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Local MSU, Summer Scholars alum gives back to June camp

Local MSU, Summer Scholars alum gives back to June camp

environmental portrait of Kenzie Claire Burchfield
Kenzie Claire Burchfield (Photo by Grace Cockrell)

Contact: Mary Pollitz

STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥Kenzie Claire Burchfield was always going to attend 幺力视频.

The daughter of current and retired MSU employees, Burchfield did not need much convincing to become a Bulldog. However, when she heard her friends at Starkville High School discuss a three-week summer theater camp 鈥渢hat sounded amazing鈥 on the university鈥檚 campus, she knew she had to be there.

鈥淭hey were always raving about the Summer Scholars program and how it was the most fun,鈥 Burchfield said. 鈥淪o, I begged my parents on my knees to let me come to camp, and they finally did. It was the best summer ever.鈥

A group of Summer Scholars practice their screenwriting skills in a classroom with storyboarding
Dan Swanson, right, guides Summer Scholars Onstage participants, from left, Lola Mae Hallows of Philadelphia and Starkville natives Cadyn Robinson and Ranier Smith through the scriptwriting process at 幺力视频鈥檚 McComas Hall. During the three-week camp, students are developing an original musical for the program鈥檚 milestone 45th production. "Face the Music(Fest)" is free and open to the public, with performances scheduled for June 26 at 7 p.m. and June 27 at 1 p.m. on the McComas Hall main stage. (Photo by Grace Cockrell)

Burchfield was in her element as part of MSU鈥檚 long-standing Summer Scholars On Stage tradition. Started in 1983 by Joe Ray Underwood who directed the camp for years, the multidisciplinary program has helped artistic middle and high school students develop story concepts, create characters, write dialogue, shape scripts and perform an original production in a condensed, intensive three weeks.

This year has more than 50 students in grades 7-12 from the Southeast and even Michigan working to incorporate their dancing, singing, acting and technical skills into a final musical production.

鈥淭his has been going on for 45 years,鈥 current Camp Director Stephen Cunetto said. 鈥淭he staff has done a great job coming back year after year to help support our campers.鈥

Burchfield spent the next two summers attending as a camper, experiences she said helped solidify her path to MSU and pursue a career in vocal music. After graduating from MSU in 2024 with a degree in music education, she earned a master鈥檚 degree in vocal performance from Samford University. Now living in Birmingham, Alabama, Burchfield has returned to campus for the past three summers to serve as its music director.

鈥淚t has made a really huge impact on my life,鈥 Burchfield said. 鈥淲hen I was in high school, I was very shy and didn鈥檛 have much confidence. But the camp staff really poured into me and gave me so much encouragement, and now I get to pay it forward. That鈥檚 my favorite thing to do, is to encourage these campers to chase their dreams, make mistakes and not be fearful.

鈥淭hese campers are brilliant, and they just need an opportunity to put themselves out there,鈥 Burchfield continued. 鈥淭hey have these ideas and are so creative, and I like to be the person who gives them validation because I know it means a lot to them, just as it does to me.鈥

Starkville native Suehyla El-Attar Young also has returned to her hometown this year to help with the camp. Leading the writer鈥檚 section, she always wanted to attend as a Starkville High School student but never had the chance.

鈥淭his year I was available, and I wanted to come and experience it,鈥 El-Attar Young said. 鈥淭o finally be here, it鈥檚 been iconic. There鈥檚 a lot of legacy here, so coming in can be a little intimidating, because I have a desire to be extremely respectful to this program that is precious to everybody who attends.鈥

El-Attar Young, Atlanta-based writer, actor and voice artist, said she was immediately impressed by the campers鈥 dedication to not only the program but their own artistic craft.

鈥淭hese students are exceptional,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e working with people who want to be here. They will do anything and everything, and they鈥檙e here with other people who have that exact same drive. They are supporting, inspiring and energizing one another.鈥

The culmination of the camp's hard work will be a three-act musical comedy titled 鈥淔ace the Music(Fest).鈥 The camp鈥檚 45th production dives into a revenge plot set on a fictional college campus, featuring 10 original songs and everything from romance to zombies to albino alligators. Free and open to the public, performances are scheduled for June 26, 7 p.m. and June 27, 1 p.m. on the main stage in McComas Hall, 127 Presidents Circle.

More information for Summer Scholars, sponsored by MSU鈥檚 Office of Pre-College and Opportunity Programs in the MSU Division of Access, Opportunity and Success, can be found at .

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