
Photo by Peter Kramer/ Getty Images Entertainment
In April 2002, Oscar winning actress Julie Andrews appeared at the Arkansas Repertory Theatre. The purpose was a fundraiser for a program the Rep had at the time.
The evening consisted of reminiscences from her as well as a conversation with Anne Jansen. It included discussions of her Oscar winning role in Mary Poppins as well as her Oscar nominated turns in The Sound of Music and Victor/Victoria.
Following the performance, there was a dinner on the Rep’s Second Stage. Though she no longer sings due to vocal chord damage following a late 1990s surgery, she did sing a childhood Cockney song about Henry VIII after Rollie Remmel sang to her a childhood song about Charles Lindbergh.
While in Little Rock, she toured the Clinton Materials Project which was processing the papers and items from the Clinton White House in advance of the 2004 opening of the Clinton Presidential Center. She also toured Heifer International.
On February 18, 2008, two time Oscar nominee John Lithgow appeared in Little Rock before a packed house at the Statehouse Convention Center. Sponsored by the Clinton School for Public Service speaker series, he spoke about the importance of the arts. He also read from his children’s stories to the kids in attendance who he brought up to the front.
Over the years, Robinson Center Music Hall has played host to numerous Oscar winners and Oscar nominees.
On February 15, 2008, Oscar nominated actor Sam Waterston appeared at the Clinton Presidential Center in a Kumpuris Distinguished Lecture Series program sponsored by the Clinton School for Public Service and the Clinton Foundation.
It is possible that journalist extraordinaire Roy Reed appears in archival footage of the Oscar winning documentary “Nine from Little Rock” (Documentary, Short-1964) and Oscar nominated Eyes on the Prize: Bridge to Freedom 1965 (Documentary, Feature-1988). First for the Arkansas Gazette and then for The New York Times, Reed was an eyewitness to history being made. What is not in doubt is that he is a character in the Oscar winning film Selma. In that movie, he was played by actor John Lavelle.