Doria Johnson (center, arm raised) celebrates unveiling of Anthony Crawford marker
Alumni News, Feature 4, Spring 2017

Alumni News – Spring 2017

Doria Johnson (center, arm raised) celebrates unveiling of Anthony Crawford marker

Doria Johnson (center, arm raised) celebrates unveiling of Anthony Crawford marker in Abbeville, S.C.

A Tale Untold: Preserving a Family’s History

The erasure from history of the lynching of her great-great-grandfather put Roosevelt University alumna Doria Dee Johnson (BA, ’07) on track to become an African American historian and international human rights activist.

A decade after graduating with a bachelor’s in history, Johnson is now close to completing a PhD dissertation at the University of Wisconsin–Madison on early 20th century African American migration, lynching and the development of the black community in Evanston, Illinois.

While this will no doubt be a major achievement, the PhD will not match the satisfaction she felt last fall when a historical marker was placed in Abbeville, South Carolina on the site of the mob lynching of her great-great-grandfather, Anthony Crawford. The lynching and subsequent seizure of his property took place a century ago.

“It was one of the most important days in my life,” Johnson said of the Oct. 24, 2016 ceremony that drew 300 people, including more than 100 of her relatives; family members of Emmett Till, Ida B. Wells and Malcolm X; and Roosevelt University Associate Professor of History Erik Gellman.

Doria Johnson and Erik Gellman

Johnson with Roosevelt professor Erik Gellman (left).

“There’s no better feeling than being able to right a wrong and preserve what’s right for history,” said Johnson, whose journey to bring to light the wrongdoing done to Crawford and his descendants began in 1988, when Johnson looked into her family’s genealogy.

A phone call to an Abbeville church, answered by a cousin she did not know she had, started the ball rolling. She immediately traveled to Abbeville for a family reunion, where she met 100 newfound cousins, including some who had heard about the mob lynching and seizure of hundreds of acres of land that Crawford farmed for cotton.

After completing dozens of interviews and reviewing hundreds of documents, including an investigation into the lynching by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Johnson published a piece about her family’s story on a genealogy website in 1999. Shortly after, the Associated Press contacted and featured Johnson in its 2001 investigative series “Torn from the Land,” which documented 57 cases in which land was stolen from African Americans, including the Crawford family.

“There’s no better feeling than being able to right a wrong and preserve what’s right for history,”
– Doria Johnson (BA, ’07)

Meanwhile, Johnson called members of Congress regarding injustices done to Crawford and his family. She also became active on the public lecture circuit, telling as many people as would listen to her family’s story.

In 2005, the U.S. Senate issued a formal apology to Johnson and the Crawford family. She came to Roosevelt a year later, convinced by scholars she’d met that she could get a fellowship for a PhD to continue her work. First, however, she needed a bachelor’s degree.

“I chose Roosevelt because of Harold Washington,” Johnson said of Chicago’s first African American mayor, who was president of the Class of 1949. “My Roosevelt professors supported me while I was at the University as well as after I graduated and continued on for my PhD,” she said.

In 2016, Johnson took a year off from her doctoral work to take a Nelson Mandela International Dialogue fellowship, which elevates conversations about genocide and other human rights abuses to the world stage. As a Mandela fellow, Johnson traveled to South Africa, Sri Lanka and other parts of the world, where she discussed state-sponsored violence against African Americans in the United States.

She also worked with the nationally recognized nonprofit Equal Justice Initiative to locate the marker in the Abbeville town square where a mob initially accosted Crawford.

“Being there to witness Doria Johnson unveil the historical marker in the town square … hers was an act of bravery with great significance,” Gellman said. “She knows that the South’s reckoning with its racially violent past represents a way for its people to build a more democratic and inclusive society in the present.”

Johnson, who will receive her PhD later this year, hopes to continue marking lynching sites around the country, with a goal to “emphasize lynchings so they are made part of the narrative in history textbooks.”


Roosevelt Alumnus Competes for BBC Singer of the World

John Chest (MM, ’09)

After eight years as an opera star in the making, Roosevelt University vocal performance alumnus John Chest (MM, ’09) is hitting the big time as a finalist in the prestigious BBC Cardiff Singer of the World competition.

“It’s a moment in my career that will be truly electric,” said Chest, who studied at Roosevelt with former CCPA professor and Metropolitan Opera star David Holloway. Chest, 31, has sung professionally since 2011, primarily in Europe.

The Roosevelt graduate credits his CCPA training for preparing him to sing leading roles, including many appearances at Deutsche Opera Berlin where he has starred in Billy Budd and other productions.

“Ten years ago I wouldn’t have thought I’d be competing at this level,” Chest said. “My CCPA professors gave me guidance and encouragement to pursue a career that has me singing today at A-level opera houses.”

Holloway, who directs the Santa Fe Opera’s Apprentice Singing Program, called Chest “one of his most talented students.”

“He is simply an unusually talented singer and he is also personable and real as a person,” Holloway said. “It is no surprise to me that he is enjoying such success.”

After graduating from Roosevelt in 2009, Chest joined the Santa Fe Opera as an apprentice singer, and then went on to Munich’s Opera Studio, where he gave more than 80 performances. He was also a member of the Merola Opera Program in San Francisco, where he received rave reviews for his role as Guglielmo in Mozart’s Così fan tutte, and starred recently as Count Almaviva in The Marriage of Figaro at Opera Philadelphia.


One of Roosevelt University’s First Graduates, Howard Rosenberg Leaves Legal Legacy

Howard Rosenberg portrait

Howard Rosenberg stood in line at Navy Pier on a cold February day in 1947, a month after returning from his service in the U.S. Army. He awaited registration for the new (since closed) branch of the University of Illinois at Navy Pier, ready to begin his education.

“After standing there about two hours, I asked one of the assistants whether we were going to get in to register,” Rosenberg said. “She said ‘I doubt it.’”

Rosenberg queried his brother about other colleges in the area.

“He said ‘There’s a new college called Roosevelt College. It is a radical place,’” Rosenberg said. He registered for Philosophy 101 and said he “was hooked.”

Rosenberg completed his Bachelor of Arts at Roosevelt in 1949 and was among the first graduates of what would become Roosevelt University. He went on to earn his law degree at DePaul University.

After two short years of practicing law in Chicago representing a credit company, Rosenberg decided to move to Denver where he began a lifelong commitment to giving back to the community.

Rosenberg took the lessons of social justice from Roosevelt to heart by founding, with other Denver-based attorneys, the Thursday Night Bar in 1966. Known today as the Metro Volunteer Lawyers, the organization provides pro-bono legal services to those in great need, a role in which Rosenberg served for decades.

“The inspiration that I got at Roosevelt was able to serve me well as a legal aid attorney,” Rosenberg said. Soon after, he made his first gift to Roosevelt, and has continued to give to current RU students to this day.

Rosenberg also went on to teach law as a tenured professor at the University of Denver’s Sturn College of Law, bringing his compassion for the less fortunate to the next generation of lawyers and social justice advocates. It all culminated in a career he never imagined.

“I thought that Roosevelt really set me on a career path that I probably never would have followed,” Rosenberg said.

“Roosevelt kind of saved me by accident and got me to thinking about going to law school, which was a really great decision for me. I really liked being a lawyer and representing low-income people.”

“Roosevelt…got me to thinking about going to law school, which was a really great decision for me. I really liked being a lawyer and representing low-income people.”
–Howard Rosenberg (BA, ’49)

Rosenberg is retired and lives with his wife, Kristen, in Denver.


Aide to U.S. Senator Finds Calling for Social Justice at Roosevelt

Tamara Jordan

Tamara Jordan came to Roosevelt University in 2010 after returning home from U.S. military service in Afghanistan, where a suicide bombing shook her station base to the core.

“Taking social justice courses at Roosevelt made me realize that a lot of people have struggles. They need someone who can advocate for them,” said the 2016 Roosevelt graduate, who today is an aide to U.S. Senator Dick Durbin.

A native of Chicago’s Englewood neighborhood, Jordan began her Roosevelt journey as a political science major, but had to drop out in 2012 due to difficulties in adjusting to life outside the military. After a three-year hiatus, she returned to the University in 2015 and changed her major.

“At its best, the social justice major at Roosevelt helps students put personal experience in a social perspective and supports them in developing skills for making change for the better,” said June Lapidus, associate professor of economics and coordinator of Roosevelt’s Social Justice Program.

As a Roosevelt student, Jordan interned at the Greater Chicagoland Food Depository, helping veterans receive benefits, and at the Jesse Brown VA Medical Center. From there, she landed an internship at Durbin’s Chicago office that became a full-time job shortly after she graduated in 2016.

“Taking social justice courses at Roosevelt made me realize that a lot of people have struggles. They need someone who can advocate for them.”
–Tamara Jordan (BA, ’16), Aide to Sen. Dick Durbin

“Social justice has helped me to find different ways to really reach people, and not just to shut the door on their needs,” said Jordan, who handles issues and calls related to veterans for 13 counties in northern Illinois.

Recently, she began mentoring at-risk youths as a volunteer with the not-for-profit Urban Warriors program on Chicago’s South Side. She also counsels veterans returning from assignments with the National Guard through the Warrior-to-Warrior Program. Her goal is to get a master’s degree and climb the career ladder in public policy or politics.

“I loved my Roosevelt experience,” she said. “It’s something that developed my focus and helped make my life more meaningful.”


CCPA Takes On the Great White Way

Since its founding, Roosevelt University has produced hundreds of theater professionals, including alumni who are Broadway stars today.

Ray Frewen, assistant director of Roosevelt’s Theatre Conservatory, credits the Chicago College of Performing Arts’ (CCPA) seasoned faculty, famed alumni, historically artistic downtown Chicago location and audition process for attracting highly talented student prospects.

This year, CCPA has auditioned 600 prospective students for next year’s program — 70 students have been chosen to take part in the three majors covering the program. Musical theatre is one of the majors that has successfully led its graduates from the classroom to the Broadway stage.

Graduates Courtney Reed, Stephane Duret, Scott Stangland and John Michael Finley all currently appear in award-winning Broadway productions.

Courtney Reed starring in Aladdin

Courtney Reed

Reed (BFA, ’06) stars as Princess Jasmine in Disney’s Aladdin The Musical. From the musical’s Seattle debut to its current Broadway run, Reed’s Jasmine has appeared in regional and international productions for six consecutive years.

Stephane Duret

Stephane Duret

Duret, Stangland and Finley have nearly two dozen musical theater credits among them. Last year, Duret joined the Tony Award-winning show, Kinky Boots. The 2007 graduate’s additional credits include Sweet Charity, Cabaret, Ragtime and Aida.

Scott Stangland

Scott Stangland

In 2016, Stangland made his Broadway debut as Pierre, a role originated by recording artist Josh Groban, in Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812. Stangland earned his MFA in 2005 and has since had roles in the Broadway hit, Once; on NBC shows Chicago Fire and Crisis; and in the films Contagion and The End of the Tour.

Prior to receiving his BFA in 2013, Finley performed in eight stage productions. Two years after graduating, Finley landed roles in Les Misérables and The Book of Mormon — in the latter, he currently appears as Elder Cunningham.

Frewen described Finley’s Les Misérables performance as the most moving experience of his life. “I just burst into tears and couldn’t talk when I saw John,” Frewen said. “I’ve worked [in production] on Les Mis for years, but it’s very moving seeing one of your kids doing it onstage.”

Mandy Modic

Mandy Modic

Mandy Modic (BFA, ’11) defined CCPA’s family dynamic as being an enjoyable part of her program experience. “You feel safe to do this vulnerable work in front of your peers, because you know everything about each other,” Modic said. “You’re able to have that closeness to your professors, where you feel like you’re all working together.”

Modic has appeared in over a dozen musicals, two network television shows and her first feature-length film, When the Lights Go Out, was released late last year.

While talent is the common thread in all of the above-mentioned alumni, Frewen said the key to success goes beyond talent. “It’s about if you are professional and a good person to work with,” Frewen said. “Control what you can control. Your talent will get you in the door, but professionalism will get you to the second job, and then the next.”


From stage to television to film, these five musical theatre alumni have taken their training at Roosevelt to the next level

Merle Dandridge (BFA, ’98)

Merle Dandridge (BFA, ’98)

With a 20-year-plus career — including work in film, television, video game animation and on stage — Merle Dandridge has graced the sets of four films and more than 20 TV shows. The Okinawa, Japan born actress and singer’s five Broadway appearances include roles in Spamalot, Rent and Aida. Dandridge’s voice work can also be heard in close to a dozen video games. Currently, Dandridge can be seen starring alongside Oprah Winfrey and Lynn Whitfield in OWN TV’s hit series, Greenleaf.

Travis Taylor (BFA, ’10)

Travis Taylor

No stranger to the regional stage, Travis Taylor has performed in several theatrical productions, including Les Misérables, Beauty and the Beast, Sweeney Todd, Camelot and Into the Woods. Taylor has appeared on television; and, in 2013, starred as the Hairdresser in the North American Broadway tour of Phantom of the Opera — whose national run continues throughout this year.

Damon Gillespie (’12–’14)

Damon Gillespie (’12–’14)

TV and stage actor Damon Gillespie hit the ground running after his enrollment in the Musical Theatre Program. In mid-2014, Gillespie joined the ensemble cast of Newsies on Broadway. The following year, the Tennessee native appeared on Comedy Central’s Inside Amy Schumer. In 2016, he made it back to the stage in the ensemble cast of Aladdin The Musical. This year, Gillespie will appear in the TV movie adaptation of the novel, Drama High, which costars Rosie Perez and Marley Shelton.

Tiffany Tatreau (BFA, ’15)

Tiffany Tatreau (BFA, ’15)

Tiffany Tatreau’s role of Ocean Rosenberg in Ride the Cyclone has taken her from the Chicago Shakespeare Theater to the off-Broadway MCC Theater. Lending her voice to a variety of regional stage productions -— such as Sister Act, Mamma Mia, A Christmas Carol and Spring Awakening — the California native was selected as one of Chicago Tribune’s “Hot New Faces of Chicago Theater 2016.”

Cole Doman (BFA, ’15)

Cole Doman (BFA, ’15)

Already a stage actor in several regional productions before completing his degree, Cole Doman’s roles in TV, film and on stage have continued to pour in, even after graduation. In the past three years, Doman has appeared in countless stage productions at the renowned Drury Lane Theater. The Philadelphia native has also landed roles on NBC’s Chicago Fire, Showtime’s Shameless and ABC’s Modern Family. Doman made his film debut in the drama, Henry Gamble’s Birthday Party, which won the Silver Q Hugo Award at the Chicago International Film Festival. Doman’s lead role as Henry Gamble was chosen as one of the “Best Breakthrough Performances of 2016” by the online movie publication, The Film Stage.


Like keeping up with your alma mater? Want to learn more about new and upcoming alumni events in your area?

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for updates on Roosevelt alumni news and happenings on campus. We’ll not only be featuring news, networking opportunities and reunion events, but also memorable photos and stories from your days at Roosevelt. So give us a like, follow or tweet — connecting with your Roosevelt alumni network has never been easier. Make sure to use the hashtag #LifelongLaker when sharing your memories with us.

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Alumni News, Fall 2016, Feature 4, Feature Stories, Uncategorized

Where RU? Fall 2016

1960s

Yvette Greenspan (BA, ’66), a College of Education graduate, published A Guide to Teaching Elementary Science: Ten Easy Steps. An educator for over 40 years, Dr. Greenspan has devoted her career to science education. The president of the Florida Association of Science Teachers said the book “is perfect for a teacher just entering the realm of science education or as a refresher for an educator who wants to update her learning environment.”

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Morton Marcus (BA, ’61) recently spoke in Goshen, Ind., as part of the Wake Up! Goshen! series.

1970s

Robert Jordan (BGS, ’77) retired after 43 distinguished years in television. He was a veteran reporter and newscaster on WGN TV in Chicago.

Dennis Vidoni (MA, ’72) published two books: Canoeing the Kashaskia: A Father & Son Short Story and White Shirts in the Wilderness: A Brother’s Survival Story. Vidoni has enjoyed a 26-year-career in the field of psychology at the University of Wisconsin at Oshkosh, Kansas Benedictine College, Regis College in Denver, and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Vidoni is retired and lives with his wife Mary in Urbana.

1980s

Robert Lowen (MPA, ’88) recently announced his retirement as chief of the Woodstock, Ill. Police Department.

Barry M. Balik (BGS, ’85), a computer science major, retired after 30 years of service as an information technology service coordinator for the City of Chicago Department of Innovation and Technology.

Brent Coppenbarger (MM, ’83), director of woodwinds at the Cline School of Music at North Greenville University, wrote his second book, Fine Tuning the Clarinet Section: A Handbook for the Band Director. His first book, Music Theory Secrets, was published in 2014.

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Euclid Williamson (MPA, ’82) recently was honored by Washington University in St. Louis with an honorary doctor of humanities degree. Williamson is the founder of Target H.O.P.E., a college prep academy, which works to enhance educational opportunities for minority students attending public high schools in the Chicago metropolitan area.

1990s

Merle Dandridge (BFA, ’98) is a lead in the new Oprah Winfrey Network drama Greenleaf. Variety newspaper wrote that the “long-term effectiveness of Greenleaf is due to the fine work of star Merle Dandridge.” During her career, Dandridge has been involved in television, stage, film and voice-over work for video games.

Dorienne Preer (BGS, ’94) was hired as Oak Forest’s human resources manager, a newly-created position. A 31-year veteran of human resources, he worked for the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning for the past 10 years.

Gregory Timmerman (BBA, ’94) was promoted to senior field premium auditor at insurance company Acuity in Sheboygan, Wis. He started working with Acuity in July 2002 as a premium auditor.

2000s

Justin Adair (BM, ’09) recently starred in the Light Opera Works’ production of Mame. Adair has earned various Jeff Award nominations for his performances. He has been seen in Guys and Dolls, Titanic, The Light in the Piazza, Les Misérables and Smokey Joe’s Café. In 2015, Adair was named one of the Chicago Tribune’s “Hot New Faces of Theatre.”

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Kurtis Gildow (MM, ’07) was promoted to dean of Programs at Chicago’s Merit School of Music. A performer and an educator, Gildow has taught at Concordia University Chicago and North Central College. He freelances as a tubist. Gildow uses his professional experience to ensure that children aren’t hampered by obstacles in their quest for a music education.

Janice Glenn (BA, ’05) was appointed by Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner as director of the Illinois Department of Human Rights. Glenn previously was director of Diversity and Recruitment in the Office of the Governor.

Heather Tredup (MMC, ’02) recently wrote the book, Virtual: A Guide to Telecommuting, an informative guide about successful telecommuting.

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2010s

Gilbert T. Domally (BFA, ’15) was listed among “The New Hot Faces of Chicago Theater in 2016” by the Chicago Tribune.  An accomplished performer, Domally has been seen in Little Theatre on the Square’s Big River and Little Shop of Horrors, as well as Bailiwick’s production of The Wild Party.

Aaron Latterell (BFA, ’14) starred in the Drury Lane Theatre’s production of Deathtrap.

Jessica Grant (MA, ’13) was named director of Community Outreach and Performing Arts Education at the Yadkin Cultural Arts Center.  She is an accomplished director with over 10 years of experience in theater.

Michael Miserendino (MA, ’13) is a high school English and theater teacher at Bartlett, Ill. High School, where he leads the theatre program and directs the school’s productions. His most recent production, The Purple Rose of Cairo, was the first group interpretation production to advance to the Illinois State competition in Springfield, Ill.

Forrest Ransburg (BM, ’12) was appointed music director at Tree of Life Unitarian Universalist Congregation in McHenry, Ill.

Derek Van Barham (MFA, ’11) was director of Skooby Don’t, a parody of Scooby-Doo  for Hell in a Handbag Productions. In 2015, he was honored by the Windy City Times as part of its 16th annual 30 Under 30, “honoring the best and brightest individuals in Chicago’s LGBTQIA+ Youth Community.”


Where Are You?

We’d love to hear what you’ve been up to! Please send us your photo and an update!
Email: alum@roosevelt.edu
Mail:Office of Alumni Relations
Roosevelt University
430 S. Michigan Ave, AUD 818
Chicago, IL 60605

Please include your name, address, email, major and graduation year.

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Alumni News, Fall 2016, Feature 2, Feature Stories

Alumni News Fall 2016

Golden Alumni Celebration

Golden Alumni

Members of the Class of 1956 joined Roosevelt’s spring graduates on the Auditorium Theatre stage during the spring semester Commencement ceremony in May. The alumni who celebrated their 50th graduation anniversary reminisced about their graduation and watched a new generation of Roosevelt graduates accept their diplomas.


Roosevelt Legacies

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Roosevelt alumni: Did your parents, children, aunts, uncles or grandparents attend Roosevelt as well? If so, then we want to hear from you. This spring, the Office of Alumni Relations is bringing together families with a legacy of Roosevelt graduates for a new special event to celebrate several generations of Roosevelt Lakers. We are inspired by your family’s deep connection to this very special University and look forward to honoring your ties to Roosevelt University.

If you are especially passionate about connecting with your Roosevelt legacy network, we invite you to join our growing Laker Legacy Committee. With your enthusiasm and gifts of time and talents, our upcoming spring legacy reception is sure to be a memorable one for you, your family and our greater Laker Legacy community.

If your family has a legacy of Roosevelt students and alumni, email or call Assistant Director of Alumni Relations David Solberg at dsolberg@roosevelt.edu or at (312) 341-2115. Please include your name, email address, graduation year and those of your family members who also graduated from or are currently studying at Roosevelt. We look forward to hearing your Roosevelt legacy stories and working together in connecting this unique and treasured alumni community.


Roosevelt Kicks Off Executive Mentoring and Career Readiness Programs

To help Roosevelt University students achieve their professional goals, the University has established two new innovative and parallel programs: an Executive Mentoring program and a Career Readiness program.

Academic achievement is not the only factor which affects post-college success in today’s competitive world. College graduates must exhibit a high degree of professionalism and leadership, including skills in cross-cultural communication, networking and presentation. Roosevelt’s new programs will help guide students through these essential experiences and provide expert training so that they can be confident in their careers upon graduation.

The Executive Mentoring Program allows Roosevelt students to interact with and to learn from experienced, successful professionals and to create relationships that will have a positive impact on their careers after graduation. In return, mentors will benefit from meeting and interacting with dedicated Roosevelt students and will experience significant personal fulfillment.

Mentors, who are Roosevelt trustees, alumni and friends, have at least seven years of professional experience and expertise in their field. Mentors give advice and feedback to students about their resumes. They guide students through the interview process and coach students in professional communication, proper attire and conduct.

Roosevelt University invites alumni and friends to guide students by serving as a mentor or career development professional.

Seasoned mentors introduce students to colleagues to help them create a professional network and provide and/or identify internship and job opportunities. They also provide insight about trends, issues and challenges in the mentor’s field of expertise. Students who have had the benefit of a mentor have an advantage over their peers who are entering the workforce, because they will have begun to build their professional network and will be aware of current issues and trends in their chosen field.

Mentors and students communicate at least once each month, including the summer months, and students are responsible for maintaining communication with their mentors. Students remain with their mentors until they graduate or until one of the parties decides to end the relationship. Mentors come from around the country. In this digital age, it is easy to maintain mentoring relationships electronically. Mentors and mentees will gather for an annual mentor appreciation luncheon in the spring semester.

Through the Career Readiness Program, Roosevelt students achieve a competitive edge, whether they intend to pursue a post-graduate degree or to enter the job market. The goal is to cultivate readiness skills and marketability that will prove to be invaluable when students apply for a job, a teaching assistant position or a spot in a highly competitive and selective graduate degree program. Students who complete the program earn a certificate. The program, which begins in the freshman or transfer year, focuses on developing skills to prepare for the workplace or graduate school.

Career Development professionals work with students to create an appropriate career plan of action, through one-on-one meetings, professional assessments, workshops and seminars. In collaboration with each of the six colleges at Roosevelt, workshops and seminars (both on campus and online) are customized to address specific areas of study to ensure that students are prepared, competitive and able to excel and enrich their lives.

Roosevelt University invites alumni and friends to guide students by serving as a mentor or career development professional. For more information and to sign up, contact Megan Bernard, associate provost for Enrichment and Retention, at mbernard03@roosevelt.edu, or call her at 312-341-3685.

Funding for this vital program is provided by The McCormick Foundation and trustees Steve Abbey and Bob Wieseneck.


Staying in the Spotlight

left to right: Scott Stangland, Courtney Reed and Stephane Duret

A dozen years have passed since Roosevelt University theatre alums Scott Stangland, Stephane Duret and Courtney Reed appeared together in a Theatre Conservatory production of Kiss Me Kate.

One of the directors of the fledgling Roosevelt show, Sean Kelley, who today leads Roosevelt’s Theatre Conservatory, remembers well the three alums – and couldn’t be prouder – as each has made it on New York’s Broadway.

“It’s pretty magical to realize that Roosevelt’s theatre program and these actors have come so far,” said Kelley, who considers himself to be more of a recruiter these days for Roosevelt’s theatre conservatory than he is a director of musical theatre.

That said, Kelley remembers working closely with:

  • Stangland (MFA , ’05), who starred in 2004 in Kiss Me Kate at Roosevelt’s O’Malley Theatre, and who today is understudy to the lead role in his second Broadway show, The Comet of 1812.
  • Duret (BFA, ’07), a Kiss Me Kate ensemble member who recently made his debut in Broadway’s Kinky Boots as both an understudy to the lead role and swing member of the New York show’s ensemble
  • Reed, also a Kiss Me Kate ensemble member and Roosevelt musical theatre graduate, who has been starring since February 2014 in Broadway’s Aladdin.

“It wasn’t just about singing and dancing. I remember telling them ‘If this is the career you want, your acting has to come first,’” recalled Kelley. “It’s wonderful for me to think back on how well they did in Kiss Me Kate,” he added. “But who could have known at the time that all three would be Broadway bound?” he said.

Stangland, who was a cast member in Broadway’s Once before starting in November as understudy to the lead role of Pierre, (being played on Broadway by Josh Groban), remembers Kelley casting and advising him on the Roosevelt set of Kiss Me Kate.

“I didn’t think at the time that I’d go on to pursue lead roles on Broadway, but here I am,” said Stangland, who calls the role of Pierre in The Comet of 1812 both “challenging and complex.”

“Looking back now, I realize I developed the work ethic I have today at Roosevelt. I was taught how to be a good person and how the theatre profession works. I credit Roosevelt for giving me the foundation to become strong at acting,” Stangland said.

Duret, who had roles in Chicago theatre before moving to New York in 2011 where he landed parts off Broadway and in international shows, also credited Roosevelt with helping him to polish his acting.

“Had I gone to New York right out of high school I wouldn’t have been ready,” said Duret, who spent the last three years preparing and auditioning for Kinky Boots.

“To know there is someone in your corner – and that’s Sean Kelley has been an amazing support. I really fell in love with the craft of acting at Roosevelt,” said Duret, who has been performing the show’s lead role as Lola.

The continuing star of Disney’s Aladdin, Reed also has credited her Roosevelt education with opening doors to professional theatres, people and opportunities. “I always found the faculty at Roosevelt and my fellow students to be dedicated, passionate and hard working,” she said recently.

While the Kiss Me Kate production is now history, Kelley believes the three Broadway actors it produced are a foundation for future interest in attending the Theatre Conservatory and the program’s continuing success.

“As our freshmen continue to choose Roosevelt’s theatre program, it’s people like Scott Stangland, Stephane Duret and Courtney Reed whom we should thank, for they are the ones who have brought Roosevelt continuing recognition,” said Kelley.


Alumna Forges Path on Broadway

Adrienne Walker

There are a lot of different ways to reach Broadway: For Alumna Adrienne Walker, the journey began as a student opera singer in Roosevelt University’s music conservatory.

A 2011 graduate of Roosevelt’s Master of Music in Vocal Performance program, Walker started her career in Chicago on the cast of the English-language opera, Porgy and Bess.

Then one thing led to another with Walker racking up roles in Chicago-area musical-theatre productions of Hair, Dreamgirls, Rent and The Color Purple, to name just a few.

Today, she is on Broadway, having made her debut in July in the role of the older Nala in Disney’s The Lion King.

“I went from doing classical voice to musical theatre. It was a complete shift, and I think the reason it’s worked out for me is because I’ve been able to adjust and have been enjoying myself,” said Walker.

At Roosevelt, the soprano studied with Roosevelt’s Chicago College of Performing Arts (CCPA) Artist Faculty Member Cynthia Clarey, who has had leading roles with opera companies all over the globe.

“Adrienne was one of my best students,” said Clarey, who has taught voice in Roosevelt’s music conservatory since 2008. “She has a beautiful soprano voice, and could have had an opera career, but I never felt she had the same feeling for singing classical music that she had for contemporary songs.”

Walker is quite confident of her vocal ability – and knows what to do to protect her voice, thanks in part to her training at CCPA. Her challenge has been preparing physically, but Walker is confident she’s gaining strength on stage day by day.

“Everybody has their own path, and this is mine,” said Walker, who believes the Roosevelt experience landed her in Chicago, which is where she needed to be to get started in the first place in musical theatre.


Harold Washington Lounge Dedicated

Congratulations to Roosevelt’s Chicago Southside Alumni Chapter for achieving its fundraising goal and honoring Roosevelt alumnus and former Chicago Mayor Harold Washington. The new Harold Washington Memorial Student Lounge was dedicated Nov. 2. It will provide Roosevelt students with a wonderful new place to study and continue Mayor Washington’s legacy of social activism.


Pizza and Theater

On Nov. 16, alumni gathered for a dinner at the Exchequer Pub before strolling over to the O’Malley Theatre to enjoy Roosevelt students in Promises Promises. Alumni are encouraged to watch their email for an invitation to the next evening of Roosevelt theater.


Parent Event

Parents of Roosevelt students were invited to a reception during new student move-in day in August. At the new event, parents learned about Roosevelt’s mission and goals and were welcomed to a network of parents, students, alumni and staff in Chicago and around the world.


BMO Harris

Roosevelt alumni who work for BMO Harris Bank in Chicago attended a reception at the bank on Oct. 24 that featured Roosevelt President Ali Malekzadeh. The alumni were encouraged to become mentors and support student scholarships.


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