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Broadway Play "The Front Page" to Be Performed at Centennial/Dedication Celebration
Revised: 14 April 2008.

Byron Scott Byron Scott
Professor Emeritus
Lee Wilkins Lee Wilkins
Radio-TV Journalism
Professor
Links

The Front Page
At a Glance:
  • See "The Front Page" performance the afternoon of Sept. 11.
  • Tickets included with event registration, set to open in late April.
  • Journalism professors to produce and direct the show.

Columbia, Mo. (March 6, 2008) -- Journalists attending the Sept. 10-12 centennial/dedication can scoop the competition during a jail break – well, sort of.

The Maplewood Barn Community Theatre, mid-Missouri's historic outdoor theatre company, will host a performance of "The Front Page," the award-winning Broadway comedic play about journalists, for those attending the celebration Sept. 11.

The Missouri School of Journalism will celebrate its centennial with the dedication of the new Reynolds Journalism Institute, the advanced studies center for 21st-century journalism. The Sept. 10-12 event will feature a variety of social, professional and academic activities.

The Front Page
Written in 1928 by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, "The Front Page" was a Broadway hit. Graphic provided courtesy of The Maplewood Community Barn Theatre.

The original play takes place inside the press room of Chicago City Hall, where a man named Earl Williams is about to be executed for murder. As the reporters in the press room brag about who will sell the most newspapers, the killer makes an escape and Hildy Johnson, the local ace reporter, hides Williams in a rolltop desk to get the exclusive scoop. Before the story breaks, Johnson ponders leaving the business altogether, in order to get married and find a new career in advertising. But managing editor Walter Burns wants none of that. All the while, the Mayor of Chicago tries to set his own agenda with the media.

Modern-day journalists may recognize something of themselves in the scoop-chasing, deadline habits of Hildy, Walter and their competitors – and laugh out loud, said Byron Scott and Lee Wilkins, the two journalism professors who are producing and directing the play.

Written in 1928 by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, "The Front Page" was a Broadway hit. Before writing the play, the authors had worked as reporters themselves; Hecht worked for the now defunct Chicago Daily News while MacArthur worked for the City News Bureau of Chicago, also known as City Press, a cooperative news agency that went out of business in December 2005.

Scott, professor emeritus of magazine journalism, is directing the play with the assistance of Wilkins, professor of radio-television journalism and the play's producer. Community theater has played a significant role in both professors' lives. Scott, who taught at the School for 21 years, has 20 years of experience with The Maplewood Barn Community Theatre in acting and directing. "The Front Page" will be the eighth show he has directed there. Wilkins was inspired to join community theater 10 years ago because of him.

Scott said it was natural for him to choose "The Front Page" to coincide with the School's centennial/dedication as the play, which is set in the 1920s, holds true to similar ethical and professional problems journalists still face today. Wilkins will host a discussion about the ethical problems involved in the play during the Sept. 11 centennial/dedication programming. A scene from the play will be performed at the discussion.

"It's a bit of a different offering from the other centennial fare, which will be more serious and even academic. It's a chance to support the arts," she said.

The Sept. 11 performance of "The Front Page" for event registrants will be held in the afternoon at the Missouri Theatre Center for the Arts, Columbia's cultural arts venue on Ninth Street. The cost will be included in the centennial/dedication registration fee; registration opens in late April. Additional evening performances for the community will be held Thursday-Saturday, Sept. 11-13. Times of the performances will be announced at a future date.

While both professors have entertained the idea of encouraging the School's journalism students and professors to audition for the play, Scott said auditions are open to anyone in Mid-Missouri.

Additional information about casting dates is available from The Maplewood Barn Theatre. Part of the proceeds from "The Front Page" will benefit the Missouri Theatre Center for the Arts and The Maplewood Barn Community Theatre. Current sponsors of the performance include the Missouri Press Association, Cumulus Broadcasting through station KFRU and Newzgroup.



2008 Centennial/Dedication Site at a Glance
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April 23: Centennial/Dedication Registration Now Open

March 6: Broadway Play "The Front Page" to be Performed at Centennial/Dedication Celebration

Feb. 26: School Alumnus and Cartoonist to Contribute to Centennial/Dedication

Feb. 21: New Book Offers Insider's View of the World's First School of Journalism

Feb. 21: Scholarly Symposium to Highlight 1908 as a Pivotal Year in American Journalism

Feb. 12: Sarah Copeland, BJ '99, of the Food Network to Serve as Consulting Chef

Feb. 6: School to Celebrate Centennial Anniversary with National Press Club March 28

Jan. 14: Missouri Press Association Announces Centennial Golf Classic

Jan. 11: Informal Reunions and Group Gatherings Night Available at Centennial-Dedication

Dec. 17: "Freedom Sings™" to Launch 2008 Activities

Dec. 5: 2008 Web Site Launched

Dec. 1: Centennial/Dedication Hotel Information

Nov. 30: McDougall Center to be Dedicated Sept. 2008

Nov. 28: Missouri Journalism Timeline Released

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