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Palladium Paul and the Mrs. are tapped for this year’s MUSE Arts Award

Palladium Paul is no dummy. He has figured out that picking good partners is the key to success. And 15-years-ago in Los Angeles I started a new partnership (she likes to call it a marriage) with Eugenie Bondurant, an actor and acting teacher.

 

Now, we’ve won the MUSE Arts Ambassador Award, from the St. Petersburg Arts Alliance, and Creative Loafing is calling us Mr. and Mrs. St. Petersburg. I guess that means we have to change our monograms.

 

Thanks to John Collins and the crew at the St. Pete Arts Alliance, and everybody at Creative Loafing. Here’s a excerpt from the story that is now up online and will appear in print this week.

 

Follow this link to Creative Loafing’s full story and a photo of our now famous kitten!

 

 

By BILL DEYOUNG

 

Paul Wilborn and Eugenie Bondurant have been watching St. Pete’s cultural revolution from the front lines. The joint recipients of this year’s Muse Arts Ambassador Award are not only performers with active local profiles, they work behind the scenes — he as a writer and programmer, she as an acting teacher and voice talent — and tirelessly champion the contributions of each new arriving artist.

 

Musers – Eugenie and Paul

A former journalist with both the St. Petersburg Times and the Tampa Tribune, Wilborn, a bay area native, says St. Pete was primed from the start to have the across-the-bay artistic edge.

 

“Not only did the city have local wealthy people who were arts supporters,” he says, “but it had the benevolent corporate support of the Times. Locally owned. Unlike the Tribune, which was part of a chain.”

 

There were, he insists, more tangible aspects, “like the beauty of this town, as a resort town; what made it sleepy also turned out to make it cool. That’s what attracts talent. There was no law passed, no ordinances done. They’ve helped — but really, talented people are choosing to come to this place.”

 

He was working for the Associated Press in Los Angeles when he met Bondurant, a tall drink of water whose elfin, exotic beauty had landed her prestigious gigs as a runway model. She was an actor, too, who’d appeared in several films and had a nice gig as an L.A. drama teacher.

 

“I was already half packed to move back to New Orleans when I met Paul,” Bondurant says. “That’s my hometown, Louisiana has a film industry … and Paul just cut me off at the pass and said ‘Hey! How about we get married and move to Tampa? It’s only an hour and change flight to New Orleans.’”

 

Tampa mayor Pam Iorio had offered Wilborn a job as the city’s “Creative Industries Manager” — shorthand for “Let’s give this town the cultural profile it’s never had” — so they hitched up and relocated. That was 2003.

 

After five years … he leapt across the bay to become the executive director of St. Petersburg’s Palladium Theatre.

 

And his wife fell in love — for a second time.

 

“St. Petersburg,” Bondurant enthuses, “is Shangri-La. We live half a block from the water. I’m a mile away from downtown. We ride our bikes to downtown. We’re far enough away, and we’re close enough. Within arm’s reach.”

 

She teaches acting at Tampa’s Patel Conservatory, and at Andi Matheny’s Acting Studio in St. Pete. Matheny, also a film and TV actress, is a relatively new arrival to the area. Her husband is Gifted screenwriter Tom Flynn.

 

“This is a perfect example of what’s going on here,” Bondurant says. “She starts teaching, they find this building — it was an old garage, which they bought and renovated — and now she’s got a little black box theater in there. There are plays, they do improv, there are workshops and there are classes. And it’s thriving.”

 

Wilborn and Bondurant keep fingers in a bakery-window-ful of creative pies. Together, they sing the Great American Songbook and more in a long-running, classy cabaret series (Wilborn is also a talented jazz pianist); hers is the voice heard on the audio tours at the Dali Museum and on the St. Petersburg Arts Alliance’s Mural Walk; they were part of the team that kick-started the Radio Theatre Project at The Studio@620.

 

“It’s fun to have contemporaries who challenge you,” says Wilborn. “I’m in a writing group where I don’t even think I’m the best writer. And I’m around musicians who are way better than me.”

 

Bondurant: “We have so many incredibly talented actors that no one knows. They know them when they’re onstage, but we also have SAG (Screen Actors Guild) actors that not very many people realize produce work here. People that fly off to different locations, and are working constantly.”

 

After appearing in a major role in 2015’s The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2, Bondurant acted on an episode of NCIS: New Orleans, and has a new project coming up. She still auditions. “If I get the call, I’m going,” she says with a smile.

 

Wilborn playfully picks up where his wife left off.

 

“We’re waiting for that call! I’m waiting for the movie star to pay off, baby! Get out there and do your thing.”

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