Hide/Unhide Content
This is a great option for pages with a lot of content but you don't want to overwhelm a viewer by displaying it all.
To Add a Paragraph with Hidden Text
- Go to the page you wish to add it to, check out the page and go into the edit mode.
- Place your cursor where you want to place the paragraph
- Click the Snippets button
- Click on Read More and press Insert.
- A table will show up that describes how you should fill out the three rows. "Label" will most liekly, need to be renamed to "Read More."
- Once you are finished you can save your work and go to the Preview tab in OU Campus. If you have any questions about how to use this snippet, please see a member of the Web Team.
Example
Arts advocate and founder of one of the first consulting companies dedicated to emerging artists, Fran Kirmser '93 has numerous Broadway credits, including helping produce Hair, the 2009 Tony Award-Winner for Best Musical Revival. Read More
Biography
A Biography may be found on www.FranKirmser.com.
As a creative producer I strive to conceive and produce timely stories about our world. As a consultant I help young artists with their career decisions and when applicable, with fundraising and promotional work necessary to realize their work to stage.
A professor at 窪蹋勛圖厙, Isabel Brown, said to me my freshman year, "As an artist, work on what you want to say with your art and how it will impact the world around you, then find the people who believe and support it and just dont worry about anyone else!" That was the best advice I got at 窪蹋勛圖厙 and Ive been doing that ever since!
An internship at the National Museum of Dance my senior year entailed cataloguing many boxes of unopened material which yielded dance literary treasures. These treasures sparked an idea that I produced in Times Square. It was called The Biography Project, and it told the life stories and showcased the early dance works of pioneer artists such as Ruth St. Denis and Isaodra Duncan among others. The major biographical scene in Ruth St. Denis play was based on a letter she wrote to her later-to-be-husband and business partner, Ted Shawn. This series birthed during a 窪蹋勛圖厙 internship helped me to develop my earliest creative work, donors, and investors that later supported my Broadway Productions and emerging artists with whom I was working.
After an injury, I began working off the stage with several arts companies large and small including Shen Wei Dance Arts, the New York Philharmonic, Lucinda Childs Dance Company and Musical Theater Works, among others. I did anything that needed doing on the non-performance side of the stage helping administratively and through that essentially learned how to produce.
Now as a creative producer, I work with artists in developing the art and on the production side I help artists with funding and promotion. Im fortunate to have had two of my productions win Tony Awards; Hair 2009 for Best Musical Revival and Whose Afraid of Virginia Woolf 2013 for Best Play Revival. I strive to make an impact with material choice. In 2008 I conceived a sports series for Broadway beginning with the play Lombardi off the heels of the financial crash that explored stories of resilience against the odds. Lombardi brought the NFL to Broadway for the first time and produced by Kirmser Ponturo Group and the NFL, the play ushered in a reported 146,000 new ticket buyers to the Broadway theater for the first time. The play is now being made into a feature film with Legendary Pictures. Learning how to gather support around an idea is key to producing your art.
My big passion is teaching emerging artists and graduates what they need to do to get their careers started and their projects realized. This work has resulted in a recently published resource titled ALifeInDance.com, which is a practical guide which hopefully helps many dance artists in their life work. Currently Im producing in New York City a newly conceived project called American Scoreboard, a series of time-sensitive and verbatim Senate hearing transcripts read by stage and screen actors free and open to the public and presented in a nonpartisan format in the name of education. AmericanScoreboard.com