ROCK HILL, SOUTH CAROLINA — Winthrop University's College of Visual and Performing Arts will acknowledge the artistic contributions of an actor and director, a storyteller
and historical interpreter, and the support of a local business at the Medal of Honor in the Arts on April 9. The event honors Polly Adkins '68, '72, Kitty Wilson-Evans '92 and Family Trust Federal Credit Union.
For the first time, the Medal of Honor in the Arts event stretches over the entire
weekend with performances all over campus. The weekend culminates with an awards dinner
on Sunday, April 9, at 6 p.m. A schedule of the weekend's events can be found online.
The Medal of Honor in the Arts award has been granted by the College of Visual and
Performing Arts since 2001. It acknowledges and recognizes the unique roles of individuals
and organizations who have made significant contributions to the arts as well as those
who have positively impacted the quality of the cultural life in communities across
the Carolinas.
Tickets for the awards ceremony and dinner are $75 each and can be purchased online. VIP tickets can be purchased for $125 each and include a ticket to "The Merchant
of Venice" on Sunday, April 9, at 2 p.m. A portion of the Medal of Honor in the Arts
event proceeds go towards a scholarship fund that helps support talented Winthrop
students who have an interest in pursuing careers in the visual arts, dance, music
or theatre.
Learn more about this year's recipients:
Polly Adkins '68, '72 has performed in many roles at the Rock Hill Community Theatre, Main Street Theatre
and the Fort Mill Community Playhouse. She also began performing in Charlotte, North
Carolina, winning seven Metrolina Theatre Awards for acting and directing, and three
Creative Loafing Awards. She has performed at Actor's Theatre of Charlotte, Queen
City Theatre, CPCC Summer Theater, Theatre Charlotte, Barebones Theatre, Victory Pictures,
Belmont Abbey Players and the New Stage Ensemble Summer Rep at Winthrop. She was twice
picked as Charlotte Magazine's Best of the Best Actress.
Adkins served on the Actor's Theatre of Charlotte's Board of Directors for over 10
years and is presently on the Fort Mill Community Playhouse Board. She helped create
Rock Hill's Main Street Theatre, which operated for several years until the theatre
was torn down for local development. Adkins continues to direct at the Fort Mill Playhouse
and other regional theatres and has directed North Carolina shows for Theatre Charlotte,
Donna Scott Productions and ATC's NuVoices Festival. She also has been featured in
local commercials.
For two years, Adkins helped develop Create Carolina, an arts project bringing together
Winthrop University students and professional arts experts from across the country.
Create Carolina was founded by Charles Randolph-Wright, famed director of MOTOWN and
screenplay writer for Showtime, HBO and 20th Century Fox.
Adkins was born in Charlotte and grew up in Rock Hill. She attended Winthrop College,
graduating Magna Cum Laude in 1968. She earned an M.A. from Winthrop in French. She
taught French and theatre at York Comprehensive High School for 43 years, directing
and producing plays at the school.
Kitty Wilson-Evans '92 is a nationally acclaimed historical-interpreter and storyteller. Her most famous
slave re-enactment is the character of Kessie, who Wilson-Evans portrayed at Historic
Brattonsville in York County during the 1990s and up until her retirement in 2010.
She blazed new trails at this historic site by being the first African-American interpreter.
Wilson-Evans received many awards and recognitions for her interpretive work, including
the Rock Hill/York County Convention and Visitors Bureau Heart of Industry Tourism
Award (2010), the Jubilee Festival Heritage Award (2009) and the Robert E. Lee Service
Award from the Ben Caudill Camp, Sons of Confederate Veterans (2008). Wilson-Evans
co-authored a book with Lucinda Dunn entitled "Kessie's Tale," based on stories of
Kessie, a young slave girl at Brattonsville in the early 1800s.
Wilson-Evans was born at Fort Benning, Georgia. She earned a B.A. from the University
of South Carolina and a M.A. in children's literature from Winthrop. Wilson-Evans
has performed in rural schools with the SC Arts Commission and worked as a teacher
with the Chapter I in Lancaster County public schools and in private schools as well.
Family Trust Federal Credit Union was established by employees at the Rock Hill Printing and Finishing Co. in 1957,
and its 60th anniversary celebration this year will emphasize the philosophy of "people
helping people." First located in a stock room at the textile plant, it provided a
way for employees to save and acquire loans when denied by traditional banks or taken
advantage of by loan sharks.
Originally called the RHP&F Federal Credit Union, it was open only to employees of
the plant. Later, as the mill declined, the credit union sought members elsewhere
and changed its name in 1988 to better reflect its wider audience. A community charter
that allowed it to serve anyone who lives, works, worships or goes to school in York
County was approved in 2000.
Today, the credit union has more than $455 million in assets, 50,000 members and seven
branches throughout York County. It employs 153 and offers the same products and services
as most major financial institution including investments, digital banking and mortgages.
In 2015, the credit union opened a three-story headquarters where the first branch
once stood, and features nine pieces of artwork commissioned from six Winthrop art
students. The company is devoted to giving back to its community, especially to teachers
and education. Contributions include $10,000 in teacher grants and a school planner
distributed annually to 7,500 educators across the county.
For more information, contact Whitney Hough, director of communications and community engagement for the College of Visual and
Performing Arts, at 803/323-2399 or houghw@winthrop.edu, or visit the website at www.winthrop.edu/arts.