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Spring 2016 Training News Photos: Cover: Cast of Freedom Rider. UMKC Theatre 2015 TRAINING NEWS Writers: Jamie Alderiso Amanda Davison Andrew Hagerty Dalton Pierce David Ruis Collin Vorbeck Ethan Zogg Project Manager: Tom Mardikes Design/Layout Manager: Sarah M. Oliver Editors: Felicia Londré Cindy Stofiel Collin Vorbeck Designer: Kate Mott Collective Collaboration 1 En Charrette 3 Lightning Strikes Twice in Scenic Design 5 Illuminating Projections 8 Matt Carter and the Hudson Scenic Studio 10 Professional Educators 12 Professors Stay Sharp 14 Working Actors 18 A Lasting Bond 20 Sound Mandala 22 Graduate Students Strut Their Stuff 23 A National Collaboration 26 Alumni at Work 28 Shaping Stage Managers 35 Playwrighting: The Art and the Craft 36 A Vocal Homecoming 37 Fringe With Benefits 39 Dramaturgs on the Rise 41 Inside Front: From Top: Joshua Gilman in The Learned Ladies. UMKC Theatre 2015 Korrie Murphy in The Rocky Horror Show. UMKC Theatre 2015 Alex Ritchie in Wittenberg. UMKC Theatre 2015 Inside Front Facing Page: Mariem Diaz, Frank Oakley, and Aishah Ogbeh in Freedom Rider. UMKC Theatre 2015 Inside Back From Left: Cast of Wittenberg. UMKC Theatre 2015 Frank Lillig and Korrie Murphy in Pericles. UMKC Theatre 2014 Michael Thayer in The Learned Ladies. UMKC Theatre 2015 Back: Cast of Caucasian Chalk Circle. UMKC Theatre 2014 Above photos courtesy of Brian Paulette UMKC Theatre is composed of a team of creative, educational professionals who work actively in the professional theatre. We build bridges. We assist the creative student to make the journey to becoming a creative professional. The practice of the department is to vigorously educate students in the many arts, crafts and traditions of theatre, and to provide a basis for future careers in the creative industries. Our specialties are the development of actors, designers, technicians and historians. We expose our students to a wide range of theatrical influences and traditions. Under the guidance of extremely experienced mentors, creativity and professional discipline are valued and developed. Our program offers intensive hands-on experience, in a conservatory training tradition, while at the same time fostering the analytical and contextual skills offered by a liberal arts education. The whole of greater Kansas City is our auditorium. The practical experience of theatre-making occurs not only within the performing venues of UMKC, but also in many professional theatres in the Kansas City area. We therefore stress theatre’s role in the overall civic dialogue, as well as giving our students professional exposure, and contacts. Theatre is a passion. We seek it, train for it and embody it. Goals and Objectives - To provide our students with the skills necessary to establish rewarding careers in an expanding and rapidly changing profession. - To strengthen and develop relationships with professional theatres, artists and communities in greater Kansas City, and to devise major projects and initiatives which can make an impact on the national stage. - To expand working spaces for our productions, rehearsals and craft shops. - To enhance the network of UMKC Theatre alumni who will maintain their participation by supporting current students and new theatre-making initiatives in Kansas City - To further strengthen our national reputation as a major American theatre training institution. T he UMKC MFA program in Acting is a rigorous conservatory experience that provides advanced training for the young professional actor. Over the course of three years, the program challenges actors to develop the varied skills necessary to achieve success. Fundamental to the training is an exposure to a diverse set of performance methods from contemporary to epic, from devised work to Shakespeare, from the Greeks to new plays commissioned and premiered by us. This unique program seeks individuals who will bring their full hearts, minds, consciences and artistic souls to the discovery of personal, foundational and daring acting techniques. Our national and internationally recognized faculty is committed to partnering with such individual talents with the goal of guiding them to their fullest creative potential. University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department by Dalton Pierce T Thayer quickly learned that acting pro he UMKC Theatre program has Michael Thayer (MFA Acting fessionally is slightly different from peran established tradition of working with 2016)is one of many UMKC students to forming in an educational setting. “The professional theatres so that its actors, de- have the opportunity to work at The Unisigners, and stage managers may benefit corn. He performed in Bengal Tiger at the rehearsal time is cut in half,” Thayer said. “When you work in an educational setting, from the experience of working on a proBaghdad Zoo last year, and will be the it’s like a lab. You can experiment and try fessional show. Few theatre departments understudy in the one-man show Buyer new things. In the professional setting, grant students this opportunity, but and Cellar. UMKC partners with the it’s still a lab, but you have to Unicorn Theatre, The Coterie, come to it quicker.” Working on and the KC Rep. These partthese shows also allows Thaynerships allow the future proer to build Equity points, which fessionals to gain experienccan ease the process of audies as well as providing them tioning in a city such as New an opportunity to establish York. None of these skills could their names in Kansas City. have been obtained without The Department of the training he received from Theatre will partner with the the department. “UMKC has Unicorn theatre to perform given me so many tools. The Mr. Burns, a post-electric techniques that they give us play, written by Anne Washallow us to adapt them in our burn. This play tells the story own work.” of a group of people who The Coterie has long perform an episode of The been a partner of UMKC, Simpsons after surviving and past collaborations have an apocalyptic shutdown of included Oliver Twist, The electricity. Directed by UMKC Hobbit, A Village Fable: In the faculty member Theodore Suicide Mountains (a producSwetz, this play examines the tion that moved to the Kennedy lasting effect that popular Center), Arthur Miller’s Playing Damron Russel Armstrong and Michael Thayer in Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo, culture can have on enterfor Time, Our Town, and Lois Unicorn Theatre. Directed by Ian R. Crawford, 2014. tainment and performance. Photo courtesy of the Unicorn Theatre Lowry’s Number The Stars. www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online 1 Last year the co-production was The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane, a play that allowed the cast of four third-year actors to perform multiple roles throughout the 60-minute production. This year’s collaboration is And Justice For Some: The Trial of Anthony Burn, written by Wendy Lement and Bethany Dunakin. This work tells the story of an escaped slave, who is unjustly sent back to his Southern master. 2 The resulting court case was the driving force that got Lincoln into the White House. Directed by Jeff Church, this play engages the audience by having them act as “1858 Massachusetts State Senators [who] discuss the themes at the end of the play.” The co-production with KC Rep is the classical Dickens story A Christmas Carol. There is also something exciting happening to Spencer Theatre, located in the Olson Performing Arts Center. The construction, which began in May, adds a new stage floor, as well as new acoustic and lighting designs. Spencer Theatre will also get an expanded lobby, as well as new restrooms and a second-floor lounge. The construction will be finished in time for the annual production of A Christmas Carol, which will feature several of our graduate students in various roles. Spencer Christensen, Nicole Marie Green, and Emily Nan Phillips in The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane. The Coterie Theatre 2015. Photo courtesy of the Coterie Theatre Missouri’s Campus for the Arts by David Ruis & Collin Vorbeck T Victoria Morgan critiques student designs for the ballet The Wizard of Oz. Photo by Jae Shanks he term charrette (the French word for cart) dates back to the Ecole des Beaux Arts in 19th-century Paris. It can be defined in two ways: a trip on a cart for a criminal facing the guillotine or a session during which focused design students rigorously work to beat the clock on arts projects being pulled on a cart – the final product then being critiqued by a master artist. Luckily, UMKC Theatre has been experiencing the latter since 1994, when Hall Family Foundation Professor John Ezell planted the first seed by bringing in Mary Zimmerman to work with MFA design students in this intensive format. Many award-winning guest master designers have followed over the past two decades, including David and Karen Shulz-Gropman, Fiona Shaw, Eldon Elder, Ralph Koltai, Ricardo Khan, Deborah Nadoolman Landis, Willa Kim, and George Tsypin. David and Karen Shulz-Gropman, production designers for the film Life of Pi, found the UMKC charrette experience to be stimulating and rewarding. They stated, “Professors John Ezell and Gene Friedman have organized and structured an ideal learning environment. For us, the chance to collaborate with the design students on the charrette was so refreshing, a true gift.” University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department 3 The charrette process is an actionpacked endeavor, with students creating and presenting their designs to the master artist within a matter of days. From research to sketches to conceptualizing a theatrical project, the process is invigorating for both students and masters alike. David and Karen Shulz-Gropman both say, “The opportunity to have full concentration on a single design project is a dream. Add to that the imaginations of your mentors: Lindsay Davis, Victor En Yu Tan, and peers, and you are in a tank with no limits.” The 2015 charrette master was Victoria Morgan, Artistic Director of the Cincinnati Ballet, challenging the students in the development of a new narrative ballet based on the illustrations used for the 1905 edition of L. Frank Baum’s novel The Wizard of Oz. The process led not only to immeasurable academic growth for the graduate students involved, but also to professional work for Alexander LaFrance (MFA Scene Design 2015). Ethan Newman (MFA Lighting Design 2017) couldn’t believe how much he learned from his first charrette in 2015. “I’d heard so much about the process when I visited that it was part of my decision to attend UMKC. I was floored by what it did for me. The collaboration, the encouragement (not only from the charrette master, but also from my professors and peers), and the focus: every part of the experience helped me to grow both as an artist and a theatre professional.” 4 Jae Shanks (MFA Sound Design 2017) was impressed by how the charrette was able to incorporate her studies in sound design. “I was excited to show Victoria Morgan what a sound designer could bring to a ballet. Even with a symphony providing the music, I was able to give her an idea of what else could be done to enhance the production. She was very receptive and provided encouraging feedback to all of us.” UMKC Theatre’s charrette is a total immersive experience and is often accompanied by readings, classes, or different events that will inform or inspire the students to be able to do their best work. Said Gretchen Halle (MFA Costume Design 2017), “With my dance background, working with Victoria Morgan from the the Cincinnati Ballet was wonderful. I especially enjoyed participating in her ballet class which combined conservatory dancers with design students, so that designers could better understand the dancer’s experience.” “Yes!” offered scenic and costume designer Zoe Still, “and it is an eye-opening experience to see how much you can get done in such a short amount of time.” The experience forces you to trust your instincts.” Added Max Levitt (MFA Costume Design 2017) as a summation of the 2015 charrette, “At the end of the day, after having worked so closely with one’s peers, it is wonderful to be able to walk away feeling that everyone I study with is exceptional.” Mission accomplished for another Master’s charrette. 2015 Charrette Master Victoria Morgan mentoring costume design student, Tyler Wilson. Photo by Jae Shanks www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online Alexander LaFrance and The Silver Shoes by Amanda Davison Alexander LaFrance’s theatre background encompasses everything from acting to directing to stage management. Victoria Morgan, the artistic director and CEO of the Cincinnati Ballet, was brought to the Department of Theatre to conduct a charrette with Professors Ezell and Friedman. This gave students across theatre disciplines access to collaboration with working professionals. A charrette, a collaborative session during which students work with professionals on real projects, provides students the chance to shine, hone skills, and potentially have their work seen in a professional production. T wo scenic design graduate students found artistic inspiration and real-world alliances through professional mentorship opportunities at the UMKC Department of Theatre. “When this happens,” says Gene Friedman, assistant professor of scenic design, “We call it ‘lightning striking’; it is that astonishing chemistry that happens on rare occasion between a designer and a director.” Jeff Ridenour (MFA Scene Design 2014) and Alexander LaFrance (MFA Scene Design 2015) forged strong professional relationships while they were still graduate students at UMKC. They created scene design magic when they were given opportunities to work with professional directors, artistic directors and choreographers. Freedom Rider stage design by Alexander LaFrance. Photo by Brian Paulette Missouri’s Campus for the Arts 5 LaFrance found inspiration in Ms. Morgan and her aesthetic, as well as in the topic of the 2014 charrette: a new ballet based on L. Frank Baum’s The Wizard of Oz. What most interested LaFrance were the parallels between the ballerina’s psychological journey and that of Dorothy’s. “I presented my ideas,” he said, “at the risk of them being rejected, only to find them embraced and encouraged by Victoria.” That risky spark of creativity, ultimately, led to LaFrance being hired as concept creator, librettist, and designer of sets, costumes, and projections for the concept that he and Ms. Morgan developed in the charrette: The Silver Shoes: The Ballerina in Oz. An original score will be composed for the debut at the Cincinnati Ballet and none other than Victoria Morgan herself will choreograph the ballet. The ballet, for which LaFrance is receiving full professional credit for scenic design, will be produced in the spring of 2017. In addition to the ballet, Alex is also designing The Ghosts of Lote Bravo, a world premiere being produced at Cynthia Levin’s Unicorn Theater — another professional relationship that Alex forged while studying at UMKC. Alexander LaFrance has also been awarded one of the most coveted internships in the country. In January 2016, he will embark on a five-month journey as an art design intern with Disney’s Creative Entertainment. Thousands of applicants vie for a spot in this program, from across America and across the globe. LaFrance will relocate to Los Angeles to participate in this professional, fully-funded program. It will be the experience of a lifetime. Alexander LaFrance 6 University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department Jeff Ridenour and Cendrillon Jeff Ridenour, in his third year at UMKC, was given the opportunity to design the opera Cendrillon for UMKC’s Conservatory of Music and Dance. Jeff did not know who the opera director Fenlon Lamb was when he was assigned the project. Jeff recently related how working with a visionary director like Fenlon Lamb altered the trajectory of his professional career. “From our first meeting Fenlon and I found that we not only had a very similar understanding and vision for Cendrillon but had a common language and sense of style and aesthetics that meshed together.” Jeff found design inspiration for the opera from the illustrator Erté’s glamorous depictions of 1920s style and modern sophistication. Don Dagenais, writing in the KC Metropolis hailed the production as “splendid”, and described it as “the most spectacular visual production this observer has seen in over 30 years of opera.” Since then, Ridenour and Ms. Lamb have also worked professionally on the operas Hansel and Gretel, La Bohème, and Little Women. They will be collaborating as a creative team Hansel and Gretel stage design by Jeff Ridenour for Nightingale Opera Theatre. Photo by Jeff Ridenour again on Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte, or The Magic Flute, for the Conservatory of Music. Ridenour and Lamb are currently developing a production company, Papermoon Productions. The company was conceived after their innovative collaboration on La Bohème, in which the costumes and settings were made largely of paper. The mission of the company is to develop affordable and innovative designs to promote the powerful experience of live opera. The company will be particularly focusing on touring productions to intimate venues for smaller communities that usually cannot afford to produce opera. Jeff Ridenour has moved to New York City, where he is serving as assistant designer to world-renowned scenographer George Tsypin on major projects including Manon Lescaut for the Berlin Staatsoper and the St. Petersburg Mikhailovsky Theatre. Cendrillon stage design by Jeff Ridenour for UMKC Conservatory of Music. Photo by Mike Strong www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online 7 “I am thankful that I can look back to UMKC and remember where my artistic identity was born. Without the program at UMKC, I would not be the designer, teacher, or mentor for my students that I have now become.” --David Hardy (MFA Lighting 2002) by David Ruis L 8 ighting design has come a long way in the theatre since ancient Greek times when artists relied on the sun to illuminate the stage for their theatrical productions. This would evolve over time to the use of burning torches and candles to enhance the play’s mood. Lighting set the tone, supported the scenes, and gave the audience a desired visual into the intensity and emotional center of the piece. Lighting brings together all of the elements (actors, set, costumes, props, etc.) of the play into a cohesive look. The ever-growing field in computers and digital technology has given birth to the next evolution of this powerful medium – projection design. The lighting designer now has the ability to catapult this field into new frontiers on stage with digital animation and automated moving projectors, and give the audience a spectacular experience. A projection design program has not yet been established at UMKC but that has not stopped Sunday in the Park with George lighting design by Jeffrey Cady. Photo courtesy of Kansas City Repertory Theatre A Christmas Carol lighing & projections design by Jeffrey Cady. Photo courtesy of Kansas City Repertory Theatre student lighting designers from learning about the medium and incorporating projections into their own designs. A big help has been from previous UMKC lighting alums, like Jeffrey Cady (MFA Lighting 1996) and Adam Dunaway (MFA Lighting 1998), mentoring student designers through master classes and residencies. The University of Missouri-Kansas City has unleashed a plethora of stellar lighting designers, tattooing their fiercely dedicated work ethic and powerful artistry in lighting and projections design onto the theatre world. Missouri’s Campus for the Arts Temishia Johnson (MFA Lighting 2006) made her Broadway debut in 2008 assisting lighting designer William H. Grant III on Cat on a Hot Tin Roof starring James Earl Jones, Phylicia Rashad and Terrence Howard. “UMKC’s MFA Theatre Training Program really prepares you for the industry, and how to build your reputation in the industry. I am living proof that listening to your professors will get you further than you ever dreamed.” Jeff Cady (MFA Lighting 1996) works mainly in projections, but still designs lighting. His latest work was seen in KC Rep’s production of Stephen Sondheim’s Sunday in the Park with George. Cady spent the summer with Jennifer Lopez as the projections programmer for her AKA tour and with Jason Aldean for his Burn it Down tour. Rocco DiSanti (MFA Lighting 2008) primarily works as a projections designer in New York City. He is assisted by fellow UMKC lighting alums Doug Macur (2014) and Devorah Kengmana (2015). DiSanti is also the projections director for the Shen Wei Dance Arts Company, best known for their performance at the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics opening ceremony. DiSanti conquered Broadway in less than two years to design shows at the Manhattan Theatre Club. Those include The Snow Geese, starring Mary-Louise Parker and directed by Daniel Sullivan; The Columnist, starring John Lithgow; and Wit, starring Cynthia Nixon. Hair, Retrospective projections design by Jeffrey Cady. Photo courtesy of Kansas City Repertory Theatre Missy Elliott concert with lighting design by Brandon Clark. Photo by Tom Martin from Bestival website University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department 9 by Jamie Alderiso M 10 att Carter earned his MFA in Technical Direction (2014) and now works at the Hudson Scenic Studio in upper Manhattan. The UMKC alumnus describes the particularities of his position. “By title, I am part of the engineering department at Hudson, but my role is typically assisting our Automation Department Head, Chuck Adomanis. I do calculations to help him design the machines for automated effects.” Matt’s work involves everything from making computer drafts for machines and scenery for the fabricators on the shop floor to writing purchase orders for motors, gears, cables, and power supplies. Additionally, Matt is beginning to learn how to design control systems. This skill is something that only a few people at the Hudson Studio know how to engineer. Matt specifies: “I have begun doing more calculations for Chuck and will continue to learn wiring diagrams for the electricians to be able to wire the controls together properly.” Through the longevity of his tenure at the Hudson Scenic Studio, Matt’s knowledge and expertise continue to grow. Surveying “well” below stage level with tension blocks of the New Amsterdam Theatre in preparation Aladdin moving to Broadway. Photo by Matt Carter www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online In reflecting back on his education at UMKC, Matt offers nothing but adamant praise and thankfulness. Matt affirms that “almost everything about my qualifications and position at Hudson is because of UMKC's TD program. I chose the program because I knew I wanted to learn scenic automation and UMKC is one of the top programs in the country for that education.” He did his third-year residency at the Hudson Scenic Studio before finally earning his degree. This final part of his education was pivotal in helping shape his current relationship with the scenic studio. Matt also insists that “the AutoCAD skills, automation design understanding, and other advanced scenery techniques like rigging that I apply at my job daily are all thanks to Chuck Hayes and Chaz Bell.” Matt has earned his place in the professional world and remains a proud alumnus of the UMKC graduate program. Matt Carter taking measurements of the grid structure of the New Amsterdam Theatre in preparation Aladdin moving to Broadway. Photo by Matt Carter Missouri’s Campus for the Arts 11 forward in a design. Working with an abundance of theatres and directors, I gleaned a clear understanding of what the universal expectations and challenges are that arise while designing a show.” Wilson’s exposure to UMKC’s problem solving helped him prepare to be a truly collaborative designer, and gave him the skills necessary to work in the professional world. By Dalton Pierce W 12 hile many graduate students from UMKC achieve success in either the professional world or the field of education, lucky are those who understand the challenges of balancing each. The UMKC costume department teaches students to excel at both. Tyler Wilson (‘15), Lauren T. Roark (‘14), and Larissa McConnell (‘10) are three of many examples of success from the graduate design and costume program. Tyler Wilson, who teaches for Wake Forest University, has designed at various regional companies. Before he entered academia, Wilson’s designs graced the stage of the Riverside Theatre in Iowa City. Iowa was treated to his creations for shows such as Cyrano de Bergerac and Othello. Wilson’s relationship with Riverside was born from his work at UMKC, and 2015 marked his third year working for the company. He believes that the training he received at UMKC jumpstarted his career: “The opportunity to collaborate with a variety of directors throughout the professional theatre in Kansas City was a thrilling introduction to the pace and expectations Costume sketch by Tyler Wilson for Iago in Othello at Riverside Theatre 2014. of professional theatre in the Midwest.” Wilson believes that the most valuable lesson he learned while in the graduate program was how to solve problems quickly. He believes that, for artists, “the biggest death sentence is an artistic block and the inability to move University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department Othello at Riverside Theater 2014. Photo by Bob Goodfellow Lauren T. Roark who teaches at the University of North Carolina-Pembroke, has designed Richard II at the Illinois Shakespeare Festival and will design the St. Louis Repertory Theatre’s production of Satchel Paige, which will also see an additional production at the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park. Roark professes she received her most important training at UMKC, where she was “given numerous opportunities to design in Kansas City, to intern at the Arena Stage in Washington D.C., and to work in Asia.” Richard II at Illinois Shakespeare Festival 2014. Photo by Pete Guither. Costume sketch by Lauren T. Roark for Richard II at Illinois Shakespeare Festival 2014 Of the many skills and lessons that Roark acquired at UMKC, the most important was the ability to trust her designs and to eliminate fear. During her second year in the department, she travelled to Hong Kong “to source and manufacture menswear for a production of The School for Scandal produced by Riverside Theatre in the Park.” These primary lessons helped her to understand the design process, as well as how to communicate www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online effectively. Larissa McConnell accepted a job at Gustavus Augustus College where she teaches classes such as Costume Craft and Design, Costume Construction, as well as others. She earned her BS in Secondary Education/ Earth Science at the State University of New York at Fredonia, which she believes helped prepare her to teach effectively. Her recent professional work includes being the Costume Designer/Shop Manager at the Bay View Music Festival in Petoskey, Michigan. McConnell’s professional work has aided her in easily exceling in the academic sphere. Remembering her UMKC training, McConnell understood that students working in the costume shop are there to learn. She affirms, “Each project must take into account the skill level of the student involved. There are times when the student’s learning experience trumps production expectations.” The training that Wilson, Roark and McConnell received gave them the necessary knowledge and skills to be both teachers and to have professional careers. They possess the dynamic duality that are the hallmarks of the graduates of the costume department at UMKC. 13 Chaz Bell (Teaching Assistant Professor of Technical Theatre) has been teaching at UMKC since 2011. He was previously technical director at Southwest Baptist University. Chaz has served as technical director for the Heart of America Shakespeare Festival since 2012 and for the UMKC Conservatory Opera program since 2010. Chaz Bell teaches graduate courses in structural design, stage mechanics and automation, advance metal working, advanced wood working, plastic and alternative materials, advanced technical problem-solving, and the undergraduate course Intro to Technical Production. He recently designed the set for the Heart of America Shakespeare Festival’s production of King Lear. Professor Bell constructing set for King Lear for the Heart of America Shakespeare Festival. Photo by David Eulitt 14 Lindsay W. Davis (Professor of Costume Design) has designed the costumes for Bengal Tiger at the Bagdad Zoo at the Unicorn Theatre in Kansas City. Currently Mr. Davis is co-designing Mozart's The Magic Flute at the UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance. Mr. Davis is actively working on his own original musical, Wand'ring Blind, and steeped in his metaphysical writings. Professor Swetz as the Tiger in Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo at the Unicorn Theatre. Costumes designed by Professor Davis. Directed by Ian R. Crawford, 2014. Photo courtesy of the Unicorn Theatre Missouri’s Campus for the Arts Sadie DeSantis (Production Manager to the UMKC Department of Theatre and Assistant Teaching Professor of Stage Management) has experience with concerts, ballet, opera, musical theatre, and outdoor production. In the summer of 2014, she was the production stage manager for a brand new production of Thoroughly Modern Millie starring Anneliese van Der Pol in Fort Worth, Texas, for the inaugural season of Prism Theatrics. Last year, Ms. DeSantis was the stage manager for the Lyric Opera of Kansas City’s Tosca and assistant stage manager for LOKC’s La Traviata. This summer she was the assistant stage manager for Mary Poppins at Starlight Theatre. This fall she was the stage manager for Starlight Theatre’s 2015 Gala titled Prism: Reflecting Forward. She is a member of the American Guild of Musical Artists and Actors’ Equity Association. In the fall of 2015, she will stage manage Rusalka at the Lyric Opera of Kansas City. John Ezell (Hall Family Foundation Professor of Design) recently designed the sets for Disgraced and Next to Normal for the Arizona Theatre Company--Tucson and Phoenix, San Jose Theatre and La Mirada--California Musical Theatre and his award winning designs for Next to Normal were adapted by the San Diego Musical Theatre. He designed The Mousetrap for the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis as well as The Winslow Boy and is currently designing Satchel Paige and the Kansas City Swing for Repertory Theatre of St. Louis and the Cincinnati Playhouse. He designed the current revival of A Christmas Carol at the Kansas City Repertory Theatre and the annual revival at the Great Lakes Theatre Festival. He designed the Cincinnati Ballet’s multi-million dollar production of The Nutcracker now touring nationally. He serves on the National Advisory Committee of the Sam Fox School of Art and Architecture, Washington University in St. Louis, and he is a member of the College of Fellows of the American Theatre at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. Scenic Design Master Classes Classes. He serves as the architectural historian of the Nuestra Señore de Guadeloupe (1629) and is the curator and archivist of the treasury of the Casa de Santo Niño at Zuni Pueblo, New Mexico. Professor Friedman has worked with George Abbott, Gerald Freedman, Adrienne Kennedy and Vincent Dowling among other theatrical luminaries. His work has been seen at the Second City Comedy Group, Lincoln Center Institute, Kennedy Center, Historic Ford's Theater, the Great Lakes Theatre Festival in Cleveland, the Repertory Theater of St. Louis, Stages Saint Louis and of course, the Kansas City Repertory Theater. He is the resident scenic designer at the Heart of America Shakespeare Festival. Gene Emerson Friedman (Associate Professor of Scenic Design) is an award-winning scenic designer known especially for his work on Shakespeare and the American musical. Professor Friedman has been awarded the prestigious Peggy Ezekiel Award for Outstanding Achievement in Theatre Arts by the United States Institute for Theater Technology for his design drafting, the only time this award has ever been granted in this field. He is a consultant to the J. Pierpont Morgan Library and Museum's exhibition Creating the Modern Stage: Designs for Theatre and Opera. He was recently cited as “a significant artistic contributor” in the American Theater community. He teaches The History of Design and Technology of World Theater, Drafting for the Theater, and Rendering Techniques for the Designer, as well as contributing his insights and experience in the Chuck Hayes (Teaching Professor of Technical Direction) has been the head of the MFA Technical Direction program at the UMKC since 1993 and served as technical director for Kansas City Repertory Theatre from 1993-2008. He was previously technical director at the University of Massachusetts/Amherst, Kent State University and the Fort Worth Shakespeare in the Park. He is an active member of USITT and a frequent presenter at their national conference. He teaches graduate courses in technical management, hand and computerized drafting, stage mechanics and automation, pneumatics, hydraulics and advanced rigging techniques. He holds an MFA in design and technology from the University of Iowa. Felicia Hardison Londré (Curators’ Professor of Theatre) completed her two-year term as Dean of the College of Fellows of the American Theatre at the Kennedy Center and now she is working on the 50th-Anniversary Fellows Volume of Citations. She is presently completing a book on 1940s American drama, focusing on Eugene O’Neill, Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller, and Thornton Wilder, for Methuen’s Decades of Modern American Drama series. King Lear at the Heart of America Shakespeare Festival. Photo by David Eulitt Meanwhile she continues research for a book on French and American theatre people as contributors to the Allied cause in the Great War. To that end, Dr. Londré has recently published several articles on entertainers in World War I: “The Range of Laughter: First-Person Reports from Entertainers of the Over There Theatre League” in Humor Entertainment and Popular Culture during World War I (Palgrave Macmillan 2015), “Elsie’s Big Show: From Entertaining Under Fire to Firing Stories in All Directions” in Old Stories, New Readings: University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department 15 16 The Transforming Power of American Drama (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015), “Sarah Bernhardt’s Last Stand in America: How the One-Legged Actress Promoted American Involvement in the Great War” in New England Theatre Journal (vol. 25, 2014). Her recent articles on Tennessee Williams are: “En Avant! Tennessee Williams between Hyperborea and the Mediterranean” in Tennessee Williams and Europe: Intercultural Encounters Transatlantic Exchanges, (Rodopi, 2014) and “A Vast Traumatic Eye: Culture Absorbed and Refigured in Tennessee Williams’s Transitional Plays” in The Theatre of Tennessee Williams (Bloomsbury, 2014). She recently gave two conference presentations: “Welcoming the Menace: Thornton Wilder’s Alcestiad and Shadow of a Doubt” at the Second International Thornton Wilder Conference in Newport RI in June and “Quelque Chose de Tennessee” at the Mid-America Theatre Conference in Kansas City in March 2015. She did nine evenings of ShowTalks for Heart of America Shakespeare Festival’s King Lear. The movie Normandy Is My Name, in which she plays the 90-year-old grandma of the title character, was released in fall 2015. Greg MacKender (Assistant Professor of Theatre Sound) has been actively composing music for theatre during the last twelve months. He is a founding member of the Kansas City Actors Theatre, and composed for their dual season openers in 2014; Hamlet and Rosencrantz and Gildenstern Are Dead. In March, he wrote the score for the first professional Kansas City production of The Merchant of Venice in over fifty years. In April he traveled to St. Louis to work with director Mike Donahue on a production of Antony and Cleopatra for the Shakespeare Festival of St. Louis. He closed the 2014-15 season composing King Lear for the Heart of America Shakespeare Festival in Kansas City. He is an Assistant Teaching Professor in the theatre department at the University of Missouri, Kansas City, where he has taught sound design and composition since 1994. Antony and Cleopatra at the Shakespeare Festival of St. Louis, 2015. Sound design by Greg MacKender. Photo by J. David Levy Tom Mardikes (Chair of UMKC Theatre and Professor of Sound Design) spent the summer of 2015 working with sound design grad on the Sound Mandala project in PAC 116. He directed the UMKC Theatre production of Wittenberg in Grant Hall Theatre. He will design sound for the March 2016 production of Satchel Paige and the Kansas City Swing at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis and Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park. www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online Carla Noack (Assistant Professor of Acting) relishes life in the “Stretch Zone” with her students and colleagues at UMKC. In addition to teaching the MFA acting progression, she recently served as the associate director for a production of Romeo and Juliet for Ten Thousand Things Theater in Minneapolis and played a version of Wonder Woman in the world-premiere production of Lasso of Truth at the Unicorn Theatre. She also starred in the world-premiere production of George Brant’s one-woman play, Grounded, at the Unicorn Theatre, and subsequently performed it in theatres in Lanesboro, Winona, and St. Joseph, Minnesota. This summer she was invited to participate in the NYC Actors Center’s “Craftsmen of Dionysus” National Conference, where she enjoyed connecting with fellow acting teachers from around the country and contributed to discussions of best practices in our field. She was designated by this group as the midwest’s eye for emerging teaching talent. Carla loves people and potlucks and ping-pong. Carla Noack and Martin Buchanan in Lasso of Truth at the Unicorn Theatre. Photo by Cynthia Levin. Courtesy of the Unicorn Theatre Sarah M. Oliver (Assistant Teaching Professor of Costume Technology) Thoroughly enjoying her return to the Kansas City theatre scene after her travels in Asia, it was a pleasure to serve as costume designer for UMKC Theatre’s production of The Rocky Horror Show and the Kansas City Actors Theatre production of The Gin Game. Lindsay Nelson and Korrie Murphy in The Rocky Horror Show. Costume design by Sarah M. Oliver. UMKC Theatre 2015. Photo by Brian Paulette Mrs. Oliver presented a session on international online costume collaboration at the 2015 Association for Theatre in Higher Education conference in Montreal. In December 2015, she will design costumes for Mr. Burns at the Unicorn Theatre and in March 2016 will serve as costume designer for The Island with Kansas City Actors Theatre. Stephanie Roberts (Associate Professor of Theatre) performed at Dell'Arte International's 40th year reunion festival in Blue Lake CA. She has continued her research into the actor/creator through presenting at the Association of Theatre Movement Educators Colloquium in Boulder CO and attending Movement Theatre Studio's intensive on The Ensemble Director in New York City. This fall she will choreograph Mr. Burns at the Unicorn Theatre and will be a featured artist for Charlotte Street Foundation’s Artists’ Walks series at the Nelson-Atkins Museum. In the spring Professor Roberts will be directing Immeasurable Heaven, the culmination of a three-year devised project, which will perform in Spencer Theatre. Scott Stackhouse (Assistant Professor of Theatre in Voice and Acting), a graduate of UCLA's MFA Acting program,has worked nationally as an actor, director, vocal coach,and fight choreographer. Some of his directing credits include: Macbeth, The Shape of Things, A Devil Inside, A Comedy of Errors, Lysistrata, Noises Off!, the midwest premiere of The Atomic View Moteland, most recently, Seven Guitars and A Midsummer Night’s Dream at UMKC. Scott has choreographed fight sequences and served as vocal coach in both academic and professional productions for the last fifteen years. He spends each summer directing for the Seaside Repertory Theatre in Seaside, Florida. Missouri’s Campus for the Arts Theodore Swetz (Patricia McIlrath Endowed Professor of Theatre Arts) started off his summer directing Tribes by Nina Raine at the prestigious Unicorn Theatre in Kansas City. The rest of the summer included spending a fabulous month in France--lots of cheese, wine, beautiful villages, La Comédie-Française, ancient theaters and friends. He also started to work on an original “Spoken Word” play with his daughter Abigail (who is a teacher of 8th grade and a poet) titled Navigating Violence – The Lessons of Ferguson. Ted also started preliminary work on Mr. Burns, a post electric play by Ann Washburn, which he will direct as a co-production with the Unicorn and UMKC Theatre this season. Tribes at the Unicorn Theatre. Directed by Theodore Swetz, 2015. Photo courtesy of the Unicorn Theatre 17 by Amanda Davison K ansas City, a mecca for theatre artists of all stripes, is not only training actors, it is also providing them with an ideal environment in which to continue to grow and work. Two of Kansas City’s brightest talents, both graduates of UMKC’s MFA Acting program, have been working on stage since graduating. Logan Black (MFA Acting 2014) and Nicole Marie Green (MFA Acting 2015) both hail from other states. Black, a native of Salt Lake City, and Green, who grew up in New York and did her undergraduate studies in Florida, were both inspired to come to UMKC out of the desire for the high-quality acting education they knew they would receive from a professional and inspirational faculty. Logan Black in Bond: A Soldier and His Dog. Fringe Festival 2015. Photo by Jamie Leonard Logan Black 18 “As soon as I talked to Ted Swetz,” says Black, “I didn’t consider any of the other programs. I said, I’m going to UMKC. That’s where I need to be.” Black says he appreciated the balance in the program between strong classical training and modern techniques, such as those from Morris Carnovsky, which brought out his strengths as an actor. “It’s about finding the balance of how much is the character and how much is me, the individual. Ted’s philosophy is so beautifully simple. It brings the character to life in a way I had never encountered before.” Some of Black’s previous work includes roles in the KC Rep productions of Our Town and A Christmas Carol, in Blithe Spirit at the Okoboji Summer Festival, as well as at the Coterie. Most recently, he performed at The Fishtank his show, Bond: A Soldier and his Dog. Black spent eleven years in the Army, one year in Iraq, and the story tells of the life-saving love between Black and his yellow lab Diego, who worked as a bomb-detecting dog. The show, rated Best of Fringe 2015, has received rave reviews and is known to elicit powerful emotions from those who see it. University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department “Jennifer Martin, who had the biggest heart and taught me to first honor life, and with it, my life in the theatre. Felicia Londré is an inspiration because she is absolutely an expert in what she does. Carla Noack taught me to use my body as a tool. Ted Swetz taught me to have ownership of my craft. Stephanie Roberts ignited my intense passion for mask work, red nose clown, and comedy; her classes demanded everything from me.” Not long after graduating, Green has been busy. Last summer, she was cast in Tribes at the Unicorn and in two Fringe shows, one of which was ThisThatThen at the Living Room. She is currently rehearsing for The Turn of the Screw by Jeffrey Hatcher at Spinning Tree Theatre, and will play as Margot in the KC Rep production of The Diary of Anne Frank. “I love what I do,” she says. It shows. Nicole Marie Green in The Liar. UMKC Theatre 2015. Photo by Brian Paulette Nicole Marie Green in The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane, The Coterie Theatre 2015. Photo courtesy of Coterie Theatre For Nicole Marie Green, the decision to jump into UMKC and Kansas City was a big one, and one that has paid off. “UMKC changed me. I am a better actor because of it. I made lasting friendships, I was put through a lot of tests. I grew up. I found my own voice.” When asked which faculty made the most impact on her time there, she struggles to pick just one: Nicole Marie Green in Tribes, Unicorn Theatre 2015. Directed by Theodore Swetz. Photo courtesy of Unicorn Theatre www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online “UMKC changed me. I am a better actor because of it. I made lasting friendships, I was put through a lot of tests. I grew up. I found my own voice.” - Nicole Marie Green 19 by Collin Vorbeck A 20 into what is being produced on the profes s UMKC Theatre endeavors to sional level.” enrich the graduate program with Chanos served as an assistant professional experiences across the city professor of theatre at Pepperdine Univerand beyond, two newly-hired members sity, teaching Advanced Period Styles in of the Kansas City Repertory Theatre are Shakespeare and Voice and Movement. already offering outlets to current students He also served as the assistant director to expand the relationship between the for the Heart of America Shakespeare institutions. Both Jason Chanos, associate Festival production of The Winter’s Tale artistic director, and Marissa Wolf, director in 2014; this is just one example of his of new works, see the benefits of collabo- national experiences balanced with a local ration between the university focus. “I look forward to utilizing and the professional the graduate students as much company. Since KC Rep as possible, working around makes its home on the their busy schedules to provide campus of UMKC, crossthem with as many professional over between the two is opportunities as possible,” Chnot only practical, it is vianos says. As associate artistic tal to the survival of both director for KC Rep, he also has Kansas City landmarks. a hand in casting and works with Chanos sees the graduate program to place UMKC as an untapped MFA actors in the co-productions. resource, one that he In recent years, KC Rep produchopes to make full use tions have featured many UMKC of throughout his tenure Theatre graduate students in with KC Rep. “I come leading and featured roles in Our from a background in Town, A Christmas Carol, and academia,” he says, “so I Romeo and Juliet. know how important it is In another important functo incorporate the comtion of his new role, Chanos is munity of a university excited to expand the audience Jason Chanos Missouri’s Campus for the Arts for both KC Rep and UMKC Theatre. Chanos provides materials specific to the current season offered at KC Rep to current MA students who teach an introductory course on Theatre to non-majors. This enables him to reach hundreds of students who would not otherwise be exposed to professional theatre. He has also made himself and the entire company of the KC Rep available to any instructor in need of a guest speaker involving a current or past production – anything that may enhance the classroom experience. Marissa Wolf Marissa Wolf started utilizing graduate talent immediately upon her arrival at KC Rep. As a company with a focus on cultivating work by new playwrights every season, Wolf was welcomed to her new position by hundreds of new play submissions yet to be read. She immediately reached out to the MA students to assemble a play-reading committee, and together the team has made substantial progress in giving each new play the attention it deserves. Under the direction of Dr. Felicia Londré, MA students strengthen their theatrical foundation through courses in theatre history and dramaturgy, and through these courses the skills to critically analyze play scripts are honed. “What a smart, insightful group of students. Their help in this process has been invaluable,” Wolf says. the level of artistry and imagination among the costume design MFA students. Their work will be instrumental in bringing to life the world premiere productions of Fire in Dreamland by Rinne Groff and Lot’s Wife by Eric Rosen.” There are many benefits to sharing a campus with one of the most successful theatre companies in the region. Students are afforded every opportunity to contribute and collaborate with professionals, and under the direction of Jason Chanos and Marissa Wolf, the bond between university and professional company is continually strengthened. Jamie Dufault and Courtney Salvage in Romeo and Juliet at The Kansas City Repertory Theatre, 2014. Photo courtesy of the Kansas City Repertory Theatre Sticky Traps at The Kansas City Repertory Theatre, 2015. Costume Design by Lauren Gaston (MFA Costume Design 2014). Photo courtesy of Kansas City Repertory Theatre Another part of the development of new works involves fully-realized productions, and Wolf is already including the UMKC Theatre design team in the company’s latest project. KC Rep’s newly branded Origin KC: New Works Festival is taking over the final slot in the season with two world premiere productions running in repertory. This year Wolf is thrilled to partner with UMKC and to have MFA costume students design the shows. “I am deeply impressed with Mariem S. Diaz in The Kansas City Repertory Theatre production of Our Town, 2014. Photo courtesy of Kansas City Repertory Theatre University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department 21 By Ethan Zogg I 22 the audience on all sides, with 35 of the speakers forming a wall-of-sound that reached from floor to ceiling. The rig took three weeks to build. After it was built, each speaker had to be tuned to create the best balance for the space. Once it was set up and adjusted, the team began their experiments. At first, Professor Mardikes and the team experimented with sound placement, or how to move sound around the space. Each of the designers would spend time experimenting, then meet and share the techniques and results they found. As the experiment progressed, they moved on to mixing multitrack recordings, moving the individual tracks around the system. The team held n the summer of 2015, Tom Mardikes (UMKC Theatre chair) and four graduate design students created “Sound Mandala,” a 48-speaker sound system that surrounded the audience and gave the designers the chance to experiment with using sound to affect how an audience perceives a theatre space. The idea for the experiment goes back twenty years, when Tom Mardikes set up a smaller, similar system on the main stage of the KC Rep to experiment with moving sound. That experiment had some success, but lacked the scale needed to become fully realized. Fast forward to 2015. Tom assembled a team of three graduate sound designers (Jon Robertson, Jae Shanks, and Jason Bauer) and one technical direction student (Adam Terry) to design, build, and experiment with a bigger, more complex system. First, Studio 116 (UMKC’s black box theatre space) had to be dampened by hanging curtains and laying down carpet. Then the system was assembled. Composed of 48 separate speakers, each with its own custom-built enclosure, the Sound Mandala System. Photo by Jason Bauer. “Sound Mandala” surrounded www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online performances periodically, showing the system to audiences, as well as students and other audio and theatre professionals. At one of the later performances, Jon Robertson played pieces he had recorded/ produced with the local artist group Ensemble of Irreproducible Outcomes. One of the pieces consisted of 96 separate sine-waves, each slowly changing over the course of approximately 80 minutes. Another was made from recordings of snow falling and synthesizers. As you moved through the room, the sound changed based on your location. Even if you turned your head a little, what you heard changed. Another piece, created by Jae Shanks, consisted of a ghost chasing a child around the room. As the footsteps moved, the sound of the child running away created the illusion of depth, as if the child were running into the distance. As successful as the experiments were, the team wants to take it further. Jon Robertson described what he saw as his next step. “Ideally I would create a brand new theatre piece where a small cast is in the center of the room, the audience is all around and the sound [system] is all around as well, and you’re story-telling through sound and live action, but sound becomes a main character.” By building “Sound Mandala,” Mardikes and the team have pushed the limits of what sound can do theatrically, exploring the way sound interacts with and affects an audience. They’ve found new techniques to transform a theatre, creating new worlds in familiar spaces. The possible applications are endless, and as they move forward in their exploration, no doubt they will give birth to a new form, a new experience, and a new theatre in which sound will be more powerful and more dynamic than ever before. MFA Acting Chioma Anyanwu (MFA Acting 2018) Chioma recently performed in The Taste Test, by playwright and UMKC professor Frank Higgins at the Just Off Broadway Theatre. She has also performed locally at the Unicorn Theatre, The Coterie at Night, and the Metropolitan Theatre Ensemble, among others. Amy Billroth-MacLurg (MFA Acting 2018) Working last summer at the Livermore Shakespeare Festival, Amy played Audrey in As You Like It and Lucy Steele in Sense and Sensibility. While in California, she also participated in a TheatreWorks’ New Works Festival production, assisting in the staged reading of The Confederates by Suzanne Bradbeer. Amy Billroth-MacLurg as Lucy Steele and Robyn Grahn as Elinor Dashwood in Sense and Sensibility. Livermore Shakespeare Festival 2015 Heather Michele Lawler (MFA Acting 2018) This summer Heather performed for three months at historical Colonial Williamsburg as a part of “The Hallam Players,” an acting troupe based on the first professional acting company in the American colonies. She performed the roles of Beatrice Rasponi in the classic commedia dell’arte play, The Servant of Two Masters as well as Player 3 in the original stage combat/ sketch comedy show, exclusive to Colonial Williamsburg, Sword Play. It was an incredible professional experience mixing her love of performing with her love of educating and history. MFA Scenic Design Trevor Frederiksen (MFA Scenic Design 2016) Trevor served as the props master for the summer season at Creede Repertory Theatre in Creede, Colorado. 2015 marked the 50th season at Creede Repertory Theatre and Trevor worked on a total of six shows, including Our Town, August Osage County, and Good on Paper. Charlie Spillers (MFA Acting 2018) In a spring production of All My Sons in Orange County CA, Charlie played the role of Chris Keller, an experience he calls “invaluable” to his training and career. Charlie Spillers in All My Sons at the Attic Community Theatre. Photo by Jennifer Owens Missouri’s Campus for the Arts Good on Paper, Creede Repertory Theatre 2015. Property design by Trevor Frederiksen. Photo by John Gary Brown 23 MFA Lighting Design MFA Costume Design Max Archimedes Levitt & Caitlin Tuten (MFA Costume Design & Technology 2016) Both Max and Caitlin worked at the Long Lake Camp for the Arts in upstate New York during the summer of 2015. They were each responsible for designing five shows, while stitching for all thirty that were in production during their tenure. On top of that, they taught classes in stage make-up and were responsible for hair/ make-up for nine different productions. Marc Vital (MFA Costume Design & Technology 2016) At the Tibbits Opera House in Coldwater, Michigan, Marc was one of three designers on staff to create and build costumes for six shows. Marc’s assignments were Peter Pan and Alone Together. Despite limited budgets and resources, the productions garnered many accolades from the community and production company alike, resulting in a job offer for next summer. Spamalot at Long Lake Camp for the Arts 2015. Costume design by Max Archimedes Levitt. Photo by Jeoff Bauer 24 Gretchen Sophia Halle (MFA Costume Design 2017) worked at the Summer Theatre of New Canaan in Connecticut, with UMKC alumni Lauren Gaston (MFA Costume Design 2014). Ms. Halle served not only as the assistant costume designer to Ms. Gaston, but was also wardrobe supervisor and lead dresser on the production. Their production of Legally Blonde was nominated for Best Costume Design through Broadway World. Peter Pan at Tibbits Opera House 2015. Costume design by Marc Vital. Kris Kirkwood (Lighting Design 2016) This summer Kris designed The True Story of the Wolf for Paul Mesner Puppets. He also designed two shows for the KC Fringe Festival: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Deathstar, and The Georgette Show. In addition to his design work Kris was involved with two professional internships. The first was with XS Lighting, where he built, installed and configured a 3D lighting visualization system called ESP Vision, allowing for ighting designers to build and cue a show in virtual space. The second internship was for an architectural lighting designer, working on projects running the spectrum from hotels to museums to interactive dioramas Ethan Newman (MFA Lighting Design 2017) Ethan’s busy summer of 2015 was spent at the Forestburgh Playhouse in Forestburgh, New York. Working as lighting designer and master electrician, his season included Damn Yankees, Young Frankenstein, Oliver!, The Music Man, 42nd Street, The Fantasticks, and his favorite design of the summer, Driving Miss Daisy. Each two-week run also included an original cabaret and a children’s production of Shrek, the Musical, which Ethan adapted to the plot of each mainstage production. University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department workshop for four days and then peround esign formed for the community. The festival also included a workshop with Sarah Ruhl Jon Robertson & Jason Bauer and a staged reading of her newest work, (MFA Sound Design 2016) The Oldest Boy, followed by a talk-back. Jon and Jason worked together on a piece The winning play received a full producfor the KC Fringe Festival called Compan- tion at Victory Gardens Theatre in Chicaions. In the play featuring performances go, Illinois, where Afton served as stage by Jason and UMKC alumna Manon Halmanager. liburton, Jon composed a recording that Jordan Kruis (MFA Stage Management acted as a third character in the play – a 2016) television set that communicated with the Jordan spent the summer of 2015 at the actors and drove the action. Hope Summer Repertory Theatre in Holland, Michigan. He served as stage manJae Shanks (MFA Sound Design 2017) ager for Smokey Joe’s Café and assistant Jae had a busy summer in 2015, working on five different KC Fringe Festival shows. Her sound design for the devised piece heatre istory Self-Ease from the spring of 2015 carried over into a summer run at Fringe. She ramaturgy laywriting also worked on several pieces performed at the Unicorn theatre, including Bond and The Snake that Stole the Flower. Michelle Stelting (MA Theatre History 2015) tage anagement Participating in the 2015 Kansas City Fringe Festival, Michelle directed a new work called Flicker, which featured a Karl Anderson (MFA Stage Management 2017) Karl served as opera produc- talented cast, including UMKC alumnus Wendy Bucheidt. They plan to re-mount tion stage manager at the Brevard Music the production in the spring at a local perCenter during the summer of 2015. formance venue called The Buffalo Room. Afton Earp (MFA Stage Management 2017) Collin Vorbeck (MA Theatre History 2016) During the summer of 2015, Afton was Last summer, Collin performed in the production manager for the first-ever Heart of America Shakespeare Festival’s Activate Midwest Play Festival on the production ofKing Lear, playing the role of campus of Western Michigan University Albany. He also appeared in a Fringe play (WMU). Plays were accepted from 118 by UMKC MA graduate Margaret Shelby playwrights, and four were selected to titled The Lash. MFA S D MA T D MFA S H /P M www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online / MFA Technical Direction Meg Dolben (MFA Technical Direction 2017) Over the summer, Meg worked as technical director for The Barnstormers Theatre in Tamworth, New Hampshire, a summer stock theater company that was founded in 1931 by Francis Cleveland, the youngest son of President Grover Cleveland. She helped produce six shows (two musicals and four plays) in ten weeks and had the opportunity to work with four different scenic designers, two different stage managers, one resident lighting designer, and a brilliant paint charge. She ran a crew of two carpenters and four interns and was charged with planning the schedules, ordering materials, drafting construction drawings, and overseeing all builds, loadins, and strikes. She even learned how to drive standard in order to move scenery with the shop’s flatbed truck and even drove it in the Fourth of July parade. The Hollow, The Barnstormers Theatre 2015. Technical Direction by Meg Dolben. Photo by Meg Dolben 25 by Ethan Zogg U 26 MKC Theatre has strong relationships with Kansas City professional theatres, and through a new partnership with The Acting Company, we’re strengthening our relationship with the national theatre scene as well. The Acting Company, a theatre company based out of New York City, has toured nationally for forty years and produced high-caliber actors such as Kevin Kline, Jesse L. Martin, Patti LuPone, and Jeffery Wright. But recently, The Acting Company members realized that though they would play in cities all over the country every year, they weren’t developing any relationships with theatres on a national scale. So they developed their new “Consortium” model and tapped UMKC to collaborate on the maiden voyage of the new system. The Acting Company playwriting meeting September, 2015. Photo by Stephanie Roberts “The Acting Company has decided to actually embed itself into our community to help grow and foster the development of the artists with whom they’ll be working and performing,” says Tom Mardikes, chair of UMKC Theatre. “This pairs perfectly with our mission to have our students work side-by-side with professionals, actively engaging in professional Missouri’s Campus for the Arts products.” The Consortium Model is a three-year cycle that works like this: four major universities are picked to be regional hubs, networking with other schools and organizations. UMKC is a hub for the midwest, coordinating with University of Missouri-Columbia, Kansas University, University of Central Missouri, and local high schools. The first year is the planning phase, laying out the plans for workshops, internships, and collaborations. A project, based on a theme, is picked for the cycle to center upon. For UMKC’s cycle, “assassination” is the chosen theme, including Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar and a new work being written by Marcus Gardley about the assassination of Malcolm X. The second year focuses on carrying Ian Belknap, Margot Harley, and Tom Mardikes at The Acting Company Board Meeting, out those plans, September 2015 including a providing students from all disciplines with playwriting contest implemented by our opportunities to work with theatre profesconsortium. Students from each hub will submit scripts written on the theme, which sionals from all over the country. As a hub for the midwest region, UMKC will act will then be evaluated and workshopped, as a conduit, not only strengthening our eventually to be performed in the third phase. The third year is the culmination of relationships with the professional theatre scene in Kansas City, but with a network the project. The Acting Company will tour of artists all over the country. It is a truly their two productions, and the four best national collaboration, and in this inauguplays drawn from the consortium schools ral cycle, UMKC is leading the charge. will be given a public reading in New York City where the students and faculty of consortium schools will participate in internships, workshops, and networking events. This new model puts UMKC in dialogue with the national theatre world, University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department UMKC Theatre is a proud member school of UMKC Theatre is associated with And is an 27 Acting Anthony Merchant (MFA Acting 2009) Anthony recently appeared in a production of The Tempest at the Classical Theatre of Harlem. His performance earned him a nomination for a prestigious AUDELCO award for Best Supporting Actor Anthony Vaughn Merchant in The Tempest, The Classical Theatre of Harlem 2015. Photo by Janaki Gerard 28 Toccarra Cash (MFA Acting 2008) Toccarra has been working in New York and was recently in a production of Brothers from the Bottom at the Billie Holiday Theatre. She was also nominated for an ADELCO award for Best Supporting Actress. Nick Gehlfuss (MFA Acting 2010) Nick has had several recurring television roles on programs that include Newsroom, Shameless, Longmire and Murder in the First. He is also starring in the new NBC series Chicago Med. Nicole Marie Green (MFA Acting 2015) Since graduating in May 2015, Nicole earned her Equity card by performing at the Unicorn Theatre in Tribes. She played the Governess in The Turn of the Screw with Spinning Tree Theatre, and will return to the KCRep in The Diary of Anne Frank as Margot. Nicole also serves as a teaching artist with The Coterie Theatre and the Heart of America Shakespeare Festival. Dina Thomas (MFA Acting 2011) Dina performed in David Ives's world premiere of Metromaniacs, directed by Michael Kahn, at The Shakespeare Theatre Company in Washington DC, which will transfer to the Old Globe in San Diego for a run starting in January 2016. She also played Jess in Everything You Touch, directed by May Adrales, at the Contemporary Dina Thomas in Metromaniacs, American Theater Shakespeare Theatre Company 2015. Photo by Scott Suchman Festival. Kelly McAndrew (MFA Acting 1998) Kelly performed in Abundance and Men on Boats in New York, productions which Michael Pauley (MFA Acting 2014) garnered NY Times Critics’ Picks. She has Michael performed in Fly at Florida Stuappeared on Orange is the New Black, and dio Theatre, directed by UMKC professor recently finished filming When the Moon Ricardo Khan. He recently filmed Pee was Twice as Big, due out in 2016. She Wee’s Big Holiday and has recorded over will be performing in the world premiere of 120 audio books. He currently works for a a new play by Jen Silverman called The touring commedia dell’arte company called Moors at Yale Repertory Theatre. Hyperion. Rick D. Wasserman (MFA Acting 1998) Grant Prewitt (MFA Acting 2012) Rick has been the signature voice of AMC Grant played Kevin in Sarah Ruhl’s Stage Network (Mad Men, The Walking Dead, Kiss at the Guthrie and toured the United Breaking Bad, etc.) for over a decade. He States with The Acting Company, perform- is currently voicing Super Bowl spots for ing Macbeth and A Connecticut Yankee in NFL Network, and is working on many King Arthur’s Court. video game and animation projects. www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online Caris Vujec (MFA Acting 1997) The Pepper Project, created, written, executive-produced, and co-directed by Caris Vujcec (also playing the lead role of Pepper) has met with grateful and outstanding success thus far, having been an Official Selection at the 2015 ITVFest, 2015 LA Femme International Film Festival, and the Bilbao Web Fest (trailer competition). In addition, the pilot episode won the Best Shorts Competition Award of Excellence, Special Mention and two IndieFest Awards (one for Cinematography, James Parsons, DP, and one for Caris, who earned a Women's Filmmaker Award of Excellence). Caris continues her recurring role as Detective Campesi on the long-running NBC hit series, Law and Order: Special Victims Unit. An avid cyclist, Caris continues to raise money each year for MS in the annual Bike MS Ride in Manhattan. Kelly Gibson (MFA Acting 2012) Kelly is currently playing Madge in a production of Picnic at Palm Beach Dramaworks, where she also spent last winter playing Cecile in Les Liaisons Dangereuses. Her summer was spent doing a five-actor adaption of Cyrano de Bergerac at the beloved Riverside Theatre in Iowa City, as well as workshopping and showcasing a new pop-style musical at Collaborative Arts Project 21 in NYC titled Alone in the U.S. Joseph Fournier (MFA Acting 2015) At the Metropolitan Theatre Ensemble, Joseph performed in the two-man show Stones in his Pockets to open their 20152016 season. Spencer Christensen (MFA Acting 2015) Since graduation in May 2015, Spencer spent a summer in Creede, Colorado, with the Creede Repertory Theatre acting in Guys and Dolls, Our Town, and a new play written to celebrate the founding of the theatre, Ghost Light. He was hired as an assistant professor of Theatre at Lake Superior State University in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, and tasked to revise the theatre curriculum and to create a more effective and appropriate theatre minor. Scenic Design Todd Edward Ivins (MFA Scenic Design 1996)Todd Edward Ivins tells stories through design. His work spans opera, plays, musicals, corporate events and newsroom sets and has been praised as “inventive”, “cosmopolitan”, and "alluring.". His collaborative skills, design proficiency, and breadth of knowledge have made him a trusted member of many Broadway design teams. Ivins’ scenic designs have been seen at The Walnut Street Theatre (Philadelphia), The 5th Avenue Theatre (Seattle), Milwaukee Rep, Theatre Row (NYC), Prince Music Theater (Philadelphia), Jewish Repertory Theater (NYC), and The Signature Theatre (DC), amongst others. Most recently he designed the sets and costumes for Mirror Mirror at the Milwaukee Ballet. Missouri’s Campus for the Arts Todd Potter (MFA Scenic Design 1993) Todd Potter has worked in regional theater as well as in New York. His numerous credits include work at The Irish Repertory Theatre, Melting Pot Theatre, Naples Players, Florida RepertoryTheatre, to name a few. Todd also teaches at NYU’s Tisch School of Drama, teaching fundamentals of drawing and advanced drafting. He most recently designed the set for God of Carnage at the Naples Players in Florida. Charlie Corcoran (MFA Scenic Design 2001) Charlie Corcoran is working extensively in regional theatres as well as on and off-Broadway. He has worked with the Irish Repertory Theatre, Juilliard, The Mark Taper Forum, New Jersey Rep, and the Santa Fe Opera amongst others. He received a Hewes Design Award nomination for his design for The Emperor Jones. He most recently designed, The Marriage of Figaro at Juilliard Opera, as well as A Comedy of Tenors for the Cleveland Playhouse and the McCarter Theatre. Scenic design by Charlie Corcoran for Vanya & Sonia & Masha & Spike at the Goodman Theatre. Photo by Liz Lauren 29 Tony Schmidt (MFA Scenic Design 1998) Tony Schmidt has maintained an active career working in a variety of capacities as both a scenic designer and fine artist. Some of these experiences have included: a permanent installation for the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry involving HO scaled replicas of Chicago Loop buildings and downtown Seattle, design for an enormous chandelier graphic for Arbor Place Mall (Douglasville, Georgia), stage designs for management meetings for companies such as Longaberger and Toyota, trade show exhibits, such as ADP and Netcaddy.com, representation in the Prague Quadrennial 1999 for his set design of Crazy for You (directed by Ernie Williams), and gallery showings and commissions in Cincinnati and Chicago. Costume Design 30 Kate R. Mincer (MFA Costume Design 2008) Kate is currently designing costumes in NYC and beyond. She recently designed the season at Stonington Opera House; this year she has also designed at the New Ohio Theatre and the Northeast Children’sTheatre Company. She also designed the costumes for the world premiere of R J Z (Romeo & Juliet & Zombies), which was nominated for three New York Innovative Theatre Awards. Kate is currently co-designing two upcoming productions for the award-winning New York City Children’s Theatre, and is working on a production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream for spring 2016. Whitney Locher (MFA Costume Design and Technology 2005) Whitney lives in New York on famed 42nd Street. Her recent Off-Broadway credits include Into The Woods at the Roundabout Theatre and Two Gentlemen of Verona for Theatre For a New Into the Woods, Roundabout Theatre 2015. Audience. She also Costumes by Whitney Locher. designed For the Last Time, a new muPhoto by Sara Krulwich sical on Theatre Row, and Eve for The Aaron Chvatal (MFA Costume Design Neo-Political Cowgirls, presented at the Gym at Judson. Currently, Whitney is pre- & Technology 2013) currently resides in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He recently inparing Measure for Measure for the Long terned as costume design assistant in the Wharf Theatre in Connecticut. Guthrie costume shop for their production of To Kill a Mockingbird. He also designed Kelly Kasper (MFA Costume Design & costumes for productions at Park Square Technology 2009) Kelly has been living Theatre (4000 Miles and Murder for Two), and working in NYC for the past 5 years. The Penumbra Theatre Company (Detroit She has worked on Broadway's Cinderel’67), The Rose Ensemble (Singing for la, The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, Freedom), and Lakeshore Players (The and at the Metropolitan Opera. Mystery of Edwin Drood). Twice a year, he travels to Lynchburg, Virginia, to coordinate costumes for Opera on the James (Gianni Schicchi, Suor Angelica, La Voix Humane, Bon Appétit, Little Women, La Bohème, The Marriage of Figaro, and Carmen this November). This February, he was a featured artist in Gallery 92 West in his hometown of Fremont, Nebraska. There, he showcased costume renderings, finished costumes, hats constructed from scratch, and panels featuring Japanese dye techniques. After great demand, Romeo and Juliet and Zombies, New Ohio Theatre 2015. he taught two classes on Arashi Shibori, Costumes by Kate Mincer. Photo by Hunter Canning University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department and one class on the Serti silk painting technique. During the summer, he manages the costume shop of the Castleton Opera Festival, where he also designed a production of Our Town for their 2015 season. Aaron Chvatal exhibition at Gallery 92West. Photo by Aaron Chvatal and projections for The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds for KCAT, projections for a tour of The Great Divorce, a touring project of The Music Man with Shirley Jones, and several corporate events across the country. Rocco DiSanti (MFA Lighting 2008) Rocco was promoted to production manager of Shen Wei Dance Arts and continued his work with that company through last year. Additionally, he has recently worked with Crossroads and did the lighting and projection design for Lift at 59E59 and his designs were mentioned in “Lighting and Sound America.” He also did the projection design for Fly with artistic director Ricardo Khan in Sarasota, which won five local awards, including best set design, and projections including the Lighting Design Jeff Cady (MFA Lighting 1996) Last year was one of Jeff’s busiest yet, as he designed four shows for the KC Rep, including lights and projections for A Christmas Carol, lights for Sticky Traps, and projections for Hair, Retrospective and the new workshop production of Stillwater. He spent the summer on tour with J-Lo with her AKA tour as the projections programmer and media coordinator for Nick Mitello and VER. He also spent several weeks on the road with the Jason Aldean crew and his Burn it Down tour in a similar position. Other designs included lights video aspect of the show. Rocco also worked on Desire with The Acting Company. His work teams with set designers to help them realize their projection designs. Thanks to his work on Desire, he was recommended to design Incident at Vichy for Signature Theatre in New York next month. Brandon Clark (BA 2013) Continuing his professional work with DSS, Inc. in Kansas City as a lighting tech, Brandon served as the LD/L1 on several notable shows around their client NASCAR, including an “awards show” in Vegas called NASCAR After the Lap and a live-televised promotional event called Bash at the Beach for Fox Sports 1. DSS also allowed him the opportunity to fill-in as Matt Gumniski’s lighting director on the Neon Trees’s summer tour for their last seven dates around the Northeastern states in July. Following his work with DSS, Brandon was offered a position at DK Production Design in Chicago, as junior designer and manager of their pre-visualization studio called Creative Spaces. He assists senior designers on projects, and goes out on the road as a lighting and media director. In his first show, he served as the lighting director for Missy Elliott’s headlining performance at Bestival in the UK. Robert Karma Robinson, Michael Pauley, Sean Patrick Hopkins and Jordan Bellow in Fly. Projection design by Rocco Disanti. Photo by Matthew Holler www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online 31 David Hardy (MFA Lighting & Technical Direction 2002) David is currently the assistant professor of theatre, set and lighting Design, Lipscomb University TN (2010-present), the former Assistant Professor of Tech Theatre/Lighting Design, Coe College IA (2007-2010), and the former opera production manager/resident lighting designer for the University of Memphis School of Music TN (2004-2007). He is also the resident lighting designer for the Blackbird Theatre in Nashville TN and designed the lights on the premiere of Roger’s Version, Hairspray, Pacific Overtures, Amadeus and Red for the Blackbird Theatre in Nashville TN. Sharareh Abvabi (BA 2014) After only a year in Los Angeles, Shara has acquired quite a resume. She designed lights for an opera at Pepperdine University which led to work at the Malibu Playhouse designing God of Carnage directed by Gramme Clifford. After that production, she was offered a position of resident lighting designer for the playhouse, which led to more design work and earned her the position of production manager. Over the course of six months she designed lights and managed shows for Ed Asner, Mark Rydell, Ed Weinberg, Jimmy Dore, Kathrine Ross, Sam Elliot, Dan Lauria, Ray Abruzzo, Wendy Malick, and most recently, Dick Van Dyke which will be featured in his official documentary and The Today Show. 32 Steve Dubay (MFA Lighting 1999) Steve is currently the assistant lighting director at CNN in Atlanta GA, a freelance lighting designer based in Atlanta GA, and lighting programmer for movies and television. He started the year dimmer teching and programming for the Hunger Games: Mockingjay (parts 1 and 2) and continued with Marvel’s Ant-Man, Taken 3, Goosebumps and Insurgent. Television work includes the series, The Family Feud and Rectify, episode 17, S2 of the Originals, and the 2014 BET Hip Hop Awards. He has also designed lights for numerous installation art exhibitions and in February he programmed LED sculptures for Grimanesa Amoros in NYC. He had worked on this installation in Madrid, Beijing and Hong Kong, Tel Aviv, Mexico City, and Sao Paolo, Brazil. Sound Design Kristian Ball (MFA 2007) Since leaving Lehigh in July of last year, Kristian had a busy year in design, engineering, consultation and academic work. He designed sound and composed for nine productions, including Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival’s The Foreigner and their WillPower touring production of Julius Caesar, Allentown Public Theatre’s True West and The Jungle Book, and Touchstone Theatre’s world premier Journey from the East. He also exhibited a sound installation piece titled Water Waste at Arizona State University, and is currently lecturer in Sound Art for the School of Art at Muhlenberg College. Robert Bowen (MFA Lighting 2008) Robert is a freelance lighting designer based in Texas. For the past two years, he has also been adjunct instructor for the University of North Texas as well as working toward a film MFA. He was always interested in directing film even while he was here. His lighting design for Big River produced by the Culture House at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts in Kansas City recently won best lighting for a musical from the International Music and Entertainment Arts Association (IMEA). Kristian Derek Ball Missouri’s Campus for the Arts Eric Webster (MFA Sound Design 1998) After spending 10 years as the A1 on multiple Broadway tours, Eric settled into Kansas City and concentrated on the consulting and contracting markets. In that time he designed or supervised AV installations across the country including Major League baseball and football stadiums, a NASCAR track, Federal Reserve bank and numerous churches, schools and theaters. He eventually returned to theater as the sound head for Starlight Theater for five years before taking over as head carpenter in 2015. He is currently the associate electrician for the national tour of C.S. Lewis’s The Great Divorce. Eric is a proud 23-year member of the IATSE and serves as the training coordinator for Local 3 Ryan Hall (MFA Sound 2012) Ryan currently resides in New York City and is a proud member of IATSE Local 1 and the Theatrical Sound Designers and Composers Association. Most recently he provided production audio for PEARL at the Koch Theatre in the Lincoln Center. Joe Concha (MFA Sound Design 2012) In 2015, Joe worked as a contract sound designer with Vicarious Visions, a video game developer for Activision-Blizzard. He designed, implemented, and debugged audio for Skylanders SuperChargers, which just came out in September. He also managed the entire dialogue pipeline, including localization in 11 languages from around the world, totaling around 200,000 individual assets. Glen Dunzweiler (MFA Sound Design 2003) After recently leaving academia (CSU San Bernardino), Glen moved to LA to focus on the business side of entertainment. He is currently shopping a children's TV show pilot called Musical Robot and is working on getting a distributor for his documentary yHomeless?. Technical Direction David Hawkinson (MFA Technical Direction 2010) David has been employed as an IATSE 829 Scenic Artist in NYC for the past five years. He worked on three seasons of HBO's Boardwalk Empire, as well as Show Me a Hero and Louie. He is now working on HBO's upcoming show Vinyl. Stage Management MUSICAL ROBOT TV plate. Photo by Glen Dunzweiler Dan Warneke (MFA Sound Design 2012) Dan is the audio engineer at the New Theatre Restaurant in Overland Park KS, one of the nation’s most successful dinner theatres, which produces five productions per year including plays and Broadway-style musicals. Each production utilizes Sennheiser wireless microphone systems outfitted with Countryman B6 lavalieres. The vocal sound system contains seven rows of time-aligned speakers placed throughout the venue to deliver sound reinforcement to the audience. Kelly Schmidli (MFA Stage Management 2015) During the summer of 2015, Kelly served as production manager for the Arkansas Shakespeare Festival, followed by work at Starlight Theatre on their production of Mary Poppins. She will continue her work in the field of stage management on multiple productions at the Lyric Opera of Kansas City throughout the 2015-16 season, including productions of Don Giovanni and Rusalka. April Brewer (MFA Stage Management 2015) April spent the summer of 2015 working at The New Theatre Restaurant on their production of The Addams Family. She followed this up with work on the KC Rep production of Blueprints to Freedom in the fall. University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department 33 Dramaturgy/ Playwrighting Andrea Anderson (MA 2012) Andrea is working on her Ph.D. dissertation at Texas Tech University in Lubbock. In August she presented a paper on the Dramaturgy Debut panel at the Asssociation for Theatre in Higher Education conference in Montreal and was elected graduate student representative for ATHE’s dramaturgy focus group. Tanya Barber (MA 2010) Tanya lives in Seattle and is married to Brian Dugas. She works in the marketing department of Taproot Theatre Company. Her play, Chad and Tara Save the World, was produced there in fall 2014. Katrina Darden Bondari (MA 2005) Katrina teaches at Trinity University and Alamo College in San Antonio, Texas. She has published an article and several book reviews on classical Greek theatre. 34 Amanda Boyle (MA 2012) Amanda will complete her Ph.D. at the University of Kansas in May 2016. She has taught several theatre courses in the department there while also working as resident dramaturg at the Unicorn Theatre. In 2014-15 she presented papers at the annual conferences of LMDA, ASTR, and ATHE. Vanessa Campagna (MA 2012) Vanessa completed her Ph.D. with distinction at the University of Missouri-Columbia and is now assistant professor of theatre at Monmouth College. She has presented papers at regional and national conferences. In August she directed Seussical the Musical at Gladstone Theatre in the Park. David Coley (MA 2008) David earned his Ph.D. at Louisiana State University and now is assistant professor and director of theatre at St. Gregory’s University in Shawnee, Oklahoma. Ben Fleer (MA 2014) Ben is pursuing Ph.D. studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Alyson Germinder (MA 2015) Alyson had a busy summer after completing her MA in May: Dramaturgy Fellow at The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington DC, participant in the National New Play Network’s Dramaturgy Intensive, and beginning a new position as literary manager of The Midwest Dramatists Center. She is also house manager and dramaturg for Kansa City Actors Theatre and continues as dramaturg for Heart of America Shakespeare Festival. Kristin Janke Henning (MA 2013) Kristin completed her MA in 2014 and has been teaching at the University of Central Missouri in Warrensburg. She reviews Kansas City theatre for KCMetropolis.org. www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online Bobbie Jeffrey (MA 2009) Bobbie is founding chair of Theatre Arts at Calvary Bible College in Kansas City, where she most recently directed Over the River and Through the Woods in October 2015. Saejoon Oh (MA 2000) Saejoon teaches modern drama at Sungkyunkwan University in Seoul, Korea. He recently directed David Mamet’s Speed the Plow in Seoul. He published three articles this year on Choe Seunghee (known in the West as Sai Shoki), the pioneer of modern dance in Korea. Rachel Mastin Stanley (MA 2007) Rachel is assistant director of the Honors Program at Missouri Southern State University in Joplin. Marianna Vogt (MA 2007) Marianna is married to Ben Bschor and lives in London. She teaches regularly for the National Youth Theatre and continues performing cabaret, while working primarily as drama and movement therapist with traumatized children at the Royal School of Speech and Drama. by Jamie Alderiso T aylor Marun is a 2011 alumna of UMKC with an MFA in Stage Management. Since her graduation, she has been active in New York. Taylor talks about her recent career developments: “I have been a member of AEA for a few years now. I am currently finishing up an Off-Broadway show, In Bed with Roy Cohn. Following this show, I will be going to Roanoke, Virginia, to stage manage 42nd Street at the Mill Mountain Theatre.” Taylor is based in New York, but also takes work in other markets around the country. Within the past year, she has worked on several other Off-Broadway shows as well as readings, galas, and concerts. In terms of Taylor’s own personal view of stage management, she believes that the best way to learn the art is through a ton of “hands on” experience. She reflects fondly on her days in Kansas City. “I was able to do many shows, including working with some companies in the KC area. I learned a lot from working with professional SMs on these shows.” Taylor champions these opportunities as invaluable assets to her professional resume; through acquiring a good Taylor Marun working in New York. amount of experience in Photo by Sadie Desantis graduate school, she was able to find work quickly. She speaks of her confidence on going into her first professional interview after recieving her degree. “The Program helped shape me into the stage manager I am today. It gave me some good foundations to build on in my career. I got that job by the way.” Taylor also received many more job offers after that first interview; she continues to remain an active and passionate stage manager. Sadie DeSantis, who oversees the program, speaks of its inherent value. “The Stage Management program is a perfect gateway to accelerate a professional career in two years. It gives students the opportunity to work side by side with professional stage managers in all forms of performance including: theatre, opera, dance, and corporate events.” Sadie was also Taylor’s classmate in graduate school. Both alumni continue to serve as examples of the highTaylor Marun working in New York. est professionalism in Photo by Sadie Desantis their field. Both of them acquired an immense knowledge of their art form. Missouri’s Campus for the Arts 35 by Andrew Hagerty T 36 he Master of Arts in Theatre program at the University of Missouri–Kansas City offers many outlets, both academic and artistic. Some students choose a focus centered on playwriting, or supplement their theatre history studies with playwriting classes. Instructor of playwriting Frank Higgins, whose play Black Pearl Sings! was one of the top ten plays produced in the 2009-10 season, aims to provide those who take his class with the tools to make their work both personal and producible. Higgins states that the most basic goal of his teaching is to “help people discover how to make themselves better writers,” and to realize that, whatever the subjective approaches to how one writes, “there are objective tools to work on.” He compares the work of the playwright to that of an architect: creativity is important, but the structure must stand. The etymology of the word playwright is essential, “Yes, it’s an art, but it’s also a craft,” Higgins says. “Picasso invented Cubism, but prior to that he could paint a portrait that was recognizably you.” This is the crux of Higgins’ teaching, and what Master of Arts students interested in playwriting can expect. Students learn to “break past their insecurities and find the approaches that tend to work,” as Higgins puts it, benefitting from his expertise in the professional field. Many students have found success as playwrights following in Higgins’ footsteps. Stephanie Demaree (MA 2014) says, “Thanks to Frank’s class, I can now call myself a published playwright.” Higgins recommended Demaree for a writing commission with a local middle school, and that play, Gran’s Guide to Stop an Ogre (Also Works for Witches and Bullies), was subsequently published by Pioneer Drama. Her play Teacher’s Lounge received a workshop production at UMKC. Demaree also competed in Kansas City’s Project Playwright competition, coming in second to another former Higgins student Cynthia Hardeman. Hardeman concurs that Higgins’ teaching provided clarity of focus. “I’d always written stories but once I sat in Frank’s class I knew that all along, I had been writing plays.” She says. “I can’t help the bias, Frank and his playwriting class changed my life and I’m forever grateful to him for recognizing and nurturing my talent.” Her play Truth Stands has been produced in several cities across the country. “Practically every opportunity I have had to see my work produced has been through Frank’s class,” Demaree says. Hardeman elaborates that Higgins “not only taught but showed in his actions that theatre is all about making connections and collaborating with others. He introduced students to the local community theatre process.” Higgins also has dozens of students and former students who have produced work for Kansas City Fringe Festival. Two students, Nick Sawin and Andrew Hagerty, have had ten-minute plays selected for readings at the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival, Region Five, with Sawin’s advancing to the national Kennedy Center Festival in Washington D.C Higgins has had many students of diverse backgrounds in the fifteen years he has taught playwriting at UMKC. Some are pursuing their MAs, but some MFA candidates, and even faculty members have been enriched by his courses. Higgins calls storytelling a part of human nature, and that knowing the practical aspects of playwriting can be invaluable: “The play is the thing and all other disciplines help to tell the story.” University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department Frank Higgins. Photo by Dr. Felicia Londré by Collin Vorbeck W ho says you can’t go home again? Scott Stackhouse has returned to one of the first stops on his theatrical journey. But where he once roamed the halls as an undergraduate student, Stackhouse now bears the title of Assistant Professor of Theatre in Voice and Acting for the Professional Actor Training Program at UMKC Theatre. And after years of paying his dues by adjunct teaching at colleges and universities across the city, he finds himself in a place that will allow him to focus on strengthening the graduate program and to prepare MFA actors for professional vocal careers. After receiving his MFA in acting from the University of California–Los Angeles in 1999, Stackhouse returned to Kansas City and worked at a number of schools in the area before landing a full-time position at the University of Missouri–Kansas City. He worked primarily with undergraduates, but also began running six-week blocks of breath work for the MFA actors, in the Linklater technique he’d studied at UCLA. This work led to Stackhouse working as vocal coach for university productions, which led to more work with the graduate department on dialects and vocal training. Following the departure of Erika Bailey to Scott Stackhouse www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online Harvard University, UMKC Theatre conducted a national search and Stackhouse was chosen to fill the graduate position permanently. “It’s bittersweet,” Stackhouse says of saying goodbye to his undergraduate duties. “So much of my time was spent helping students balance theatre work with their other studies, and there was something exciting and rewarding in that.” He is looking forward to the change in perspective: “Now, my focus is on the graduate student whose life IS the theatre. It is more demanding for them; they just “go” all day. How do they get through the day? How can I help that process?” Stackhouse has three focuses in the immediate future for the program. The first is the overall health and well-being of the students. “I want them to take the best-possible care of themselves, physically and emotionally. Resting their voices, using them correctly.” 37 His second focus is to emphasize the need for what he calls “athletic” voices. “Contemporary work sometimes leads to disengaged or partially-attentive voices. Our work needs to be crisp, not on its heels.” The third focus is one that other programs, and even students themselves, often overlook: voice-over work. “Our third-year actors have always left with a professional demo reel. Last year, I started in-depth animation voice-over work with the second-year actors. The goal is to develop these techniques over the course of their time with us, and to tailor the work according to the abilities of the individual student. This is a great way to use what we teach in the classroom to get professional work after graduation.” Stackhouse is also excited to shape his own style of teaching voice: “So much of what we do as professors is based on how others have taught it to us. What will my version of vocal training be? How can I make it Shipwrecked! directed by Scott Stackhouse. Courtesy of Seaside REP. Photo by Nikki Hedrick unique and original to me?” Now that he is no longer dividing his time between graduate voice work and undergraduate directing and acting work, he’ll have the opportunity to give the program his own special stamp. However that special stamp manifests itself, Stackhouse will certainly strengthen the foundation of the graduate program and guide its graduates into a successful future. 38 Shipwrecked! directed by Scott Stackhouse. Courtesy of Seaside REP. Photo by Nikki Hedrick Missouri’s Campus for the Arts by David Ruis F or the past eleven years, The Kansas City Fringe Festival has given KC artists the opportunity to produce and showcase their work in a theatrical stew that includes: theatre, spoken word, film, music, dance, comedy, and burlesque. Fringe delivers to an array of audiences, providing a variety of entertainment that can appeal to anyone’s particular performance taste. There is a show for everyone. Inspired by the Edinburgh Festival in Scotland, the festival gathers a menagerie of artists and art supporters, celebrating theatrical artistry at its truest, purest form. The Fringe Festival has also given ample opportunities to University of Missouri-Kansas City theatre students. Jonathan Robertson (MFA Sound Design 2016) and Jason Bauer (MFA Sound Design 2016), along with Jason Ludlow created the “sound play” Companions. Describing the play, Robertson states that “The main character is the sound of a television, which we learn is actually a sonic projection of the wife’s internal thoughts.” Robertson also directed and did the sound design for the piece. This was Robertson’s second year in the Fringe Festival. Manon Halliburton and Jason Bauer in Companions, KC Fringe Festival 2015. Photo by Darren Toliver He feels that it is a “great place for artists to practice and perform what the artists love, art.” As for Bauer, the most important thing about KC Fringe is that, “It allows artists to create original pieces or to produce known pieces that the artist loves. It is a platform that is unbiased and inexpensive to work from and gives opportunities for artists to learn.” Margaret Shelby (MA Theatre History 2015) and a few friends decided to take the risk and self-produce their own scripts about art and art-making for KC Fringe. The Art is a Lie, an evening of short plays, was executed at Phosphor Studios. Shelby’s own play, The Lash, was directed by UMKC graduate student Elizabeth Bettendorf Bowman and featured many UMKC students and alums. Shelby sees the value of KC Fringe for an artist. There is no excuse not to be a part of it. “Seriously, there is very little that can prevent you from being a part of Fringe. We self-produced, and did so by launching a very successful Kickstarter campaign to raise money. Fringe provides a venue for the most shoe-string of efforts, and you really have to take advantage of that.” University of Missouri- Kansas City Theatre Department 39 Lauren Pope, Margaret Shelby, and Chris Roady in The Snake That Stole the Flower. KC Fringe Festival 2015. Photo by Mary Donaldson Love Me Tinder, KC Fringe Festival 2015. Photo by Jill Toyoshiba Jae Shanks (MFA Sound Design 2017) sound designed five shows for the festival: Love Me Tinder, The Penis Monologues, Bond: a soldier and his dog, Self-Ease, and The Snake that Stole the Flower. Shanks was also the assistant stage manager for Lovesick. For Shanks, the festival was all about adapting. In designing her show, Shank focused on keeping it simple to run and simply augmenting the show as a whole. “Overall, I learned so much about my own capabilities and ideas and how to adapt to the needs of a show in three hours of tech (sometimes less!). I am glad that I was a part of such an interesting experience seeing crazy theatre. It’s a fantastic feeling to be a part of such collaborative effort.” The KC Fringe Festival continues to grow year after year, providing platforms for original work and stellar talent, combining artists and audiences together in a community of support and celebration for the love of theatre. 40 www.umkctheatre.org Apply Online Vanessa Severo in The Penis Monologues. KC Fringe Festival 2015. Photo by Roy Inman by Andrew Hagerty W dramaturg for the Missouri Repertory hat is a dramaturg? Curators’ Theatre for 22 years, says that UMKC’s Professor of Theatre Felicia Hardison LonMA program trains its students to “create dré heads up the Master of Arts program a richer experience” both for those who at the University of Missouri-Kansas City work on a production and those who view and prepares her students to be scholars it. of theatre history and dramaturgs. Author Alyson Germinder (MA 2015) is of fourteen books and scores of scholarthe current literary manager with Midwest ly articles, Londré says dramaturgs can Dramatists’ Center and works professionfunction as the “conscience of the play,” ally asa dramaturg throughout Kansas and instead of focusing on particular deCity. She sees dramaturgy as “a powersign or performance aspects, are able to ful and necessary part of any theatrical offer a wider view of the world within the process.” For Germinder, the work of the play. Londré says many directors are now dramaturg is all about the audience: “I “clamoring” for dramaturgs and my time to making the Kansas City theatres information I collect for in particular look to each show as accessithe MAs of UMKC. ble as possible for any Graduates of the MA audience member that program have studmay come in contact ied extensively under with the production.” Londré and work This is in keeping with as dramaturgs for Londré’s statement that UMKC productions theatre history is the and co-productions. “absolute foundation” Several of these of professional theatritheatres, including cal productions. While the Coterie and the Germinder states that Unicorn, have hired “dramaturgs have to graduates to serve constantly fight for their as staff dramaturgs place in the room,” Lonand literary mandré maintains that it is agers. Londré, who At Home at the Zoo at Kansas City Actors Theatre. vital to “learn the facts served as Photo by Mike Tsai Missouri’s Campus for the Arts first” before branching off into theory-based studies. This is why even MFA students take at least two of Londré’s courses, to solidify that foundation and strengthen their artistic pursuits. And, as Londré points out, many MFA candidates choose to take additional courses, because the knowledge of where theatre has been is as important as figuring out where it is going. Germinder says that “One of the hallmark traits of dramaturgs is our curiosity.” As Londré points out, the MA program is structured to be flexible in tailoring to students’ particular interests. MA students are encouraged to branch out into various literary forms, Londré says, “to help them find their strengths” and enhance the impact of their theses. As Germinder says, “You have the ability to make the MA program unique and applicable to your interests – and you don’t find that at every university.” The Gin Game at Kansas City Actors Theatre. Photo by Brian Paulette 41 s 2015-2016 Season 2015/16 THEATRE SCHOLARS Lee & Nadine Marts Scholarship Bill Baker, Jr. Scholarship Sandra Lopez Baker Thomas Scholarship Danny Fleming Jeanne McIlrath Finter Memorial Scholarship in Costume Gretchen Halle n ble) Mariem S. Diaz, Maya Jackson, Joshua Gilman, and Caroline Vuchetich in The Learned Ladies. UMKC Theatre 2015. Photo by Brian Paulette ions The Mary Ellen Fowler Award Fund Caitlin Tuten Gretchen Halle Patricia A. McIlrath Scholarship Afton Earp Patricia Crowe Morgan Acting Internship Edwin Brown III Michael Thayer Morgan-Oppenstein Acting Award Mariem Diaz Joshua Gilman Caroline Vuchetich Jeanne McIlrath Finter Acting Award 2th Joshua Gilman The Darker Face of the Earth Benefit Scholarship e Cast of The Rocky Horror Show, UMKC Theatre 2015. Photo by Brian Paulette c play Max Levitt Three Sisters Benefit Scholarship Morgan Lea Palmer Noises Off Benefit Scholarship Margaret Dolben AWARDS ADMINISTERED by THE UMKC COLLEGE of ARTS & SCIENCES e Trial 58] Francis J. Cullinan & Baker S. Smith, Jr. Scholarship Amanda Davison Dalton Pierce nakin) Jason Bauer Ingram Family Scholarship Fund Nicole Jaja The Honorable Karen McCarthy Scholarship for Theatre Caroline Allander Jeannette Nichols Scholarship Elizabeth Still SCS Scholarship Jon Robertson Gretel Sigmund Scholarship in Theatre Glenn Linder William & Fay Sollner Scholarship Elizabeth Sampley Douglas Enderle Honorary Scholarship in Theatre Design Paige Beltowski Richard J. Stern Foundation Scholarship for Theatre Arts Costume Caitlin Tuten The Kelly Award for Theatre Nils Emerson THE NEW THEATRE GUILD SCHOLARSHIpS Dr. Patricia McIlrath Scholarship Grethen Halle MFA, Costume Design The New Theatre Guild Richard Carrothers & Dennis D. Hennessy Scholarship Michael Thayer, MFA Acting The Virginia Kelley Scholarship James Alderiso, MA The Julia Boutross Scholarship Jamie Leonard, BA Theatre The Michelle Bushman Scholarship Mariem Diaz, MFA Acting pRIvATELy-AWARDED SCHOLARSHIpS The William & Jo Ann Sullivan Fellowship Maya Jackson Richard J. Stern FellowshipCostume Marc Vital Richard J. Stern FellowshipSound Jessica Shanks John D. Ezell Design Scholarship Cast of Pericles, UMKC Theatre 2015. Photo by Brian Paulette Tzu-Ching Cheng Mark Exline Trevor Frederiksen Tristan James Sandra Lopez THE HALL FAMILy FOUNDATION FELLOWS Jason Bauer Paige Beltowski Shannon Barondeau Joshua Christ Margaret Dolben Afton Earp Mark Exline Katherine Gehrlein Jessica Hawkins Nicole Jaja Tristan James Ashley Kok Kaleb Krahn Jacob Lensing Glenn Linder Morgan Lea Palmer Jon Robertson Elizabeth Sampley Andrew Steele Adam Terry Caitlin Tuten Tzu-Ching Cheng Cast of Freedom Rider, UMKC Theatre 2015. Photo by Brian Paulette 21st ve Pictured Top to Bottom: Nicole Marie Laura Spencer JacobsChristensen, and Spencer Christensen Green & Jamie Dufault, Frank Lillig & Murphy,Theatre Margaret 2015. Shelby.Photo in The Korrie Liar, UMKC All Photos by Brian Paulette by Brian Paulette re.org KC Rep and UMKC Theatre work in partnership to prepare talented young artists for a future in theatre. Financial assistance from generous donors is essential to sustain UMKC’s acclaimed theatre training programs. If you are interested in contributing or in establishing a scholarship, please contact Jason Elliott at [email protected], 816.235.5776. Cast of Caucasian Chalk Circle, UMKC Theatre 2015. Photo by Brian Paulette Master of Fine Arts Theatre Design and Technology: Technology Acting and Directing: Acting Stage Management Sadie DeSantis 816-235-2783 [email protected] Carla Noack 816-235-5207 [email protected] Technical Direction Chuck Hayes 816-235-2772 [email protected] Theodore Swetz 816-235-2858 [email protected] PROGRAMS Design and Technology: Design Costume Lindsay W. Davis 816-235-6023 [email protected] Lighting Victor En Yu Tan 816-235-2767 or 816-213-8826 (cell) [email protected] Master of Arts Theatre Dr. Felicia Hardison Londré 816-235-2781 [email protected] Academic Advisor Cindy Stofiel 816-235-6683 [email protected] Scenic John Ezell Gene Friedman 816-674-7333 816-235-2733 [email protected] [email protected] Sound Tom Mardikes [email protected] A pply Online! www.umkctheatre.org Greg Mackender [email protected] Relay Missouri at 1-800-735-2966 (TT) or 1-800-735-2466 (VIOCE) Spring 2016 Training News