TCG Announces 2010 TCG Award Recipients
Theatre Communications Group (TCG), the national organization for professional not-for-profit theatre announces the winners of the 2010 TCG Awards for excellence. The TCG Awards, presented during TCG's National Conference in Chicago this past June, exist to salute extraordinary dedication to the American theatre community, the recipients of this honor are nominated by their peers and selected by TCG's Board of Directors. Since 2001, TCG's member theatres have been asked each year to nominate one person or organization for each of the five prestigious awards. On stage at the Palmer House Hilton's Red Lacquer Room, TCG recognized a Regional Funder, a National Funder and recipients of the Peter Zeisler Memorial Award, the Alan Schneider Director Award and the Visionary Leadership Award with "Spirit of Irreverence" statues designed by Ralph Lee.
"It is with great pride that TCG awards these recipients," said TCG Executive Director Teresa Eyring. "TCG congratulates you for not only inspiring the field with your forward-thinking vision, but also for putting that vision into action and taking the steps towards the future that our field needs to survive and thrive." Eyring continued, "Thank you so much for your work, your imagination and your dedication to the American theatre community."The 2010 TCG Award recipients are:Regional Funder Award: the Joyce FoundationVisionary Leadership Award: Bill Rauch, Artistic Director, Oregon Shakespeare Festival
Theatre Practitioner Award: Bernard Gersten, Executive Producer, Lincoln Center Theater
National Funder Award: Susan Smith Blackburn Prize
Peter Zeisler Memorial Award: Jack Reuler, Artistic Director, Mixed Blood Theatre
Alan Schneider Director Award: Anne Kauffman, DirectorThe 2010 Regional Funder Award recognizes a local funding organization that has evidenced leadership and has provided outstanding sustained support of theatres in the region in which the conference is being held. The 2010 award honors a funder based in the Chicago area.
The 2010 National Funder Award recognizes a small, midsize or large company or foundation that has evidenced leadership and provided outstanding sustained national support of theatre in America.The Susan Smith Blackburn Prize, established in 1978, is given annually to recognize women who have written works of outstanding quality for the English-speaking theatre. The Prize is intended both as a personal tribute to Susan, who died in 1977, and as an embodiment of values she believed in and devoted so much of her life to. After appearing in productions at the Alley Theatre and Little Theatre in Houston, where she grew up, and at Smith College, she studied acting with Uta Hagen and played several leading roles in New York. When she moved to London in 1962, she gave drama classes to schoolchildren while working as a journalist. She believed that society urgently needed more influence from talented women, and she encouraged many women to excel. It is the purpose of the Prize to perpetuate the high standards, the creativity and the vitality that were integral to Susan's life. The Prize is administered in Houston, London and New York by a board of directors who choose six Judges each year, three from each side of the Atlantic. Previous recipients of the National Funder Award include: Time Warner, Inc.; Humana Inc./the Humana Foundation; Target; AT&T and Altria as well as the Harold and Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust, Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Shubert Foundation, the Wallace Foundation; the Nathan Cummings Foundation; and The Boeing Company.Accepting this award was Alex Kilgore, Susan's nephew and the president of the board of the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize.
The 2010 Peter Zeisler Memorial Award recognizes an individual or organization whose work reflects and promotes the ingenuity and artistic integrity that Peter Zeisler, late executive director of TCG, prized. The honorees exemplify pioneering practices in theatre, are dedicated to the freedom of expression and are unafraid of taking risks for the advancement of the art form. In honor of Peter's uncanny ability to introduce talent to the rest of the field, the nominees have not been recognized nationally for their work. Jack Reuler founded the Mixed Blood Theatre Company in 1976 at the age of 22 after receiving a degree in zoology from Pomona College and Macalester College. In 1984 Jack was named to Esquire Magazine's first "Register of People Under 40 Changing America." Mixed Blood won three Twin Cities Drama Critics Circle Awards and, in 1985, the Twin Cities Mayors' Public Arts Award. Mixed Blood won the 1990 Rosetta LeNoire Award: Actors' Equity's first award for "celebrating the universality of the human experience on the American stage." Jack was named Macalester College's 1991 Distinguished Citizen. He received the 1992 Minneapolis Award from the City of Minneapolis and the 1993 Martin Luther King Humanitarian Award. Mixed Blood was awarded the 1995 Minneapolis Civil Rights Commissions' Martin Luther King Award. In 1996 Mixed Blood was awarded the Minnesota Council on Black Minnesotans' "Dream Keeper Award." In 1997 the Minneapolis Foundation presented Jack with its Diversity Award. In 2006, he received the Local Legend Award from the United Negro College Fund/General Mills Foundation and the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2006 Ivey Awards. In 2007 Mixed Blood received MetLife's Access Award at the APAP conference in New York. In 2009 he has received a Sally Irvine Award for Vision, Actors' Equity's Spirit Award, and has been named by St. Paul Foundation a Facing Race Ambassador. Previous recipients of the Peter Zeisler Memorial Award include Mildred Ruiz and Steven Sapp, The Foundry Theatre, Will Power and Elevator Repair Service.The 2010 Alan Schneider Director Award was created in memory of Alan Schneider, a prolific director and mentor responsible for over one hundred productions in the American theatre. He introduced American audiences to Samuel Beckett-directing the 1956 American premiere of Waiting for Godot-as well as many others including: Edward Albee; Michael Weller; Harold Pinter and Bertolt Brecht. This award was established in honor of Alan Schneider's significant contribution to the American theatre and his lifelong concern for the development of career opportunities for freelance directors. The award is designed to identify and assist exceptional directors whose talent has been demonstrated through work in specific regions, but who are not known nationally.This year's recipient, Anne Kauffman, is a New York-based director primarily focused on new plays. A founding member of The Civilians, she is also a Usual Suspect at New York Theatre Workshop, an alumnus of the Soho Rep Writers and Directors Lab, Lincoln Center Directors Lab, The Drama League of New York, on the advisory board for Soho Rep and LCT3, and a member of New Georges Kitchen Cabinet. In addition, she is a recipient of a Lilly Award for Directing, a Big Easy Award for her production of The Children's Hour, and an OBIE Award for her work on The Thugs by Adam Bock at Soho Rep. Anne received her MFA in directing from UCSD. Anne Kauffman was nominated by Blanka Zizka, Artistic Director of the Wilma Theater (Philadelphia, PA), who commended Anne for "her inventive and imaginative Off-Broadway work with young, up-and-coming playwrights ... Her work on [our] production of Becky Shaw has exceeded all of our expectations, both in the power and economy of her directorial vision and in her generous approach to collaboration." Previous recipients of the Alan Schneider Director Award include: Joel Sass, Michael John Garcés, Nancy Keystone, Darko Tresnjak, Henry Godinez, Roman Paska, Mark Brokaw, Charles Newell, David Saint, Roberta Levitow, Kyle Donnelly, Peter C. Brosius and Mary B. Robinson.About the TCG National Conference:
The TCG National Conference brings together approximately 800 theatre professionals from across the nation and around the world for meetings, speeches, performances and a chance to explore the local theatre community. The 2010 Conference was held in Chicago, Illinois from June 17-19 at the Palmer House Hilton - 17 E. Monroe Street, Chicago, Il and hosted by The League of Chicago Theatres. In addition to the Palmer House, conference activities were also held at Chicago Shakespeare Theater, The Goodman Theatre and Steppenwolf Theatre Company.For more information, go to www.tcg.org/conference

Videos