![]() ![]() In 2002, this honor was rechristened the Paula Vogel Prize. In her first year as a graduate student, she won the Forbes Heerman and George McCalmon playwriting competition for “The Swan Song of Sir Henry.” Vogel took home the prize again her second year for “A Woman for All Reasons,” a feminist take on Robert Bolt’s “A Man For All Seasons.”Įxpanding the play into a full-length script, retitled “Meg,” Vogel won the American College Theater Festival’s National Student Playwriting Award in 1977. Vogel entered Cornell’s doctoral program in theater arts in 1974. “What an amazing journey she has taken since her days here as a student in the 1970s.” “It is a pleasure to join my colleagues in Performing and Media Arts in celebrating Paula Vogel’s achievements – including her soon-to-be-awarded doctorate,” said Gretchen Ritter, the Harold Tanner Dean of Arts and Sciences. “Indecent” serves as her revised doctoral thesis. Vogel’s visit, one of two marquee events celebrating the opening of Klarman Hall and the New Century for the Humanities at Cornell, will also include the awarding of Vogel’s doctoral degree, concluding an academic odyssey that began more than four decades ago. '76, to campus April 12-13 for a conversation and concert reading of her most recent play, “Indecent.” The Department of Performing and Media Arts will welcome Pulitzer Prize-winning dramatist Paula Vogel, M.A. ![]()
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