Time Stands Still Archives - 91¶ĚĘÓƵ News /now/news/tag/time-stands-still/ News from the 91¶ĚĘÓƵ community. Mon, 03 Mar 2014 19:42:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Play explores relationships, social issues, through lens of photojournalist injured in Iraq war /now/news/2014/play-explores-relationships-social-issues-through-lens-of-photojournalist-injured-in-iraq-war/ Fri, 14 Feb 2014 13:57:52 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=19133 A photojournalist returning from war-torn Iraq deals with the images her mind cannot erase and the personal, marital and moral choices that define her life in the 91¶ĚĘÓƵ theater production, Time Stands Still, directed by senior Amanda Chandler.

Written by Pulitzer Prize winner Donald Marguiles, Time Stands Still will be staged in the Lee E. Eshleman Studio Theater at 7:30 p.m., Feb. 14-15, and 21-22.

The play follows its main character, Sarah Goodwin, as she returns to Brooklyn, New York, after being badly injured by a roadside bomb. The drama explores the relationship between Sarah and her boyfriend James Dodd – also a journalist – and the moral ambiguity of earning one’s living from documenting the suffering of others.

“The war and the politics informs their situation, as it does for our post-9/11 society, but the heart of the story lies in how they learn to cope together and how they relate to each other,” says Chandler.

In the New York Times on Aug. 23, 2013, theater critic Sylviane Gold gave an outstanding review to a Hartford, Ct., production of this play, calling it Marguiles’ “finest work to date.”

“Like [his] earlier plays, it asks us to ponder the intricacies of love and friendship and the emotional perils of professional success…. ” wrote Gold. “[It] goes beyond the personal to explore the moral ambiguities of journalism, a subject that both producers and consumers of the news media tend to avoid.”

Performances run approximately two hours with an intermission.

General admission tickets are $5, or $2 for 91¶ĚĘÓƵ Students, and are available through the 91¶ĚĘÓƵ theater department. For more information and answers about age appropriateness, contact the theater department at 540-432-4674; theater@emu.edu.

Cast:

Nicolas Custalow, a senior from Charlottesville, Va.

Chris Parks, a junior from Philadelphia, Pa.

Lauren Wengerd, a senior from Dundee, Ohio

Rebekah York, a sophomore from Bucharest, Romania

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Acclaimed photojournalists explore “optimism and ingenuity” of Brazilians in exhibit opening Feb. 14 /now/news/2014/acclaimed-photojournalists-explore-optimism-and-ingenuity-of-brazilians-in-exhibit-opening-feb-14/ Mon, 10 Feb 2014 21:19:44 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=19243 “Sonhos e Saudades” – the Portuguese title of an exhibit by acclaimed photojournalists Tyrone Turner and Susan Sterner – means “dreams and longings.”

“Brazilians are big dreamers, incredibly optimistic,” Sterner explained in a recent telephone interview, reflecting on the time, 1998-’00, when she and Turner, her professional partner and husband, worked in Northeastern Brazil. A two-year fellowship with the Institute of Current World Affairs Time enabled them to document, in still photography, the human side of issues there, including land rights, literacy, public health and women’s lives.

An exhibit of this work opens Feb. 14 in 91¶ĚĘÓƵ’s Margaret Martin Gehman Gallery in the University Commons.

, associate professor in , characterizes the couple as “some of my oldest and dearest friends,” whom she met when they were neighbors in Northern Virginia.

“It’s been amazing for me to watch them grow and change,” Moore adds. “Everything they do has a deeply human element.” She views their creativity as never “merely aesthetic. They’re deeply concerned with every story. They are not patronizing, but walk with the people they photograph.”

The couple will speak at both the exhibit opening and a performance of the play Time Stands Still on the evening of Feb. 14.

Susan Sterner

Sterner was touched by the Brazilians’ “optimism and ingenuity – how they went about solving problems. It’s a country of survivors.” Northeastern Brazil’s ˛ő±đ°ůłŮĂŁ´Ç (backcountry) is a semi-arid, often-mythologized area that entails “hard lives.” Droughts and famines require frequent migrations, reminiscent of America’s Depression-era Dust Bowl, Sterner explained. She and Turner primarily worked in the provinces Bahia and Pernambuco and the city Recife.

Sterner is director of photojournalism programs at D.C.’s Corcoran College of Art and Design. Prior to the Brazil project, she documented immigration and poverty in the United States and life in Haiti for the Associated Press. From 2001 to 2006, she was a White House photographer.

Sterner’s work was previously featured in a 2011 exhibit at 91¶ĚĘÓƵ, titled “Women’s Apron Stories,” which centered on women in El Salvador.

Tyrone Turner

Turner, a New Orleans native and adjunct professor at the Corcoran, has worked with the Times Picayune and Los Angeles Times newspapers. His work has appeared in National Geographic on subjects including Katrina, the Gulf Oil Spill and quilombos (descendants of runaway slaves who settled on the Brazilian frontier).

The couple will speak at 4 p.m. at the Feb. 14 opening of “Sonhos e Saudades: Tracing Northeastern Brazil.” That evening they will participate in a talk-back following a production of Time Stands Still,  a Tony nominated play written by Pulitzer Prize winning Donald Margulies, at 7:30 pm in the Eshleman Studio Theater. The play is about a photojournalist who has returned home from covering war-torn Iraq, where she was injured; she must deal with personal issues, including her relationship to her reporter-boyfriend,  a fellow war correspondent.

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