Kevin
is the son of current toddler teacher Aedín Artigue
and former MIR teacher Michael Artigue. He attended MIR in
the Primary years, then left to attend McKinley Elementary
for the second grade. He finished the rest of his elementary
schooling at Kimberly, then went on to Cope Middle School.
During middle school, he got involved in community theater,
spending seven summer seasons with the Redlands Theater Festival.
After graduating from Redlands High School,
Kevin attended UC San Diego and graduated summa cum laude
with a degree in Theater, with an emphasis in acting and playwriting.
He was honored with the Rita Bronowski Award upon graduation,
given to an especially promising undergraduate. He worked
as a professional actor in San Diego and as a teaching artist
with the La Jolla Playhouse and San Diego Repertory Theater.
There, he wrote and produced his second play, "Read-Only-Memory,"
in a small theater in downtown San Diego. He spent the next
five years in Los Angeles, working and struggling as an actor
and being active in the Los Angeles experimental theater scene.
Kevin now makes his home in New Haven,
Connecticut and writes exclusively for film and stage. He
is in the process of applying to several graduate schools
to further his studies in playwriting.
Irreverent Thoughts on MIR
"My experience
at MIR was unique because in addition to going to a Montessori
school, I was being raised by two amazing Montessori teachers
at home. So pretty much I did whatever I felt like, when I felt
like. "No, in actuality,
I couldn't have asked for two more supportive parents, and
they remain that way to this day. I think they have instilled
in me-and I'll let them credit Maria Montessori for this if
they want to-an amazing sense of possibility. In other words,
if I followed my bliss, I could do and achieve whatever
I wanted to in this world, if I just promised to put it away
when I was finished, and roll up the mat, neatly.
Not into a square or any other pointy shape, but into a perfect
tube.
"My parents have been wonderful guides
for me, and I like to think that despite public schools' repeated
attempts to turn me into a robot, I hold onto the Montessori
ethic at my core. That is part of my instinctual response
to life now that I am an adult, because I am still learning
every day that the world is full of possibility, and you really
do get to choose, and that it is about how you choose, and
how we choose to live together. (And, if you don't want to
put it away, because you've had a long day or you just don't
feel like it, you can actually hire someone to clean it up
for you, for something like $50 an hour. I have the number
if you need it.)
So I'll take this moment from my desk
in New Haven to write a huge thank you to my Montessori teachers
and my Montessori parents, for showing me the way but never
making me go there. And the whole no-grades thing really rocks.
Thirty years of A-plus-plus-pluses! Congrats MIR!" |