Rehabilitation Through the Arts

Rehabilitation Through The Arts (RTA) was founded by Katherine Vockins in 1996 in Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Ossining, New York and now operates in five men's and women's, maximum and medium security New York State prisons: Sing Sing, Bedford Hills, Woodbourne, Green Haven and Fishkill. RTA is the lead program of Prison Communities International, a registered tax-exempt non-profit organization.

Background

RTA began in Sing Sing with a group of men who wanted help writing and presenting a play, and has since expanded to include dance, movement, visual arts, voice, music, literature and creative writing.

Mission

RTA uses creative arts to build skills in communication, leadership, problem-solving, conflict resolution and respect for self and others. These life skills help prisoners reconnect with family, pursue education and re-enter community life on release.

The Program

RTA runs innovative creative arts workshops in various aspects of theatre - improvisation, playwriting, devised, physical and technical theatre, Shakespeare studies - along with dance, movement, visual arts, voice, music and creative writing. Inmates perform in workshop and full scale productions of both original and published works. RTA also operates a successful modern dance program for men - the only program of its kind nation- (and perhaps world) wide.

Through creative arts, prisoners develop their ability to communicate, collaborate, set goals, express themselves and imagine alternate scenarios. Even in the harsh environment of prison, trust and community can build. Prisoners undergo a profound transformation; on release, many RTA alumni express remorse for their crimes by working in gang prevention, substance abuse and educational programs that help others make better choices in life.

Two research studies have clearly demonstrated the positive effects of the RTA program. John Jay College of Criminal Justice's 2003 study with the NYS Department of Correctional Services showed that RTA participants had fewer infractions and spent fewer days in keeplock than a control group. A 2010 study conducted by SUNY Purchase and the NYS Department of Correctional Services concluded that RTA participants complete the GED earlier in their incarceration, more RTA participants complete educational programs beyond the GED, and that after joining RTA, participants spent an almost three-fold increase in time enrolled in post-GED courses than those who did not participate.

RTA invites over 250 community guests to its full scale productions in Sing Sing Correctional Facility each year. These are extraordinary opportunities for the public to peak behind prison walls; they are amazed at the intelligence, talent and humanity they find there.

RTA's classes and productions are facilitated by over 30 volunteers who fan out to remote prisons across three state counties. These volunteers are professional artists and experienced teachers - most have advanced degrees and many teach in prestigious academic institutions such as NYU's graduate program in Educational Theatre, Bard College, Catholic University, Drew University and Wesleyan University. RTA counts among its facilitators Kim Breden, Connie Grappo, Richard Hamburger, John Lloyd, Kate Powers and Gary Sloan.

Theatrical Productions

The following plays were produced as a part of Rehabilitation Through The Arts at Sing Sing Correctional Facility, Ossining, NY:

Golden Boy

Our Town

A Few Good Men

Superior Donuts

Starting Over

Macbeth

Of Mice and Men

West Side Story

Stories from the Inside Out

The N_____ Trial

Breakin' the Mummy's Code[1]

Jitney

Fine Print

12 Angry Men[2]

Stratford's Decision[3]

Reality in Motion

SLAM

Voices From Within

A Few Good Men

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

The Sacrifice

An Evening of Theatre, Four Original One-Act Plays

When We're Home

Reality in Motion

Productions Outside of Sing Sing Prison:

The Bull Pen

Two Trains Running

Back House Productions

The "Nigger" Trial

Voices From the Inside

Benefits and Events

RTA held its first New York City Benefit performance From Sing Sing to Broadway – An Evening Without Walls in June 2006 at Playwrights Horizons Theatre, with special guest performance by Charles Dutton.

RTA's November 2010 benefit "The Inside Story", directed by Connie Grappo, featured Broadway actors Lee Wilkoff and Anne Twomey, performances by RTA alumni and an exciting auction of artwork created by RTA participants behind prison walls.

Board Members

Board members of Prison Community International are: Katherine Vockins; Suzanne Kessler; William Hanauer; Robin Melen; Richard Waksman; Hans Hallundbaek; Jens Schott Knudsen; Raji Mangat; Mark Wallace; Sean Dino Johnson and Jabbar Collins.

Funding

RTA is funded through foundation grants and private donors such as The Kalliopeia Foundation, The Sunshine Lady Foundation, The Bloomberg Foundation, EILEEN FISHER, numerous church groups and individuals.

References

External links

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