Contact: Dean Jackson
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Press Release
Coweta County Schools

Date: April 25, 2008

Alan and Denise Jackson, Erksine Caldwell honored with first Brooks Awards at Centre on April 29
 

Attendees of the first annual Richard Brooks Visionary Awards of Artistic Distinction – held this Tuesday, April 29 at the Coweta County Centre for Performing and Visual Arts – are being urged to arrive early.

Centre director Don Nixon is asking audience members to be in their seats no later than 6:50 p.m. that night, as country music superstar Alan Jackson, author and wife Denise Jackson and the late writer Erskine Caldwell are honored as the first inductees into Coweta County’s “arts hall of fame.”

Because of high public interest in the event, unfilled seats will be opened to those without a ticket approximately 5 minutes before the awards ceremony begins at 7:00 p.m.

Seating is limited in the 1,000-seat CPVA, and Brooks Awards tickets offered to the public at 3 p.m. on April 24 were quickly exhausted. “We had such an overwhelming demand for tickets that we gave out the last of them before four o’clock,” said Nixon.

The Brooks Awards are being inaugurated to honor people who have contributed significantly to the arts through Coweta County, and are named for former Coweta County Superintendent Richard Brooks, who will also be among the honorees. They are intended to serve as an ongoing “Coweta County arts hall of fame” and will be given each year afterward to local artists or contributors to the arts in Coweta County, said Nixon.

Tuesday’s ceremony at the Centre for Performing and Visual Arts (CPVA) will welcome Alan and Denise Jackson back home to Coweta County, and Tim Gooding – the grandson of novelist Erskine Caldwell – will be welcomed as he accepts a Brooks Award in honor of the late writer.

All three awards recipients are Coweta County natives – both Jacksons hail from Newnan; Caldwell, who died in 1987, was born near Moreland, where the home he was born in resides today as the Erskine Caldwell Birthplace and Museum. Museum Director Winston Skinner will appear with Gooding as Caldwell is honored for his lifetime literary contributions.

The Jacksons will appear in Newnan earlier in the day as well, at Scott’s Bookstore in downtown Newnan from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Denise Jackson will be signing copies of her new book “The Road Home” and Alan Jackson will be autographing copies of his newest recording.
On Tuesday night, a host of family members, old friends, supporters and dignitaries will welcome them both onstage at the Centre for Performing and Visual Arts in Newnan.

Newnan native and Broadway actor Glen Rainey will serve as Master of Ceremonies for the evening. The honors choirs from Atkinson and Grantville Elementary Schools will serenade the Jacksons during both of their appearances, along with several high school vocalists and instrumentalists. Actor Michael Scialabba will read excerpts from Erskine Caldwell’s “In Search of Bisco.”

Adam and Shannon Wright – who make up the country music duo The Wrights – are among the several members of the Jackson family who will appear onstage Tuesday to honor them, along with lifelong friends, childhood teachers and local community leaders.

Organizers of the brooks Awards urge attendees to consider making a donation to arts scholarships offered through the Centre for Performing and Visual Arts.

The scholarships are awarded to local graduates who are pursuing studies in the fine arts, including the music, the visual arts, theatre, dance and other fields served by the Centre.

“The scholarships benefit talented students in Coweta County who are pursuing a career in the arts,” said Nixon. “They help worthy students follow their dreams, just as the people who we are honoring Tuesday night have, and we hope the scholarships will encourage the same spirit of excellence that is being honored by the Brooks Awards.”

Nixon said that he has been very gratified to see the community interest in Tuesday’s awards ceremony.

“It is very encouraging to see people in the community react as they have and want to honor these people,” said Nixon. “And this gives us a chance to show our appreciation to Richard Brooks for his courage and willingness to envision, and win community support, for the creation of the Centre for Performing and Visual Arts.”

Tuesday night’s awards are named for Brooks – who served as school superintendent from 1994 to 2002 - for his stewardship over the planning and construction of the Lower Fayetteville Road Centre. The Centre will begin in 5th year of operation this April. Brooks and school board members included the Centre as one of the major projects proposed to voters in Coweta County’s first Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax, which was passed in 1997 by local citizens.

Since its opening the Centre has received significant public support and use, said Nixon. “Because of that, people can easily forget that the Centre was originally met with some skepticism. People were not sure it was going to be used by our students and our community, or that it would be a worthwhile value to the community.”

That wasn’t surprising, said Nixon, “because in 1997, when the Centre was first proposed, it was very new and very different. It was visionary then, it was visionary when it was being built 5 years ago, it remains visionary today.”

“We have visitors from other communities who come to the Centre today, just like visitors from around the country tour the Central Educational Center. Everyone is floored when they realize the Centre is owned by the school system, and yet it makes sense when they see what it does for students and our schools. And just like at CEC, they want to see what we do here and how we make it work because they want to create something like it for their own communities,” said Nixon.

“That makes a huge statement about our community, and also about Richard Brooks’ vision for this Centre,” said Nixon. “It took courage on his part to do this and he had a board behind him that agreed and backed him up, and the whole community has benefited.”

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