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Review: Barely Placing

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By Michael Block

You know what audiences are begging for? A musical about the Holocaust! That is completely and one hundred percent facetious. In fact, why even tread the waters of the time? A good story. The Gold isn’t necessarily a Holocaust musical. The Holocaust is a backdrop for the show with music and lyrics by Philip Yosowitz and book by Yosowitz and Andrea Lepcio. This is a musical about remembering. Oh yeah, and a little boxing.
Spanning decades, The Gold follows the rise of Joseph Cohen, a Jewish man living in Germany, as he sets his eyes on the 1936 Olympic Games. When love, lust, and the rise of the Nazis prevent Joseph from the gold, his world is turned upside down when his family is taken to Concentration Camps. To protect their young son Aaron, they send him to live with their German friend. Jump ahead years, Aaron is now a boxing prodigy who finds himself training for the Olympics in Israel, the same place his long lost father is. The reason many people go to musicals is for the music. That’s the thing we remember. Unfortunately for The Gold, the score is not something memorable. It’s a very old fashioned musical with a sweeping epic score that is dated. It’s logical to try and be the next Les Miserables but fulfilling that dream is hard to do. The Gold sadly did not. Even if the score had some grand moments, what is holding the show back is the book. The Gold needs a facelift. But it needs a script doctor, and one beyond a plastic surgeon. For starters, the dialogue is silly and the timeline is laughable. Yes, Yosowitz and Lepcio try desperately to incorporate many milestones and moments in Joseph and co.’s life. But when you go from first date to first kid within scenes, you can’t help but have a look of bewilderment. And this happens so frequently. The Gold must be trimmed, perhaps losing some characters and cutting some songs. Just because you like the melody doesn’t mean you need a reprise. Even with the structural changes, the dialogue must be improved. This company is filled with talent but some of the words that rolled off the tongue had shades of bad community theater. To no fault of their own. It’s what was on the page. Even with cosmetic changes, will it be enough?
Like many classic musicals, The Gold featured a large cast with an ensemble relegated to playing those typical ensemble roles. They provided a wall of sound that gave Yosowitz’s score substance. Even with thin characters, there were some solid performances. Through strong subtleties, Josh Davis easily gave Joseph Cohen a life from youngster to a man who's seen the horrors of the world. The power in his voice elevated Yosowitz's music. As his wife Sarah, Karis Danish provided strength and determination, even inserting a flare of pluck. Jenn Malenke’s Gabrielle was placed in a tough position. Being the sister of Joseph’s rival and being Sarah’s best friend, Gabrielle was always forced to do something difficult. And when she was asked to be the Joseph and Sarah’s son’s caretaker, her life too was turned upside down. Malenke’s character wasn’t given substance in the text but she sure did try to give worth Gabrielle. And it was appreciated. Having kids in a show is hard. As Young Aaron and Young Julie, Graydon Peter Yosowit and Stephanie Ticas won over the crowd with their cuteness and impressive vocals. Yet they also managed to pull focus from the overall arc of the story. By the time we saw the adult versions of Aaron and Julie, played by Adam Maggio and Emily Kron, it’s likely you were over them. The pen pal plot line desperately needs to be shrunk so when it gets to Maggio and Kron’s time as the characters they don’t have to force an arc in causing their performances to suffer dearly.
Spiro Veloudos had a grand task in directing The Gold. Making sense of the overall picture seemed to be on the backburner, instead choosing to hone in on the individual plot points. Veloudos’ puzzle did not fit together. He was inherently given some roadblocks to drive around but seemingly paid little care to them. Veloudos and lighting designer Joe Beumer chose to go a quick black after every single scene. Kudos for keeping a consistent vocabulary but man was it repetitive. Was this to help with the scene changes? If so, then scenic designer Meganne George faltered in her design. With Veloudos’ tempo being an issue, having to wait for a table and chair, sometimes making an appearance for a book scene less than a minute long, destroyed any semblance of momentum. Musicals thrive from applause. When the audience doesn’t applaud after a song, you know there’s an issue. And let me tell you, it’s hard to clap after a Nazi song. Doesn’t matter how triumphant the sound is, it’s a song about Nazi pride! The same goes for dramatic plot points, like a death in a Concentration Camp. You’re not going to get claps. Is there a way to avoid this in this particular story? No. As crazy as it sounds, the lack of applause can also deter a continuous flow. Veloudos’ staging, for the most part, was confined to the boxing ring George set up. Was it strange to have people step inside the ring when they probably shouldn’t be in there? Yeah. But that’s the design. I suppose it can be forgiven. What can’t be forgiven is the intentional, or unintentional, ode to Les Miserables. Never can you ever wave a flag and not compare it to Les Mis. That Israeli flag waving killed the message of hope within the scene as it immediately upstaged itself.
The Gold has problems. Some fixable. Some unavoidable. The story Philip Yosowitz and Andrea Lepcio set out to tell is confusing based on synopsis alone. On the surface, you want to make it the next Rocky. But it’s not a boxing musical. There is a message of hope but it has to be sold as a Holocaust musical. And unfortunately, that’s not a draw.

Spotlight On...Shyam Bhatt

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Name: Shyam Bhatt

Hometown: London, England, U.K.

Education: Law (University College London), Theatre Studies (Davies Laing & Dick), Acting and Drama (Actors Centre), Improv (Groundlings LA), Acting (Playhouse West)

Favorite Credits:Treya! Also Fatima in The Domestic Crusaders (stage), Sylvia in "Making Sparks" (TV) and Meena in East is East (stage)

Why theater?: The most interesting thing in the world is other people, and theatre gives us the chance to explore the deepest nuances of what makes each of us tick. Theatre is fantastic, it's live, it's all the most interesting parts of life spliced together on stage. The rush is unbeatable.

Tell us about Treya's Last Dance:Treya's Last Dance is a darkly comedic solo show where all the parts are played by the lead actress. Awkward, brittle, yet lovable Treya enters a speed-dating event she's been gently forced to go to by loving, worried parents, who are keen for her to find a 'life-partner.’ So far, so conventional. But as the evening proceeds, cracks appear - all is not right in Treya's world. Humorously, messily and poignantly, across the table from a series of dodgy dates, Treya stumbles into a way to start facing up to the recent tragedy that's befallen her family.

What inspired you to write Treya's Last Dance?: The old story! I wrote Treya's Last Dance as there was (and is) a serious lack of strong, confident, funny female characters from minority ethnicities. I wasn't getting auditions for the parts I wanted, so I wrote the part I wanted to play . . . and played it! There was in particular (and continues to be) a dearth of pieces addressing the very distinct issues facing the children of immigrant parents, and the chasms that open up between generations as a result. My work focuses on this, and Treya's Last Dance is only the first part of a long line of work I hope to be a part of creating. I am currently part of the Kali Theatre Talkback Writers' Workshop, a workshop which mentors beginner writers who are looking at exactly these kinds of stories.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: Tough question! I enjoy thought-provoking theatre that presents familiar issues in a different light, or through an angled prism. Recent pieces I've enjoyed a lot were The Nether, and The Encounter. I'm inspired a whole bunch of people but the three that spring to mind right now? Melissa McCarthy, who takes funny characters to a whole new level; Mindy Kaling, who as far as I can see is the BOSS, and David Tennant, whose performance in Black Comedy on stage years ago is what made me want to be in theatre.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Melissa McCarthy and Kristen Wiig.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: Theatre: The Nether, Unreachable. Television: Bored to Death

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Tina Fey, starring in "The Misadventures of a Goof-Off".

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: I'd go through the ages and through countries watching all the comedies ever written. A key player would be an original version of Sheridan's The Rivals.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Marmite and peanut butter and bananas. All together.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: A different person.

What’s up next?: Auditions! And whatever the universe throws my way. Hopefully a good second follow-up play.

For more on Treya's Last Dance, visit www.outlandishcatproductions.com

Review: Camp Raging Hormones

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By Michael Block

I never went to summer camp. Well I did. It was day camp. But that’s not the same as sleep away camp. That’s usually the source of story in entertainment. So what is about sleep away camp that writers are so found of putting into story? The fond memories of course! But what are those memories? According to Camp Rolling Hills, camp is all about raging hormones and not the fun and games to be had all summer long.
With a book by David Spiegel and Stacy Davidowitz, music by Adam Spiegel, and lyrics by David Spiegel, Adam Spiegel, and Stacy Davidowitz, Camp Rolling Hills is a generic camp show where the fun and games don’t take the main focus, instead picking romance and the hardships of pre-teen crushes and the crises they form. The boys and girls of Camp Rolling Hills reunite for another rousing summer of fun but when first time camper Robert, a new cog in the equation, arrives the summer is turned upside. Cabin turf wars, love triangles, and the meaning of friendship encompass the short months at the kids’ summer getaway. Camp Rolling Hills has material that is instantly relatable, even if you never were a camp kid. Spiegel and Davidowitz allow the relationships of the characters to take center stage. But the characters within are brazenly stereotypes. In the post “High School Musical” age, we are all in this together and the various cliques and types can interact through a common bond. While they did give each character an individual identity, it’s a shame how standard they truly were. From the geeky kid to the cool girls to the jock to the tomboy, Camp Rolling Hills has them all. The cabins each get six campers. Six boys and six girls. And yet there is absolutely an expendable boy and girl in each group that do little to further the plot. Cut these characters and the story is still told and there’s one less body to have to handle, especially when each kid is given a verse to sing in a song. Streamlining is everybody’s friend. On the surface, this is a show for kids. They’re not going to pick up on the nuances of the story. But Spiegel and Davidowitz’s book is a bit hap-hazardous, experiencing some minor plot holes. They were smart to introduce the characters through song as it helped engrain the nicknames in your head. Tracking them all and their narratives wasn’t always the easiest. Spiegel and Davidowitz brush the surface when it comes to modern themes. From death and divorce, Camp Rolling Hills has the power to relate to kids experiencing similar situations. They were right to not give everyone a “woe is me” plot line but when they did, it has to be expanded or have more emphasis. Adam Spiegel’s score is sugary but nothing special. It invites the kids in. But like many shows with a youth company, Spiegel’s music fell into a trap. It's not an overly tricky score but without a company of A+ kids, the score sounds weak and ineffective. Is this something fixable in the future? Likely not but it’s something to keep an ear out for.
photo by Sarah Marie Mayo
Camp Rolling Hills is the epitome of kid fun. And everyone in this cast had fun. On that front, it was a cohesive company. Completely at the same level? Not so much. But that allowed some nice individual performances to stick out. On the kid side, Mitchell Sink is a star. As the food connoisseur Brian “Play Dough” Garfink, Sink has impeccable timing and the ability to land a joke with ease. Sink really was the breakout kid of the show. Though his part was not as nearly as large, David Hoffman as Ben(jamin) Dover, the kid with the biggest adult-themed nickname, has a star quality to him. One of the only true triple threats in the company. James Ignacio had the task of playing new kid “Smelly.” Even with a ridiculous nickname, he owned his character. He almost reached heartbreaking performance level. Over on the girls side, Beatrice Tulchin had an infectious sweetness to her. Her character fell to the background often due to overshadowing stories, but she showed much promise. In the realm of the adults, John Krause was absolutely one of the most grounded performers on the stage. If Spiegel and Davidowitz eliminated every adult in the story and left just Krause’s Rick, all would be ok. Though her character was small, her choices were big. Jillian Louis got caught up in character, one that had an odd purpose overall.
Director Jill Jaysen has great experience guiding a giant cast of kids. It helped keep the world in order. Jaysen fed into the silliness of Camp Rolling Hills while trying to pop out the real life themes. Perhaps it was her performers who missed these intentions but when it came to exploring the complexities of the situations, Jaysen seemed to only brush the surface paying more attention to the funny bits. But hey, this is kids’ theater. Scenic designer Gennie Neuman opted to give the cabin feel through bunk beds for each cabin. With festival limitations being a factor, what Neuman did was smart. Having the kids be the ones to operate the brakes on the structures? Not so smart. The costumes fell somewhere between intentional and pulled straight from the performers’ closet. While it was ultimately rectified when the kids wore their camp shirts, the grey counselor polos were just a boring choice. Choreographer Theresa Burns had her hands full. The chore of not only choreographing one show but then implementing two casts must have been a headache. Yet the dancing was simple and effective.
Whether it was the specificity of the production or the material, Camp Rolling Hills is a subpar kids show. The truth of the situation is that it's marketable. There is a future. There is just a lot of work to be done. It's transparent why the company was overstuffed but when it gets in the way of the big picture, it's hard to judge properly. Is this a show that wants to be performed on a grand stage, a la 13, or sent straight to middle schools? Either way, we’ll be venturing back to Camp Rolling Hills.

Spotlight On...Meshaun Labrone

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Name: Meshaun Labrone

Hometown: Miami, Florida 305, baby!

Education: BFA in Theatre from Florida International University

Favorite Credits: Sterling in Two Trains Runnin with The M Ensemble theatre company in Miami, Florida.

Why theater?: Because its living art. I love that!

Tell us about Power! Stokely Carmichael: POWER! is a play that touches on the Black Power movement and the young man that brought this movement to the forefront. It also introduces people that were influential to bringing the movement about including an old shop worker that witnessed a lynching as child to an white segregationist that believed that having sex with black female minors is not a crime at all.

What inspired you to write Power! Stokely Carmichael?: The lynching of Trayvon Martin inspired me to write this play.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: Theatre of the Absurd is my inspiration. Samuel Beckett, David Mamet, August Wilson, Daniel Day Lewis, Prince and Denzel Washington are artist that are my biggest inspiration.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Susan Lori Parks, Denzel Washington, Don Cheadle and Daniel Day Lewis.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: Mine

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: In a movie about me, I would play me.

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: Marlon Brando in Streetcar Named Desire and Sidney Poitier in A Raisin in the Sun.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Vanilla/Chocolate milkshake.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be ____?: a doctor.

What’s up next?: A new one man show called, SPOOK. It will be about a police officer that turned into an Active Shooter, killing 4 fellow officers. The play takes place an hour before his execution.

Spotlight On...Christian Lee Branch, Adam Mace, and Rajendra Ramoon Maharaj

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Name: Christian Lee Branch, Adam Mace, and Rajendra Ramoon Maharaj

Hometown:
CB: Brooklyn, NY
AM: Brooklyn, NY
RM: Dix Hills, LI, NY

Education:
CB: BA Communication Studies - St. Joseph’s College, New York
AM: MA Educational Theatre - New York University; BA Speech Communications - St. Joseph's College
RM: MFA Directing - Brooklyn College; BA Communications Arts & Science/Associates in Criminal Justice - St. John University    

Favorite Credits:
CB: Judas in Jesus Christ Superstar, Voice of Audrey II in Little Shop of Horrors, Noah in Salome: Da Voodoo Princess of Nawlins
AM: BETWEEN (Director - World Premiere by John Guare) - Nuyorican Poets Cafe, R+J: An Uncivil Tale (Writer/Director) - Rebel Theater
RM: Little Rock - Passage Theatre; Black Nativity - The Goodman Theatre, The Ballad of Trayvon Martin - New Freedom Theatre, Sweet Tea - Signature Theatre

Why theater?:
CB: I have always been fascinated by the sharing of emotions that theatre allows. Whenever I get on a stage or see a performance the human condition is there in your face and you embrace it and let it move you.
AM: The theatre saved me. It’s a place where I have always felt understood and heard.
RM: I feel like theatre is the closest art-form that speaks to how I view and see the world as an artist and activist.

Tell us about Mother Emanuel:
CB:Mother Emanuel was truly a labor of love. It was the first time I ever wrote a play because the story of the tragedy struck a chord within me. In Mother Emanuel we set out to show a truthful glimpse of the power of community, love and faith.
AM: It's the world's first opportunity to learn about the brave individuals who were murdered at Mother Emanuel AME Church in June 2015. We tell their stories through testimony and song.
RM: It's a world premiere of a musical play that focuses on the last 90 minutes of the Charleston Nine who were viciously murdered at a prayer service in their church.

What inspired you to write/direct Mother Emanuel?:
CB: I received a phone call from Adam and Rajendra asking to meet up. At the time we had just started working together on another project, but then we learned about the Mother Emanuel shooting. Being that we each grew up very involved in our churches, to hear about this act of violence happening in a church just shook us to our core. We had so many emotions whirling within us and the only way we could express them was to use our artistry, and Mother Emanuel was born.
AM: I had been working on a different project with Rajendra and Christian at the time the shooting happened and it really stopped us in our tracks. As a person of faith, along with Rajendra and Christian, I felt I needed to be a part of telling this story.
RM: I was very angry about the shooting and didn't know where to put my anger. So as my mentor and one of my theatre heroes, Anna Deveare Smith once said, I put it into my art.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?:
CB: I am a total Musical Theatre fan. Sometimes the only thing people have is the song in their heart to get them through their situations, and musical theatre showcases that. Mahalia Jackson, Luther Vandross, and Whitney Houston have been the biggest inspirations for me musically. Whenever they sang they connected with the lyrics and I strive to do that when I perform.
AM: I love theatre that challenges me and my humanity. I love "history" plays too. I am also drawn to Musical Theatre. I have recently been inspired by John Doyle's work.
RM: I enjoy docudrama and plays that deal around Civil Rights and historical events. I like works that fuse different styles and create new ways of storytelling. I'm inspired by Anna Deveare Smith, Lloyd Richards, Moises Kauffman and George C. Wolfe.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?:
CB: One of the Pattis, LuPone or LaBelle
AM: I'd love to collaborate with James Lapine
RM: Katori Hall

What show have you recommended to your friends?:
CB: Shockingly, I have many friends who have never seen a Broadway show so to them I always encourage seeing Phantom
AM: The Color Purple
RM: The Color Purple

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?:
CB: I would say James Earl Jones would play me and the title would be: “You Better Sing!”
AM: Paul Rudd in "Okay, so that Happened."
RM: Jeffrey Wright in "Eyes on the Prize"

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?:
CB: The Original Broadway cast of The Wiz!
AM: Opening Night of Les Miserables on Broadway
RM: Opening Night of West Side Story

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?:
CB: Mac and Cheese and Pernil (roasted pork shoulder)
AM: I am a bit of a comic geek.
RM: I enjoy buying Cole Haan shoes and Air Jordans

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?:
CB: Funny, I would be doing my survival job that I have now. Working in the Student Life (clubs and organizations) office at a St Josephs College.
AM: A stand up comedian
RM: Talk Show Host

What’s up next?:
CB: Mother Emanuel has inspired me to write more. I am not sure what exactly I will write yet, but it will most likely be musical-based.
AM:  Some more writing. I have some projects I've been working on.
RM: A Vacation. I've been the Guest Artistic Director at New Freedom Theatre and I directed, choreographed, and produced three shows back to back there and now Mother Emanuel. I'm taking a two week vacation in California.

For more on Mother Emanuel, visit www.motheremanueltheplay.com or www.rebeltheater.com

Trolling Time with...Corinne Britti

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Name: Corinne Britti

Hometown: Winston-Salem, NC (we don't have witches we have doughnuts)

Education: Adequate (NYU Tisch)

Who do you play in The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer: Ingrid, Laughs, Mr.

Describe your character(s) in three words: bitch, lover, saint (I never feel ashamed)

Tell us about The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer: Think "The L Word" but with guys mixed with "Once Upon a Time."

Describe The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer in three words: A gay romp.

Who is the biggest liar?: My "dad"

Who is the biggest troll?: Nick. So tall.

Who is the sexiest?: Kate McKinnon.

Who is the most mischievous?: Austin.

Most likely to go on an adventure?: Also Austin. He seems well-traveled. Up for anything.

Most likely to get caught up in a cult?: Geo. So young. So trusting.

Which bandana best describes you?: Yellow. It's for pee, which is sterile, which is how many would describe my performance en la boudoir.

Favorite (gay) bar in NYC: On top of my fridge where I keep my tequila.

Fun, laughs, or good time?: Can't have one without the other two.

Do you talk to yourself in a mirror?: How else could I face my family

What is your favorite moment in The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer: Don't know what this says about me, but I very much like parading around as a gay-bashing Southern man. It really brings me back to my roots.

What is the most rewarding thing about being a part of the Dreamer team?: How freaking lovely all these people are.

Why should we come see The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer?: There are very few shows in New York where you can both laugh your ass off and be pretty genuinely aroused at the same time. You won't regret it.

The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer is part of the 20th Annual New York International Fringe Festival! Performances dates are Saturday, August 13th at 9:30pm, Tuesday, August 16th at 5:00pm, Monday, August 22nd at 4:45pm, Wednesday, August 24th at 7:00pm, and Saturday, August 27th at 1:30pm. All performances will be at Venue #1: Teatro SEA (107 Suffolk Street). For tickets, visit fringenyc.org

For more on The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer, visit dreamerplay.com. To support and donate to the project, please visit gofundme.com/dreamerplay


The 3rd Annual Mikey Awards- NYMF 2016 Edition

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I had a dream. To attend all of the NYMF full productions of the 2016 season. Then I hit a very unfortunate scheduling snafu that made me miss one show. So I saw 16 of the 17 full productions. But that's not going to stop me from celebrating the best of NYMF 2016! For the 3rd time, I bring you the "Mikey" Awards, celebrating outstanding achievements of the festival! Sure, the festival hands out their own hardware but who doesn't want some from everyone's favorite critic! (likely only uttered by my mother). Here are the 16 eligible shows!


  • A Scythe of Time
  • Camp Rolling Hills
  • Children of Salt
  • Eh Dah?- Questions for My Father
  • Forest Boy
  • Icon
  • Lisa and Leonardo
  • Ludo's Broken Bride
  • Newton's Cradle
  • Nickel Mines
  • Normativity
  • The First Church of Mary, the Repentant Prostitute's FIFTH ANNUAL!!! Benefit Concert, Revival, and Pot Luck Dinner
  • The Gold
  • The Last Word
  • Tink!
  • Ultimate Man

THE AWARDS

Outstanding Musical- Forest Boy

Honorable Mentions- A Scythe of Time, Children of Salt, Newton's Cradle, The Last Word

Everyone loves a big, flashy musical. But once in a while, you witness something simple yet evocative. Something stimulating and unique. Something refreshing. This year, that show was a little indie musical from overseas. Forest Boy has a ripped from the headlines story with a folk inspired score and some outstanding movement. The biggest hurdle is selling this show to an audience. Once this team figures that out, Forest Boy will live again on stage. 

Outstanding Actor- Maurico Martinez (Children of Salt)

Honorable Mentions- Josh Davis (The Gold), Michael Glavan (Ultimate Man), Michael Jayne Walker (Ludo's Broken Bride), Will Connolly (Forest Boy)

This was a hard one, yet so easy. Maurico Martinez may not be a household name but he sure the hell should be. The smoldering performer carried an entire show on his shoulders with a powerhouse vocal and charisma like no other. Maurico Martinez epitomizes what a leading man should be. He'll be back gracing our stages once again, you wait and see.

Outstanding Actress- Lesli Margherita (A Scythe of Time)

Honorable Mentions- Charlotte Maltby (Icon), Gabrielle McCliton (Ludo's Broken Bride), Izzy Castaldi (Normativity), Karis Danish (The Gold)

To be completely frank, NYMF 2016 was no the year of the girl role. But it sure was the year of Lesli Margherita. A ridiculous vocalist with impeccable comedic timing, Lesli Margherita stole the show as the woman writing about her brush with death. Margherita was not only game to do whatever the show called for, she did it with ease. Just wait, Lesli Margherita will be a Broadway headliner real soon.

Outstanding Supporting Actor- Travis Kent (The Last Word)

Honorable Mentions- Brian Charles Rooney (Ludo's Broken Bride), Christopher Russo (Forest Boy), Danny Rutigliano (A Scythe of Time), Mitchell Sink (Camp Rolling Hills)

This was probably the hardest category to not only bring down to 5 but pick the "winner." Travis Kent comes out on top for his breakout role as Scrabble expert Neil in The Last Word. Rockin' the 70's geek chic, Kent captured the essence of the character and finding a way to make him the most interesting of the group. And when he had his solo moments to shine, it highlighted some of the promise in the musical. And an extra special kudos for the sideburns and glasses. That's commitment! 

Outstanding Ensemble-Forest Boy

Honorable Mentions- Camp Rolling Hills, Children of Salt, Newton's Cradle, Tink!

When you move as a unit, you work as an ensemble. The intricacies of this musical highlighted the overall flawless company. Every single member of this company had their moment but watching them fade into the background to form the world for the others exposed just how tight this show was. 


Outstanding Director- David Alpert (A Scythe of Time)

Honorable Mentions- Jose Zayas (Children of Salt), Michael Bello (The Last Word), Robert McQueen (Forest Boy), Victoria Clark (Newton's Cradle)

Even though this show didn't have solid continuity in style in tone, director David Alpert united the gothic thriller with the comedy effortlessly. His strong vision allowed A Scythe of Time become a fan favorite. Along with his strong creative team, they managed to make the June Havoc Theater workable for a musical. Alpert knew how to get his audience into this strange world, excited for the twists and turns to come. 

Outstanding Score- Scott Gilmour and Claire McKenzie (Forest Boy)

Honorable Mentions- Brett Sullivan (The Last Word), Heath Saunders (Newton's Cradle), Jamie Jarrett (Normativity), Mark Alan Swanson (A Scythe of Time)

Combine the theatricality of Once with the sound of Mumford and Sons and you get Forest Boy. With Scott Gilmour's effective lyrics and Claire McKenzie's sweeping music, the duo gave Ray/Robin's story a soul. It was the right sound for this story. Anything else would not have felt natural. In the landscape of the season, Forest Boy was unique enough to stand out in all the right ways.

Outstanding Book- Kim Saunders (Newton's Cradle)

Honorable Mentions- Alan Harris (A Scythe of Time), Brett Sullivan (The Last Word), Lauren Epsenhard (Children of Salt), Scott Gilmour (Forest Boy)

To be fair, writing a libretto is not easy. To be honest, this NYMF season had some trouble in the realm of books. But Kim Saunders' book for Newton's Cradle was something special. It is rich in potential. In the hands of a the proper director, Saunders' style can be realized to its fullest potential. Saunders managed to discuss the important topic of autism in a manner that was informative yet theatrical. We saw how it effected Evan as well as the individuals around him. The vantage points in which Saunders offers propels the musical.

Outstanding Overall Design- Ludo's Broken Bride

Honorable Mentions- A Scythe of Time, Children of Salt, Forest Boy, The Last Word

To be completely honest, Ludo's Broke Bride had some incredibly tragic book problems. But what will be remembered is the product. Ludo's Broken Bride looks good. From scene to scene, word to world, there was at least extraordinary element. Chalk it up to the puppets by Sierra Schoening and the projection design by Pauline Lu to lift this show to the next level. It's not a secret that Ludo's Broken Bride had some woes the carried into the design, but take away the libretto and you get a visually beautiful design.

Outstanding Orchestrations- Dana Levinson (Ludo's Broken Bride)

Honorable Mentions- Geoff Davin and Tyler Summers (The First Church of Mary...), Claire McKenzie (Forest Boy), Conrad Helfrich (The Last Word), Jaime Lozano and Jesus Altamira (Children of Salt)

The ability of bringing a theatrical sound to an established songbook takes great skill. When it comes to the world of jukebox musicals, it takes more than putting the song in a show. If you don't know the canon of Ludo, watching Ludo's Broken Bride will inspire you to. What orchestrator Dana Levinson done is nothing short of amazing. The music was beautifully elevated. It's very possible that Levinson's version of the Ludo music is better than the original.

Outstanding Choreography- EJ Boyle (Forest Boy)

Honorable Mentions- Nick Kenkel (The Last Word), Paul Stancato (Icon), Stephanie Klemons (Children of Salt), Theresa Burns (Camp Rolling Hills)

Though we love flashy dance moves, not all musicals need them. It's not part of their vocabulary. Such is the case in Forest Boy. EJ Boyle established a world through the movement. It was clean, precise, and helped tell the story. It's easy to understand why you'd want to compare Forest Boy to The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.

Outstanding Artwork-Camp Rolling Hills

Honorable Mentions- A Scythe in Time, Forest Boy, Ludo's Broken Bride, Tink!

A show's artwork not only needs to look good, it needs to properly sell the show. This year featured some odd show art but it was Camp Rolling Hills that did the job best. It's fun. It's cute. It's the show.





Unsung Hero Award- Rosemary Fossee (The First Church of Mary...)

Honorable Mentions- Brendan Melafronte (Ludo's Broken Bride), John Krause (Camp Rolling Hills), Joyah Love Spangler (Ultimate Man), Sabina Petra (Forest Boy)

The Unsung Hero Award goes to a person who's mostly in the background yet has the ability to stand out in the front. There were many of those in this year's festival but none did it quite like Rosemary Fossee. The character of Shelly Braithwaite is quite ridiculous. She's a convict who is asked to sing in the gospel trio. It's a funny visual gimmick but Fossee sing circles around everyone. Her voice is unmatchable. Keep an eye on this girl.

Band Geek Award- The First Church of Mary...

Honorable Mentions- Children of Salt, Forest Boy, Ludo's Broken Bride, Nickel Mines

The score of this show was a mix of pop, gospel, with a lot of soul. Bringing those horns into the fold was the best move Geoff Davin made. The sound was glorious. The musicians of this band was comprised of the NYC based band Soul'd Out NYC. In addition to sitting on the side, they occasionally were asked to react to the action since they were technically a part of the show. And they played well.

Most Likely Future Audition Song: Girls-"Soldier On" (The First Church of Mary)

Honorable Mentions- "A Funny Thing" (Children of Salt), "Japan It" (Ludo's Broken Bride), "Take Me There" (Lisa and Leonardo), "Whatever" (Normativity)

There were some great contenders this year but when you have such a musical moment like Megan Murphy Chambers had with "Soldier On", you know it's an amazing song. It was one of Geoff Davin's finer writing moments, but the message alone is a reason for you ladies to put it in your book. It was a rare occasion where I wanted to give a mid-show standing ovation.

Most Likely Future Audition Song: Boys- "Scream Scream Scream" (Ludo's Broken Bride)

Honorable Mentions- "Enough is Enough" (Children of Salt), "Psalm of Samuel" (Nickel Mines), "Where Land Meets Sky" (Forest Boy), "Who Needs Friends Like Mine" (The Last Word)

Ok, so technically this song wasn't written for the show but it sure is a song that fellas will want to put in their books! The Ludo tuner is a great upbeat number that allows a range of emotions to shine through. And Michael Jayne Walker did a mighty fine job with it.

Song of the Festival-"Maybe Tomorrow, But Not Today" (The Last Word)

Honorable Mentions- "I Want My World Back" (Ultimate Man), "I'm in Love and I Want You to Know" (Ultimate Man), "Perfect" (Icon), "These Friends of Mine" (The Last Word)

Firstly, if you'll notice, it was a battle between Ultimate Man and The Last Word but the opening number from The Last Word takes the prize. Why? Repetition and an ear-worm worthy melody. Brett Sullivan certainly knows how to open and close a show. Getting the audience to leave the theater with a tune in their head usually is a sign of success. Sullivan did that. Twice.

Next Stop Broadway Award- Icon

Honorable Mentions- Camp Rolling Hills, Children of Salt, The Last Word, Tink!

This award is for the show that is marketable and right for a commercial audience. Icon is just that. A fascinating story. Old-school charm. There's something for everyone. The show itself needs some finessing but once it does, expect to see a run somewhere. 

Spotlight On...Casey Dressler

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Name: Casey Dressler

Hometown: The Florida Keys (Key Largo & Islamorada)

Education: New World School of the arts in Miami and The Acting School of South Florida.

Favorite Credits: Frankie in Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de lune by Terrance McNally, Sarah in A Map of Virtue by Erin Courtney and Jennifer Jones in The Realistic Joneses by Will Eno. I just closed an extended run of Parallel Lives by Kathy Najimy and Mo Gaffney here in South Florida and it was hands down the most fun I’ve ever had on stage.

Why theater?: Because it’s magic! And the people are just the best! Shout out to my Thinking Cap Theatre family!

Tell us about The Wedding Warrior: The Wedding Warrior is a One Woman romantic comedy based on my experiences working as a wedding coordinator at a resort in my hometown of Islamorada. I play close to 20 characters in the show, all of which are based on real people whose paths I crossed during my brief stint in the bridal biz.

What inspired you to write The Wedding Warrior?: I initially wanted to write The Wedding Warrior as a vehicle to empower myself as an artist. It was never my intention for the story to become so personal. I had this idea that by 30 I’d definitely be married. This was something I wanted above all else. I started writing the show a few years ago shortly after my 30th birthday. I guess it was my quarter life crisis in a way. There was a sadness and a pressure I was feeling about not being married and much of that has informed my show. I grew up in a small island town and have stayed pretty close to home. I came to the conclusion that this was one of the reasons why I was putting so much emphasis on wanting my life to be wrapped up with a pretty perfect marriage bow. I decided I needed to travel and step outside the comforts of home where my roots were so deeply planted. So instead of planning a wedding, I planned a show abroad. I set a goal, gave myself a deadline and premiered The Wedding Warrior at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2014. It’s been a beautiful journey so far and one that I hope will continue to have wings.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?:"I don't like it when people come up to me after my plays and say, 'I really dug your message, man.' Or, 'I really dug your play, man, I cried.' You know. I like it when people come up to me the next day, or a week later, and they say, 'I saw your play. What happened?'– Jeff (Bill Murray, Tootsie). I love watching and performing thought provoking theatre that can be interpreted differently from person to person. As a writer and solo performer however, I am not as cool as Bill Murray in Tootsie. What speaks to me the most is being able to bring a story full circle in a way that is uplifting and leaves audiences feeling satisfied. I’ve always been a sucker for a happy ending. Maybe because I want so badly to believe they do exist. If someone comes up to me after a show to say I made them laugh or cry or gave them some kind of hope, then my goal was accomplished. As for inspiration? My family, my friends, my hometown, the wonderful weirdos I meet in my travels and of course that crazy thing called LOVE.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Robert Smith of The Cure. His music has been the soundtrack to my life.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: There was a beautiful show that premiered in South Florida last year called Daniel’s Husband, written by local Playwright Michael Mckeever. It moved me to tears and I did not stop thinking about it for weeks. I definitely took to social media and anyone who would listen to gush over it.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?:“Bridget Joneses Diary” which I believe was in fact made into a movie and starred the lovely Renee Zellweger. Honestly though? I’d love to adapt the Wedding Warrior into a screen play. As for the star, I’d be real Sylvester Stallone with ROCKY about it and insist they cast me.

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: Miss Saigon, Original London Cast. I still listen to that CD in my car, sing and sob to it. I am not well versed in musical theatre to be honest, but I saw a touring production of it as a teenager and I’m pretty sure it changed my life.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: I watch the Golden Girls every night before bed.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Doing something else that gave me great purpose, but as of now I’ve yet to figure out what that would be. If I had another option I may have already fallen back on it.

What’s up next?: The New York International Fringe Festival (SAT Aug. 13th @ 3:45, SUN Aug 14th @ 6:15, WED Aug 17th @ 9:15, SUN Aug 21st @ 4:30, FRI Aug 26th @ 7:15). AND…The Chicago Fringe Festival Aug. 31st-Sept 11th. Exact performance dates TBA.

For more on The Wedding Warrior, visit www.TheWeddingWarriorPlay.com and www.facebook.com/TheWeddingWarriorPlay

Spotlight On...Julia Izumi

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Name: Julia Izumi

Hometown: New York, NY

Education: BA in Drama from Tufts University, about to enter MFA Playwriting Program at Brown University

Select Credits: Performed in all iterations of The Brewing Dept.’s HamletGhosts, Julia in Molly Murphy and Neil deGrasse Tyson On Our Last Day On Earth (Incubator Arts), Suzu in Clare Barron’s Washougal My Heart (Communal Spaces)

Why theater?: Why not?

Who do you play in Meet Murasaki Shikibu?: Murasaki Shikibu (woah!)

Tell us about Meet Murasaki Shikibu: The play is a cross-cultural tragicomedy about a book-signing featuring the world’s first novelist, Murasaki Shikibu, who happens to be a badass Ancient Japanese lady.

What is it like being a part of Meet Murasaki Shikibu?: It’s been insane! This is the first time I am performing in a play I have written, and so the pressure is on! But I have an incredible team of people supporting the work who make me feel as calm as I can be and I am so grateful to them every day. It is very humbling to see all the hard work everyone is putting in around me for a show that feels heavily me-centric. I hope I am paying them back properly by creating a piece that is not self-indulgent or self-serving, but that gives voice to the unheard.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: Theatre that defies all expectations.

Any roles you’re dying to play?: Jenny in John by Annie Baker

What’s your favorite showtune?: I’m a sucker for anything in the Ahrens and Flaherty catalog.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: I would faint with happiness if I got the opportunity to work with Caryl Churchill in any capacity. Even if it would be just to sit in a room with her for a few minutes. She’s my theatre hero.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: I’d like to hope that if I ever get to a point where a movie about myself is to be made, there will be a plethora of established Asian-American actresses to choose from. ☺ My life-story movie would be definitely called “The Bouncing Penguin” though.

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: It would be pretty stellar to go back and see the opening night of the original for colored girls who have considered suicide / when the rainbow is enuf on Broadway. That would have been so electric.

What show have you recommended to your friends?:Men on Boats at Playwrights Horizons!

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: I will watch movie trailers for hours. I probably end up seeing 1% of the films, but I have a strange fascination for watching just movie trailers.

What’s up next?: Grad school! Ahh!

For more on Meet Muraski Shikibu, visit www.MeetMurasakiShikibu.com

Spotlight On...Miles Mandwelle

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Name: Miles Mandwelle

Hometown: Glens Falls, NY

Education: A little here, a little there.

Favorite Credits: Mozart in Amadeus, for sure.

Why theater?: There is no more immediate way to connect

Tell us about Scratching: It's Britton Buttrill's gritty rhapsody on life in Georgia.

What inspired you to direct Scratching: Because it's good! I'm inspired by Britton's ability to bring empathy- the kind we need in society- to the forefront. The stakes could not be higher, and it's beautiful to see.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I was actually having this conversation last night with a colleague who thinks I should be working more in queer theater. I've always been on the outside looking in, and I'm clueless as to what will speak to me most of the time. I am devoted to Brian Friel. Same with Gian Carlo Menotti, Jeffrey Hatcher, Leonid Andreyev, Marius Von Mayenberg, Peter Schaffer and others. I'm new to new works, and Britton has me hooked. My friends, first of all. I'm really blessed to have a lot of talented, inspiring friends. In particular, folks like Anthime Miller and Isaac Bush who go boldly into a new and exciting direction with every project, or Britton whose plays are all distinctly different than one another, shifting in and out of shades of humanity. Then there are my actor friends who floor me with their invention- like Julia Register or Patrick Kiernan who are such quick, inventive and outrageous character actors, or on the other end of the spectrum you get Hunter Ringsmith or Mia Hutchinson Shaw who can play seven different characters in three minutes and they're all deeply moving. I feel the same way about the actors of Scratching. They surprise me with in new ways all the time, and I like to be surprised. Within reason.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: I'm so lucky that that list is not long. There are brilliant women like Laura Roth who have been running in the cabaret circuit for their careers and I want to put them in an Albee play so bad. I want to assistant direct for John Doyle, Robert Falls, and Jesse Berger. Those are big dreams.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: Scratching, by Britton Buttrill.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: I've actually looked into this, but Linda Hunt's people never get back to me.

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: Original Broadway production of Follies. For sure.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: There's a John Waters moment in every show I do. I won't tell you. But I'm deeply obsessed

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Teaching Alexander technique in my hometown or working with refugees.

What’s up next?: Scratching! Then some irons in the fire.

For more on Scratching, visit http://scratchingtheplay.weebly.com

Spotlight On...Jeremy Kehoe

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Name: Jeremy Kehoe

Hometown: Smithtown, NY

Education: BA, Journalism, Boston University

Favorite Credits: Killing Russell Crowe, Ammo, Existential Magic Eight Ball

Why theater?: Theater is immersive, it’s intimate, it’s intense, and it is a chance to transport an audience by creating an entirely new reality in a 20-foot by 20-foot space. Theater is live and occasionally raw, and sets the nearly impossible standard of demanding perfection on every take — from everyone: from the actors to the director to the light and sound operators to the stage manager — they all must work together in that moment to drive the story forward and tell a compelling tale that impacts that individual audience during that particular performance. And, selfishly, as a writer I love theater because dialogue dominates. There are no helicopter crashes, no car chases, no CGI tomfoolery to distract the eye. It’s terrifying and mortifying, but I can’t imagine doing anything else.

Tell us about Movin’ On Up?: Movin’ On Up is funny-or-die in the graveyard — an absurdist comedy where three characters (who may be dead or alive) bumble and stumble, and thrust and parry, and block and stymie, and quiz and question one another as they try to puzzle out why they’re there and what path they are supposed to take next. These three characters have their own reasons for winding up in the graveyard — Daniel watches over it all, Lewis wakes up there, and Joan dazedly wanders in — yet they all must squeeze into the same E-Z Pass lane of existence to try and make sense of it all (except none of them own an E-Z Pass, and none of them have enough cash to pay the toll. At a macro level, Movin' On Up is a play about self-determination: Who do you decide who the boss of you is? Who do we allow to set the rules for ourselves? Where do we search for purpose and meaning and who do we put our faith in to find order in the chaos? But, you know, in a hah-hah funny kind of way. http://www.movinonuptheplay.com/

What inspired you to write Movin’ On Up?: The seed for Movin’ On Up was planted in a jury waiting room, of all places. The room was stacked with more than 100 prospective jurors, yet what immediately struck me was the silence. Despite being stacked together like chickens in an industrial farm, there was nary a peep beyond an occasional greeting or a murmured “Bless you” after a sneeze. Then, slowly, the room began to fill with noise — that silence had given way to a cacophony of conversation — and that got me thinking about language and communication and interaction: why did humans and animals begin communicating? Did birds begin chirping at each other because they needed to — because their survival depended on it — or because they wanted to (“Poo-tee-weet”)? I concluded that noise is a necessary ingredient for life (although the growing ranks of the face-down-in-the-phone crowd offers a persuasive counterargument). Since we are creatures who choose to make noise, that led to another question: what is the point of making noise, and what do we do with the noise being created around us? What is our individual purpose?. That’s what Movin’ On Up is about — a group of characters making noise who stumble upon each other while trying to determine their purpose, their reason for being, while searching for the path to take to get where they need to go (all in good fun, of course).

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I’m inspired by writers who experiment with language, who challenge accepted norms, who make us feel sympathy for the unsympathetic, who can take me out of my comfort zone and force me to defend my position or upend my attitude and point of view. Every writer writes like himself/herself, which is the transformative aspect of all art: the power to change minds.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: If I could harness the power of 1.21 gigawatts while piloting a DeLorean at 88 mph, I would pilot my way back in time to the four writers have had the greatest influence on my writing: Kurt Vonnegut, for bearing witness to the horror of war and creating humanity and humor and hope from its ashes; George Orwell, for his prescient commitment to speak truth to power and his “lack of purple prose”; J.D. Salinger, for his ability to capture and convey a cultural and generational malaise; and Charles Bukowski, who was a master of finding beauty and creating poetry from an underbelly of society who had been cast aside and forgotten.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Eugene Levy: "Citizen Eyebrows".

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: I would see any play where the proprietors encouraged the audience to hurl fetid produce at the stage. I imagine the sound of a spongy tomato splattering against a scrim would be rapturous. And, it would give us a reason to hang on to our overripe tomatoes. We tell ourselves we’ll use them to make homemade tomato sauce, but we never do.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Kit Kats.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Standing on a corner somewhere holding a cardboard sign containing some wryly humorous message in barely decipherable handwriting.

What’s up next?: I am close to birthing a new creation I’m calling, This Ain’t the DMV. All of the characters are living in an abandoned house — homeless and with few or no outside connections. They exist only within the space they are in. The idea is to use these homeless characters as mirrors to reflect back on ourselves. We’re living in a time where fear and paranoia are the dominant motivators — emotions preyed upon by supposed leaders who cater to the fearful’s basest instincts. One outgrowth of this uncertainty and angst is the disturbing number of people have become all too eager to lash out — whether in the guise of self-protection or the righting of perceived wrongs — and demonize the “other”. Many times these “others” are different colors or religions, as well as those one rung down the economic ladder. It’s easier to strike out against the powerless than take on the powerful — and easier to dehumanize. At the bottom of the economic ladder are the homeless, and this piece is aimed at humanizing a group of people who but for the grace of god go I.

Spotlight On...Kathleen Warnock

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Name: Kathleen Warnock

Hometown: Philadelphia, PA

Education: University of Maryland-Baltimore County, BA

Favorite Credits: Outlook at the Dublin Gay Theatre Festival; Some Are People at Emerging Artists Theater; Grieving for Genevieve at Venus Theater (MD); liner notes for the Joan Jett & the Blackhearts CD “Unfinished Business.”

Why theater?: Because it keeps me off the streets at night. Seriously, it’s a lifetime opportunity to create work with people I admire and love, and as a writer, it gets me out of the house and talking to other people.

Tell us about The Further Adventures of… ?: It’s the story of a little girl who grows up to be a writer, and a lesbian, and her obsession with a classic sci-fi TV show, which clued her in to both those identities.

What inspired you to write The Further Adventures of…?: The play started out as a 24-hour play written for Wings Theater. I wrote the part of Maggie for Jamie Heinlein, who is still playing it. The 10-minute play has had a good long life, been performed by our company and others all over the place, and published in a “Best Short Plays” anthology. I’d always suspected that the play had room to grow, and after a production of it in Provincetown (where I stepped in to play the lead at the last minute), I realized where it could go and how to expand it So I kept going.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I love talented people with huge hearts, who make theater that’s honest, as painful or funny as it may be. People who have opened doors for me include the late Doric Wilson and my dear friend and mentor Tina Howe. Of my circle of indie theater people, I think of Daniel Talbott, Mark Finley (artistic director of TOSOS), actor/writer Donnetta Lavinia Grays.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Julie Andrews.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: This year: Casey Llewellyn’s O, Earth and J. Julian Christopher’s Locusts Have No King.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Possibly Laura Linney, and it would be called “Songs Only I Can Hear.”

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: My Fair Lady with the original Broadway cast.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Candy corn. Though I’m really not that guilty about it.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: a sportswriter.

What’s up next?: A production of Rock the Line at Venus Theater in Maryland. I love their work, and I look forward to their take on my play inspired by my decade or so following Joan Jett.

Spotlight On...Vanessa Shealy & Rick Younger

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Names: Vanessa Shealy & Rick Younger

Hometown: 
VS: I'm from Oklahoma City, and Rick is from Baltimore, Maryland. We actually talk a lot of about the differences in where we grew up in My White Wife, or So I Married a Black Man.

Education: 
RY: Vanessa got an MFA from the University of Georgia; I didn't study theater or film in college, but my degree was in American Studies from the University of Maryland.

Favorite Credits: 
VS: My favorite credit is always the most recent one. This spring UP Theatre Company in Washington Heights did a great production of my play, An American Drum Circle. It was great! The show was directed by Melissa Attebery, one of our two directors for this show. And it was staged in the round, which was really exiting. We had a great cast, including the fabulous Rick Younger.
RY: And mine is also recently - I got to work with Woody Allen on a new project of his for Amazon. My scene was with Woody Allen and Elaine May - two legends!

Tell us about My White Wife, or So I Married a Black Man:
VS: Well, I'm a white woman, and Rick is a black man. And we're married - and that's what the show is about! It's part storytelling, part stand-up comedy.
RY: We reveal some inside information about race from our personal experience. See, most people don't like to talk about race, or if they do it's very PC. But, because we're married, we talk about race all the time.
VS: So we thought we'd take that freedom that we can have with each other - the freedom to REALLY talk about race, openly, in a private conversation - and make it public.
RY: Plus it's funny. People need to laugh together. We're raising a biracial child, in a so-called “post-racial” America. We hope we can free people up to have a difficult and desperately needed conversation about race.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?:
VS: Big-fun-play inspires me. Theater that makes me think, but doesn't preach, and tricks me into thinking that I came up with a wonderful epiphany all by myself is always satisfying. Above all, a big story - one that really moves.

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?:
RY: I'd go back and see RENT with the original cast. I was in the national tour of the musical and I've always wished I'd seen the original.

What's your biggest guilty pleasure?:
VS: Black licorice. And I'm not trying to be funny. I really like it.
RY: Kentucky Fried Chicken, original recipe. And I'm not trying to be funny either. It's my guilty pleasure.

If you weren't working in theater, you would be _____?:
VS: I'd be teaching, which I did for years and occasionally still do. Teaching is essentially performing, and writing, and directing, and producing, and stage managing ...so I guess I'd be doing the same thing I'm doing now.
RY: Well, I do stand up, so I'd be doing that. Or if I wasn't doing stand up I'd be singing. So yeah, basically the same thing I'm doing now.

What's up next?:
VS: I'm writing an indie comic book with my co-creator, Leah Lovise, called Couri Vine. We have the first two books in print and we hope to get the third out in time for Thanksgiving (and they make great holiday gifts!!)
RY: I'll be doing another “Rick Younger Show” in the fall. It's a show where I perform with my 6-piece band and sketch comedy guests. It is a mix of live music, stand up, and sketch comedy.
VS: It's a fun show. We've produced about 30 versions of the show together since we're been married. It's always different and it's always good time!

For more on Vanessa and Rick, visit www.YoungerChildProductions.com, VanessaShealy.com, and RickYounger.net

Spotlight On...Ezra LeBank

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Name: Ezra LeBank

Hometown: Eugene, Oregon

Education: BA, SUNY Purchase; MFA Smith

Favorite Credits: Edinburgh Fringe, La MaMA, Israel Acrobatics Convention

Why theater?: I think of myself as an event planner. It’s my job to create an evening that is worth it for a group of people to set aside their lives for an hour and imagine together. Once I learned about circus, the idea of creating images that appear magical as a way of telling stories seemed like the coolest thing. What’s better than coming up with a crazy proposal, and then inventing it? For example: Okay, what if we crash an airplane, swim to the bottom of the sea, and discover lost love – now let’s build that with our bodies. I love the mix of the literalness and abstraction forced by working with our bodies as the aesthetic material. We are real, and everything you see is imagined.

Tell us about Flight: Flight is a sequel to The Little Prince with an acrobatic twist. It’s a story about learning to see with the heart, and finding the courage to fly. The three of us who perform are all acrobats, and we morph into cactuses, waves, and far-off islands as we invite the audience to discover this wonderful story in a way they’ve never imagined. We blend acrobatics, comedy, and storytelling to create an adventurous hour at the theatre with a lot of heart.

What inspired you to write Flight?: I had a dream to create an acrobatic show that would invite adults to feel like children again. When The Little Prince fell into my lap, it was clearly the story I had been dreaming of. Once we started developing the show, it leapt to life! It’s a lot of fun, and a great reminder that just because we get older, doesn’t mean we have to grow up.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I'm a big fan of contemporary French circus. I saw an amazing show in Paris that was all about stacking and chopping wood. I would never have dreamed that could be so incredible. The care they put into each simple concept is mesmerizing. The French idea of ‘cirque’ is philosophical in a way I had never understood from other circus. They develop what feels like some of the most purely poetic performance I’ve ever seen in any format. It makes me laugh, cry, and reconsider my life’s purpose without being sure what’s happening. They’re on a whole different level.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Any collection of French circus artists. Am I pandering too much? I should probably focus my energy on learning to speak French.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: I tell everyone to see Ockham's Razor, a London-based aerial theatre company - their new show Tipping Point is at the Edinburgh Fringe this year. It's spellbinding, and so much fun.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: I don't know that anyone would want to make or see that, but in some alternate universe where people flock to dull movies, I'd probably be played by the neurotic Jew of the moment, so Jesse Eisenburg has probably got that role on lock. Maybe they’d hire a wonderful acrobat to do stunts and make me appear much more talented than I am for a little dramatic edge. I would be okay with that (nudge nudge).

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: This is nerdy, and reveals my love of mime, but I’m sad I never saw Marcel Marceau do his solo act live. Friends say he was magical on stage.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: I have a dangerous obsession with Almond Croissants.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Living off the grid in the rainforest, climbing trees, and making friends with turtles and squirrels. Or taking a nap.

What’s up next?: The day after Flight closes in New York, I’ll be on a flight (no pun intended) back to Long Beach where we will have our first rehearsal the following day for a new, large-scale acrobatic theatre show called ‘Elements.’

Spotlight On...Dominique Salerno

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Name: Dominique Salerno

Hometown: San Diego, CA

Education: Princeton University (AB), American Conservatory Theater (MFA)

Favorite Credits: Clarin, the old clownish manservant in Jose Rivera's Sueno, Olivia in Twelfth Night, and Ariel in The Tempest.

Why theater?: In a world dominated by digital connection, I think that the live interaction between the audience and the performer is more necessary than ever. Bringing people together in a room to tell stories is such a primal human need, and I love being a part of it.

Tell us about The Box Show: The Box Show is a one-woman show in which I perform over 25 characters from within the confines of a small kitchen cupboard. The entire show takes place within this tiny space, and every time the cupboard doors fly open, we discover an entirely new reality: a drunken couple mid-fight in Las Vegas, the entire Greek Army inside the Trojan Horse, a lonely Giantess, a lost Pope and so much more! It is fast-paced, wacky, absurd, heartfelt, hilarious, and truly transformative! The show plunges the audience into vastly different worlds without ever leaving the physical space of The Box.

What inspired you to write The Box Show?: My grad school (American Conservatory Theater) has this fantastic mid-year festival called "SkyFest" where you can propose your own dream projects to create in two weeks. I proposed that the school lock me alone in a room with absolutely no materials to make my own one-woman show from scratch. It just so happened that the room they assigned me had this small AV cupboard built into the wall that hadn't been used for years. I climbed inside and the show was born out of my curiosity and creative imaginings. I have an improv/sketch comedy background, and I think the style of show came from my hunger for that joyful exploration during a rigorous and serious acting graduate program.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: As a performer, Improv is my soul-food. It is something that I need to do for my own creative well-being. As an artist on a larger scale: I love edgy, daring work. I love documentary theatre, and theatre for social justice. I always feel that the soul of theatre hinges on the live experience created by both the audience and a performer in that shared moment. For that reason I think I am drawn to work that can be slightly shocking or interactive. I love anything that shakes the audience up viscerally, and I think the Box Show is a blend of my improv addiction and my attraction to edgy work.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Lin Manuel Miranda, Jose Rivera, Tina Fey, Amy Schumer, and Key and Peele. (A girl can dream, right?)

What show have you recommended to your friends?: I haven't even seen the play yet (I am going after the Fringe) but I have recommended Bedlam's Sense and Sensibility. I love that theatre company. I caught their production of Saint Joan years ago, and it rocked my world.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Julia Louis Dreyfus. "Can't Stop. Won't Stop".

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: I still haven't seen Hamilton! So maybe I could go back in time and see it at the Public!

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: The T.V. show: Criminal Minds.  I am seriously addicted.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Teaching, most likely. Or working for the Southern Poverty Law Center to combat the rhetoric and actions of domestic hate groups. I wrote my undergraduate thesis on the religious dimensions of the white power movement, and I have a real passion for fighting extremism.

What’s up next?: The Box Show will have its final run at the United Solo Theatre Festival on Sept 15th at 9pm. After that, I am looking forward to being an actor again. That's the beauty of writing and producing your own one-woman show from the ground up: it's so exhausting that I am aching to just be a cog in someone else's glorious machine. Auditions, here I come!

For more on The Box Show, visit www.theboxshow.org and https://www.facebook.com/boxshowtime/?fref=ts. For more on Dominique, visit www.dominiquesalerno.com

Spotlight On...Holly Kristina Goldstein and Dan Rider

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Name: Holly Kristina Goldstein (Director), Dan Rider (Writer)

Hometown: 
HG: Sag Harbor, NY
DR: Hingham, MA, outside Boston

Education: NYU Tisch

Favorite Credits: 
HG:Perfect Fifths (Director) @ John Drew Theater Lab & Houseworld (Performer) in Brooklyn
DR:Hadestown @ NYTW (Assistant Music Director), Hamlet (NYU Tisch, titular role)

Why theater?: 
HG: It’s always been a huge part of my identity, since I was a kid, so when the time came to choose a path as an adult there was really no other option for me.
DR: I think we live in a world where empathy is becoming a limited resource. Because we're so bombarded by images of other peoples' suffering on a daily basis, it's very easy to feel detached, removed from the experience of your fellow humans. Theater is where we practice empathy, where we exercise the muscle of caring about other people, in the room, with us, in an immediate context.

Tell us about Thud!
HG:Thud! is about three people and their relationship to pain and to each other. I think that our cultural relationship towards violence is shifting, due to the visibility of police brutality towards people of color in particular, and I think that Thud! fits into that conversation by questioning why we have always been so entertained by violence and toeing the line of when violence stops being funny.
DR: Holly basically covered it. There's a lot of swearing, and a lot of obscure horror movie references. It's pretty bleak, but I like to think there's a little hope buried in there somewhere.

What inspired you to write/direct Thud!?:
DR: I started writing Thud! soon after a fairly debilitating mental breakdown. I had just gotten diagnosed with depression, and was trying to reconcile that diagnosis with my perception of myself as a human. And having been suicidal, I was grappling with my own relationship to pain and violence. I think the characters materialized out of that. The part of me that was desperate for approval, desperate to please, became Tad the hapless clown. And that voice of self-reproach, the bitter, caustic, irrational verbal abuser in my head became Morley, the foul-mouthed teenager. Both of them are very much parts of my personality.
HG: Dan did. He brought the script to me about a year and a half ago and asked me to direct it and at first I wasn’t sure, there was a lot of work to do, but there something, particularly in Morley, that really resonated with me and that compelled me to tell her story. A lot of her speech patterns and her mannerisms remind me of a version of myself that I wanted to give some attention to. Now, I know once you see the play that statement will probably be quite alarming, but I really do love these characters like they are a part of me. Dan’s writing is so nuanced and energized and smart that half the work is already done for me. I’ve never felt such love and ownership towards a project before and I think I would do just about anything to see it succeed.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?:
HG: Theater that showcases all bodies (all races, genders, abilities), provides a platform for voices we don’t always get to hear and really challenges the audience to think about their place in the world is what speaks to me. Inspiration is a funny thing. I’m a very physical person and I learn and create by experience, not in the abstract of my mind, so I think, for me, inspiration comes when I’m in a room full of talented artists with beautiful ideas who are ready to create and discover a project with me.
DR: Holly and I are kind of opposites in this respect—I'm very much not a physical person. I think in sounds, and I'm really drawn to the verbal and auditory. Plays that use language in creative ways jazz me, or that play with the musicality of words. But I'm with Holly in that having a room full of smart, trusting, brave artists gives me the most inspiration. Writer's block hits me hardest when I isolate myself, and cultivating a community is, I find, the best cure.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?:
HG: I have a really great respect for Niegel Smith and the work he directs. I think that he’s unafraid to reach into the audience’s mind and just shake them around and let them land wherever they land and sometimes that place is scary and sometimes that place is galvanizing and inspiring, but his work (Take Care at The Flea in particular) really reflects the kind of theater I want to be making.
DR: I'd love to work with Dave Malloy. His work never fails to crack my head open and melt my brain.

What show have you recommended to your friends?:
HG: At Fringe? In the whole world forever? I recently got to see a snippet of Taylor Mac’s 24-hour song cycle that is going up in October and I think if you can afford to see it (presale tickets are $400) then 100% GO. Otherwise, I think anyone who cares about theater (and most of my friends do) should see something at Shakespeare’s Globe in London at least once in their life. It really gives you a sense of where we’ve been and how far we’ve come and how transcendent our art form is.
DR: Anyone who's had a conversation with me in the past six months knows that I can't recommend Hadestown enough. I had the good fortune of working on that gorgeous show, and I basically can't stop talking it up.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?:
HG: That’s hard because I’m Non-Binary and there aren’t a ton of NB actors who are well known, but I certainly wouldn’t mind Ruby Rose stepping into my shoes. Title would have something to do with how often I get hurt (another thing that connects me with Thud!).
DR: The only cross-dressing celebrities I can think of are Jaden Smith and Eddie Izzard, so maybe they could take turns? Do it “I’m Not There”-style? And I would call the movie “Gone with the Wind,” just to mess with people.

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?:
HG: Peter Brook’s Marat/Sade
DR: Susan Sontag's Waiting for Godot in Sarajevo

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: 
HG: Lost Girl - it’s a Canadian SciFi show about a bisexual succubus. Need I say more?
DR: Cupcake Wars. Mostly for the hot hipster carpenters.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?:
HG: Very bored and very sad
DR: Probably taking after my parents and going to law school. Shudder.

What’s up next?: 
Our collective, BITCRUSHER, is producing our next show, You’re Going to Hell if You Laugh, on September 16th at 10pm on the main stage at Dixon Place! It’s a hybrid burlesque/clown show about disability and sexuality.

For more on Thud!, visit www.bitcrushertheater.com and facebook.com/bitcrush3r

Spotlight On...Matthew A.J. Gregory

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Name: Matthew A.J. Gregory

Hometown: Albany, NY

Education: MFA from UCLA and BA from SUNY Albany (lots of acronyms)

Favorite Credits: As an actor: The Power of Darkness at the Mint Theater Off B’way, and Romeo and Juliet at the Saratoga Shakespeare Company.  As a director: A Midsummer Night’s (Queer) Dream at Theater for the New City, and The Hypochondriac at the cell.  As a costume designer:  The Myths at the Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, and Assisting John David Ridge for the Broadway revival of Lily Tomlin’s Search for Intelligent Life in the Universe.  As a costume artisan:  making skin-tight pants for Lucy Liu in Charlie's Angels.

Why theater?: I love the immediacy.  It’s the aliveness of it.  I tried my hand at film as an actor and designer, but it doesn’t hold a candle to the thrill of the stage.  Anything can happen, and sometimes the greatest moments are created on stage through happy accidents.  Great theater is a transcendent experience for me, both to watch and be a part of.  It is as close to a spiritual experience I have ever known.

Tell us about A History Of Servitude:A History of Servitude is a wacky and wild  Commedia dell’Arte performance that is part parody and part improv comedy. A History of Servitude is a comic survey of world history, from the dawn of man to the present.  The play examines and celebrates the eternal struggle of the underdog.  History remembers men (and to a much lesser extent women, which we point out as well) of greatness, who through conquest, innovation and accomplishment have left an indelible mark on the story of man.  But what about the servants of these giants?  Using the boldly physical slapstick comedy of Commedia dell’Arte, we bring attention to the contributions of the working class to history, which all too often goes unnoticed.   The Great Pyramids of Egypt were built by slaves, but it’s the pharaohs whose names live on.  A History of Servitude posits a comic reminder that ‘the little people’ are the ones on whose back much of history rests, despite the fact that the masters get all the credit.

What inspired you to create A History Of Servitude?: Well, it was truly a team effort.  The Department of Fools, our Commedia troupe, is comprised entirely of former students of mine from both NYU and the Lee Strasberg Theatre & Film Institute.  Over many years of teaching, I have kept in touch with alumni who share my love of mask work and Commedia dell’Arte.  Last year I invited about a dozen of them to join with me in creating a Commedia troupe that would present free theater throughout NYC, including subway busking and street performance.  From the very start of Fools, the company was interested in examining the long history of the haves and have-nots through Commedia.  At one of our first rehearsals, another of the Fools (Yair Ben-Dor – who has appeared on QUANTICO and elsewhere) suggested the title A History of Servitude and on the spot we began riffing on the theme; thinking about the master/servant dynamic from cavemen to modern humans.  From that point to now, we have been developing the show largely through improvisation and devising techniques.  There is no single writer or director.  We do all the work as a collective, which offers unique challenges but the result is so much richer and more fun!

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I love almost all kinds of theater, from musicals to the classics to sketch comedy, but sadly a lot of theater today is truly deadly (to borrow from Peter Brook).   I want theater that grabs me by the soul and doesn’t let go until the curtain call.  I think of plays like Mary Zimmerman’s Metamorphoses at Circle in the Square back in 2002, or Bedlam’s Saint Joan a couple years ago, and that is theater at its best.  Raw, unconventional and deeply imaginative.  I am inspired by theater artists (both past and present) who immerse themselves in the artistry of creation from multiple angles, like Julie Taymor and Moliere.  I aspire to be like these artists in approaching the creation of theater not strictly as a writer, or director, or designer, or actor, but being all of them simultaneously.


If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Gods, that is a long list!  A few highlights:  I’d love to work with Bill Irwin (the man is a comic genius and unparalleled clown), Mel Brooks (his work has influenced my approach to comedy more than any other individual), and Mary Zimmerman (her plays are simply divine).  Please, any of you, feel free to call me any time!  I’ll be waiting by my iPhone.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: I don’t get to see as much theater as I once did, since the birth of my son.  However, I tell people all the time to see anything Bedlam is doing, which currently is their adaptation of Pride & Prejudice.  You can’t go wrong with Bedlam!

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Kevin Spacey in "STAGES OF LUNACY:  A STORY OF ONE MAN’S OBESSION WITH THE THEATER".

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: It would be either Moliere’s Imaginary Invalid in the final performance after which he passed away, or Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream at the Globe.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: A tub of Ben & Jerry’s Chubby Hubby and binge watching on Netflix.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Dead.

What’s up next?: Right now, I am just focusing on getting through the end of August and the Fringe.  After that, the Fools and I will get back to work on another show called The Tooth-Puller.  It’s great classic comedy, but one of the integral Fools in that show is off finishing up the national tour of Newsies so we are waiting until he is back in the fall to complete work on that little gem.

For more on Matthew, visit https://matthewajgregory.squarespace.com. For more on A History of Servitude, visit https://departmentoffools.wordpress.com/

Spotlight On...Heider Tunarrosa

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Name: Heider Tunarrosa

Hometown: I was born in Bogota, Colombia, but I’ve been living in NYC for the past 8 years.

Education: I majored in creative writing and film studies at The New School.

Favorite Credits: This play and my short film “Searching for Taylor Swift.”

Why theater?: Theatre is magic. Theatre has that uncanny ability of telling the same story over and over again, but in different ways. It’s also encouraging as a performer to make the audience laugh or gasp while you’re on stage.

Tell us about You Belong with me because you’re so vain: It’s a romantic comedy about a Colombian songwriter who falls in love with his best friend’s ex-boyfriend, and he gets help regarding this dilemma from the imaginary versions of Taylor Swift and Lady Gaga. I wanted to write a play about falling in love with the wrong person and having to decide whether to listen to your head or your heart. Forbidden love is a feeling everyone has experienced at least once in their lives.

What inspired you to write You belong with me because you’re so vain?: I was very depressed because I was going through a break-up, and I wanted to write something that will make people laugh. I’ve always been a fan of romantic comedies, and I wanted to tell a love story that could be relatable to anyone.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I love comedy. I’ve always loved the concept of comedy from pain, and there’s nothing more painful as an artist than having a broken heart. I’m mostly inspired by writers such as Billy Wilder, Taylor Swift, and Yasmina Reza. Those 3 writers have an outstanding way of telling love stories from very personal perspectives.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: I would love to work with Stephen Karam, and with Martha Plimpton.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: I love The Book of Mormon. If there’s a show that makes you laugh from beginning to end, it’s that one.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: I would play myself since no one can imitate my accent, and the movie would be called “working down the ladder.”

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: I would love to go back in time and see Glenn Close as Gloria Swanson in Sunset Boulevard. Never had the chance of seeing Ms. Close on stage.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: I always find an excuse to eat ice cream.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be_____?: I would be an attorney.

What’s up next?: I’m working on developing a web series right now.

Spotlight On...Tasha Nicole Partee

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Name: Tasha Nicole Partee

Hometown: Currently New York, New York. Originally Richmond, Virginia. Both are home!

Education: M.A. in Educational Theatre (NYU), BFA in Theatre Education (Virginia Commonwealth University)

Favorite Credits: I am fortunate to have worn a lot of hats in theatre (many of them simultaneously, though, which can be quite the challenge if you only have one head). My favorite acting credit has to be a recent production of The Iceman Cometh with the Hudson Guild Theatre Company, in which I played Cora. For dance, my time as a Baltimore Ravens Cheerleader was life changing. For teaching and directing school theatre, it would be a tie between Willy Wonka and a fabulous little play called Attack of the Pom Pom Zombies. For choreography, it would be A Midsummer Night’s Dream with the Onomatopoeia Theatre Company. And as for writing, it’s Mrs. Schrodinger’s Cat, my first full-length play.

Why theater?: Theatre is tangible. It’s connection. It requires face-to-face interaction. It lives and breathes because of dialogue and the many forms communication with another human being can take. I can’t put into words how necessary I think theatre is. My senior year of high school, we were given the gift of a new drama teacher. The drama kids were proud but few until she arrived, and through her humor and enthusiasm, she built this entire community of performers and crew members and kids who didn’t actually do anything but still wanted to be there. We did Ducktails and Bobbysox that spring. It was our Grease. I loved the community she created, and I became a drama teacher because of her. With my own students, our classroom is a family room. I’ve been teaching theatre for the better part of fifteen years in many contexts, but the one thing that never changes is the connection my kids feel, the being part of something. It’s something I try to create with my casts now as I move into writing and directing outside of classrooms. My fantastic voyage in theatre began before the i-age. Looking back, I know I didn’t understand just how precious and sacred those experiences of togetherness were. Now, I value them even more. On social media, anyone can post an idea or a rant, in isolation, and even have the ability to block others from commenting. Misunderstandings run amok. Tone and intent are misinterpreted. Human beings are dehumanized, and dialogue becomes optional. This is why I think theatre is necessary. It never lets us forget we are human.

Tell us about Mrs. Schrodinger’s Cat: Mrs. Schrodinger's Cat follows a group of women as they learn of a local art gallery's unsettling new exhibit: anonymous photographs taken surreptitiously of people in their small town. With the identity of the photographer and the subjects of the photos still in question, and with the potentially humiliating ramifications of such an exhibit weighing heavily on their minds, the women unite for a summer night’s escapade to face the sad, funny, beautiful truth. Raising questions about image, perception, entitlement, and art, Mrs. Schrodinger's Cat ultimately asks what it means to know another person, and the extent to which we ever really can. The cast and creative team for the show are phenomenal. We performed last summer as part of Manhattan Repertory Theatre’s Spring Play Development Series, and coming back to it this summer with fresh eyes for the New York International Fringe Festival has been such a unique and rewarding experience. We’ve been able to make so many new discoveries with the characters, and we’ve been able to dig so much deeper with the text. Sometimes I forget I wrote the darn thing. We can’t wait to share it with our audiences in August!

What inspired you to write Mrs. Schrodinger’s Cat?: I am intrigued by paradoxes and thought experiments. You can give yourself a good headache when you want to with it all! Or, if you’re married to a former philosophy major (as I am), you can just pour a glass of wine and enjoy some lively conversation. My husband and I were driving to Virginia a few years ago and got to talking about Schrödinger’s Cat and the observer’s paradox. We were not drinking wine at this time, just to be clear. The questions Schrödinger’s Cat raises about the observer’s affect on the observed reminded me of a piece that had been in the news recently about an NYC photographer who had taken pictures of his neighbors in their apartments across the way from his own, without their knowledge or consent. When the photographs were later exhibited, there was a lot of controversy. One side argued it was invasion of privacy. The other side argued artistic license. Courts became involved, lawsuits filed, privacy laws cited. It was fascinating and unsettling to me, and it raised even more interesting questions. While I thought the photographs were beautiful and the photographer’s defense of his work both poignant and haunting, I could absolutely sympathize with the subjects of the photos and see why people would be upset about it. Above all, I began to wonder what the actions of the photographer, his subjects, and the community as a whole reflect about a culture in which it is commonplace to put one’s life on display, or at least the best shots. With all of these questions in my mind, all of which I thought were important and worth discussing, Mrs. Schrodinger’s Cat began to develop. I fictionalized the situation, imagining it occurring in a much smaller town, but I attempted to give a human and equal voice to all sides of the issue. I do not try to provide any answers with this play, though. Just, hopefully, some good material for lively discussions. Wine optional.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: Questions inspire me, first and foremost. To authentically explore a question through theatre results in rich characters, great dialogue on stage, and, perhaps most importantly, conversation off stage among audience members on their way home from a show. I love theatre that asks questions rather than that which tries to provide answers. I also love theatre that intrigues and mystifies and makes the audience work a little to piece things together. This probably comes from my affinity for Dateline, the ID Channel, and all things mystery. Add in humor—as I wholeheartedly believe in the unique ability of humor to reach people—and you’ve got the perfect combination, in my book. If Dateline were funnier, I’d probably never leave my couch.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: I secretly dream of a Vince Gilligan production of Mrs. Schrodinger’s Cat. We are actually from the same hometown, so clearly he would understand me. And though it’s not meant to be, Nora Ephron. She inspires me every day.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: I can’t say enough good things about The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime. Also, I got to see Hamilton last summer, but whenever I go to recommend it to friends, I feel guilty. Like, “Go see this, if you win the lottery.” It makes me feel like a chump. But obviously, it’s amazing! Play lotto!

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: It’s set in my future and would be called, “Still Going.” It stars the oldest living actress at the time, playing me just kind of being happy and looking back at all the fun I had in theatre. I become an astronaut at the end.

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: I really regret that I didn’t get to see The Father recently. I’d also love to go back in time and see the original Sweet Charity, though I cannot wait for Sutton Foster’s upcoming performance!! I would have loved to have seen Kevin Spacey as Hickman in The Iceman Cometh. And as long as I’m in this time machine, I’d like to hit “pause” so I can catch the million shows I want to see before they close this fall.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: 1960’s folk music. The hippier, the better. My childhood was spent listening to this type of music on tapes in my dad’s car as we’d drive around for hours, not really going anywhere. It was magical.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be____?: Listening to 1960’s folk music on tapes, driving around for hours, not really going anywhere. I might also be an astronaut at this point, as that was my childhood dream. Before I found theatre.

What’s up next?: I’ve got a short piece in The New York New Works Theatre Festival in August! It’s called In a Vision, or in None. The cast is outstanding, and I am very excited about it. My hope is to expand it into a full-length play over the next year. There may or may not be a cat in this one, as well…

For more on Mrs. Schrodinger's Cat, visit https://mrsschrodingerscat.squarespace.com

Spotlight On...Julianne Cross

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Name: Julianne Cross

Hometown: Erie, Pennsylvania

Education: Penn State University

Select Credits: Improv comedy was my gateway drug back to theater in my adult life. UCB gave me a place to learn and perform as well as a community of artists to collaborate with. I currently perform sketch comedy with my BoogieManja sketch team, First Runner Up every month at The PIT Loft.

Why theater?: There's an infectious energy when performing live - it feels like almost anything can happen. There's also no time for inner dialogue or self doubts on stage, you simply have the gift of being fully alive as the character in the moment. Also, when I was 4 I wanted to be on Star Search so my mom took me to audition for community theater and the rest is history.

Who do you play in Tailspin!?: Duran Duran

Tell us about Tailspin!:Tailspin! is a one act comedy filled with chaos, destruction, and laughs written by Zach Stephens and directed by Kelley Webb. Lowly assistants at fictional Babylon Studios are left to do damage control when North Korea's supreme leader is furious with his depiction in their latest film. Besieged from all sides, they must contend with a spiraling predicament catapulting them further into a frenzied distortion of American culture and the creative process. If you like pop culture and comedy, this show's for you.

What is it like being a part of Tailspin!?: Oh boy. A collaborative blast. Every rehearsal is full of laugher and discovery. To say that my character is wacky would be an understatement, so there is a ton of physical comedy involved. I was lucky enough to work with the creative team on the first run of Tailspin! at the Venus/Adonis Theater Festival in February, and they are all a joy.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I'm drawn to the unexpected - a comedy that makes you really think or a drama that can make you laugh out loud due to the absurdity of human behavior. Lucille Ball inspires me - for every outrageous circumstance she found herself in on her show, she was rooted and grounded as a real human being. That's where the comedy lives.

Any roles you’re dying to play?: I love dark comedies. "a feminine ending" by Sarah Treem is one of my favorites and I feel deeply connected to the lead role, Amanda. I would have to learn to play the oboe, but that's a sacrifice I'm willing to make.

What’s your favorite show tune?:"Stars And The Moon" by Jason Robert Brown from Songs From A New World. I sing it at karaoke bars to mess with people who just want to hear "Sweet Caroline" for the 100th time.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: Tina Fey was very kind to me in passing once and encouraged me to quit my corporate job to pursue comedy. She has no idea who I am but she made a huge impact on my life. I think she's a brilliant writer and performer and it would be an honor to work with her in any capacity. That said, Molly Shannon is my spirit animal - her full commitment to physical comedy and total immersion into her characters is what I aspire to. My middle school history teacher used to call me "Mary Catherine Gallagher" when I was misbehaving and I took it as a compliment.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Julianne Moore. It would be called "I know it's confusing, but I'm not Julianne Moore".

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: The original cast of RENT on Broadway. I was a really big nerd for that show in high school but only saw it on tour.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: I typically recommend seeing comedy shows that my friends have written. Girls With Brown Hair is a female sketch duo that I think are fantastic. They have a show currently running at UCB.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: Sharing photos and videos of my niece, Marcie Bea. She's two years old and quite possibly my favorite person on the planet. Being an aunt is rewarding and incredible and basically just bragging rights to something I deserve zero credit for.

What’s up next?: I'm trying to do more storytelling and I've been "working" on a comedy project with my writing partner for too long... we need to bring it to life.

For more on Julianne, visit www.juliannecross.com. For more on Tailspin, visit www.tailspintheplay.com
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