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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Corn Dogs & Cakes

Theater, music, and the other arts, including the culinary, appeal to more than a single sense. Consider the importance of presentation in a fine restaurant. It cannot merely taste good. It must look good as well, for we taste not only with our tongue and nose but with our eyes and even our ears.

“The senses aren’t confined to the plate,” agrees Courtney Oliver, head of public relations at Playhouse on the Square. “It’s about lighting and color and space and what music is playing. It’s why the best servers are the invisible ones … so that the diner can concentrate on conversation and consumption without distraction.”

Oliver knows a bit about arranging food and drink in a theatrical setting. She is part of the team that works on Playhouse’s “First Sundays.” These events, on the first Sunday of a play’s production, celebrate the play in a unique way: using food to attract audiences. And the events can get pretty serious. Competition is fierce, for example, during the annual tuna casserole cook-off that accompanies Playhouse’s holiday tradition, A Tuna Christmas.

“For The Buddy Holly Story, we’re doing all-American food — apple pie, root-beer floats, hot dogs, and apple martinis,” Oliver says. “For The Light in the Piazza, we’ll do an Italian wine tasting and serve pizzas and bruschetta.”

Other local theaters also promote productions with creative uses of food. Theatre Memphis takes its opening-night receptions so seriously it’s planning for a wedding — well, the wedding cake anyway — for its August production of Oklahoma!. “And corn,” adds Kell Christie, TM’s artistic director. “There’s got to be corn.”

For TM’s upcoming production of Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, a certain meat pie takes center stage. (Hint: The secret ingredient is people!) Christie is hesitant to serve anything resembling protagonist Mrs. Lovett’s vicious dish. “For our reception, I think we’ll be going in, oh, the other direction,” she says emphatically. “The anti-Sweeney Todd. Some nice fruit. Vegetables. Maybe we’ll even go vegan.

Germantown Community Theatre (of which, in the spirit of full disclosure, I serve as executive producer) has a similar ritual: tailgate parties, also on the first Sunday of a play’s opening weekend. Some tailgates are themed, as with last year’s Oktoberfest party for The Underpants (Steve Martin’s adaptation of a German play) and an Italian feast for Romeo and Juliet.

One unexpected consequence of the tailgate parties has been the emergence of theater supporters who come to shows only on those days. One regular can be relied upon to provide one of the area’s premier bread puddings, and about 10 theatergoers dress in the theme of the show, including a giant pair of underpants (fitting three of them together) for The Underpants. Also on the sweet side, GCT serves ice cream at intermission after yours truly saw Judi Dench in Hay Fever in London. To my surprise, ice cream is a staple of the West End theater scene. While Londoners prefer Godiva, we go with Ben & Jerry’s.

While the food served in conjunction with a show can enhance the theater experience, food on stage isn’t always so inviting. Local actor Bonnie Kourvelas recounts a Germantown production of Dearly Departed in which the character of Delightful consumes corn dogs. “Sooner or later, there would be a slip-up,” Kourvelas recalls. “The corn dog wouldn’t be cooked all the way through and would be semi-frozen in the center. The poor actress playing Delightful would have to gag it down anyway.”

Actor Leah Bray Nichols laments her own past experience as a consumables wrangler. “I was a human garbage disposal,” she confesses of her duties behind the scenes of Playhouse’s Having Our Say, in which the illusion of a working sink was accomplished using a spout that emptied into buckets in a basement green room. “Each morning following a night show, my job was to dump the old water and food and clean out the buckets for that evening’s performance. Mmmmmm … live theater is so glamorous.”

Glamour is sure to be in abundant supply at this year’s Ostrander awards ceremony, where a fantastic edible spread will hopefully lack the one ingredient that can spoil any meal: drama.

The Ostranders, Sunday, August 24th,
at the Memphis Botanic Garden. Cocktail reception: 6-7:30 p.m.; awards ceremony: 7:30 p.m. Tickets: $5.

Categories
Cover Feature News

Stage Night

Chris Ellis will be in Memphis on August 24th to host the 25th installment of the Ostrander Awards, ArtsMemphis’ and Contemporary Media’s annual party honoring the best of Memphis Theatre. The Frayser-born character actor, famous for playing Deke Slayton in Apollo 13 and for getting into a comic brawl with Joe Pesci in My Cousin Vinnie, has mixed emotions about the engagement. He could be in Denver that night for a screening of Gospel Hill, a film he worked on with Danny Glover and Angela Bassett that’s scheduled to roll opposite the Ossies. (Ellis says there’s a small chance that Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama might attend the screening before the Democratic convention gets under way.) He says he’d love to be there for that. But Memphis is home. Or it was home.

Ellis’ mother recently passed away, and there are loose ends that need tending to on the north side of town. That’s changed the tone of his visit a bit, though he’s been looking forward to the Ostranders and the opportunity to reconnect with a theater scene he holds in high regard.

“I just play my usual ‘Cracker von Peckerwood’ character,” Ellis says, dismissing his performance in Gospel Hill as more of the same. As a spirited fixture on Memphis stages throughout the 1970s and ’80s and as a regular in front of, behind, and occasionally under the bar at Midtown’s P&H Café, Ellis thinks it’s a hoot that he usually portrays Republicans, rednecks, and gruff authoritarian figures.

“When I think of my time as an actor in Memphis, there’s a lot of tenderness,” he says, sitting on a park bench somewhere in rural Maine for a telephone interview. “Tenderness is the best way I can describe it.”

Memphis Flyer: So what’s on your mind?

Chris Ellis: I need to get the roomers out of my mother’s house as soon as possible. The window units are running, I’m told, and all the windows are open. When my mother first came to Memphis from North Mississippi, she took in roomers to make ends meet, and she completed that circle toward the end of her life. And let me tell you about some of the roomers she’s taken on. These are the kinds of people who operate rides at carnivals, get paid in amphetamines, and don’t have many teeth by the time they’re 30.

When did you start doing theater in Memphis?

The first time I was asked to leave Circuit Playhouse was in 1970. I’ve been asked to leave a lot of places since then, including Graceland, Hearst Castle, and the Museum of Tolerance, but I was first asked to leave Circuit in 1970. The story behind that is involved, uninteresting, and complicated.

You worked at other regional theaters as well, not just at Circuit.

I did. But Circuit Playhouse was my entrance to the community of theater in Memphis. It was new. It was closer to where I lived than Theatre Memphis, and it wasn’t as intimidating. Although I’m sure all of this was just in my mind, Theatre Memphis didn’t seem as available back then. There was an “us versus them” attitude. It was [Playhouse on the Square founder] Jackie Nichols versus this much more established company. My heart has always been with Jackie and Playhouse on the Square, because he’s this tap dancer from Ted Mack’s Amateur Hour who started a significant theater company that has consistently done good work. It’s one of those miraculous finishes — one of those last-minute victories that the human race seems to adore.

In various bios I’ve seen, you always cite Memphis as the place where you learned your business.

What I was able to do here as a very young person just out of college was incredible. That was my training and my education. A friend once said if you want to learn to be an actor there are two things you can do: You can study at Juilliard or you can work in the theater with seasoned professionals and watch them as they do their work on stage. And that’s what I did. I watched Memphis actors like Walter Smith, Jay Ehrlicher, Alan Mullican, and Joanne Malin.

When I first went to New York I had something everybody else my age lacked: I’d played significant roles in a couple dozen plays. I don’t know. Maybe nobody cared that I played Rosencrantz in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead or Milo in Sleuth, but that really was my education.

Do you take much of that education into your film roles?

Not really. It’s a very different thing. I didn’t work for 10 years when I lived in New York. I was living in bone-crushing poverty. My hairline was going, and my waistline was growing. My agent said if I’d quit playing [Shakespeare’s] Mercutio and start sounding like a good old boy, I could get work on TV and in film. And so that’s what I did. And I feel so lucky.

You’re also one of those miraculous last-minute finishes. Your career started rolling at 40. That’s about the time most people might think about giving up and moving on to something else. What kept you going?

All I ever wanted to do was to be able to write “actor” on my tax returns — which I didn’t even file for close to a decade when I was so poor. It’s all I ever wanted to do since I was a kid and dreamed that someday I might be able to stand in the same room as Annette Funicello.

I remember doing a show at Circuit with Alan Mullican, a wonderful actor who didn’t make his living in the theater. He made his living as some kind of civil servant working for the state, which wasn’t very fulfilling, and he did theater at night. One time he was very exhausted and I asked, “If you’re so tired, why do you do so much theater?” He looked at me like he didn’t understand and said, “This is what I do.”

Self-portrait by Chris Ellis, holding an Ostrander award.

You did everything here from performing Shakespeare with Ellis Rabb to playing Lee in Sam Shepard’s True West. Does any role stand out as a high point for you?

Playing Christopher Marlowe in The Passionate Shepherd. Jo Malin directed, and I remember her telling me I was emotionally predisposed to the character but that my voice was my own worst enemy.

I’ll never forget Edwin Howard, the Press-Scimitar‘s theater critic, writing about that show and “Chris Ellis’ new, deeply modulated voice.”

At what point did you realize you were going to have a career in Hollywood?

Probably after the second film, My Cousin Vinnie. That film surprised everybody, because nobody expected it to be a big movie. Before that, I’d worked for 16 weeks on Days of Thunder with Tom Cruise, but I was invisible in that film.

I didn’t really feel like I was in the club until Apollo 13. That’s when I stopped feeling intimidated — when I was made to feel included by the director. Lots of stars are bullies, and lots of producers and directors treat actors like expired goods. That’s not true of Ron Howard and Tom Hanks.

I don’t have any expectations or sense of entitlement. When you’re an actor, you never get the memo that says your career is over. Mine could have been over yesterday. It’s a hard business, especially when your hair starts turning gray. And it’s especially cruel to women. Go to the Internet Movie Data Base and go back 20 years. Find movies by A-list stars like Stallone, Tom Cruise, or Bruce Willis. Look for the names of the leading ladies in these films. Most of the time these will be names you won’t recognize.

Among the Memphis stage productions nominated for this year’s Ostrander Awards: The Pirates of Penzance (Playhouse on the Square)

What’s next on the horizon for Cracker von Peckerwood?

He’s just finished the second of what he hopes will be a reoccurring role on the TV series Burn Notice. And I worked on a film called G-Force that’s scheduled to be released in 2009. Given the kind of roles I usually play, you might think that G-Force has something to do with aeronautics, but it doesn’t. It’s about gerbils.

Gerbils, really? As in …

No! No. Oh no. It’s animated. I don’t think Richard Gere had anything to do with this movie.

I have to ask, because I remember playing a drinking game at the P&H back in the ’80s called “I Never.” Somebody says, “I never [fill in the blank],” and anybody who’s done that particular thing has to drink …

Ha! Well, there’s nothing I never did.

Yes, the most popular part of that game was when someone would say, “I never [fill in the blank] with Chris Ellis.” Half the table always had to drink.

I once printed up a bunch of T-shirts that said, “I Never Slept With Chris Ellis.” [Actress] Deborah Harrison printed one that said, “I Did. It Wasn’t That Great.”

And the Winner Is …

Twenty-five years ago,
Memphis presented its first theater awards.

by Michael Finger

The men and women who jammed into the Old Daisy that June evening in 1984 were restless. Many glasses of wine tend to have that effect on people, and the various members of the Memphis theater community were rarely known for being anything less than boisterous at parties.

But they quieted down a bit when Barbara Cason stepped to the podium. Cason was the former Front Street Theatre actress who had found success in Hollywood playing bit parts in hit shows like The Waltons and Remington Steele, and she had come home to host a brand-new event in town. In the time-honored tradition of the Oscars, she opened an envelope to announce, “For best dramatic production, the winner is … Amadeus, at Theatre Memphis.”

The Night of the Iguana (Theatre Memphis)

And so it went at the first Memphis Theatre Awards, an event sponsored by Memphis magazine that has honored the best and brightest in the local theater community for 25 years.

Memories are a bit foggy — did we mention all that wine? — but Kenneth Neill, now publisher and CEO of Contemporary Media, the company that produces the Flyer, Memphis magazine, and Memphis Parent, recalls that the local theater community wasn’t entirely happy with the coverage they were receiving from our city’s two daily newspapers.

“Back in the 1980s, Robert Jennings was The Commercial Appeal theater critic, and over at the Press-Scimitar it was Edwin Howard, and they just didn’t get along,” Neill says. “It was Sally Thomason, president of the Memphis Arts Council, who mentioned to me one day that it would be nice if they would just cooperate and do something together.”

One thing led to another, and Bob Towery and Neill, publisher and editor of Memphis magazine, respectively, met with Thomason and came up with the idea of an annual competition.

“I think it was a good decision to get the Arts Council involved,” Thomason says. “Ken wanted to give it a community base — something that would lend it a kind of legitimacy that would take it beyond just a magazine project. And I will say this: If it weren’t for Memphis magazine, it would not have happened, and it wouldn’t be here today.” The first year wasn’t easy.

“When we started talking about this, I’m not sure we really had any idea how to proceed,” Thomason says. “We eventually came up with this idea to have a panel of judges, and it was delightful that everyone who got involved was very conscientious.”

The judges for the first Theatre Awards included Walter Armstrong, Gene Crain, Amy Dietrich, Levi Frazier, Stephen Haley, Emily Ruch, C. Lamar Wallis, and Miriam DeCosta Willis.

“We looked for people who were involved in the theater, so they would have some kind of deep knowledge of what they were watching,” Thomason says. “And getting attorney Walter Armstrong was our key, because he seemed to go to everything. I remember he said, ‘I’m tired of raising money for the arts, but this is something I can really put my heart into.'”

Ruch had been involved with the local theater community since 1954, performing on stage and serving on the play selection committee for the old Memphis Little Theatre. She took her judging responsibilities quite seriously.

“I wouldn’t even have a glass of wine before I went to a play,” she says, “and I would take notes in my program and go home and write up what I thought, right away, while it was still fresh.”

Ruch adds that the various judges weren’t even supposed to talk to each other during the year.

“We could not go to a play together, because we didn’t want to be influenced by the other person,” she says. The judges met at Armstrong’s house at the end of the season to select the winners.

“We met all day and all night,” says Ruch, “and we really followed the rules. We were very honest about it. We wanted to acknowledge all theaters, but we didn’t give an award to a theater just because they hadn’t gotten one.”

The winners that first year included:

• Best dramatic production:

Amadeus, Theatre Memphis

• Best performance by an actor:

Jay Ehrlicher, Amadeus

• Best performance by an actress:

Pamela Poletti, The Miracle Worker,

Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (Circuit Playhouse)

Playhouse on the Square

• Best musical production:

Handy, Theatre Memphis’ Little Theatre

• Best set design:

The Dresser, Circuit Playhouse.

A special award for “service to Memphis theater that spans generations” went to Eugart Yerian, director of the Memphis Little Theatre from 1929 to 1961. (The following year, the award itself was named the Eugart Yerian Award.)

“We won quite a few awards that evening,” says Jackie Nichols, executive producer of Playhouse on the Square and Circuit Playhouse. “It was kind of small that year, and after the first glass of wine, or two, you don’t remember much about it. But it was Memphis magazine’s way of honoring the theatrical tradition that has always been so awesome in Memphis. And I don’t want to speak for him, but I guess it was Ken’s way of wanting to give something back to the community, and the art form he chose to honor was theater.”

The theater awards grew and prospered, especially when Janie McCrary, who was then working at the Arts Council, took over the judging.

Memphis magazine would produce the event, and the Arts Council would get the judges together,” McCrary says. “At first it was, let’s just see what we can do here. But then we came up with more rules, more criteria, and after the first few years it became a bit more structured.” The awards themselves are now called the Ostranders, named in honor of Jim Ostrander, one of the city’s most popular actors, who died of cancer in 2002.

Ruch, who served as a judge for the first three years, remembers her colleagues felt a keen responsibility to do it right back in 1984.

“We were very aware that we were the first,” she says. “And we were very aware that we were doing something that would be deliberately continued or deliberately not continued, so I don’t think I’ve ever seen such dedicated people.” That dedication has clearly paid off.

Looking back to that first competition, Ruch remembers, “We took ourselves very seriously, but it was fun, fun, fun.”

Jerry Springer: The Opera (Playhouse on the Square)

25th Annual Ostrander Awards

Sunday, August 24th

Memphis Botanic Garden

Cocktails: 6 p.m.; awards: 7:30 p.m.

Tickets: $5, $6 at the door

. . . . . . . . . .

Talks to Angels …

Arts patron Dorothy Kirsch
is honored for lifetime achievement.

by Chris Davis

By all accounts, Dorothy Orgill Kirsch, the winner of this year’s Eugart Yerian award for lifetime achievement in Memphis theater, is the single most caring, genuine, funny, energetic, and loving person who ever patronized the arts or loved animals way too much.

Kirsch isn’t an actress, though she’s been on stage once or twice. Kirsch is a volunteer and a philanthropist, the kind of person theater folks rightly call an angel. She’s supported an array of artists, filmmakers, and institutions, ranging from Ballet Memphis and the Hattiloo Theare to Voices of the South.

Whitney Jo, Playhouse on the Square’s managing director, says Kirsch has a critical edge as well. “There have been a couple of occasions where she’s seen a show and was very vocal about everything that was wrong with it.” Jo says the criticism goes down easier when it comes from somebody who sponsors productions and gives to capital campaigns.

“Dorothy has believed in the work of Voices of the South from the get-go,” says Jenny Odle Madden, the group’s executive director. “She loves our adaptations of Southern stories. There is not another arts patron like her.”

Memphis Flyer: Most people think of you as an arts enthusiast, but you’ve been on stage a time or two, haven’t you? I remember seeing your name in the program for A Streetcar Named Desire at Theatre Memphis. Were you Stella? Blanche?

Kirsch: HA! I was a bag lady.

Describe yourself in a million words or less.

Lucky enough to do the things I love.

When did you decide that theater was your thing?

Well, I was very fortunate, and as a pre-teenager back in the Dark Ages, I would go to the theater whenever the family went to New York. I also remember going to shows in Memphis at the Front Street Theatre when it was in the basement of the King Cotton Hotel.

What pleases you the most?

I love dance. I love good comedy. The great thing about theater is that you can go back to see the same show, and it’s different every time. I think I saw Nunsense five times.

Do you have an all-time favorite show?

Uncle Vanya with Ken Zimmerman and Jim Ostrander. And Theatre Memphis’ Cats.

For a list of Ostrander Award nominees (and next week’s winners, once they’re announced), go to memphisflyer.com and search “Ostrander.”

Categories
Theater Theater Feature

The Greatest

Jim Ostrander, the man for whom Memphis’ annual theater awards are named, could do it all. His singing could fill the vacuum of space; his skills as a comedian were rivaled only by his skills as a tragedian. And although he was stoutly built, he could kick up his heels with the best dancers around. Ostrander’s laugh was famously large, and backstage lore held that you couldn’t have a bad show if he was in the audience. This year’s Ostrander nominations show that Memphis’ theaters are living up to the example set by their namesake: They can do anything.

Yes, musicals do dominate this year’s award season, but very few of them can be described as fluff. From the biting social commentary of Caroline, or Change, to the knowingly silly satire of The Musical of Musicals (The Musical!), these are complex artworks far removed from the escapist fare that defined America’s musical theater for most of the 20th century.

Theatre Memphis staged Steve Martin’s light absurdism with Picasso at the Lapin Agile, while Rhodes College tackled Samuel Beckett’s most famous monster, Waiting for Godot.

Shakespeare was well represented by an extraordinary (and underrecognized) production of Romeo and Juliet at Germantown Community Theatre, while Othello stalked the boards of Theatre Memphis’ Next Stage. Classic comedies like The Odd Couple were balanced by the grim realities of The Glory of Living and The Rabbit Hole.

Groups such as Playwright’s Forum and Our Own Voice supplied Memphis with numerous original works.

The 2006-’07 season has seen Memphis theaters tackle big issues relating to race, gender, and economic strife via scripts as diverse as Oleanna, The Full Monty, and Crumbs from the Table of Joy.

It short, it has been a good year for Memphis theater, and on Sunday, August 26th, Contemporary Media (parent company of the Flyer) and the Greater Memphis Arts Council will celebrate the best of the best when the Ostrander Community Theatre Awards get under way at the Memphis Botanic Garden. Cocktails are served at 6 p.m. The ceremony begins at 7:30 p.m.

Ostrander Community Theatre Awards
Nominees for 2006-2007

Key: TM=Theatre Memphis, NSTM=Next Stage at Theatre Memphis, POTS=Playhouse on the Square, CP=Circuit Playhouse, GCT=Germantown Community Theatre, HT=Harrell Theatre, POTSTW=Playhouse on the Square at TheatreWorks.

SET DESIGN: Christopher McCollum for Picasso at the Lapin Agile at NSTM; Bruce Bergner for Seussical at POTS; Christopher McCollum for The Odd Couple at TM; Jimmy Humphries for The Rabbit Hole at CP; Pam Hurley for Little Shop of Horrors at TM.

COSTUMES: Rebecca Powell for

The Rabbit Hole at Circuit Playhouse

Seussical at POTS; Andre Bruce Ward for My Fair Lady at TM; Jason Bishop for The Wild Party at CP; Janice Louise for Picasso at the Lapin Agile at NSTM; Rebecca Powell for The Mousetrap at POTS.

LIGHTING: Jared Land for Little Shop of Horrors at TM; Ben Wheeler for Seussical at POTS; Matthew Landwehr for The Rabbit Hole at CP; Ken Friedhoff for The Full Monty at POTS; Ben Wheeler for Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at POTS.

PROPS: David Nofsinger and Bill Short for My Fair Lady at TM; Carey Stipe for I Am My Own Wife at CP; Bill Short for It’s a Wonderful Life: A Live Radio Play at POTS.

SET DRESSING: Bill Short for It’s a Wonderful Life: A Radio Play at POTS; Carey Stipe for I Am My Own Wife at CP; Christopher McCollum for Picasso at the Lapin Agile at NSTM; Dave Nofsinger and Bill Short for My Fair Lady at TM.

MUSIC DIRECTION: Angelo Rapan for Little Shop of Horrors at TM; Angelo Rapan for Evita at HT; Dennis Whitehead for The Wild Party at CP; Dennis Whitehead for The Full Monty at POTS; Gary Beard for Musical of Musicals at NSTM.

SOUND DESIGN: Eric Sefton for Romeo and Juliet at GCT; Rory Dale for I Am My Own Wife at CP; Rory Dale for The Rabbit Hole at CP; Steven Gary for Oleanna at NSTM; Rory Dale for The Glory of Living at CP.

CHOREOGRAPHY: David Ollington for The Full Monty at POTS; Amy Hanford for Evita at HT; Jerre Dye for Little Shop of Horrors at TM; Pam Hurley for Musical of Musicals at NSTM; Jay Rapp for The Wild Party at CP.

The House of Blue Leaves at Theatre Memphis

SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A MUSICAL: Shaheerah Farrakhan for Caroline, or Change at POTS; Irene Crist for The Full Monty at POTS; Cheyenne Nelson for The Wild Party at CP; Sheana Tobey for The Wild Party at CP; Crystin Gilmore for Caroline, or Change at POTS.

SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A MUSICAL: Kent Fleshman for Little Shop of Horrors at TM; Greg Pragel for The Full Monty at POTS; Daniel Zakarija for The Full Monty at POTS; Jeremy Garrett for Big River at POTS; John Hemphill for Big River at POTS.

LEADING ACTRESS IN A MUSICAL: Illeana Kirven for Caroline, or Change at POTS; Emily Pettet for Beauty and the Beast at HT; Miriam Rodriguez for Little Shop of Horrors at TM; Kim Baker for Seussical at POTS; Jude Knight for Musical of Musicals at NSTM.

LEADING ACTOR IN A MUSICAL: Marques Brown for Little Shop of Horrors at TM; Aaron Lamb for The Full Monty at POTS; Andrew Weir for Big River at POTS; Pete Montgomery for Seussical at POTS; Kent Fleshman for Musical of Musicals at NSTM.

DIRECTION OF A MUSICAL: Dave Landis for Caroline, or Change at POTS; Cecelia Wingate for Little Shop of Horrors at TM; Bennett Wood for Musical of Musicals at TM; Gary John La Rosa for Seussical at POTS; Dave Landis for The Full Monty at POTS.

MUSICAL PRODUCTION: Caroline, or Change at POTS; The Full Monty at POTS; Seussical at POTS; Little Shop of Horrors at TM; Musical of Musicals at NSTM.

SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA: Alicia Queen for Othello at NSTM; Erin Shelton for Crumbs From the Table of Joy at CP; Jo Lynne Palmer for The Exonerated at POTSTW; Irene Crist for The Rabbit Hole at CP; Maya Geri for Crumbs From the Table of Joy at CP.

SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA: Tony Isbell for Picasso at the Lapin Agile at NSTM; Jim Palmer for The Pillowman at POTSTW; Aaron Lamb for The Pillowman at POTSTW; Ed Porter for The Rabbit Hole at CP; Barry Fuller for Picasso at the Lapin Agile at NSTM.

LEADING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA: Kim Justis Eikner for The Rabbit Hole at CP; Erin McGhee for The Glory of Living at POTS; Kristi Steele for Crumbs From the Table of Joy at CP; Erin Shelton for Othello at NSTM.

Caroline, or Change at Playhouse on the Square

LEADING ACTOR IN A DRAMA: Michael Khanlarian for Othello at NSTM; Kyle Hatley for Picasso at the Lapin Agile at NSTM; Barclay Roberts for The House of Blue Leaves at Theatre Memphis; Marques Brown for Picasso at the Lapin Agile at NSTM; Michael Gravois for I Am My Own Wife at CP; Michael Gravois for The Pillowman at POTSTW.

DIRECTION OF A DRAMA: Stephen Hancock for I Am My Own Wife at CP; Stephen Hancock for The Pillowman at POTSTW; Tony Horne for Crumbs From the Table of Joy at CP; Dave Landis for The Rabbit Hole at CP.

DRAMATIC PRODUCTION: The Pillowman at POTSTW; Picasso at the Lapin Agile at NSTM; Crumbs From the Table of Joy at CP; I Am My Own Wife at CP; The Rabbit Hole at CP.

ENSEMBLE ACTING: Cast of Musical of Musicals at NSTM; cast of Crumbs From the Table of Joy at CP.

BEHIND THE SCENES AWARD: Michael Compton at TM; Rory Dale at POTS; Betty Dilley at GCT.

EUGART YERIAN AWARD FOR LIFETIME SERVICE TO MEMPHIS THEATRE: Julia “Cookie” Ewing.

College Ostrander Awards
Nominees for 2006-2007

Key: U of M=The University of Memphis, Rhodes=The McCoy Theatre at Rhodes College

EXCELLENCE IN SET DESIGN: Laura Canon for Waiting for Godot at Rhodes; Michael Jones for Elegies at U of M; Douglas Gilpin for Noises Off at U of M.

EXCELLENCE IN LIGHTING: J.D. Sargent for The Last Days of Judas Iscariot at U of M; Laura Canon for Waiting for Godot at Rhodes; Ken Friedhoff for Elegies at U of M.

CHOREOGRAPHY, STAGE COMBAT: Susan Chrietzberg for As You Like It at the U of M; Jerre Dye for Dancing at Lughnasa at Rhodes; Susan Chrietzberg for Noises Off at the U of M.

LEADING ACTRESS IN A MUSICAL: Claire Hayner for Elegies at the U of M; Annie Freres for Elegies at U of M; Kirie Taylor Walz for Elegies at U of M.

LEADING ACTOR IN A MUSICAL: Kevin Todd Murphy for Elegies at U of M; Ryan Scott for Elegies at U of M.

SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA: Jade Hobbs for As You Like It at U of M; Shannon King for Dancing at Lughnasa at Rhodes; Alicia Queen for Agnes of God at Rhodes.

SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA: Thomas Kelly for Waiting for Godot at Rhodes; Daniel Sturtevant for Waiting for Godot at Rhodes; Matthew Crewse for As You Like It at U of M.

LEADING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA: Alicia Queen for Dancing at Lughnasa at Rhodes; Ann Marie Gideon for As You Like It at U of M.

LEADING ACTOR IN A DRAMA: Jason Hansen for Waiting for Godot at Rhodes; Michael Frame for Noises Off at U of M; Nate Smith for Waiting for Godot at Rhodes; Pete Montgomery for Dancing at Lughnasa at Rhodes.

ENSEMBLE ACTING: Cast of Elegies at U of M; cast of Waiting for Godot at Rhodes; cast of Dancing at Lughnasa at Rhodes.

DIRECTION OF A DRAMA: Jerre Dye for Dancing at Lughnasa at Rhodes; Pamela Poletti for Waiting For Godot at Rhodes; Stephen Hancock for Noises Off at U of M.

DRAMATIC PRODUCTION: Waiting for Godot at Rhodes; Dancing at Lughnasa at Rhodes.