By Jeff Murphy,
February 3, 2020
WARRENSBURG, MO – As a professor of theatre, scholar, and artist, Julie Rae Mollenkamp’s
commitment to excellence at the University of Central Missouri is well known by her
students, colleagues and patrons of the arts at UCM. What she does for the theatre
profession at home and on a broader scale was recently recognized as the Kennedy Center
American College Theater Festival (KCACTF) honored her with its most prestigious award.
Mollenkamp was recognized through the presentation of the Kennedy Center Gold Medal
at the KCACTF Region 5 Festival 52, Jan. 19-25 in Sioux Falls, S.D. The event was
hosted by South Dakota State University and The University of South Dakota. Nominations
from faculty and students contributed to the award selection, which was made within
each of eight KCACTF regions.
In addition to recognizing extraordinary work in educational theatre teaching and
production, the KCACTF Gold Medal honors an individual who has dedicated their time,
artistry and enthusiasm to the development of KCACTF, and has made a strong commitment
to the organization’s goals and values. Mollenkamp vast experiences and contributions
to her craft that have advanced the theatre education profession contributed to her
selection.
The longtime professor said she was thankful to KCACFT for “this humbling recognition.”
She added, “I am a better wife, mother, teacher, artist and human being because of
the opportunity to serve in this organization for the last 25 years - it has been
the greatest gift of my career. I am truly grateful for the honor of helping our students
grow into their best selves.”
According to the KCACTF, Mollenkamp’s extensive career includes work in directing
and acting in more than 90 different projects. She is actively involved in the Speech
and Theatre Association of Missouri, and is a past member of its Board of Governors.
Her service with KCACTF and past productions have led to 56 Meritorious Achievement
Awards, two invitations to the Region V Festival and eight National Accommodations,
including the Citizen Artist Award. She also has been involved with the National Communication
Association (NCA) Theatre Division, serving as chair from 1999-2001, and the Association
for Theatre in Higher Education, where she served from 2006-2008 as vice president
for membership and marketing.
Mollenkamp has served as National Playwriting Program Chair for KCACTF Region 5, and
currently serves on the National Kennedy Center American College Theatre Committee
as Region 5 member-at-large and as Representation, Equity, and Diversity Coordinator.
She also is a member of the Dramatist Guild, the Society for Stage Directors and Choreographers
and Statera Arts, an organization committed to bringing women into full and equal
participation in the arts.
Throughout her distinguished professional career, Mollenkamp has received many accolades
as a teacher, director, playwright and scholar. This includes recognition by UCM’s
College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences as a 2005 recipient of the Faculty
Achievement Award, followed in 2006 by the CAHSS Excellence in Teaching Award. In
2013 she received the Speech and Theatre Association of Missouri Wayne Brown Award
for Outstanding Teacher, and during the same year, she was appointed as the Meridith
Harmon Sauer Distinguished Professor of Theatre at UCM. This is the most prestigious
honor given to a UCM Theatre and Dance faculty member. Her many accolades also include
the NCA Division of Theatre’s Excellence in Teaching and Service Award and Lifetime
Achievement Award, and the KCACTF Road Warrior Award.
Among Mollenkamp’s vast projects, she premiered her one-woman performance of “In Conclusive
Woman” at the Ryan Repertory Theatre in New York in 2009, a work that was published
in “Best American Short Plays,” 2006-2007. It also was included in the Rutgers’ 30
year Feminist Artists Archives, and selected for publication in Applause Books’ “Best
American Monologues.” Her performance work, “Another Woman’s Baby,” premiered at the
University of Missouri and was performed at Ryan Repertory Theatre in July 2019. She
has acted in and directed numerous plays that have been shared with a UCM audience
in the James L. Highlander Theatre, among the achievements was her leading role performance
as Violet Weston in the Pulitizer Prize-winning play, “August: Osage County.”
The parents of two sons, Mollenkamp and her husband, Daniel, are the owners of Smashing
Frame Productions, a film and theatre production company.