MONMOUTH, Ill. — Seven Monmouth College students
served as presenters at the 36th Annual Great Lakes Region Kennedy Center
American College Theatre Festival (KCACTF) at Illinois State University in
Normal, Jan. 13-18. Additionally, 11 other students took part in the event
as participants.
A national theater program involving 18,000
students from colleges and universities nationwide, the KCACTF has served
as a catalyst in improving the quality of college theater in the United
States. It has grown into a network of more than 600 academic institutions
throughout the country, where theater departments and student artists
showcase their work and receive outside assessment by KCACTF respondents.
Representing Monmouth as presenters were senior
Amanda Caldwell of Stronghurst; juniors Emily Mitsdarffer of Blue Island
and Anne Olson of Alexis; and sophomores Kat Koelbl of Roscoe, Lindsey
Markel of Sidell, Sarah Zanger of Quincy and Josh Sonnenburg of Portland,
Ore.
Participants included seniors Tom Hill of Chicago
and Elizabeth Kline of Aurora; sophomores Adam Drake of Rockford and Mike
Wilmoth of Clinton; and freshmen Hilary Binks of Glen Ellyn, Charley
Pippenger of Hawthorn Woods, Mary O’Connor of Joliet, Michelle Anstett of
Peoria, Lauren Swanson of Oak Forest, Sara Youngs of Wauconda and Chris
Walljasper of Donnellson, Iowa.
Theater productions by 10 Midwestern colleges and
universities, selected from 40 entries considered, were a highlight of the
festival. Regional winners will advance to the national ACTF event in
April at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington,
D.C.
Illinois State University and Eureka College
co-hosted the event. In addition to the theater productions, students
competed in the areas of acting, design, playwriting and criticism.
Among the festival guests were actor and Illinois
State University alumnus Gary Cole (“Fatal Vision,” the Brady Bunch movies
and, currently, “The West Wing”), Curt Columbus of Steppenwolf Theatre
Company, Curt Tofteland of the Kentucky Shakespeare Festival and Western
Illinois University president Al Goldfarb, former provost at Illinois
State and a professor of theatre history.