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UWO Playwright, Professor Wins Two Awards

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  • UWO Playwright, Professor Wins Two Awards

    UWO PLAYWRIGHT, PROFESSOR WINS TWO AWARDS
    By Sarah Owen of The Northwestern, [email protected].

    Oshkosh Northwestern, WI
    Posted September 13, 2007

    Internationally known playwright Richard Kalinoski's work has the
    University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh professor in the national spotlight.

    Kalinoski's play "A Crooked Man," which first opened at Frederic March
    Theatre in February, earned him a $1,000 Playwrights First Award from
    the National Arts Club of New York, and the 2007 Armenian Dramatic
    Arts Alliance's Frances Paul Lyons/Almas Paul award, for $10,000.

    For the latter, Kalinoski was flown to Los Angeles for a gala on
    Aug. 19, where the top three finalists were invited to find out whose
    work would take first place.

    "I was especially pleased, because the panel of judges was quite
    distinguished; it included an Academy Award-winning screenwriter,
    Steve Zaillian, who wrote the screenplay for 'Schindler's List,'"
    Kalinoski said.

    "Just to have my play considered sort of at that level was both an
    honor and also useful in terms of my work."

    No stranger to accolades, Kalinoski's work has earned a shower of
    awards - from Angouni and Garland awards for "Beast on the Moon"
    to a Reva Shriner Award for "Between Men and Cattle."

    On top of his two national prizes, Kalinoski was also recently
    commissioned by the Provision Theatre in Chicago to write his next
    play, after his "Beast on the Moon" did a successful run there in 2006.

    "They pay me to write any play I want to, which is fairly rare in
    theatre, actually, because theatre companies often can't afford to
    do that," Kalinoski said.

    With his deadline for a first draft looming in January, the playwright
    has spent much of summer at work interviewing sources and materializing
    a direction for a play he says will work around a female soldier
    returning from Iraq.

    "The good thing about a commission is, not only do they pay you to
    write the play, they've basically committed to producing it," he said.
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