2018 August Wilson Competition Names Regional Winners

Top two winners advance to national finals in New York

On February 19, 23 students from multiple Texas high schools gave it their all on the Bob Hope stage at Meadows School of the Arts in Dallas as they vied for an all-expenses-paid trip to the national August Wilson Monologue Competition finals in New York City. Three top winners from the Dallas Region were selected, including Callie Holley, High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, Houston (1st place); Jaurius Norman, Cedar Hill High School, Cedar Hill (2nd place); and Madison Meadows, Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, Dallas (3rd place).

Each of the contestants performed a two- to three-minute monologue from one of playwright August Wilson’s “Century Cycle” award-winning plays, all of which depict the African American experience in the 20th century.

Holley and Norman will advance to the national finals, to be held May 7 at Broadway’s August Wilson Theatre in New York. There, they will compete against regional winners from Atlanta, Boston, Buffalo, Chicago, Greensboro, Los Angeles, New Haven, New York, Pittsburgh, Portland and Seattle for scholarships, cash awards and their own set of Wilson’s Century Cycle collection of plays. The national finalists also will be treated to a Broadway production and will meet established actors, who in the past have included Denzel Washington, Phylicia Rashad and other stars of the stage. If either Holley or Norman is unable to make the trip, Meadows will serve as alternate.

“What has amazed me about this competition is how it is expanding to include other Texas cities,” said Associate Professor Benard Cummings, who established the Dallas regional competition after working with the national competition for several years. “We had Houston, Austin and Tyler join us this year, and three schools from San Antonio – which sent faculty representatives to observe our prelims – were blown away by the competition and are slated to join us next year. It is growing statewide, and I am very proud of this unexpected turn of events.”

The annual Dallas Region competition also features an essay contest, in which students write an 800- to 1,000-word essay based on themes found in Wilson’s plays. Three winners were announced during the February 19 Dallas Region finals, including Bailey James, Grand Prairie Fine Arts Academy; Abraham Veliz, Willowridge High School, Houston; and Bryan Ordonez-Santini, Barack Obama Male Leadership Academy, Dallas. Each winner received a $100 cash prize.

Throughout the Dallas Region competition, several theatre students and recent alumni from Meadows School of the Arts assisted Cummings by coaching the high school competitors in a series of workshops. Co-coordinators for Cummings this year were Kyle Douglas (B.F.A. Theatre ’18) and Katie Ibrahim (B.F.A. Theatre ’18).

Additional Meadows students and recent alumni who helped with the 2018 event include:

Kassy Amoi (B.F.A. Theatre ’18)
Coda Boyce (B.F.A. Theatre ’20)
Mikaela Brooks (B.F.A. Theatre ’19)
Timothy Brown (M.F.A. ’16)
Sasha Davis (B.F.A. Theatre Studies ’16)
Tiana Johnson (M.F.A. ’16)
Diego Martinez Martinez (B.F.A. Theatre ’19)
Jasonica Moore (B.F.A. Theatre ’19)
Jeffery Pope (B.F.A. Theatre ’21)
Bonnie Scott (B.F.A. Theatre ’20)
Yusef Seevers (M.F.A. ’18)
Lauren Steele (B.F.A. Theatre ’19)
Roderick Woodruff (B.F.A. Theatre ’19)

The Dallas Region finals were emceed by actor Hassan El-Amin. Judges included Regina Washington, artistic director, African-American Repertory Theatre; Will Power, artist-in-residence, SMU Meadows and playwright-in-residence, Dallas Theater Center; Sasha Davis (B.F.A. Theatre Studies ’16), local teaching artist; Khira Hailey, local theatre director; Tonya Holloway, co-artistic director, Soul Rep Theatre Company; Bryan Pitts, local actor currently starring in Detroit ’67 at Jubilee Theatre; and Meadows alumnus and local actor Robert George.

The Dallas Region event of the national August Wilson Monologue Competition is sponsored by SMU Meadows School of the Arts. National presenters are True Colors Theatre Company of Atlanta and Jujamcyn Theaters of New York. National sponsors are Delta and Aetna.

Read more about the annual .

Read more about .

Read more about SMU Meadows Division of Theatre and Associate Professor Benard Cummings.

Figure:

August Wilson (1945-2005) is an American playwright best known for the “,” a collection of 10 plays about the African American experience in the twentieth century. Most are set in the Hill District of Pittsburgh where Wilson grew up.

One of Wilson’s plays, Fences, was adapted into a movie starring Denzel Washington and Viola Davis and was nominated for four Academy Awards in 2017: Best Picture; Actor; Supporting Actress; and Writing (Adapted Screenplay). The original Fences opened on Broadway in 1987 and starred James Earl Jones. It earned $11 million in one year, as well as a  and multiple Tony Awards. Wilson’s The Piano Lesson, set in the 1930s, was nominated for the Tony in five categories and won the  in 1990.

 calls his series of plays a “landmark in the history of black culture, of American literature and of Broadway theater.”

The August Wilson Theater is on Broadway, on 52nd Street. It is one of several theatres owned by  Theatres, which also owns the Eugene O’Neill, Al Hirschfeld, St. James and Walter Kerr theatres.