Dolores Hydock: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Dolores Hydock.jpg|right|thumb|Dolores Hydock]]
'''Dolores Hydock''' (born c. [[1952]] in Reading, Pennsylvania) is an actor and storyteller.
'''Dolores Hydock''' (born c. [[1952]] in Reading, Pennsylvania) is an actor and storyteller.


Hydock enrolled at George Washington University in Washington D.C. and then took a year off to travel in Europe. When she returned to the United States she transferred to Yale University to study American folklore. For her senior thesis she took on the subject of the Folklore of the American South and found her way to [[Horse Pens Forty]] where she was mentored by [[Warren Musgrove]].
Hydock began performing with her sisters and neighborhood friends as a child. She enrolled at George Washington University in Washington D.C. and then took a year off to travel in Europe. When she returned to the United States she transferred to Yale University to study American folklore. For her senior thesis she took on the subject of the Folklore of the American South and found her way to [[Horse Pens Forty]] where she was mentored by [[Warren Musgrove]].


After graduating, Hydock settled in [[Birmingham]] and became a frequent performer for programs in the [[Birmingham Public Library]] system and at the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]], [[Birmingham Botanical Gardens]], [[Leeds Community Arts Center]] and other venues, as well as at festivals. She has performed extensively in stage productions and as a the lead in one-woman shows for [[Birmingham Festival Theatre]] and [[Terrific New Theatre]], including her own works.
After graduating, Hydock settled in [[Birmingham]] and became a frequent performer for programs in the [[Birmingham Public Library]] system and at the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]], [[Birmingham Botanical Gardens]], [[Leeds Community Arts Center]] and other venues, as well as at festivals. She has performed extensively in stage productions and as a the lead in one-woman shows for [[Birmingham Festival Theatre]] and [[Terrific New Theatre]], including her own works.


Hydock has served as a featured storyteller at the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, Tennessee, and as "Teller-in-Residence" at the International Storytelling Center there. She has released numerous recordings of her original stories and has taught in the drama program at [[Birmingham-Southern College]].
Hydock and [[David Doggett]] co-founded the [[Association of Cajun Music Enthusiasts]] (ACME) in [[1992]]. Hydock has served as a featured storyteller at the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, Tennessee, and as "Teller-in-Residence" at the International Storytelling Center there. She has released numerous recordings of her original stories and has taught in the drama program at [[Birmingham-Southern College]].


<!--As an actress, she has been featured in the one-woman plays Tony Curtis Speaks Italian and All I can Say is 'I Love You,' Take a Ride on the Reading, In Her Own Fashion, Shirley Valentine, The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe, Becoming Dr. Ruth, Fully Committed, The Lady With All the Answers, and Nothing Sacred: An Evening of Stories by Ferrol Sams.-->
==Works==
* "[[Footprint on the Sky|Footprint on the Sky: Voices from Chandler Mountain]]"
* "[[A Sweet Strangeness Thrills My Heart]]"
* "[[In Her Own Fashion]]", about [[Ninette Griffith]]
* "[[Eglamore and Cristobel]]"
* "[[Silence: The Adventure of a Medieval Warrior Woman]]"


==References==
==References==
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==External links==
==External links==
* [https://storypower.org/index.html Dolores Hydock] website
* [https://storypower.org/index.html Dolores Hydock] website
* [https://www.al.com/topic/Dolores%20Hydock/index.html Dolores Hydock] at {{AL}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Hydock, Dolores}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hydock, Dolores}}

Latest revision as of 15:29, 31 May 2023

Dolores Hydock

Dolores Hydock (born c. 1952 in Reading, Pennsylvania) is an actor and storyteller.

Hydock began performing with her sisters and neighborhood friends as a child. She enrolled at George Washington University in Washington D.C. and then took a year off to travel in Europe. When she returned to the United States she transferred to Yale University to study American folklore. For her senior thesis she took on the subject of the Folklore of the American South and found her way to Horse Pens Forty where she was mentored by Warren Musgrove.

After graduating, Hydock settled in Birmingham and became a frequent performer for programs in the Birmingham Public Library system and at the Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham Botanical Gardens, Leeds Community Arts Center and other venues, as well as at festivals. She has performed extensively in stage productions and as a the lead in one-woman shows for Birmingham Festival Theatre and Terrific New Theatre, including her own works.

Hydock and David Doggett co-founded the Association of Cajun Music Enthusiasts (ACME) in 1992. Hydock has served as a featured storyteller at the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, Tennessee, and as "Teller-in-Residence" at the International Storytelling Center there. She has released numerous recordings of her original stories and has taught in the drama program at Birmingham-Southern College.

Works

References

External links