Cover Story:  
Faulkner and His Contemporaries


Summer 2002 Issue
* Director’s Column
* Kotz Exhibition 
* Ethridge’s New Book
* Peter Aschoff
* Morgan Scholarship 
* History Symposium
* Jimmy Faulkner 
* Patchett Wins Award
* Exhibition Schedule 
*Call for Papers
* New Southern Studies Scholarship
* Tennessee Williams*Gray & Coterie Awards
*Reading the South
*Brown Bag Schedule
*Center Ventress Order Trustees
*Call for Papers
* 25th Anniversary Celebration Schedule
* Friends of the Center 
* Graduation Photo
* Become a Friend of the Center 
* 2002 Oxford Conference for the Book
*Writer in Residence Tom Franklin
*Franklin and Fennelly
* Mississippi Folklife Association
* Southern Studies Alums 
* Country Music
*Regional Roundup
* Note on Contributors

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Mississippi Delta

Tennessee Williams Festival

The Mississippi Humanities Council has awarded a grant for the tenth annual Mississippi Delta Tennessee Williams Festival, scheduled to take place in Clarksdale on October 17-19, 2002. Williams’s 1961 play The Night of the Iguana will be a focus of this year’s festival. As in the past, the festival program will include presentations by Williams authorities and friends, several performances, a session with papers by scholars, and tours of the house and neighborhood where the playwright lived as a child. Also scheduled in conjunction with the festival are workshops for teachers and for student actors and a drama competition, with prizes totaling $4,000 for the winners. 
Williams authorities confirmed to participate in the festival are George W. Crandell, Albert J. Devlin, Erma Duricko, Allean Hale, W. Kenneth Holditch, Colby Kullman, Nancy M. Tischler, and Ralph F. Voss. Actress and director Erma Duricko will perform as well as conduct an acting workshop for high school students. Williams’s brother, Dakin, will also make his annual appearance. Other participants will be announced soon. 
Scholars are invited to submit papers for possible presentation at the festival. Papers on any topic related to Williams and his work are eligible for consideration. Presentations should be 20 minutes maximum. Authors whose papers are selected for presentation will receive free lodging during the festival and a waiver of the registration fee. The deadline for submissions is August 30, 2002. To enter, send a completed paper (7-8 pages) or an abstract (250 words) to Colby H. Kullman, Department of English, The University of Mississippi, University, MS 38677.
The Tennessee Williams Festival Acting Competition, hosted by Coahoma Community College, is open to high school students in Mississippi. The competition includes two acting categories, monologues and scenes. All material must be drawn from the plays of Tennessee Williams. Each monologue is to be two minutes or less, and each scene is to be between five and ten minutes and involve any number of characters.
Cash prizes are given for winning monologues and scenes, which will be performed for the festival audience. Prize money will go to schools of the winners for use with drama activities or library books related to theater and literature. Students, with their teacher-sponsors, will be given the opportunity to decide how the prize money will be spent.
For information on the 2002 festival and drama competition, write Tennessee Williams Festival, P.O. Box 1565, Clarksdale, MS 38614-1565; telephone 662-627-7337. 

Photograph: Collection of Richard Freeman Leavitt


 

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