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Farquhar College of Arts and Sciences
Performing and Visual Arts

Performing and Visual Arts

Faculty and Staff

Michael Caldwell Michael Caldwell, D.M.A.
Michael is a concert pianist, respected music educator, arts administrator, and arts advocate, who currently serves as director of the Division of Performing and Visual Arts in the Farquhar College of Arts and Sciences at Nova Southeastern University.
A 1990 Pianist Foundation of America “Pianist of the Year”, Michael has appeared in concert on four continents as a United States Artistic Ambassador to countries in South America, Europe, the Middle and Near East, and Africa, under the auspices of the U.S. Information Agency, in a position created by President Ronald Reagan. In 1995, he was the national committee chair for diversity for the College Music Society, a William Grant Still National Symposium Fellow, and he served as a panelist for the National Endowment for the Arts American Music Recording Project. In 1999, he was one of three pianists selected to perform at the Ivan Davis Tribute at Festival Miami. In 2004, Michael made his 21st Century debut in South Florida with a multi-media update of the piano recital, “Music of Magic, Mystery and Romance” in Ralph R. Bailey Concert Hall, where he returned on April 22, 2007, to appear as piano soloist with the Broward Symphony Orchestra in a performance of Ludwig van Beethoven’s “Emperor” Concerto. Michael’s civic experience has included symphony orchestra, cultural theatre, music academy, and library board memberships in New Mexico, North Carolina, and Tennessee. He received his undergraduate and master’s degrees in music from the University of Miami in Florida and his doctor of musical arts degree and highest graduate honors from the University of Arizona at Tucson. Michael’s extra-musical adventures include working as a CBS-TV news reporter and creating and hosting cultural radio and television programs in Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee. He most recently served as associate dean of  Visual and Performing Arts at Broward College.

Mark DuncanMark Duncan, M.F.A. (Coordinator of Performing Arts/Assistant Professor of Theatre/ Artistic Director)
Mark earned an M.F.A. in acting from Virginia Commonwealth University, a B.A. in theatre from Coastal Carolina University and is a graduate of Chicago’s prestigious Second City Conservatory. Regional and international credits include the Georgia Shakespeare Festival, Theatre of the Stars, New American Theater, Wing and Groove Theatre Company (Chicago), Theatre Virginia, Richmond Shakespeare Festival, Blue Ridge Theatre Festival, Shockoe Slip Theatre Company (Chicago), Hollywood Shakespeare Festival, Rude Mechanical Productions, The Promethean Theatre, and the Sibiu International Theatre Festival, Romania. Mark is an assistant professor of theatre and coordinator of performing arts at Nova Southeastern University. He has served on the faculties at Wesleyan College, University of Central Arkansas, and Virginia Commonwealth University.

Bill AdamsBill J. Adams, D.M.A. (Assistant Professor of Music/Vocal and Musical Director)
After several years performing and teaching in New York and Pennsylvania, Bill J. returned to South Florida to develop a music major and support the expanding arts programs at Nova Southeastern University. Prior to leaving, he completed his doctorate at the University of Miami with opera veteran, Joseph Evans, and wrote An Introduction to Acting for Singers. Bill J. became the director of the Musical Theatre Program at Barry University in Miami Shores and served as artistic director of the award-winning South Florida Choral Arts, Inc. In Pittsburgh, he taught voice lessons in the Conservatory of Performing Arts at Point Park University and served as artistic director of the Renaissance City Men’s Choir. New York credits include: The Rape of the Lock (Ariel), The Bartered Bride (Vašek), Die Zauberflöte (Monostatos), Madama Butterfly (Goro). Regional credits include: A View from the Bridge (Mike), Albert Herring (Mayor), Pump Boys and Dinettes (LM), Man of LaMancha (Anselmo), Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (Joseph), Assassins (Zangara), Little Shop of Horrors (Seymour), The Coronation of Poppea (Arnalta), The Very Last Green Thing (Android), Falstaff (Dr. Cajus), Manon (Guillot), and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (Cheswick).

Dan GelbmannDan Gelbmann, M.F.A. (Assistant Professor of Theatre/Technical Director)
Daniel is an assistant professor specializing in technical theatre and scene design. He has held professional positions with a number of theatre companies and has particular expertise in Asian theatre. He teaches theatre in the Division of Humanities at the Farquhar College of Arts and Sciences.

Barbara RyanBarbara A. Ryan, M.F.A. (Assistant Professor of Art/Painting)
Barbara received an M.F.A. in painting at the Joint Visual Studies Program of Old Dominion University and Norfolk State University in Norfolk, Virginia (1996) and a B.F.A. in painting at Kutztown University of Pennsylvania (1992). Barbara developed and taught courses for the Museum School at the San Diego Museum of Art and most recently was the gallery director of the Fine Arts Gallery and adjunct professor at Broward College. She will be teaching foundation and visual art studio courses including Two and Three Dimensional Design, Drawing, Life Drawing, and Painting. In addition to the teaching of creative skills, Barbara prepares students for working in the contemporary art world by focusing on the stewardship of fine craftsmanship and productive use of time and resources. Her professional work has been exhibited regionally and nationally and includes painting, drawing, printmaking, and jewelry design. Her work explores the relationship of time, distance and scale, place identity, and themes surrounding body adornment.

Elana Lanczi, M.F.A. (Assistant Professor of Dance/Choreographer)
Elana Lanczi is a dancer and choreographer originally from Boston, Massachusetts. She performed internationally in both South Korea and Brazil and nationally with noted choreographers Sean Curran, Katie Duck, Anita Gonzalez, Li Chiao-Ping, Lionel Popkin, Merian Soto, and Maida Withers, among others. Her own choreography is influenced by the investigation of contemporary dance forms and has been performed throughout Pennsylvania, Virgina, Washington, D.C., and Florida. In 2004, Elana and Miami wheelchair dancer John Beauregard traveled to Koln, Germany, to work with noted German choreographer Gerda Konig on a mixed-ability duet commissioned by Tigertail Productions. In 2005, Elana traveled to Mexico to begin research for a future dance project with the help of Tigertail Productions and an International Cultural Exchange grant. In addition to her work as a dancer and choreographer, Elana has taught at The Harid Conservatory in Boca Raton, FL, and Broward Community College, where she served as the dance program coordinator. Elana holds an M.F.A. in dance choreography and performance from Temple University.

Ed Fitzpatrick ( Performing and Visual Arts Facilities Manager)
Ed earned a bachelor of fine arts in theatre arts from Culver-Stockton College in Canton, Missouri. He worked as a technician for summer stock companies in Kentucky, Ohio, and Missouri before moving to Florida in 1997. Ed was the assistant technical director at the Lake Worth Playhouse in Lake Worth for close to three years. After that, he moved on to the Caldwell Theatre Company in Boca Raton. He was the master carpenter there for six and a half years. During that time, he also worked as a carpenter and technician for Palm Beach Dramaworks in West Palm Beach. He continues to work as a freelance technician for area theaters.

Mark J. Cavanaugh, Ph.D. (Music Director of the NSU "Sharkestra" Pep Band and University Orchestra)
Mark is a conductor, arranger, composer, and pianist. His principal conducting teachers are Kirk Trevor and Tsung Yeh, and he has also studied with Johannes Schlaefly, Emil Simon, Marius Smolij, and Tomas Koutnik , among others.  He has been an invited participant in conducting workshops sponsored by the American Symphony Orchestra League and the Conductors’ Guild, as well as by the International Workshop for Conductors featuring the Bhoduslav Martinu Philharmonic in Zlin, Czech Republic. He is also the founder of the NSU Commencement Orchestra, now it in its eighteenth year. The  orchestra draws from the best local talent in South Florida and former members have gone on to  memberships in prestigious musical organizations such as the United States Marine Band (The “President’s Own”),  the Florida Philharmonic, and the original London cast of the Broadway show Blast!. Mark has arranged and conducted for many different ensembles, including symphony orchestras in the United States and Europe, including the South Bend (IN) Symphony and the Austin (TX) Symphony orchestras. He has also written for marching bands, big bands, and vocal ensembles, and has composed the two school songs for Nova Southeastern University. At NSU, he is the founder and music director of both the “Sharkestra” pep band and the university orchestra. Mark holds a bachelor’s degree from Iona College and master’s and doctor’s degrees from the University of Notre Dame.

Jennifer Donelson, D.M.A. (Assistant Professor of Music)
Jennifer Donelson received her D.M.A. in Piano Performance from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and has studied with Paul Barnes, Mark Clinton, Ann Chang-Barnes, Robert Groves, and Quentin Faulkner. A specialist in the piano works and writings of Olivier Messiaen, she has lectured on and given performances of portions of the Vingt Regards sur l’Enfant-Jésus throughout the United States, France and Mexico.  Dr. Donelson has been awarded numerous academic fellowships, as well as a grant supporting her research at the Bibliothèque Nationale de France on the controversy surrounding the premiere of Messiaen’s Vingt Regards.  She is the founding director of the Cor Immaculatae Schola Cantorum, a professional vocal ensemble dedicated to the performance of Gregorian chant and sacred polyphony.  She also currently directs scholae cantorum at St. Michael the Archangel and St. Robert Bellarmine parishes in Miami. 

Chetachi Egwu, Ph.D. (Choreographer)
Chetachi was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan, to Nigerian parents and raised in Buffalo, New York. She completed her bachelor of arts in communication at the State University of New York at Buffalo in 1996. While a student there, Chetachi undertook many ventures, including dancing with Buffalo’s renowned African dance company, Kakilambe. Chetachi earned a Ph.D. in communication from Howard University in 2005. She has served on the faculties of Howard University, Morgan State University, and the George Washington University and currently serves as an assistant professor in the Farquhar College of Arts and Sciences' Division of Humanities. As Chetachi's passion for communication and academia grew, so did her passion for dance. She has studied under and performed the choreography of several well-respected dancers, including Sherrill Berryman-Johnson, Deborah Riley, Carla Perlo, Chris Aiken, Mohammed DaCosta, Nejla Yatkin, and Reggie Glass. She has been a company member of Carla & Company, Coyaba Dance Theater, and the Choreographers’ Collaboration Project and has also danced various projects with companies like Son Urbano. Chetachi feels that being immersed in both the dance and the academic world gives her a unique perspective that helps her to excel in both.

Margaret LedfordMargaret M. Ledford
Margaret hails from Chattanooga, Tennessee, where she received her bachelor of arts in theatre and speech from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. She studied Cubo-Expressionistic Scenography post-WWI in an exchange program with Masaryk University in Brno, Czech Republic. Before moving to Miami, Margaret was a production assistant Off-Broadway for Doctor! Doctor! at the Players Theatre, production stage manager for the historic Barter Theatre in Virginia, and co-founder/co-director for the Renegade Theatre Players in Tennessee. Margaret is the resident director for The Promethean Theatre (TPT), the resident professional theatre company at Nova Southeastern University, and has been nominated for Best Director in this year’s Carbonell Award for TPT’s production of Nilo Cruz’s Two Sisters and a Piano (also nominated for Best Ensemble and Best Sound Design). She is a member of Actors’ Equity Association and serves on the board of the Theatre League of South Florida. Margaret has professionally worked in theatre from New York to Miami over the past 15 years in almost every aspect, granting her the unique and terrific opportunity to have worked with many great theatre artists such as Kathleen Turner, Tony Randall, Jack Klugman, and Tony-award winning director Jack Hoffssiss.