• John O’Rourke

    Editor, BU Today

    John O'Rourke

    John O’Rourke began his career as a reporter at The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour. He has worked as a producer at World Monitor, a coproduction of the Christian Science Monitor and the Discovery Channel, and NBC News, where he was a producer for several shows, including Now with Tom Brokaw and Katie CouricNBC Nightly News, and The Today Show. John has won many awards, including four Emmys, a George Foster Peabody Award, and five Edward R. Murrow Awards. Profile

Comments & Discussion

Boston University moderates comments to facilitate an informed, substantive, civil conversation. Abusive, profane, self-promotional, misleading, incoherent or off-topic comments will be rejected. Moderators are staffed during regular business hours (EST) and can only accept comments written in English. Statistics or facts must include a citation or a link to the citation.

There are 9 comments on University Mourns Legendary Theater Educator

  1. James Spruill was an exemplary American and a maverick in his field of theatre arts. As an educator and community activist, he opened doors for African American artists when most doors were shut. Kudos to Boston University for recognizing Spruill’s talent and nurturing his career over many decades.

  2. Jim was one of my favorite, most impacting teachers of my life. I still tell stories of his classroom direction and audience participation to my theatre students. Especially recalling fond memories of his participation as an audience member at university productions. He would speak to us in the midst of producton, reaching out to our characters, joining the life of the play. Jim taught me so much both as an actress, a teacher and most of all of the joy of being an expressive human being. I will miss him terribly. What a loss for us all. His laughter will forever ring in my heart.

  3. I prefer the word ‘generous’ to describe Jim. He was actually on of the good guys. He was also infectious; you wanted to be like him in some way. He gave me a chance and I ran with it. The art, love, talent and skills of theatre are still with me today. He turned ‘Black Theatre’ into theatre for Black People. At the same time, he turned people (generally) on to theatre and turned theatre on to people. We were, in a profound sense, family. I only hope his son and my sone continue the tradition of what he (with God’s help) put into motion.
    May God be pleased with him, grant him full forgiveness and grant him peace.

  4. A kind, sweet, and gentle man, friendly and outgoing, and genuinely humble before his art. He carried an aurora of goodness about him. I am grateful for the Whenever I saw him, I looked forward to his quick smile and gentle wit. I will miss him so much.

  5. Emerson College. My first acting teacher at Emerson College in Boston. He seemed to enjoy my singing as well as my acting potential. Precious memories, how they linger.

  6. James did something really magical for me as a 20 year old, that still is with me today: he deeply expressed, through his loving, intense gaze, a belief in me, that translated into a belief in myself. While I left the world of theatre a long long time ago, he planted the seed, and it was a precious gift. He also planted another seed– casting a white girl in a black theatre production– fueling a belief in tearing down preconceived notions of acting, race and cultural categories. He had a huge impact in my life, and I am so grateful to have had known him.

  7. Jim Spruill influenced my life more than, I’m sure, anyone knows. It was a privilege to be under his tutelege my freshman year at Emerson College and from that encounter in that brief moment in time, I learned from Mr. Spruill communication and directorial skills that have served me with great success both in my career and in my personal life. I am so grateful for the time I was blessed to have the honor of learning from him. That part of James Spruill that became such a part of me lives on. Thanks Jim. – M Billups, Emerson College ’74

  8. I am greatly saddened to have heard of Jim,s passing all these months after the fact. I believe that one of Jim’s first professional jobs was in a play I wrote, The Coop, that ran off broadway in l966. I vividly recall how great a guy he was to work with and how much I enjoyed being around him during and after rehearsals. For many years now I have wondered how he made out after the show went down. I find he had a distinguished career at my alma mater, B.U., but I’m not surprised. Not at all. He had a generosity of spirit and a wonderful talent that was and is unusual in the somewhat daunting life of the theatre. I would have loved to stay in touch with him but that’s the way it goes. I’m so pleased that students and colleagues revered him so. I’ve kept his picture close by for the last few days-it’s been almost fifty years-such is the residue of a shared great experience in the distant past.

Post a comment.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *