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OKLAHOMA
CITY, March 23, 2007 – In any successful development office, donations
arrive in the mail with regularity. Some come from individuals, others from
corporations and foundations. But one envelope that arrived recently left
Penny Voss scratching her head.
“The return address said Rodgers and Hammerstein,” said Voss,
who joined the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation in January as vice
president of development. “OMRF receives gifts from all sorts of different
sources, but this one puzzled me.”
The check—made out to OMRF for more than $7,000—was no
mistake. As Voss soon learned, the payment represented OMRF’s annual royalty
share from performances of the Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein musical
Oklahoma! This most recent check brought the total for fiscal year
2007 to just over $30,000.
Through an estate gift, every time the state’s namesake
musical is performed, OMRF receives one-quarter of one percent of box-office
royalties. The payments, which have totaled more than $350,000, will
continue as long as Oklahoma! plays on stages around the world.
The gift traces its roots to Claremore native Lynn Riggs, who
in 1931 penned the play (Green Grow the Lilacs) that Rodgers and
Hammerstein used as the basis for their musical Oklahoma! When Riggs
died, he willed equal shares of his royalties on the musical to his four
siblings. Riggs’ brother William Edgar lost his wife to heart disease and
his daughter to cancer, so upon his death in 1977, he donated his portion to
support heart disease and cancer research at OMRF.
“Mr. Riggs chose a unique way to give back to our state,”
Voss said. “Through his generosity, Curly, Laurey, Ado Annie and Aunt Eller
can help find treatments for diseases that touch the lives of nearly every
Oklahoman.”
Debuting in 1943, the original production of Oklahoma!
ran for a then-unprecedented 2,212 performances. There have been many
revivals of the musical since, including national tours and a 2002 Broadway
revival that earned a Tony Award. Last year, the play was staged thousands
of times, from an all-female production in Japan to a more traditional
staging by high-schoolers in Lynn Riggs’ hometown of Claremore.
Voss expects that Oklahoma’s centennial year will bring quite
a few productions of the state’s signature musical. “We may not be a brand
new state anymore, but Oklahoma! still shines.” And next year, she
said, there will be no confusion. “I’ll be ready when that check arrives.”
About OMRF:
Chartered in 1946, OMRF (www.omrf.org)
is one of the nation's oldest, most respected biomedical research institutes.
Dedicated to understanding and
curing human disease, the nonprofit institute focuses on such critical research areas
as Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, lupus and cardiovascular disease. It is home
to Oklahoma’s only member of the National Academy of Sciences. |