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Source:
Myra Gordon, 785-532-6276, mygordon@k-state.edu
http://www.freestateproductions.com/reynolds/index.html
News release prepared by: Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, 785-532-6415,
ebarcomb@k-state.edu
Friday,
January 12, 2007
THEATER
ACTOR, 'DAYS OF OUR LIVES' STAR JAMES REYNOLDS SPEAKING AT K-STATE
JAN. 19 FOR MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. BUST INSTALLATION CEREMONY
MANHATTAN
-- James Reynolds, a television and theater actor best known
for playing Abe Carver on NBC's "Days of Our Lives," will
speak at Kansas State University's installation ceremony of the
Martin Luther King Jr. bust.
The
ceremony is at noon, Friday, Jan. 19, in the field house. The bust
is being placed at the southeast corner of the building.
Reynolds,
who grew up in Oskaloosa, has a one-man show, "I, Too, Am America,"
which calls on the lives and writings of more than 50 African-Americans.
The show has Reynolds interpreting poems from Langston Hughes, delivering
Sojourner Truth's "Ain't I a Woman?" speech and providing
views of slavery and the slave trade. With more than five-and-a-half
hours of material to call on, Reynolds crafts a different performance
for each audience.
Reynolds
has played Abe Carver on the daytime drama "Days of Our Lives"
for more than 22 years, making Carver the longest-running African-American
character in television and Reynolds the only African-American actor
to portray a single character for so many years. He earned an Emmy
nomination for a stint on another daytime drama, "Generations,"
in 1991 before returning to "Days."
After
graduating from high school, Reynolds left Kansas and joined the
Marines, where he became a reporter for the service newspaper, The
Windward Marine. He later served in Vietnam, reporting from the
battlefield in addition to his combat duties. Upon returning to
the United States, Reynolds enrolled at Washburn University in Topeka,
where he majored in pre-law and journalism but caught the acting
bug. He appeared in campus productions and worked with local theater
groups in Topeka.
After
traveling and working as an actor in San Francisco, he returned
to Kansas for several years, writing on theater, film, dance and
music for the Topeka Daily Capital. Today, Reynolds helps head Free
State Productions, a film and TV production company based in Kansas.
He shares a spot on the Kansas Historical Society's list of famous
Kansans alongside President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Amelia Earhart,
Langston Hughes and others.
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