Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Along with Jeffrey Wright, you can include other well known actors Clancey Brown and Robert Wisdom as well as local standup comedian and sports radio host Danny Rouhier. I'm sure there are a number of others working in various segments of the theater arts across the country.
Another notable alumnus active in the performing arts is Tony-nominated Broadway performer Brandon Victor Dixon, St. Albans Class of '99, who was a Presidential Scholar for the Arts coming out of STA. http://www.college.columbia.edu/cct_archive/jul_aug07/updates8.php
Anonymous wrote:Along with Jeffrey Wright, you can include other well known actors Clancey Brown and Robert Wisdom as well as local standup comedian and sports radio host Danny Rouhier. I'm sure there are a number of others working in various segments of the theater arts across the country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are some pretty good actors out of St. Albans (e.g., Geoffrey Wright) and some of the other area independent schools (the Sidwell guy in the zombie show, like his stuff) -- I think a well-rounded high school drama program leading into a BFA at the next level can be a fine background. If someone is looking to act professionally now in their teens, I don't think any of the academically oriented private schools in town are the best bet.
Actually, Geoffrey Wright didn't start acting until his junior year of college. He's just incredibly talented, in college he didn't major in theatre. After college he did win a scholarship into a major mfa program that he quit after his first semester to pursue a broadway career. The rest as they say is history.
Anonymous wrote:There are some pretty good actors out of St. Albans (e.g., Geoffrey Wright) and some of the other area independent schools (the Sidwell guy in the zombie show, like his stuff) -- I think a well-rounded high school drama program leading into a BFA at the next level can be a fine background. If someone is looking to act professionally now in their teens, I don't think any of the academically oriented private schools in town are the best bet.
Anonymous wrote:How good is the upper school drama program?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The GPA distribution in the school's profile gives a college a clue where your kid stands within his class. They use it when a school doesn't rank.
Does this cause any angst among the families of the boys with high class rank? I suppose the thinking is that SATs should correspond to grades, but needless to say that is hardly a hard and fast rule.
Nope. The kids with straight As and A pluses do great in college admissions, so why worry about class rank? It probably helps the admissions in the aggregate -- you don't get a school saying to a kid with great board scores and very good grades "oh sorry, you're not ranked in the top 10% of your class, so we are not interested." Lastly, generally most of the parents have come to accept that you really can't micromanage your child's career at STA -- the school is fairly confident in politely explaining its policies and then standing by them. There's some carping on various things but generally not too much and not very focused.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The GPA distribution in the school's profile gives a college a clue where your kid stands within his class. They use it when a school doesn't rank.
Does this cause any angst among the families of the boys with high class rank? I suppose the thinking is that SATs should correspond to grades, but needless to say that is hardly a hard and fast rule.
Anonymous wrote:The GPA distribution in the school's profile gives a college a clue where your kid stands within his class. They use it when a school doesn't rank.