Quinnett Wins National Theatre Award
Professor Wins National Theatre Award
Professor Kelly Quinnett, head of performance at the 果冻传媒麻豆社 Department of Theatre Arts, has received a national award in recognition of her commitment to teaching at the university level.
Quinnett is the first and only recipient of the , presented and sponsored by the College of Fellows of the American Theatre in honor of Uta Hagen, the late Broadway star who spent decades training generations of aspiring actors.
The award, presented in April at the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival in Washington, D.C., recognizes Quinnett’s distinguished service as a teacher of acting and her distinguished career as a working actor.
Quinnett said she is humbled by the award.
“It’s really moving and meaningful to think about how many hearts I helped open,” Quinnett said. “I’ve always wanted to make a difference and help others connect.”
Quinnett encourages her students to cultivate empathy and the extraordinary, to act with honesty and to live creative and full lives of kindness, truth and vulnerability, on stage and off.
“Kelly Quinnett is simply the finest actor I’ve ever directed or acted with,” said David Lee-Painter, a professor of theatre in U of I’s College of Letters, Arts and Social Sciences. “She lights up the stage and screen – like Uta Hagen she is dangerous in the very best sense – alive, vulnerable and advocating for her character and the storytelling in every moment. She makes all of her fellow actors better.”
Quinnett is past chair of the Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival’s (KCATCF) Region 7 and was the 1990 recipient of the festival’s National Irene Ryan Scholarship. She has appeared on “All My Children” and “One Life to Live” and numerous film and stage productions. In 2016, Quinnett was honored with the National KCACTF Special Achievement in Performance as Medea in “Medea: Her Story,” produced by U of I Theatre Arts. She has taught at U of I since 1998.
Published May 2019