Wednesday, May 12, 2010

2009 Graduate, Acting Major, Ben Guralnik


Ben Guralnik, graduated Adelphi in 2009 and I had the honor to talk with him about his career at Adelphi. Ben not only was a student here for the recently built PAC but was here for the renovation of the PAC and the pre-PAC days. In this short essay written by Ben himself, he touches upon his beginning here at Adelphi, the renovation era, the post renovation and the present, which is about how life is in the acting world after graduation.

When I first started attending classes at Adelphi as an acting major, things were pretty good, as we had the very nice Olmsted Theatre, and we were even promised that we would get to do our freshman workshop in there. Luckily, for our entire freshman year, all of the mainstage shows (including both Dance Adelphi’s’) were performed in the 300+ seat historic Olmsted. I had learned to love all of my teachers and fellow acting majors and we were told there might be an even bigger facility built for all of us performing arts majors, so, honestly, life was pretty good for us.

Then, towards the end of my freshman year, we were told that we were going to be using grungy old, fried food smelling Post Hall for all of our classes and even some performances. They also mentioned some high school over a mile away called Herricks for bigger mainstage shows, such as Midsummer Night’s Dream, Urinetown and Our Town. For TWO ENTIRE Years! This was not what I was hoping college was going to be like at all. Well, we all complained and made the trek over to Herricks everyday for rehearsals and shows and we all just got used to it.

My senior year rolled around, and on my first day of class, I realized that all of that complaining and commuting had finally paid off, because all of the Performing arts majors (Dance, Theatre, Tech and Music) had a new Home…… The PAC! Even though I only got to use this gorgeous state of the art-art facility, with over 6 performance spaces for a year, it was an honor to be an Adelphi student, as well as a theatre major. Luckily my last show (Stage Door), ended up being on the exact same stage as my first show (Freshman Workshop), so it was a nice way to end off right where I started. The two years in between were not really as bad as everyone made them out to be, and most importantly FLEW BY. Actually all 4 years flew by.

Here I am, just a few blinks later, an actor, living the dream in New York City, one year after graduation, and NO, I have not gotten my big break yet, but I have gotten a few parts in theatre here and there, in shows in Manhattan and Brooklyn, and it hasn’t been easy (but who said it was going to be easy?). I have yet to get a real steady paying job (most likely waiting tables, as most actors do). Graduating in the year that I did, was not the greatest timing, economy wise, and I have heard from a lot of friends in the class of ’09 that finding a job is not real easy these days. But, I’m going to be persistent, and keep pushing, knowing that I have a BFA from the wonderful acting program at Adelphi University, and I know that all that suffering at Herrick’s and in Post paid off, and that has trained me to just be patient and optimistic. My time will come.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

A word from the Chair

In this podcast, we hear from the perspective of the Department Chair, Nicholas Petron, on why the Adelphi Theatre program is the one to choose.
















Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Performing Arts Center News Video

This is a news video I was able to put together, interviewing different people from the Theatre Department. This video's purpose is to tell the challenges and obstacles to get a job in the area of performing arts after college.

This link below will take you to Youtube where this video can be viewed in full screen.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Why Adelphi?

I had the opportunity to interview, Brennan Gallagher, a junior acting major here at Adelphi. The thing I wanted to know the most was, why he chose Adelphi's Theatre program out of all the other schools he could have gone to. With this, i put together a small interview in a slideshow. I hope you enjoy!



Sunday, April 4, 2010

Don't Forget "Tartuffe" Comes to Adelphi

"Molière is the second most produced playwright after Shakespeare and Tartuffe is a favorite. An exposé of the religious fervor and hypocrisy, it has been performed for more than 350 years. Reset in this production from Paris to modern, money-soaked Texas, Christopher Hampton's wonderful blank verse translation tells the story of rich businessman Orgon’s devotion to the radical preacher Tartuffe, who is in fact an arch-con-man." (Adelphi Performing Arts Center)

"Tartuffe" is directed by Brian Rose and will open up Tuesday April 6, 2010 at 7:30pm in the Black Box Theatre.

Performances:
4/6–7:30 p.m. | 4/7–7:30 p.m. | 4/8–7:30 p.m. | 4/9–11:00 a.m. & 7:30 p.m. |4/10–8:00 p.m. | 4/11–2:00 p.m.

A Great Jazz Pianist

Adelphi University is proud to announce, Fred Hersch, "A master who plays it his way" (New York Times) is coming to Adelphi, Saturday April 17, 2010 at 8:00pm.

Hersch has been heard sporadically over the past two years. This is because Fred is very sick from AIDS and a severe case of pneumonia that the people closest to him, his partner, Scott Morgan, and his brother, Hank, as well as his parents, thought, on the worst of his bad days, that they had seen him for the last time. Early in 2008, the H.I.V. virus migrated to his brain, and Hersch developed AIDS-related dementia. He lived for a time in mental and physical seclusion, hallucinating under the delusion that he had the power to control time and space and that everyone around him was plotting his demise. In fact, he came so close to dying that his paranoia seemed practically justified. At his sickest, Hersch fell into a coma and remained unconscious for a full two months. While incapacitated, he was bound to his bed in St. Vincent’s Hospital in New York. He lost renal function and had to undergo regular dialysis, and he required a tracheotomy. He was unable to consume food or liquids of any kind, including water, for eight months. He could not swallow a thing or speak above a whisper. As a result of his unconsciousness and inactivity, he lost nearly all motor function in his hands and could not hold a pencil, let alone play the piano.

Hersch has been featured on CBS Sunday Morning with Dr. Billy Taylor and on a variety of National Public Radio programs including Fresh Air, Jazz Set, Studio 360 and Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz. Hersch has also been awarded a Rockefeller Fellowship, grants from The National Endowment for the Arts and Meet the Composer, and six composition residencies at The MacDowell Colony. He conducted a Professional Training Workshop for Young Musicians at The Weill Institute at Carnegie Hall in 2008 and was awarded the Branigan Lectureship at Indiana University in 2004. A committed educator, Hersch was a faculty member at the New England Conservatory for ten years, and has taught at The New School and Manhattan School of Music; he is currently a visiting professor at Western Michigan University and on the Jazz Studies faculty of the New England Conservatory.

This amazing performance can be witnessed Saturday April 17, 2010 in the Performing Art Centers Concert Hall.