The Department of Theatre and Communication
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498 Tuscan Avenue
Hattiesburg,Mississippi 39401
601.318.6051
admissions@wmcarey.edu
DEGREES OFFERED
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Bachelor of Arts in Theatre Bachelor of Arts in Speech Communication and Theatre
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The WCU entity now known as the Department of Theatre and Communication was established by Kate Downs P'Pool in 1915. Little is known of the history of the department after her time, although plays were staged and the names of some faculty are recorded. It can probably be assumed that some limitations in casting were created by an all-female student body.
It was in the decade of the 60's that the college began a strong theatre emphasis. In 1960 the annual tour of a theatre production was begun. This continued for thirteen years until the "energy crisis" of 1973 made it financially difficult to take a show on the road.
In the beginning, the touring group traveled primarily on the weekends to engagements in Mississippi and other southern states. Gradually the effort grew until the group was on the road, not only on weekends, but also during the spring break and the entire month of June. The players went from Texas to Illinois to upstate New York to Miami, and points between. Memorable engagements, among many, were at the U. S. Military Academy at West Point, New York; an international student conference in Texas; a military base in Illinois; and the federal penitentiary in Atlanta.
What seemed like a major disaster at the time turned out to be not much more than a blip in the development of the department. In June of 1963 a fire destroyed the building in which the department was housed. Everything was lost - library, lighting equipment, costumes, properties, set pieces, tools, etc. After floating for a year, the department was housed in its present location on the ground floor of Tatum Court with the theater itself occupying the area that had once been a swimming pool. The theatre program bounced back with new strength and went through its last renovation in 1973. Through the generosity of friends of the theatre, lighting and sound equipment have been upgraded in recent years.
In 1994-95, the theatre began participation in the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival (KCACTF), a move that has proven to be one of the smartest decisions made by the theatre faculty. Each year six productions are chosen from the region, which is comprised of ten states. In the last six years, Cary has been selected five times for the regional festival and was an alternate in the other year. In 2001, "And David Danced", an original play written by WCC theatre graduate, Jonathan Pope Evans, was selected as an ACTF national finalist to be performed at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. One month later the WCC cast and crew participated in the fourth annual English Theatre Festival held in Bratislava, Slovakia. The WCC students and faculty were the first Americans to ever be invited to the festival. This past year proved to be an exciting year for the department as it was honored with the Mississippi Governor's Award for Excellence in the Arts. William Carey Theatre is the first college theatre to receive the award. In 2002, the theatre also ventured into missions as the department took a team of eight students and three faculty to Nairobi, Kenya. While in Kenya the eleven person team ministered through puppets, drama and musical theatre. In the spring of 2004 the department once again returned to Nairobi, Kenya to tour a full production of the musical "Smoke on the Mountain".
A colleague at another college has referred to Carey's theatre as "the little school that could." Operating in limited, crowded conditions that many would consider hopelessly inadequate, the WCC theatre program has grown and even flourished, coming to be highly respected in the state, region, and nation.
Faculty Info:
STEPHEN BAILEY, Dewey Lynn Douglas, Marilyn K. Ellzey, Keone K. Fuqua, Jeanna C. Graves, Brandon Knight, Tim Matheny, Obra Quave.