As the largest, most comprehensive university system in the United States, the State University of New York has the unique opportunity to enrich some of the most influential people across all industries. As the Tony Award nominations are revealed this week, the world is reminded how talented SUNY alumni are in Theatre.
It was recently announced that University at Albany alumna Carolee Carmello has been nominated for her role in the Broadway musical “Scandalous“. Ms. Carmello, who has appeared in a dozen Broadway musicals and four national tours, is up for a Tony Award for “Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical” joining industry colleagues, Patina Miller in Pippin, Valisia LeKae in Motown The Musical, Stephanie J. Block in The Mystery of Edwin Drood, and Laura Osnes in Rodgers + Hammerstein’s Cinderella. Last year, Judy Kaye won the award for her part in Nice Work If You Can Get It.
Ms. Carmello joins SUNY Purchase College alumnus Kenneth Posner, who was nominated for three Tony Awards for “Best Lighting Design of a Musical” for Kinky Boots, Pippin, and Cinderella. This would be Posner’s second Tony; he won in 2007 for Best Lighting Design in a Play for The Coast of Utopia, for which he also won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Lighting Design in a Play that same year. He’s been nominated for numerous Tony, Drama Desk, and Outer Critics Circle Awards since 1991.
Alumni Profiles is an ongoing series highlighting successful graduates who, with a SUNY education, achieved interesting and influential careers.
This week’s alumni profiles takes a look at a pair of alumni who are bandmates playing abroad this month. The Arch Stanton Quartet, a quartet including Christopher Macchia (SUNY New Paltz ’00) and Roger Noyes (University at Albany ’03), is currently touring Egypt in conjunction with AMIDEAST, an organization engaged in international education, training and development activities in the Middle East and North Africa.
Herkimer County Community College Radio-Television Broadcasting students recently experienced a most challenging news day for even the most seasoned reporters. On Wednesday, March 13, students approached a local story that made national headlines, tying it into the campus reaction to the recent shooting that left four dead in Herkimer and Mohawk. Reporter Marc Barraco helped spearhead the three minute feature that summarized the tragic events as they related to the college community.
“This production crew really came together around a difficult story and a difficult news day,” said Douglas Flanagan, Instructor of Radio-Television Broadcasting. In addition to their “normal” jobs, students Adam Svereika and Dave Glantz shot solid footage in difficult situations. In addition to reporting, Barraco assisted with editing the feature story and was live on the air on the College’s radio station, WVHC 91.5 FM, throughout the ordeal.
The Harlem Shake is taking over the internet, and SUNY campuses are getting into the spirit of it. Generation SUNY has gathered some campus samples of the excitement.
Alumni Profiles is an ongoing series highlighting successful graduates who, with a SUNY education, achieved interesting and influential careers.
Kyle Bradstreet is a writer and alumni of Buffalo State college. His work has been produced in the U.S. and Europe. He is the author of the plays From Prague, Honor Thy Mother and Alcohol., as well as numerous one acts. As a screenwriter, Kyle has written for Copper (BBC America), Borgia: Faith & Fear (Canal+) Manhunt (HBO miniseries) and The Philanthropist (NBC). His fiction has been published in Blood Lotus, Third Wednesday, The Coachella Review, Two Hawks Quarterly and rFISHc. Kyle is a member of the Dramatists Guild of America and the Writers Guild of America, East.
How did your SUNY education help prepare you for life and your career?
At SUNY College at Buffalo, I received a B.A. in English with a Minor in Theatre and an M.A. in Multidisciplinary Studies — a degree which was comprised of English and Theatre courses. I was blessed with exceptional professors who taught the great literary works from positions both analytical and creative, the importance of multiculturalism in the arts, the fundamental rules of storytelling and, later, how to break those rules to shape my own work. I was encouraged to learn as much through life as through research — a balance I continue to implement in my day-to-day work. Near the end of my M.A. program, I took a master class from Tom Fontana, Buffalo State College alum and veteran television writer/producer, who quickly became a mentor and close friend. The most important piece of advice he gave was: if you want to be a writer, you must write every single day. This practice, combined with the educational foundation provided in my previous years at SUNY College at Buffalo, launched me into the world with the goal of becoming a professional writer.
What is a typical day at work like for you?
The exciting part of my job is that there’s no such thing as a typical day. There is, however, one constant — the before mentioned daily writing. Early each morning, I swill coffee and put pen to paper at my desk in Brooklyn. After a few hours of writing, I head to whatever job awaits. If a theatre production, it’s a day of rehearsals, meetings and rewrites. If I’m in production on a television show, I can be found writing/reworking scripts or on set, collaborating with the director and actors to keep true the vision of the show. If a television show is in post-production, I’ll assist in the editing process. And, when I’m on hiatus from any of the above, I just write — plays, short stories, creative sketches, television pitches — an effort to sharpen my skills and bring the next project to life.