If you’re going to teach the dream, you have to live the dream. Robinson That’s Professor Ursula O. Robinson’s philosophy about teaching professional drama at South Carolina State University.
Her rapidly growing list of acting credits is proof to her students that she teaches from experience and they, too, have chances at success. Local news has never been this personal. Free to download.
Subscribers enjoy unlimited access. “The Professional Drama Program’s motto is ‘Live Your Dreams,’ and how I can lead others to their dream without pursuing mine own?” Robinson said. “I left my dream of working in TV and film to concentrate on my playwriting and teaching aspects of my career.
“But as the Drama Program began to incorporate more TV and film into our curriculum, it was important for us to provide them with up-to-date information about the industry,” she said. “Since I began my journey, I have been in films with my students. Some have graduated with film credits and the tools to move forward in the industry.
We are planning more interactions in the industry to enhance their matriculation.” Robinson’s latest credits include four episodes in the second and third seasons of the television series “Hightown.” She played “Chanise,” a Jamaican seasonal worker who ends up involved in some deep issues.
“I wanted her to be the hard-working woman is presented with a door to the things she dreamed of,” Robinson said. “She had to make a choice that p.
