By Nicole Lyons, February 4, 2026
From left, Theatre Performance senior John Plasencio, Musical Theatre senior Hannah
Vath
and Kasey Lynch, Ph.D., visiting assistant professor of Theatre.
Students and faculty from the University of Central Missouri (UCM) Division of Theatre and Dance attended the (ACTF) Jan. 18-24 in Rochester, Minnesota. Thirty-five students and four faculty members attended and were recognized for excellence in multiple areas of theatre and dance.
One of the festival’s biggest awards went to Hannah Vath, a senior Musical Theatre
major, for winning the Region V Irene Ryan Acting Scholarship competition out of 300
students in the seven-state region. This prestigious award recognizes, honors and
provides financial assistance to outstanding student performers, awarding eight $500
regional scholarships and one national scholarship annually. Vath will participate
in the national festival in April.
To win this award, Vath prepared a four-minute performance package including a monologue
and a scene. Vath's scene partner, Theatre Performance senior John Plasencio, also
won Irene Ryan Outstanding Scene Partner in the final round. Kasey Lynch, Ph.D., visiting
assistant professor of Theatre, served as acting coach for Vath and Plasencio, helping
them select material and mentoring them between rounds of competition.
In addition to his acting award, Plasencio's 10-minute play, “Bedtime for Borz,” was
selected as a regional finalist. Out of 96 play submissions, the top six plays were
chosen for a staged reading and performed during the Gary Garrison National Ten-Minute
Play Festival.
Nathalia Cordero, a sophomore Theatre Performance major, won the ASPIRE Arts Leadership
Fellowship for Region V. While at the festival, she created and pitched her own model
for producing theatrical events to a selection panel of theatre professionals. This
exercise encourages students to think holistically and critically about leadership
styles, programming and models, placing the art in the context of community and demonstrating
students’ ability to think outside the box.
Kaia Trujillo, a junior Digital Media Production major, received an honorable mention
for her direction of “Lungs” by Duncan Macmillan for the Society of Directors and
Choreographers (SDC) Fellowship Competition. Trujillo cast this scene with two UCM
actors, Vath and Caleb Klaus, and presented it at the festival. To advance to the
top six in the final round, Trujillo participated in an interview with the SDC respondents,
during which their director’s book, statement and approach were discussed.
Rosalyn Schuster, a recent Musical Theatre graduate, and Chris Schilligo, a junior
Music Technology major, advanced to the semi-final round of the Musical Theatre Singing
Intensive to be among the top 52 students out of 300 contestants. Schilligo advanced
to the top 20, earning him a spot in the Musical Theatre Intensive Showcase, where
he performed “Stay Gold” from “The Outsiders.” Allie Whitbey, a sophomore Theatre
Performance major, was selected as lead dancer and one of the top 19 dancers for the
Musical Theatre Dance Intensive. Students worked with a Broadway choreographer to
learn and perform a dance piece for the showcase.
Madison Keep, a junior Math Education major; Raegan Weber, a senior Theatre Performance
major; and Kelley Akers, a freshman Speech and Theatre Education major, were each
cast in three different 10-minute plays at the festival. Keep was also selected as
an alternate for 10-minute play direction.
Jacob Collins, a Theatre Performance junior, and Lola Simmons, a Theatre Performance
freshman, served on the ACTF Region V Student Advisory Board.
Theatre Performance major Ellie Siegfried and Theatre Design/Technology majors Ari
Kendrick, Gabe Sokolowski, Emma Stevens and Molly Blackburn each presented their stage
management, costume design and sound design work from both unrealized and various
UCM Theatre and Dance productions for adjudication at the Design Expo. Kendrick received
a Mental Health and Wellness Advocacy Award for her lighting design research of “Cabaret.”
Five costumes from UCM’s recent production of “The Importance of Being Earnest,” designed by Assistant Professor of Theatre (Costume Design) Cassie Kay Hoppas, were
selected to be presented in the Costume Parade during the festival’s closing ceremony.
Each piece took weeks of meticulous design, patterning and construction by Hoppas
and the students in her costume design and production classes. All five looks also
featured hair and makeup design by a student from her stage makeup course.
Throughout the week, students attended a variety of invited productions, participated
in numerous workshops and intensives in all areas of theatre, and auditioned and interviewed
for professional theatre companies. Many UCM students received callbacks for summer
employment and internships, and gained opportunities to apply their education in professional
practice. UCM’s own Shenanigans Improv and Sketch Comedy Team performed during the
Improv Showcase.
Vath, Collins, Mayeli Rodriguez Romero and senior English major Avory Nail participated
in the Collaborative Theatre Challenge in various capacities. Collins, Cordero and
Frankie Nelson participated in the Devised Theatre Intensive with a comedic retelling
of “Little Red Riding Hood.”
UCM productions received Meritorious Achievement Awards during the opening ceremony.
For UCM’s spring 2025 production of “Dr. Seuss’s The Cat In The Hat,” Jenise Cook, assistant professor of Theatre,
and Cami Wieberg, assistant director, received recognition for Creating a Space for
Fantastic Collaboration; Sokolowski was recognized for his stage management. The entire
cast received an award for Ensemble Performance, with sophomore Musical Theatre major
Elizabeth Molina and sophomore Theatre Design/Technology major Emma Stevens recognized
for their work as a Dynamic Duo - Thing 1 and Thing 2.
“C,” produced at UCM in spring 2025, received an award in every creative and design position:
Associate Professor of Theatre Aaron Scully and Trujillo for Direction; Iona Dewalt
for Musical Direction; Ashley Miller-Scully and Weber for Choreography; Stephanie
Heathcock and Dohyun Grace Kim for Stage Management; Cook for Intimacy Choreography;
Spencer Musser and Sojeong Lee for Scenic Design; Alyna Mathews for Properties Design;
Kendrick and Wesley Freeman for Lighting Design; Blackburn and Lucy Nutt for Costume
Design; Hoppas for Hair and Makeup Design; Sokolowski and Brody Lafrentz for Sound
Design; Claire Groos for Double Duty as an Actor and Band Member; Anna Fletcher for
Super Swing; the entire cast for Ensemble Performance, and lastly, for the production’s
Lobby Display, Interactive Elements and Immersive Experience.
The fall 2025 musical production of “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” received Meritorious Achievement
Awards for Ensemble Acting, Comedy, and Vocal Performance for cast members Audrey
Shepard, Trae Selemaea, Jadan Zelch, Fletcher, Nelson, Collins and Schilligo. Recognition
for Costume, Hair and Makeup Design was awarded to Nail, while sophomore Theatre Design/Technology
student Lafrentz was recognized for Sound Design. An award for Choreography was presented
to Vath, and Direction and Creation of a Safe Space was awarded to Lynch.
Lastly, Schuster and freshman Theatre Design/Technology student Shannon Williamson
were awarded meritorious recognitions for Backstage Management for “The Importance
of Being Earnest.” Nutt was recognized for her Wig Design.
UCM Theatre and Dance faculty led workshops and panels at the festival. Hoppas led
the Costume Runway Intensive and taught two workshops, Intro to Flat Patterning the
Bodice and Intro to Flat Patterning the Skirt. Musser, assistant professor of Theatre
(Scene Design and Technical Direction), was a load-in/out respondent and led workshops
on Ink and Watercolor for Design and 3D Modeling and Printing. Lynch taught two workshops,
“Understudy, Swing, Standby, Oh My! The Art of Stepping In” and “Movement for the
Actor: A Crash (Obstacle) Course in Viewpoints,” and served as a respondent for the
Irene Ryan preliminary rounds. Miller-Scully, chair of the Division of Theatre and
Dance, assisted with dance callbacks for Crane River Theatre and led a faculty-only
panel on ACTF Funding Resources. UCM faculty also participated in the College Fair
to meet and recruit transfer students to the program.
UCM Theatre and Dance students and faculty expressed their appreciation for Provost
Tim Crowley, the Academic Competitive Teams Council, the Office of Graduate Studies
Scholarly Activity Fund, and several individual donors who provided funds to help
offset the cost of this invaluable learning experience.

