This year, we are incredibly pleased and excited to announce the creation
of the endowed Rupert T. Barber, Jr. Scholarship in Theatre. The first
theatre scholarship at Davidson, this merit-based scholarship will be
awarded to qualified students who demonstrate a passion for theatre
as they enter Davidson College and who remain active in the theatre
department throughout their tenure at Davidson.
For
more than 40 years, Dr. Rupert Barber has been synonymous with theatre
at Davidson, serving as a one-man department and working out of a cramped
backstage dressing room to instill in his students an appreciation for
oral communication, literature, and history, and, above all, a lifelong
love of theatre.
From 1963-1998, Rupert directed over sixty productions for the Department
of Theatre and Speech. Some highlights include: The Boyfriend
(1967), in which he cast then-student Joe Gardner, a series of Moliere
plays, (The Miser, Tartuffe and The Learned Ladies), and a
stunning production of Kiss Me Kate.
Beyond his directing, Rupert initiated a course in 1967 called the New
York Seminar. Because of Dr. Barber’s vision and hard work, over
200 Davidson students have had the exhilarating experience of seeing
New York City for the first time, where they were exposed to Broadway
and off-Broadway plays.
In 1997, Rupert created The Connie Company, a program devoted to theatre
for young people, in memory of Constance Welsh, founder of the Davidson
Community Players, an organization Rupert has nurtured and guided for
decades. For the Players, he has written or adapted, then directed,
a number of children’s plays -- each laced with his belief in
the power of the word on stage and his love for reaching others through
theatre. Some of his best-known pieces include: The Dancing Donkey,
The Christmas Gift Shows, Hansel and Gretel and Jack and the
Beanstalk.
Even after his retirement in 1998, he has continued to direct numerous
shows, has been a deacon and elder at Davidson College Presbyterian
Church, is the current president of the Davidson Historical Society,
and serves on the Design Review Board for the Town of Davidson.
Rupert’s commitment to Davidson earned him the Algernon Sydney
Sullivan Award for community service, presented at the 2001 Davidson
College Commencement.