Jimmy Award Recipients

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Zachary Wolf - Jimmy Guant Award RecipientMy name is Zachary Wolf and I am a graduating senior majoring in English with an emphasis on Creative Writing and minoring in the Music Industry. I am truly honored to be one of the five recipients for the first Jimmy Gauntt Memorial Award at USC.

My interest in the arts is neither a recent nor faint curiosity, but rather a deep, indelible necessity to pursue creative endeavors – to study them, to participate in them, but most importantly, I am constantly compelled to enjoy, as frequently as possible, the way the arts seem to invite explorations of our own vivacity. This is to say, I cannot imagine my life without engaging in some form of creative of expression. From a very early age, my parents have embedded in me an appreciation for music. They encouraged me to take piano and guitar lessons, to join a children’s choir, and to participate in community theatre. Indeed, my family was a musical one, but during my maturation I began to form my own set of interests. As a senior in high school, inspired by my then-mentor, Bill Waters, I developed an inexorable attraction to the art of story and written expression. I soon found that I had a talent for poetry, and I decided to capitalize on that talent for my major as an undergraduate. I have since been fascinated with all forms of narrative expression, from film, to stage, to novel, to poem. However, my passion for music never left me. With a desire to engage in significant discourse regarding contemporary popular and alternative music, I became a disc jockey as USC’s student-run radio station, KSCR. There, I soon became the Co-Director of Publication, which charged me with running the station’s music blog and releasing two annual music, arts and culture based magazines entitled Bandwidth. I have since spent my senior year as the General Manager of KSCR, a position that has given me the opportunity to, among many other things, interface directly with the artists whose music had inspired me to become a disc jockey in the first place.

However, my two years of research with Professor David Román stand as my most important academic encounter with the arts. During my sophomore year, Prof. Román and I received a grant from the Summer Undergraduate Research Fund in order to study the Cultural Politics of the 2008 Broadway Season. What began as a single trip to New York City soon blossomed into all-encompassing intellectual enterprise. I have since developed an expertise on Broadway plays and musicals, and garnered a wealth of research experience. My collaboration with Prof. Román has resulted in two additional grants under the USC Provost Fellowship during the fall of 2008 and summer of 2009, as well as a featured, co-authored review of South Pacific for the May 2009 edition ofTheatre Journal.

As I prepare to graduate, the only thing I actually know for certain is that I want the arts to play a major role in my yet-undecided career. My experience at USC, and the work I have done both inside and outside the classroom have certainly prepared me for a plethora of opportunities in that regard. Moreover, being chosen to participate in Jimmy Gauntt’s legacy with this award is such an un-expected privilege, and I am sincerely grateful for such distinguished recognition

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Andrei Malikov

by The Jimmy Gauntt Award 2010 Recipients

Andrei Malikov - 2010 Jimmy Gauntt Award Winner

I was born in Russia, a country with a very strong theatrical tradition, and my parents had always made a point of taking me to as many plays and showing me as many classic movies as possible. As a result my childhood heroes were a Russian actor named Vladimir Visotsky, most famous for his portrayal […]

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Aliviana Sanders

by The Jimmy Gauntt Award 2010 Recipients

Aliviana Sanders - 2010 Jimmy Gaunt Award Recpient

Aliviana Sanders’ first writing project (around the age of 7) was a sequel to the Little House on the Prairie series. However, the project went unfinished and Aliviana turned to other hobbies, focusing mainly on playing different musical instruments. Growing up in the suburbs of Los Angeles, thousands of artistic opportunities were available; she dabbled […]

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Schaeffer Nelson

by The Jimmy Gauntt Award 2010 Recipients

Schaeffer Nelson - 2010 Jimmy Guantt Award Recipient

I was drawn to USC for many reasons, but two of the most persuasive were its palpably creative atmosphere and its location right in the nerve center of Los Angeles. Over four years, those reasons have remained sturdy. I have grown tremendously as a writer since I arrived. Coached by our writing faculty and rubbing […]

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Janet Thielke

by The Jimmy Gauntt Award 2010 Recipients

Janet Thielke - 2010 Jimmy Guantt Award Recipient

Janet Thielke graduated from Houston, TX’s High School for the Performing and Visual Arts theatre department in 2006. Soon after having a play produced there as part of a student festival, she abandoned a burgeoning career as a classically trained actress for the much more financially secure pursuit of creative writing. While at USC, she […]

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Paige Cohen

by The Jimmy Gauntt Award 2011 Recipients

Paige Cohen - 2011 Jimmy Guantt Award Recipient

I originally moved to Los Angeles to study film at USC. I would be the greatest storyteller in all of Hollywood! (So I said.) But after about three weeks, I found myself pulled in a different direction. Arriving from a small town in the northern suburbs of California, Los Angeles was like nothing I’d seen. […]

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Colin Dwyer

by The Jimmy Gauntt Award 2011 Recipients

Colin Dwyer - 2011 Jimmy Guantt Award Recipient

“For me, it started with a single story: a brief, overwritten work of fantasy fan-fiction that I suspected was awful even while I wrote it, back in the sixth grade. Remarkably though, the teacher to whom I showed my first story was generous enough to humor me — she took the time to read it, […]

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Laura Brun

by The Jimmy Gauntt Award 2011 Recipients

Laura Brun - 2011 Jimmy Guantt Award Recipient

While at USC I began work on a chapbook entitled “Bending Buttons” which is written in imitation of and in response to Gertrude Stein’s “Tender Buttons,” a collection of short poems. When I began imitating Stein’s style I felt like a copycat or a thief and was terrified to bring my manuscript in for my […]

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Lauren Perez

by The Jimmy Gauntt Award 2011 Recipients

I started writing when it occurred to me that I could write a much better mystery for the Boxcar Children than their author Gertrude Chandler Warner. My story involved vengeful ghosts and a near fatal fall from a cliff, and sadly remains unfinished. I started writing because I love reading, and I have loved reading […]

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