Create
Carolina Festival Takes Look at Politics
March
28, 2008
ROCK HILL, S.C. The second annual Create
Carolina Arts Festival: A Southern Fried Arts and Film
Festival will focus on politics during this
presidential election year, as well as showcasing
independent films.
The festival, scheduled for May 19-June 7 at
Winthrop University, will bring together artists from
around the country for a multi-disciplinary arts
experience featuring productions by established and
emerging artists.
Inspired by the current political climate, Create
Carolina participants will write and produce an
innovative theatre piece about the untold story of
Victoria Woodhull and Frederick Douglass. Festival
writer-in-residence Jonathan Davidson will
collaborate with Winthrop University students to create
a multimedia theatre production to examine the parallels
between the political processes of the late 1800s and
now.
A little know fact in American history is that in 1872,
Victoria Woodhull, the first female stockbroker,
ran for president and nominated Fredrick Douglass,
a former slave, as her vice presidential nominee.
Currently, Sen. Hillary Clinton and Sen.
Barack Obama are vying for the
Democratic Party nomination for president.
The highly anticipated project will premiere at the
Create Carolina Arts and Film Festival on May 30, 31
and June 7.
"We wanted to tell a story through the lens of today,
that's why multimedia will be such an essential
element, said Davidson. The play will be a further
testament to the rise of youth interest in the elections
of 2008 where youth turnout is three or four times
greater then in 2004 election.
Organizers also will continue a commitment to
independent filmmakers who can be present for the
festival screening. This year, the festival will present
on May 23 Train Wreck - My Life as an Idiot
starring Sean William Scott and Gretchen Mol.
Writer and director Todd Williams will attend and
answer questions about the film, which was an official
selection of the Hampton and Seattle international film
festivals.
Create Carolina also will screen on May 24 the
documentary A Man Named Pearl, which tells the
inspiring story of self-taught topiary artist Pearl
Fryar of Bishopville, S.C. Fryar will lecture
about his work prior to the film screening.
Other theater events will include a staged reading on
June 5-6 of God's Man in Texas, written by
David Rambo, and a staged reading on June 4 of Rock
Hill writer Terry Roueche's new play, Discretion.
In addition, there will be a university three-hour
credit course, performance opportunities, lectures and
master classes. This creative catalog of activities will
provide Winthrop students and the community a variety of
hands-on cultural events for their participation.
In 2007, Winthrop University's College of Visual and
Performing Arts produced the first Create Carolina,
an arts festival collaboration between the university
and Charles Randolph-Wright, acclaimed writer,
director and producer of theatre, film and television
and past recipient of the Winthrop University Medal of
Honor in the Arts.
To learn more, go to
http://www.createcarolina.com/ or call Amanda
Woolwine at 803/323-2399.
[Back
to News and Events]
|