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Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Nine emerging artists awarded $450,000 in Leonore Annenberg Arts Fellowships

Nine emerging artists awarded $450,000 in Leonore Annenberg Arts Fellowships

PHILADELPHIA, April 12, 2016 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Nine early-career artists have been named as the recipients of grants from the Leonore Annenberg Fellowship Fund for the Performing and Visual Arts, which awards $50,000 a year for up to two years to help promising individuals make a breakthrough in their artistry, broaden their skills, and achieve professional success.

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Fellowships totaling $450,000 were awarded in 2016 to violinist Robyn Bollinger; bass-baritone Brandon Cedel; actors Jeremie Harris, Miriam Hyman and David Pegram; cellist and conductor Nico Olarte-Hayes; visual artist Nyugen Smith; ballet dancer Devon Teuscher; and musician and musicologist Daniel Walden.

The Leonore Annenberg Fellowship Fund has paid or pledged more than $5.5 million in career-development grants to artists, including the current group, over the last nine years. The funding has enabled promising artists with world-class talent to film a movie, record new music, experiment in performance, afford studio time or training, buy materials, pay for living expenses and pay down student debt. The fellows, selected in consultation with partners such as The Public Theater, American Ballet Theatre, and the Perlman Music Program, work with mentors chosen by the partners and the Leonore Annenberg Fund.

"The philanthropy represented in these fellowships embodies both ideals and constructive action," said Gail Levin, Ph.D., director of the program, administered by the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania. "Through her beneficence to early-career musicians, dancers, singers, actors and visual artists, Leonore Annenberg will not let us forget what is important and what is good."

Past recipients include Misty Copeland, the first African American woman to be named a principal dancer at American Ballet Theatre, as well as fellow ABT principal Isabella Boylston; actor André Holland, a star of Cinemax's "The Knick"; Grammy Award-winning singer Isabel Leonard, co-star of the new opera "Cold Mountain"; and pianist Sullivan Fortner, winner of the 2015 Cole Porter Jazz Fellowship.

"This fellowship truly shaped the kind of artist I want to be, and changed my life," said violinist and composer Michelle Ross. Actor Jeremy Strong ("The Big Short") said: "With one miraculous stroke, the fellowship gave me the means to devote all my time utterly to the creative work I was hungry for..." With this fellowship, said multimedia artist Angel Otero, "I was able to be in a city as challenging as New York with the state of mind I wanted. I was able to wake up to make art, and sleep knowing that I could make art again the next day."

The 2016 recipients of the Leonore Annenberg Fellowship Fund for the Performing and Visual Arts (and their hometowns) are:


-- Violinist Robyn Bollinger (Philadelphia, Pa.) made her Philadelphia
Orchestra debut at age 12. A graduate of the New England Conservatory of
Music, her fellowship sponsor, Bollinger has developed a concert model
that blends multimedia historical presentations and personal narrative
with performance. She has proposed to develop a video production and
live performance of "CIACCONA: The Bass of Time," a multimedia project
that seeks to demystify Bach's "Ciaccona" for solo violin. Her father,
Blair, is bass trombonist of the Philadelphia Orchestra. She has been
awarded a two-year fellowship of $50,000-a-year.
-- Bass-baritone Brandon Cedel (Charleston, S.C.) will join Oper Frankfurt
in 2016 when he completes his third year of the Metropolitan Opera's
Lindemann Young Artist Development Program, which sponsored him. A
graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music, Cedel won a Grand Prize at
the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions (2013) and a Richard
Tucker Career Grant (2015). The New Yorker's music critic Alex Ross
wrote of Cedel: "Capable of singing anything from Cavalli to Wagner, he
may be destined for stardom."
-- Actor Jeremie Harris (New York, N.Y.) nominated by The Public Theater,
was recently cast in FX's X-Men TV series "Legion." A graduate of the
Juilliard School, he has appeared in TV, film and theater productions,
including Suzan-Lori Parks' acclaimed "Father Comes Home from the Wars"
at the Public Theater. Harris, a high school basketball player who once
dreamed of playing in the NBA, fell in love with theater during a
college preparatory acting program at the Harlem School of the Arts. He
received a two-year award.
-- Actor Miriam A. Hyman (Philadelphia, Pa.), who received an MFA at the
Yale School of Drama, which sponsored her, landed her first professional
acting job as a high school senior in Freedom Theater's annual holiday
production of "Black Nativity," a year after she ushered at the holiday
show while in the company's training program for teens. She is a
graduate of University of the Arts in Philadelphia. Performing this
year in "The Piano Lesson" at McCarter Theater in Princeton, Hyman
brought "a quiet dignity and a rough poetic cadence" to her role, wrote
New York Times critic Ken Jaworowski. Hyman, who raps under the moniker
Robyn Hood, received a two-year award.
-- Cellist and conductor Nico Olarte-Hayes (Plainsboro, N.J.) was nominated
by the Perlman Music Program, where he studied for eight years. He
graduated with honors from the Harvard/New England Conservatory Joint
Program with an A.B. in physics from Harvard and a Master of Music from
NEC. He performed on "Live from Lincoln Center" and "The Kennedy Center
Honors" in tribute to his mentor, violinist Itzhak Perlman.
Olarte-Hayes, who also won the 2015 Vincent C. LaGuardia, Jr. Conducting
Competition, plans to buy instruments and equipment and record works for
solo cello by American composers. His fellowship is two years.
-- Actor David Pegram (Houston, Texas) graduated from the Mason Gross
School of the Arts at Rutgers University. He spent two years in Lincoln
Center Theater's production of "War Horse," alternating between two
roles: one of the actor-puppeteers playing the lead horse, Joey, and
Private David Taylor, best friend of Joey's original owner. In his
first real professional job, Pegram "succeeded way beyond his years or
experience," said André Bishop, producing artistic director of Lincoln
Center Theater, which is sponsoring him. Pegram, awarded a two-year
fellowship, is "an actor of immense promise - intelligent, attractive,
devoted to his craft," said Bishop, who will be one of his fellowship
mentors.
-- Multimedia artist Nyugen Smith (Jersey City, N.J.) is sponsored by the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago, from which he is to graduate
this year with an MFA. Smith, who has had 15 solo exhibitions, was born
in Jersey City, N.J., spent his early childhood in Trinidad, and has a
bachelor's degree from Seton Hall University. He is interested in the
"confluence of cultures and sensibilities of the African and European
experience within colonial and postcolonial contexts." His two-year
fellowship will enable him to pursue field research in the Caribbean for
a mixed-media sculpture and develop mixed-media drawings highlighting
mythical and historical figures from Caribbean and American literature.
-- American Ballet Theatre soloist Devon Teuscher (South Burlington, Vt.),
is possessed of great technical skill, and hopes to grow as an artist
through acting lessons, studying choreography, working with a dance
coach, and visiting prominent companies including Paris Opera Ballet,
the Royal Ballet, and Bolshoi Ballet, to learn about their training
styles and repertory. Before being promoted to soloist, in 2014, the New
York Times named Teuscher one of six standouts in the corps de ballet.
Writer Gia Kourlas noted that Teuscher has "prodigious strength," yet
still "is all upper-body eloquence."
-- Musician and musicologist Daniel Walden (Berkeley, Calif.), a candidate
for a Ph.D. in music theory at Harvard University, received a bachelor's
degree at Oberlin in piano performance, and a master's in music studies
at the University of Cambridge. As a performer on harpsichord, he has
been acclaimed for his "extreme virtuosity" (Alex Ross, the New Yorker).
Dedicated to new music performance, Walden is a founding member of the
Netherlands-based music collective Oerknal! Sponsored by Oberlin
Conservatory for his two-year fellowship, Walden seeks to "explore the
ways that new music interfaces with rare avant-garde works of
Renaissance Italian keyboard music."
The arts fund is part of the Leonore Annenberg Scholarship, Fellowship, and School Funds, which also provide four-year college scholarships to high school students who have overcome challenging circumstances, and grants to underfunded public elementary schools that serve children in financial need. As of June 2016, the Leonore Annenberg Funds will have provided or committed more than $19 million to arts fellows, college students and elementary schools.

About Leonore Annenberg: Leonore Annenberg (1918-2009) was U.S. Chief of Protocol for President Ronald Reagan and wife of the late Ambassador Walter H. Annenberg. Mrs. Annenberg established the grants to support her lifelong commitment to public service, education, and the arts. All grants are made on an invitation-only basis, in consultation with a partner organization. Visit www.leonoreannenbergscholarships.orgfor more information.

Photo - http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20160408/353226




SOURCE Annenberg Public Policy Center

Photo:https://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20160408/353226
http://photoarchive.ap.org/
Photo:https://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20160408/353226
http://photoarchive.ap.org/
Annenberg Public Policy Center

CONTACT: Michael Rozansky, Annenberg Public Policy Center, 215-746-0202, mrozansky@asc.upenn.edu; Gail Levin, Director, The Leonore Annenberg Funds, 215-746-5461, glevin@asc.upenn.edu

Web Site: http://www.leonoreannenbergscholarships.org


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