Dance Magazine Features RTA

This month’s Dance Magazine features dance teacher Susan Slotnick and the Rehabilitation Through The Arts dance program at Woodbourne Correctional Facility – the only modern dance program in a men’s prison nationwide. 

Dancers in medium-security prison

RTA Modern Dance Class

The article recognizes the dedication of Susan and her colleague, Bethany Wootan, and speaks to the power of the arts to uplift and transform. 

Knowing how chaotic much of the men’s lives may be, and seeing form, sinew, line and grace come forth to present the spirit of each individual in collaboration and harmony with his company of dancers, is hopeful beyond all reason.Dance teacher Brenda Bufalino, following performance of Woodbourne’s “Figures in Flight” dance company

Posted in RTA on April 22nd, 2011 by Ricki – 1 Comment

RTA Alumni Perform at NYU Bullying Symposium

RTA participants NYU Applied Theatre 2

photo by Javier Cardona

New York University’s symposium “The Bully Menace and Applied Theatre” - at the Provincetown Playhouse on April 15th – featured RTA alumni from Woodbourne Correctional Facility performing works written by men currently incarcerated.

Pictured above from left to right – David Giraudy, Manny Borras, Michael Coaxum, Andre Noel and Jason Bermudez – read works by John Dickerson, Jecoina Vinson, Felix Rondon, Elder Beaudouin, David Mantalvo and Andre Noel (recently released), who participate in RTA’s program in Woodbourne, a medium security prison in Sullivan County. 

Joining the group below are Katherine Vockins, RTA Executive Director, Nan Smithner, NYU Educational Theatre professor and frequent RTA volunteer, and Javier Cardona, RTA Director of Arts & Education.

RTA participants NYU Applied Theatre 1

The work explores physical, psychological and systemic bullying  in families, streets and prison.  It comes out of the NYU/RTA Prison Initiative, which provides prisoners an opportunity to work with outstanding academics and practioners, and provides a deeply rewarding professional and personal opportunity for graduate students and faculty to work behind bars.

Posted in RTA on April 18th, 2011 by Ricki – Comments Off

May 13, 2011 – Save the Date

RTA presents

Superior Donuts

By Tracy Letts, Pulitzer Award winning author 

Superior Donuts

 

Look for your invitation in the mail in the first week of April.

Send in the reply card early to reserve a seat.

 

 Performance in Sing Sing Correctional Facility, Ossining, NY

Posted in RTA on March 23rd, 2011 by Ricki – 3 Comments

ThreadNews Inaugural Story Features Rehabilitation Through The Arts

Threadnews.org is a new website that focuses on underreported stories and their social impact. We applaud their first edition, which features various aspects of prisoner reentry.

The story follows Manny Borras, an RTA participant recently released from prison, as he experiences a world very different from the one he left behind 17 years ago.

While incarcerated, Manny was deeply committed to RTA – as a writer, dancer and performer. Threadnews.org asks the question: “Did theatre help restore his humanity and can it keep him from returning to a life behind bars?”

See Manny’s story and listen to an interview with RTA’s Executive Director, Katherine Vockins, about the process of learning critical life skills through the arts.  www.threadnews.org

Posted in RTA on March 7th, 2011 by Ricki – Comments Off

Lewisboro Ledger Interviews RTA’s Katherine Vockins

Written by Jane K. Dove
Thursday, 09 December 2010

“We get real results and change people’s lives,” said Katherine Vockins, the founder and executive director of Rehabilitation Through the Arts (RTA), a creative arts program for incarcerated men and women at five correctional facilities in southern New York state, including Bedford Hills and the infamous Sing Sing in Ossining.

The all-volunteer program, which Ms. Vockins started in 1996, uses theater, dance, poetry, visual arts, and other disciplines to help prisoners bolster their self-esteem, communicate, collaborate, set goals, and solve problems. RTA is a program of Prison Communities International, a non-profit organization.

A 2009 study conducted by Purchase College and the New York State Department of Correctional Services showed RTA effectively sets the stage for learning and encourages participants to pursue their education into college and even beyond.

Ms. Vockins sat down with The Ledger earlier this week to describe RTA and her role.

A native of Los Angeles who has lived in Katonah with her husband, Hans Hallundbaek, since 1972, Ms. Vockins had a highly successful career in business before switching directions and founding RTA.

“Both of us worked for Dansk Designs, Hans in overseas operations and me in marketing,” she said. “We traveled extensively and later started our own independent consulting firm, dealing in international business related to the home furnishings industry.”

But the dynamics of their husband and wife business partnership changed dramatically in 1994.

“My husband had what I call a mid-life correction,” Ms. Vockins said. “He decided to leave the business, work as a volunteer for non-profit causes, including the homeless, and obtain a doctorate from New York Theological Seminary. It was a complete shift.”

One of Mr. Hallundbaek’s volunteer pursuits was teaching at Sing Sing prison. Ms. Vockins said, “I was still running the business, but decided to sit in on a few of his classes to see why he was so enthusiastic.”

Ms. Vockins said she is not a “do-gooder” by nature and had always felt quite at home in the competitive world of business. “But sitting in the classroom at Sing Sing, I met and talked with some of the men,” she said. “I saw them speak and present information in my husband’s classes and realized there was a lot of potential for positive change.”

Changing lives
Ms. Vockins said RTA was “really born out of my conversations with these men and the realization they are people just like us, with many longing to make a positive change in their lives.

“I asked one man if there was any theater going on at Sing Sing and the answer was no. I had a limited background in the arts, mostly volunteering as a stage manager in community theater, and the idea for RTA was born in the summer of 1996. We started the program as a theater workshop at Sing Sing.”

Today, RTA operates at Sing Sing, Bedford Hills, Fishkill, Green Haven, and Woodbourne correctional facilities. At any given time, there are well over 100 RTA participants spread throughout the different facilities, with some 35 volunteer facilitators conducting classes and workshops in different disciplines.

Activities available through RTA include basics of theater; improvisations, and scene study; public speaking and monologue workshops; dance, physical theater, movement and yoga; playwriting and poetry; Shakespeare study; vocal training; and visual art.

Since RTA was founded, thousands of guests have seen theatrical productions that include Macbeth, Of Mice and Men, West Side Story, 12 Angry Men, A Few Good Men, and many others. Prisoners have also written and produced their own plays related to events shaping their lives.

“Our expansion and success has been driven by the participants,” Ms. Vockins said. “They are very enthusiastic and quickly develop the ability to express themselves and to imagine different scenarios for their lives. Even in a harsh environment like Sing Sing, we see their self-esteem grow along with their ability to trust others. Many express remorse for their crimes by working as prison volunteers in gang prevention, substance abuse prevention, and educational programs that help others make better choices in life.”

Ms. Vockins said RTA does not have a fixed curriculum, but operates with flexibility as volunteers in different areas of the arts become available.

Current volunteers from Katonah include Anne Lloyd, John Lloyd, and Patrick Collins.  “We are always looking for new volunteers in any of our disciplines,” she said. “Bedford Hills is our newest facility and we are hoping to attract some volunteers from this area.”

“There is just so much potential behind the prison walls,” she said. “Our volunteers are key to helping these men and women their self-esteem, gain self-knowledge and self-confidence. We use the school buildings in the different prisons and it is a safe environment.”

Looking back over her role in Rehabilitation Through the Arts, Ms. Vockins said that all of the business skills she acquired over the years translated very well into her volunteer work.

“I had always been a woman working quite successfully in a man’s world,” she said. “Although this was a big step for me, it was not at all intimidating and the rewards are great.”

Read the article online at LewisboroLedger.com

Posted in RTA on December 9th, 2010 by Ricki – Comments Off