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The Jack
Oakie
Scholarship |
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Jack Oakie
application packets are available in PCOH
112 (Fine and Performing Arts Office) and by
download @ (TBA)
Deadline to submit is
Monday, November 5, 2012 at 5:00 p.m.
Applications must be submitted to the
switchboard (A building) by that deadline.
The Jack Oakie and Victoria
Horne Oakie Charitable Foundation has
awarded the Fine and Performing Arts
Division at College of the Canyons $11,000
per year which will be distributed to as
many as eleven COC students as
scholarship/trust awards in the amount of
$500-$1,000 each (non-renewable). These
awards, generally merit-based on an
applicant’s COC academic record, COC
artistic achievement, and written critical
review (see below) will be awarded to
students studying Performing Arts (Theatre,
Dance, or Music) or Fine Arts (Animation,
Art, Graphic and Multi Media Design,
Photography, or Radio/Television/Film).
Scholarship money is designated for expenses
related to applicants’ studies.
Eligibility Requirements:
- Applicant must be
currently enrolled as a student at
College of the Canyons.
- Applicant must be
currently enrolled in or have
successfully completed a COC Fine or
Performing Arts course within the past
12 months.
- Applicant must watch
a Jack Oakie and/or a Victoria Horne
Oakie film and submit a one page typed
critical review. (Please review the
helpful hints for
completing the Jack Oakie/Victoria Horne
Oakie Critical Review)
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For students’ convenience,
both Jack and Virginia Oakie films can be
checked out through the COC campus library.
There will also be an OAKIE FILM SERIES on
Tuesday, November 1, 2011 from 6pm-9pm in
Hasley 101. At this series, students can
view an Oakie film, meet members of The Jack
Oakie and Victoria Horne Oakie Charitable
Foundation and ask questions concerning the
application process.
Completed applications
(including the one-page critical review)
must be submitted no later than Monday
November 5th @ 5 PM to the Switchboard (A
Building)
Students can apply for the
following scholarships:
-
The Randy Haberkamp-Oakie
Scholarship
- The Jack Oakie
Memorial Award for Excellence in Comedy
Script or Screenwriting.
- The Jack Oakie
Memorial Award for Excellence in
Directing a Film, Stage or Television
Comedy.
- The Jack Oakie “It’s
All In Fun” Award for Excellence in
Comedic Excellence in Theatre or Stage
Acting, Comedic Improvisation, Singing,
Dancing, etc.
- The Jack Oakie
“Double Take” for Excellence in Film,
Stage or Television Acting.
- The Victoria Horne
Oakie “Myrtle Mae” Award for Performing
Excellence in Voice, Dance, Stage, Film
or Television. (Myrtle Mae was Mrs.
Oakie’s character in the 1950 movie
“Harvey”).
- The Dr. Floyd Moos
Scholarship for Excellence in the Fine
and/or Performing Arts
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DIRECTIONS:
Scholarship applicants will watch a Jack
Oakie film and submit a one-page typed
analytical review that will include the
following:
- a brief synopsis of
the film, and
- a critical analysis
of what the applicant might have done
similarly or differently had he/she been
the screenwriter, director, specific
actor, etc.
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Students applying for the
“Myrtle Mae” award are also encouraged to
watch one of Victoria Horne Oakie’s films.
The submitted copy of the critique will not
be returned.
Jack Oakie came to Hollywood in 1927. His
career by that time already included
vaudeville, Broadway musicals and
appearances in New York films. In Hollywood,
he made 87 pictures, mostly comedies or
musical comedies, over which period he
perfected his trademark comic triple-take.
His career included such films as "Once in a
Lifetime," "Million Dollar Legs" and "It
Happened Tomorrow." Oakie received an
Academy Award nomination in the supporting
role category for his satirical portrait of
a Mussolini-like head of state in 1940's
"The Great Dictator." Victoria Horne Oakie
was an American character-actress, appearing
in 49 films (uncredited in 25 of these)
during the 1940s and 1950s. Some of the
films in which she appeared included Blue
Skies (1946), Forever Amber (1947,
uncredited), The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947),
Abbott and Costello Meet the Killer, Boris
Karloff (1949), and Harvey (1950). Jack
Oakie died in 1978 and his wife, Victoria
Horne, died in 2003.
For more information about the
scholarships, please contact Peggy Lotta,
Administrative Assistant for the Fine and
Performing Arts Division at 661-362-5013.
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