EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE听|听September 09, 2013
Alan Alda wins public service award from world鈥檚 largest scientific society
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INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 8, 2013 鈥� Alan Alda, actor, writer, director and science advocate, has won the American Chemical 中国365bet中文官网 (ACS) Award for Public Service. The award was presented here today at the 246th National Meeting & Exposition of the ACS, in the Indiana Convention Center.
ACS, the world鈥檚 largest scientific society, extends the award to recognize outstanding accomplishments in public service benefiting the chemical sciences. A founding member of the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science at Stony Brook University, where he is a Visiting Professor, Alda is pioneering the use of improvisational theater exercises to help scientists share their work and their passion with the public. Based on his own experience as a child fascinated by a candle flame, he also originated the Center鈥檚 annual Flame Challenge contest, which invites scientists to explain complex material to 11-year-olds.
Alda became famous as surgeon Hawkeye Pierce in the TV series M*A*S*H, won seven Emmy Awards and six Golden Globe Awards and created memorable characters in scores of movies, several of which he also wrote and directed.
Yet, exceptional as his artistic achievements are, they are rivaled by his contributions to improving the communication of science to the public. As host of PBS鈥� Scientific American Frontiers from 1993 to 2005, he talked with hundreds of scientists around the world and saw that scientists communicate much better when they carry on real, personal conversations about their work. He brought that insight to Stony Brook, inspiring the University to create the Center for Communicating Science in 2009. The Center was renamed in his honor in April 2013.
Alda鈥檚 commitment to science communication is long-standing. He is a board member and participant in the annual World Science Festival in New York. He helped launch the play QED, about physicist Richard Feynman, and originated the role of Feynman on Broadway. In 2006, he received the National Science Board鈥檚 Public Service Award 鈥渇or his contagious enthusiasm in fostering wonder and discovery.鈥� In 2010, he won the AAAS Kavli Science Journalism Award for his PBS series The Human Spark. And in 2011, he saw the premiere of Radiance: The Passion of Marie Curie, a play he wrote about the scientist he calls his hero.
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