2020 Recipients

Professors David Roman and Danzy Senna, co-chairs of this year’s Selections Committee, recently announced the 2020 recipients of the Jimmy Gauntt Memorial Award, aka The Jimmy.  The Jimmy is awarded to the top graduating seniors who have majored in English, Creative Writing or Narrative studies.   Normally, six stellar seniors receive The Jimmy.  Professor Roman explained why this year 8 awards were bestowed.

We decided to distribute the love more widely this year.    We could not resolve who would be our sixth recipient, so we decided to give it to the three students who were under consideration.   Over 30 students were nominated by the faculty, and then Danzy and I narrowed it down to a shorter list of 15 students for the committee to consider.”  

Unfortunately, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we were not able to have the customary dinner to celebrate the 2020 Jimmies.   The dinner is widely attended by faculty members and the Gauntt-Kirby family.  It is hoped the dinner can be rescheduled as soon as possible. 

We are proud to announce the 2020 recipients of The Jimmy.   This is the 11th year the award had been given out and there are now 66 Jimmies walking the planet.  Congratulations to you all!

Sydney Ahmed

Fedja Celebic

Danielle Collins

Siying Feng

Anissa Jones-Montano

Kanak Kapur

Rami Kirio

Luke Van Lant

Jimmy Gauntt as Lord Loveless in a 2006 performance of The Relapse at Queen’s College in London

I’m honored to be one of the recipients of the 2020 Jimmy Gauntt award for the 2020 graduating class. Growing up 45 minutes away in Long Beach, I was awakened to the city’s unique creative energy while in high school. My friends formed bands, self-published zines, and were radicalized by the 2016 election cycle. A vibrant and self-contained arts community played out in backyards and living rooms, with infrequent, special drives up to LA proper. I was mostly interested in the beat poets and Henry Miller at the end of high school, and thankfully my education and friendships at USC broadened my literary horizons far beyond their grandiose hedonism, to Anne Carson and Maggie Nelson, John Ashberry and Denis Johnson, Christian leftists like Paulo Friere and Daniel Berrigan, neuroscientists (Antonio Damasio), physicians (Paul Tournier, Oliver Sacks), and psychoanalysts (Rollo May, Robert A. Johnson, Jung), all of whom I incorporated into my Narrative Studies capstone on intergenerational storytelling and values.

Beyond reading and writing, I met people during the past four years in south LA who are involved in a range of creative pursuits. My film school friends coordinated large numbers of people to create shorts, web series, and VR projects. I did production design and apprenticed art direction at first, and did several film scores on the back end of college with my synth, sampler and guitar. I concurrently recorded and released several music projects, and played saxophone in a group with Long Beach and LA friends. I began taking lots of photos and, for a while, painting and studying outsider artists in the US. My friend Mike Black and I spend the beginning of 2020 working on a collaborative book of photos, digital art, and poetry titled “History Pt. V”, which we’re going to print soon. While studying abroad in Europe, I traveled to southeast Asia and north Africa, and worked with Refugee Project Maastricht to hold community events and music/ESL lessons with the largely Syrian refugee population there. When I returned to LA, I began interning with the International Rescue Committee, where I now work full-time as their financial coach and coordinate a new CDFI lending service.

My years at USC have been life-affirming, though not without hardship and loss, including the death of one of my close friends and housemates. My current work allows me to be of service to my city and its inhabitants, to put down roots and learn the meaning of solidarity. Curiosity compels me to continue my education and, though I often fail, to translate thought to action and to learn from my experiences. Professors such as Brighde Mullins and connections through the Brain and Creativity Institute, including Rod Miranda and the good people at Sages and Seekers, taught me to never stop striving toward these ideals of actualized selfhood. On top of everything, I think LA is one of the greatest cities in the world and worthy of my commitment and gratitude.

Fedja Celebic

by Casey Gauntt 2020 Recipients

I was born on October 14, 1997, despite not having been consulted beforehand on whether that was a good idea. I grew up in Newburyport, Massachusetts, only child to immigrants from Montenegro of former Yugoslavia. I didn’t cry much as a baby. In preschool, my teacher asked my parents if they read to me, or […]

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Danielle Collins

by Casey Gauntt 2020 Recipients

Hi, I’m Danielle! I’m a double major in English and Spanish, which basically means I love language in all its forms. I’m from the suburbs of Chicago, but moved around a lot as a kid, and packed up boxes full of books each time. Growing up, I always considered my love of reading to be […]

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Kanak Kapur

by Casey Gauntt 2020 Recipients

Hi, I’m Kanak! I was born in Bombay (now known as Mumbai) and my family moved to Dubai when I was about six. My parents relocated again when I was a sophomore in high school to Los Angeles, where I was lucky enough to stay for the next six years. It was a miracle to […]

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Rami Kirio

by Casey Gauntt 2020 Recipients

Growing up in Southern California has exposed Rami to different cultures that shaped the person he is today. Born to a single mother he learned to be attentive and caring. Rami loved the water and the outdoors growing up. His favorite times growing up were family movie nights and lots of popcorn. Rami did various […]

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