, Desiree Parsons, 15, nephews Travis Parsons, 17, and Maverick Parsons, 13, all of West Chester, Pa., her aunt, Phyllis Boyd, of Wilmington, and cousin, David Schweizer, of Boston. Article by Jerry Rhodes To learn how to subscribe to UDaily, click here. |