The gifted and beautiful Victoria Rowell began her professional
career dancing with the American Ballet Theatre II Company, the
Ballet Hispanico of New York and the Twyla Tharp Workshop. She
enjoyed modeling and appeared in many magazines including Seventeen
and Mademoiselle.
Victoria is best known for her award winning soap opera roles
including parts in One day To live, As The World Turns, The Young
and the Restless. Among her credits are roles on the Cosby Show
and, for 8 years,with Dick Van Dyke as Dr. Amanda Bently in Diagonsis
Murder. She’s had roles opposite Eddie Murphy (The Distuinguished
Gentleman) and Jim Carrey (Dumb and Dumber). She has starred in
many other movies, independent movies, and TV movies.
Victoria has been very energetic and hard working to have accomplished
so much in her career and says she owes a lot of her work ethic
to her foster care experience. Born in 1960, her mother gave her
away to foster care at 16 days old. She and her two older sisters
moved from foster home to foster home until they ended up together
with a couple Victoria considered her real family. “My foster
mother was an amazing woman”, Victoria said later to the
Los Angeles Times. “She was a self-sufficient widow who had
already raised ten of her own children. When she had the three
of us, she was a senior citizen. She also ran a 60-acre farm. From
her foster mother, Victoria received love and support and learned
the lessons of hard work that served her well in her growing up
years and in her professional career.
At an early age, young Victoria showed an interest in dance, which
her foster mother encouraged. At age eight, without any formal
lessons, she received the Ford Foundation Scholarship to the Cambridge
School of Ballet in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She went on to receive
scholarships to the School of American Ballet, The American Ballet
Theatre, and the Dance Theatre of Harlem. At 19, Victoria moved
to New York and began dancing professionally with the American
Ballet Theatre II Company. In those days, partying was fashionable
if you were a ballet dancer and Victoria occasionally enjoyed the
nightlife at famous clubs like Studio 54. However, she was serious
about her work and even though she was criticized by her friends,
she rarely joined in the parties.
While performing onstage, Victoria was spotted and asked to model.
From that, she went into acting, which is her profession today.
Ms. Rowell is mother of two children, Maya and Jasper.
And Victora Rowell has one more passion. Today she also dedicates
herself to the nonprofit organization she founded: Rowell’s
Foster Children’s Positive Plan (RFCPP). Helping other foster
kids today, she feels she’s finally able to pay a little
back to the foster system that helped her so much when she was
a young girl. Victoria advocates for foster kids because she believes
that they deserve a lot of support, many having suffered more than
their share of emotional trauma and many having had to face more
than their share of setbacks. She wants to help some of these kids
profit by experiencing the arts, because she knows how much the
arts helped her. “The arts saved my life and now I’m
using the arts to help save other people’s lives.
RFCPP is a scholarship fund that sponsors foster youth in
California for placement in fine arts lessons and performance or
athletic training and team sports. The organization’s website
explains;
“…
the performing arts are a significant counterpoint to the
instability and emotional upheaval in a foster child’s life… Likewise,
athletics and sports programs for foster youth open the door to …(self)
discipline and determination. Team sports teach…good sportsmanship,
teamwork, personal persistence. Athletic training offers children
a safe haven to test their physical ability.”
The Positive Plan funds lessons, training, coaching, and materials
for kids in care to pursue their dreams in the arts and sports.
Summer camps for foster kids and their siblings are provided by
the organization, as well as a variety of sports camps, including
the US Sports NIKE Basketball Camp for Girls and the US Sports
NIKE Tennis Camp. Likewise, music, theater, and arts camps are
available to foster kids who are serious about the arts.
RFCPP also offers job placement aid to foster youth in Los
Angeles and Orange Counties.
In her message as Founder and President of the Rowell Foster Children’s
Positive Plan, Victoria Rowell emphasizes:
“
Foster children are good kids. With guidance and instruction,
they will be prepared to become self-sufficient, successful adults.”
For more information, log on to Victoria’s organization’s
website: www.rowellfosterchildren.org.
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