Posted on May 19, 2025

David Furr, Assistant Professor of Acting for the Camera banner

College of Visual and Performing Arts Dean bruce d. mcclung has announced the appointment of David Furr as Assistant Professor of Acting for the Camera. 

David Furr is a Tony-, Drama Desk-, and SAG Award-nominated actor with over 25 years of professional experience across Broadway, Off Broadway, television, film, regional theatre, voiceover, and audiobook narration. His frequent appearances on Broadway include Tony-nominated revivals such as King Lear, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, The Importance of Being Earnest, Noises Off, and Burn This, as well as The Rivals, Accent on Youth, and Cymbeline.  David has performed in well over half the Shakespearean canon at major theatres nationwide and received The Falstaff Award and Actors’ Equity Association’s St. Clair Bayfield Award for his performances at The Public Theater’s Shakespeare in the Park. 

In addition to his stage work, Furr is known for portraying Dashiell Montgomery on HBO’s The Gilded Age (SAG Award Nomination), as well as for significant recurring roles in such popular series as The Man in the High Castle, Bull, TURN: Washington’s Spies, Mr. Mercedes, and Odd Mom Out. His film work includes notable appearances in Evening, 13 Hours, The Highwaymen, The Sounding, and more. Furr is also a seasoned voice actor, lending his voice to a wide range of dramatic, commercial, and narration projects, including audiobooks for Our Enemies Will Vanish and Chernobyl Roulette

Alongside his performance career, Furr has spent more than 15 years coaching, mentoring, and conducting workshops for actors as they navigate the professional industry. He holds a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Acting from the Alabama Shakespeare Festival/University of Alabama and brings a collaborative and industry-informed approach to actor training with a focus on cultivating authentic human connection. 

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Posted on April 30, 2025

Featured Image for Landing in the right place with theatre

As a child, Erin Lambertson had her sights set on a gymnastic career, but an injury changed her course. Read about how she “stuck the landing” with her pivot to theatre.

What has been your journey in the arts and how did you find your way to UNCG’s College of Visual and Performing Arts?  

I grew up in the boondocks, on a crop farm in rural Maryland, so I really didn’t have any theatrical plans. My hometown, Stockton, has a population of about 70 people. I was doing gymnastics and other sports. I wanted to make it to the Olympics in gymnastics, but I had a knee injury when I was 12. That put an end to the gymnastics, and my mom put me in a theatre troupe which was doing a production of Annie. I auditioned, and that was my first show. 

I stayed with that children’s theatre group through middle school, and by then I was really hooked. My need to understand myself and others just took over all my other interests. 

I auditioned for colleges during COVID, so everything was online. There’s already a barrier to doing things over the internet, and I was having a hard time connecting to any of the schools. But when I “walked in” to the Zoom room for UNC Greensboro, it was like all the walls had dropped. It felt like the professors really wanted to get to know me as a person. 

 
I had not experienced a school that was interested in me both as a performer and as a person. I think you see a lot of other programs that try to fit performers into these consumer boxes of how they can be marketable. But during the UNCG audition, I felt like the focus was on who I am and the stories I want to tell, and that has been the truth ever since I’ve been here. I have felt like my artistic voice comes first, and that the classes highlight that and have trained my storytelling abilities.  

 
How has the UNCG School of Theatre been a good fit for you? 

Because we are such small cohorts, we get a lot of individualized training with the professors. The professors are young and still working in the industry, so we get to see their pursuit of their careers, which inspires us in our own work. I also feel like there’s just not as much competitiveness as in some other programs. Everyone at UNCG Theatre is so supportive of each other. 

What has been your best experience here at UNCG? 

It’s hard to pick just one, but working with Jim Wren (Professor Emeritus of Theatre) on Wild Party was great. I was in the ensemble, and it was the first time I’d had a director that really encouraged us to physicalize our characters, which I feel has been informative for my personal growth. Playing Carrie this fall was really fun. That role taught me a lot about stamina and self-care. It’s a super demanding role, emotionally. 
  

Godspell last spring was also very fulfilling, the way we ebbed and flowed off each other’s creativity.  
 

What is the biggest lesson you’ve learned while at UNCG?  

  
I think I’m still learning it. I think I’ll be learning it for a while, but just to trust myself and my creative vision and knowing that what I have to offer should be offered unapologetically. That really came to light for me during Side Show. I was Assistant Director with Tug Watson (Assistant Professor of Musical Theatre Choreography/Directing) as Director. Sometimes when Tug asked my opinion I would say ‘I don’t know, you’re the director.’ But he allowed such an open space that I began to feel comfortable speaking my mind. 

 
What are your future plans? 
I’d like to move to New York, maybe book a cruise or tour, something that will allow me to travel. But for now, the plan is just to get to New York. I can definitely see myself directing some more, in addition to acting. Even when I’m on stage, I have a sense of what’s going on at all times, just not with my role. I found when I was behind the director’s table, I was easily tracking everything and seeing the whole picture, so my brain works for directing, and I found a new joy in it.  
 

What is your advice for incoming students?  

Start figuring out what your interests are and take your creative process from there. I think I spent too much time in my earlier years as a student trying to figure out what everyone else was interested in so that I could adapt and become that. But in the last two years, I’ve started learning more about what parts of theatre I’m drawn to and why I’m drawn to create and that has helped me become a better artist. So, my advice, in a word, is self-discovery. 

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Posted on May 10, 2025

Angelica Kankam MFA Dance

Angelic Kankam’s journey to UNCG’s School of Dance started half a world away. Learn more about she found her way from Ghana to Greensboro in this Commencement Interview. 

What has been your journey in the arts and how did you find your way to UNCG’s College of Visual and Performing Arts? 

I grew up in a performing arts family. My mom sings. My dad sings. We all play instruments, so we’ve always had that performance artistry in the family. I danced in high school, mostly just for the fun of it, but when I went to the University of Ghana, I enrolled in the performing arts program—music, dance, and theatre. I would say that is where my academic journey in the arts began and where I received my Bachelor of Fine Arts. 

After that four-year program, I did my required national service at the University as a teaching assistant. All during that time, I was looking for ways to learn new dance techniques. I watched YouTube videos and took every workshop I could, and then an opportunity came up for me to teach with a dance company as a ballet instructor for three-to-six-year-olds. I was also doing some choreographing for some artists and at some corporate events.  

I had decided I wanted to go back to school and to do that in the United States. I did some searching online and asking friends who had gone to the United States for graduate school, and one of them mentioned UNC Greensboro. I checked the UNCG School of Dance website and looked at the faculty and what they were working on. I had read about BJ Sullivan and her Safety Release Technique, and I read about Robin Gee’s work, too. I also looked at information about graduates and what they were doing and checked out all the opportunities that students had here. 

How has the UNCG School of Dance been a good fit for you? 

As an international student, funding is important, so having the opportunity to be a graduate assistant helped me make the decision to come—that and knowing that I’d be able to teach because pedagogy is an important aspect of choreography. For your choreography to be performed, you must be able to teach it. 

One of the things that I think really stands out for me at the CVPA School of Dance is the sense of community. You feel it in the classroom and in the halls. The laughter in these spaces is just amazing. 

What has been your best experience here at UNCG? 


I found myself in a School of Dance graduate program not knowing anyone. Everything was new. The support I received from everyone was massive, and I’m extremely grateful for that. It feels like a foundation that this program has been built on—so it wasn’t hard for them to, you know, bring me in, pull me in. The support and the push you get in classes is a highlight for me. 
  

What is the biggest lesson you’ve learned while at UNCG? 

I’ve learned that it is important to ask for help when you need it. There are times when you feel that you’re self-sufficient, that you can figure this out myself. But know that the help is there and give yourself the grace to find it. I hardly ever asked for help back home in Ghana, and it’s a great lesson that I’ve learned here. If I’m overwhelmed, I know that I can speak with someone and receive guidance. I want my students to know that too. Sometimes I just sit in a circle with my students and ask how their week is going. Just having that circle moment is really helpful in relieving stress for all of us. 

 
What are your future plans?  

I can stay in the United States for a year of optional practical training in the field that I’ve studied, so I want to take advantage of that opportunity. But in my bigger plans, I see myself going back to Ghana and working in the performing arts there. I’m happy that my country is more open and appreciative of the arts lately, but there is still work to be done, and I know that it’s definitely in my life plan. I’d like to start a project in Ghana—start a movement in Ghana—to build a performing arts space. It would be a place to share our culture and to give children easy access to the arts. 

What is your advice for incoming students? 
 
Enjoy the process. 

You might think of the end goal as the important thing, but I believe everything that’s happening to get you to that finish line is in a way more important.  

Also, believe in yourself and go for it. You are here for a reason. You weren’t accepted into this School by chance. There’s something unique about you that the world needs, and the world is eager to see. This is this moment. 

Photo from Angelica’s thesis production “Agoro: A Day in the 90’s” which draws inspiration from childhood games

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Posted on May 07, 2025

Yoki Miu Chi Lai, Assistant Professor of Scene Design

College of Visual and Performing Arts Dean bruce d. mcclung has announced the appointment of Yoki Miu Chi Lai as Assistant Professor of Scene Design.

Lai is a set, costume, and production designer for theatre performances and corporate events, having worked on over 120 productions in Hong Kong and internationally.

She has taught MFA and BFA courses at the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts and has designed sets for the Public Broadcasting Services, the Asia Society, Princeton University, and Fortune Live Media in the United States; the Rose Theatre and the Haymarket Theatre Company in the United Kingdom; Queensland Conservatorium Theatre in Australia; Wild Rice in Singapore; Shanghai Theatre Above and Shenzhen Media Group in mainland China; and for leading theatre companies in Hong Kong including the Hong Kong Repertory Theatre, Hong Kong Opera, Hong Kong Arts Festival, and the Emperor Entertainment group. She was the Resident Designer for Chung Ying Theatre Company from 2003 to 2005.

Lai has received awards including Best Set Design and Best Make-up and Image Design as well as Best Costume Design Nomination from the Hong Kong Federation of Drama Societies. She was awarded the Donald and Zorca Oenslager Fellowship Award in Design in 2008 and the Eldon Elder Fellowship in 2007 and 2008 at Yale University; and an Asian Cultural Council Fellowship in New York in 2007.

Lai worked as a full-time assistant for Santo Loquasto in New York City for his various Broadway productions from 2008 to 2010. She was Ming Cho Lee’spersonal assistant in 2011 for his world-renowned prominent set designer exhibition in Shanghai and Ningbo, China.

Lai holds a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) from Yale University School of Drama and a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) from the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts.

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Posted on April 30, 2025

Featured Image for Heavy Metal Runs In The Family

For Claire Lewis art has been in her heart, and in her family, for a very long time. Read more about how she’s forging her way in this Commencement Interview.

What has been your journey in the arts and how did you find your way to UNC Greensboro’s College of Visual and Performing Arts? 

I have always been drawn to art. I really haven’t ever done much else other than that. I was pretty sick as a kid, and art was a big source of comfort and a coping mechanism for me. It was my outlet. I was also home-schooled, so I was able to do more art than in a traditional school. After high school, I went to a community college and got my associate’s degree. 

My parents, Emily (’98 BFA Art) and Casey Lewis (’99 BFA Art), are both metal artists and UNC Greensboro Art Alumni from the same program as me. You know when you’re a kid, you think “I want to be just like them.” But I diverted a little and went to VCU (Virginia Commonwealth University) for a year. It wasn’t the right fit, so I found my way back here! 

 
How has the UNCG School of Art been a good fit for you? 
  

I found a great sense of community here. That sounds cliché, but it’s true. Everyone’s so connected. We’re always in the studio, and we bounce ideas off each other. I feel really at home here. I also like the fact that I can connect with my teachers. I can talk with them about whatever is on my mind and get good feedback. Overall, I feel very supported. 

As an artist, I use fiber and metals. Crochet is my primary fiber medium, and here at UNCG I’ve really focused on metalworking. I’ve gotten into casting and have loved being on Kevin Vanek’s (Academic Professional: Associate Professor of Sculpture and Foundry Director) furnace building crew this semester. The Iron Pour events have been great—I was on the floor the whole time for the most recent one. 

I love the way the professors here stay connected with alumni, and I hope to do that as well. 

What has been your best experience here at UNCG? 

I have learned so much from Kevin, and one of the best things I’ve been able to do here is to be a part of the team representing UNCG at the National Conference on Contemporary Cast Iron Art and Practices in Alabama this semester. We participated in the cupola competition. The cupula is a portable furnace used for metalworking, and each team built one and took it to show. I got to connect with so many other metal artists, and we did really well in the competition. 

What is the biggest lesson you’ve learned while at UNCG? 

I’ve learned that I need to take my time. I feel like I’ve always been such an overachiever in a hurry to get to a final product. But being able to enjoy the artistic process is the biggest part of it all. Take time in art and take time with life.  

 
What are your future plans? 
 
I run a successful crochet business, Handmade by Hootie. I make crocheted stuffed animals and have several show circuits that I do throughout the year. I’m hoping to amp that up while also looking for a metal shop foundry job. It’s possible that I might work with my parents at some point in the future, but I’m trying to branch out first. 

 
What is your advice for incoming students? 


Connect with your classmates. Make friends because you’re going to be around these people a lot, especially if you’re going into sculpture. I’m generally in the studio about 16 hours a day, so making friends with as many people as you can means that you’re never alone.  

Try to connect with your professors and new friends, and you’ll gain so much outside perspective and knowledge. I was able to have that experience, and I hope future students do as well.  

I’ve loved my time at UNCG, and I hope I’ll be able to stay involved with this community, maybe through future iron pour events and The Artist Guild. I’d like to help the guild stay in touch with alumni, because I want to stay connected for as long as possible! 

Story by Terri W Relos

Photo credit: Bjorn Bates (photo of Claire working the furnace) and Claire Lewis (photos of metal and crochet work)

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Posted on May 07, 2025

Sandra Andrade as Assistant Professor of Animation

College of Visual and Performing Arts Dean bruce d. mcclung has announced the appointment of Sandra Andrade as Assistant Professor of Animation. 

Andrade is a passionate artist, educator, and creative professional dedicated to the worlds of animation and game development. She is currently working on several productions within the animation and game industries, including serving as a character modeling supervisor, leading teams through the design and development of stylized and realistic characters.  

She has spent the last four years teaching in higher education, helping students build the skills and confidence they need to break into the industry and genuinely loves teaching and views it as an extension of her passion for storytelling and design. Her pedagogy strives to bridge the gap between academic learning and real-world practice, showing students not just how to use industry tools, but how to think critically and creatively about the stories that they want to tell. 

Creating unique characters and immersive worlds has always been at the heart of Andrade’s work, whether it be sculpting in ZBrush, developing game-ready assets, or mentoring student teams, and her goal is to continue creating—and inspiring others to create—meaningful stories through the power of animation and games. 

Andrade holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Media Arts and Animation from the Art Institute of Philadelphia; and a Master of Fine Arts in Visual Effects and Animation, a Master of Arts in Game Development, and a Master of Arts in Visual Development from the Academy of Art University.  

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Posted on April 23, 2025

Announcement of Leilei Xia to School of Art
Announcement of Leilei Xia to School of Art

College of Visual and Performing Arts Dean bruce d. mcclung has announced the appointment of Leilei Xia as Assistant Professor of New Media & Design.

Born in Guangzhou, China, Leilei Xia is a multimedia artist who works in tactile art, experimental animation, video art, and participatory workshops and collective works. As the founder of the tactile art collective Tactileye and one of the editors of the independent science zine Icosa Magazine, Leilei often uses the format of role-playing and storytelling to explore the theme of body, tactility, and accessibility. She is interested in combining the process and result of creating art, treating art not only as a noun but also as a verb.

Xia’s tactile workshops have been hosted at the UCCA Center for Contemporary Art, Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts, A4 International Artist Residency, Transcultural Exchange in Boston, Accent Sister in New York, and the Institution of Contemporary Art at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU). Her films and animation have been awarded or selected for such festivals as the Ann Arbor Film Festival, StopTrik Animation Festival, Berlin Female Filmmaker Festival, and Paris International Animation Festival. Her works have been exhibited in New York, Greensboro, Richmond, Guangzhou, and in other cities. She was also one of the speakers at TEDxVCU 2023.

Xia holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) from Rhode Island School of Design and a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) from Virginia Commonwealth University.

Please join us in welcoming Leilei Xia to the CVPA family!

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Posted on April 08, 2025

Kari A. Adams Faculty Announcement Banner, Assistant Professor of Choral Music Education, CVPA UNCG

College of Visual and Performing Arts Dean bruce d. mcclung has announced the appointment of Kari Adams as Assistant Professor of Choral Music Education. 

Dr. Adams is currently Assistant Professor of Choral Music Education at the University of Missouri. She previously served on the faculty of Florida State University, where she was awarded the Outstanding Teaching in the Major (Undergraduate) Award in 2023. Prior to her career in higher education, Dr. Adams taught middle school choir in Knob Noster, Missouri, where she was named Teacher of the Year in 2015. 

An active guest conductor and clinician, Dr. Adams has conducted All State and regional honor choirs in Florida, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. She has presented at state practitioner conferences in six states as well as at national American Choral Directors Association and National Association for Music Education conferences. Her articles focused on research-based strategies for practitioners have been published in the Choral JournalFlorida Music Director, Music Educators Journal, and Update: Applications of Research in Music Education. 

Dr. Adams’s research has been published in leading journals in the field including Journal of Research in Music Education, Journal of Music Teacher Education, Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education, Update, and International Journal of Research in Choral Singing. She currently serves on the editorial board for Update and as the chair of Society for Research in Music Education’s Learning and Development Special Research Interest Group. 

Dr. Adams holds a PhD in Music Education from the University of North Texas, a Master of Arts (MA) in Choral Conducting from University of Central Missouri, and a Bachelor of Music (BM) in Music Education from Freed Hardeman University.  

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Posted on April 07, 2025

Alessandra Feris Faculty Announcement Banner, Assistant Professor of Piano, CVPA UNCG

College of Visual and Performing Arts Dean bruce d. mcclung has announced the appointment of Alessandra Feris as Assistant Professor of Piano. 

Brazilian pianist Alessandra Feris has performed widely in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, England, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Mexico, Portugal, Serbia, and the United States, making successful solo debuts in major venues such as the Theatro São Pedro in Porto Alegre (Brazil), the Auditório León de Greiff in Bogotá (Colombia), the Costa Rican National Theater, the Steinway Haus in Frankfurt (Germany), and the Palácio de Bellas Artes (Sala Manuel M. Ponce) in Mexico City.  

Dr. Feris is currently an Associate Professor of Piano at the University of South Dakota. She previously served on the Piano Faculty and as Artist-in-Residence at Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College. 

Committed to excellence in teaching, Dr. Feris is the winner of the John Simms Piano Award at the University of Iowa, the Outstanding Teaching Assistant Award at Florida State University, and the Mississippi Humanities Council Teacher of the Year Award. Her students are frequent winners of piano competitions such as the state MTNA Young Artist Competition and the University of South Dakota Concerto Competition. She is devoted to the diffusion of Latin-American piano music and is often invited to premiere works by contemporary composers and   is an artist-teacher at the InterHarmony International Music Festival in Italy and at the Lancaster International Piano Festival in Pennsylvania. 

Dr. Feris holds a Bachelor of Music (BM) from the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil, a Master of Music (MM) from the University of Iowa, and a DM (Doctor of Music) degree from Florida State University. Her teachers include Dirce Knijnik, Thomas Steinhöfel, Réne Lecuona, Read Gainsford, and the legendary Lazar Berman. 

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Posted on April 03, 2025

Ryan Reynolds Faculty Announcement Banner, Assistant Professor of Bassoon and Chamber Music, CVPA UNCG
Ryan Reynolds Faculty Announcement Banner, Assistant Professor of Bassoon and Chamber Music, CVPA UNCG, v1

College of Visual and Performing Arts Dean bruce d. mcclung has announced the appointment of Ryan Reynolds as Assistant Professor of Bassoon and Chamber Music. 

Reynolds is a member of the GRAMMY™-award-winning ensemble Akropolis Reed Quintet and is known for his pedagogy, activity within the American chamber music circuit, output as a recording artist, and commitment to creative and collaborative artmaking. An award-winning chamber musician, Dr. Reynolds has won prizes at six national chamber music competitions, including the Gold Medal at the 2014 Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition.  

Dr. Reynolds tours internationally with Akropolis and has released six studio albums with the ensemble. The most recent album, Are We Dreaming the Same Dream?, was released in April 2024 in collaboration with composer/pianist Pascal Le Boeuf and drummer Christian Euman, and won a 2025 GRAMMY™ award. Dr. Reynolds has performed with orchestras throughout the United States including the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra, Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra, and Savannah Philharmonic Orchestra, among others.  

As an educator, Dr. Reynolds has previously held teaching positions at Miami University and Eastern Michigan University. He has served on the faculties of the Renova Music Festival and the Maine Chamber Music Seminar and currently teaches each summer at the Interlochen Adult Chamber Music Camp and the Akropolis Chamber Music Institute. He has given masterclasses and lectures in Canada, Germany, Spain, the United Arab Emirates, and at many American colleges and universities.  

Dr. Reynolds is a graduate of Interlochen Arts Academy, holds a Bachelor of Music (BM) and Master of Music (MM) from the University of Michigan, and a Doctor of Music (DM) from Florida State University. He is grateful to his teachers Eric Stomberg, Jeffrey Lyman, and Jeff Keesecker. Reynolds is a Fox Artist and performs exclusively on a Fox 601 bassoon. 

Please join us in welcoming Ryan Reynolds to the CVPA family!  

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