How I Became An Interim Artistic Director
This post is the first of an ongoing series about my adventures and escapades as the Interim Artistic Director at the Hangar Theatre in Ithaca, New York.
How did I become an interim artistic director?
Four hours before I boarded a plane to Istanbul, I received an
email from Margaret B. Shackell, the president of the Hangar Theatre Board.
The artistic director was stepping down. I had been recommended. Was I
interested in applying for the Interim Artistic Director position at the Hangar
Theatre, in Ithaca, New York?
You bet your ass I was.
I thought about emailing Margaret back, but then decided against
it – I would be in transit for a day, and I knew they wanted to act fast.
Besides, everybody knows that fortune favors the bold. So instead I
googled her and discovered she was also an accounting professor at Cornell.
I found her office number online. When I called, it rolled to voicemail.
Her cellphone number was on the outgoing message. I called her cell. She
picked up. I told her I really wanted this job, and I would write a letter
before I got on the plane. (Thanks, Rafa, for packing for us both – I’d love to
pretend this is because I had to write that letter, but we both know you’d have
done it anyway because I hate packing so very very much)
The Hangar Theatre is a 350-seat thrust in Ithaca. The first summer I
spent there was in 2001, as a Drama League Directing Fellow. The second
was two years later, when then-Artistic Director Kevin Moriarty invited me back
to direct Julius Caesar with the Lab Company, which would later be
re-mounted as a school tour. Here are a list of people I met during those
two summers with whom I’m still in touch, all this time later:
David Snider
Lindsey Gates
Kevin Moriarty
Lisa Bushlow
Bob Moss
Kali Quinn
Lyndsay Ruotolo
Tom Picasso
Josh Canfield
Courtney Bell
Noshir Dalal
Jennifer Joan Thompson
Amy Schluennes
Emily Fink
Ian Lowe
Jade Rothman
Rachel Fleit
Dan Knechtges
Wendy Dann
Adam Zonder
Adam Zonder
That’s how many I can list off the top of my head, and the easiest way for me to show how influential those summers were to me. The inimitable and magic nature of the Hangar didn’t stop for me with the people I met and the collaborations I formed. It had to do with what was expected of me as an artist.
As a Hangar Drama League director, working in the Wedge (the
experimental second stage) was the first time in my professional life that I
was given the space to choose what I wanted to direct. It was a luxury to which
I was so unused that it bewildered me at first: what kind of work did I want to
make? What was important to me? What did I need to communicate to the world?
I did not direct this Wedge show but I found the picture online and I loved it so I'm using it because the internet didn't exist when I was in the Lab. Neither did electricity. |
When I returned, two summers later, to work on Julius Caesar, I brought with me two designers whose work and friendship would have profound influences on me in the future: Oana Botez on costumes, and Mimi Lien on sets (MacArthur Genius Grant Recipient, 2015). It was the first time I got to direct Shakespeare professionally. It was where I met and first cast Lab Company member Jennifer Joan Thompson, with whom I've worked at least ten times since, including my off-Broadway premiere. Jennifer is also a writer now, and I was honored when she asked me to direct her first piece, Booksmart at Studio Tisch. Fellow Vassar alum Emily Robin Fink and Noshir, this awesome ninja I’d met in Rochester a few years earlier were in that production as well, as you will see when you check out the awesome lab video we’re making this year.
Downtown Ithaca. I mean, come on. |
You bet your ass I wanted that job.
The 2016 season, which out-going Artistic Director Jen Waldman had
already chosen, is glorious.
In Istanbul, I found out I would be granted an interview. Two days
later, over Skype, from Bulgaria, said interview occurred by the Search
Committee (comprised of Margaret, a few other board members and Managing
Director Josh Friedman). Luckily, I had been a finalist to be
the Artistic Director of a LORT theater a few months before, so I could
anticipate many of the questions that would be asked.
Here are some of them:
- What kind of artists do you like to work with?
- What role do you think the Hangar should play in its community?
- Describe your leadership style.
- Which plays would you want to direct and how would you market the season?
- What kind of artists do you like to work with?
An Upstarts Event. |
The criteria I use is: brilliant, hard-working, and kind.
Brilliant is a must. We work in a saturated market. As the e-mails
flooding the Hangar casting e-mail account remind me daily, the competition in
our field is crushing. That means that brilliance is the price of
admission. Next, given the relatively challenging material our
company is drawn to (one of our criteria for the plays we pick: if you can see
it on Broadway, we don’t need to do it), the only way to present a reading
of the caliber that will make us proud is by using hard-working actors who
are willing to work on the material outside of the 4-hour rehearsal we
schedule, the way any director worth their salt needs 10 hours of prep to knock
a reading out of the ballpark. Finally, when you’re in a kitchen with 75
people waiting to be fed and not a dish is ready, you better believe you want
the people around you to be kind. Just like, when you’re in the last
hour of a ten-out-of-twelve and a prop breaks and a costume tears and a scene
that we never quite got in the rehearsal room feels even worse on stage, if the
people you’re working with aren’t kind, you will never find your way to a
solution. Also, why not be kind? You’ll live longer.
2.
What role do you think the
Hangar should play in its community?
I’ve always loved the idea of a regional theater being not just a
place to go to see plays, but where the people of the community spend real
time. That’s how I answered the second question. To use my husband’s
business talk, what’s the added value that an audience member gets with their
ticket value?
3.
Describe your leadership
style.
Like most interesting things, leadership style is difficult to
describe, but I tried nonetheless. As a director, my favorite response to
a question has become, “I don’t know.” In my 20s, this was incredibly
difficult for me to say – as a young director, and a young artist, and a young
person, I wanted to know. I felt like I needed to know. And the
worst kind of collaborators make you feel bad for not knowing. But as I
matured into my 30s, I found the joy in not knowing. That a director can
do all the prep, all the research, know the script intimately, and still allow
themselves to be surprised in rehearsals. It took me 15 years to begin to make
sense of what JoAnne Akalaitis had been screaming at me for three years at
Juilliard.
4.
Which plays would you want
to direct and how would you market the season?
Finally, there was the season itself. I felt anxiety from
the board about this – would I be interested in producing a season I hadn’t
chosen? Maybe, with a different season, the answer would’ve been
different. But (and this will be one of the many places I will thank
Outgoing Artistic Director Jen Waldman), I loved this season. I was wild about
this season. Running the Upstarts, I had learned that I needed to
be as excited about a play I was producing as I needed to be about a play I was
directing. That’s not a low bar. The Hangar 2016 season, however, made
this easy for me.
12 Portions of Pasta, made by the Upstart Creatures. |
In The Heights is possibly the
second-best musical ever written, (after Hamilton),
also written by Lin-Manuel Miranda. This is a musical about New York City
(where I’ve lived for 20 years), about immigrants (I am an immigrant to this
country, having moved from Israel when I was 6), and about the American Dream
(hello, my life). When I think about what’s happening in this country
right now, a musical with this kind of diversity feels important, the way art
needs to be important.
Constellations is a stunning two-hander
about love and possibility that was part of MTC’s Sloan
Project. Two years ago, I received a Sloan Grant to write a play about
the Ancient Roman scientist/philosopher Lucretius and his stunning epic
treatise on physics and love and the world, De Rerum Natura. This is a
smart play. This is a play that would need a really smart director. I knew who
I wanted to direct this play immediately, and that made me very excited about
producing it.
And Third, the last play written by Wendy Wasserstein. Well, let’s just say that since Wendy passed away ten
years ago (actually, nine years and eleven months, but who’s counting?), I feel
like she’s been up there, looking down, helping me out when she can. This was
one of those times.
Eddie Boroevich and Kathryn Grody in our original production of Third at Theater J. |
So, yeah, I could produce this season.
I talked about how I would market each play (I thought I’d flubbed
this one horribly, but later Margaret told me I hadn’t, which was nice).
There were other questions – about time commitments, about the Lab
Company (I’m going to devote another post in its entirety about the lab company
because I’m so psyched about it), about Ithaca. I flubbed a few. I
made some jokes, which luckily the wi-fi connection was strong enough to convey
with some kind of authenticity over Skype. A few days later, back in the
states, I was invited to chat with Adam Zonder, the production manager at the
Hangar.
Adam has been at the Hangar for twenty years. He is the institution’s
living memory. He can recite the budget and schedule for the summer with
the kind of confidence and knowledge that I find somewhere between impressive
and intimidating. As one board member joked with me later, “Just do what Adam
says and you’ll be fine.”
Adam was the Production Manager both summers I had spent at the
Hangar in the early ‘00s. Luckily, he didn’t hold the way I behaved then (I was
young, alright!) against me. In his perfectly frank, undecorated way, he told
me what was possible this summer and what wasn’t. He told me what had
worked in the past and what hadn’t.
It is easy, when you’ve never run a theater before, to be seduced
by the trust and the power and the responsibility of the job. Adam was sobering
without dampening my enthusiasm. He made the job real.
The one and only Josh Friedman |
And most of all (and I know it’s become so clichéd it’s almost not
worth repeating) but be yourself. The weirder you are, the more
important this is. There would be no point in me putting on a three-piece suit
and presenting myself to the Board as an experienced administrator. If that’s who
they wanted for this job, they wouldn’t have given me an interview. And if I
managed to fool them and get the job by presenting myself that way, what a bore
to have to be that.
Know who you are and sell that. I am a man-child. I am
weird and funny and make jokes about my weight (I’m passing on carbs these days
so that I don’t return from Mexico Jabba-sized) and my hair (I don’t wear it -
it wears me). At the same time, I started and am still running a successful New
York theater company, but our operating budget is in the mid-four digits. I
have supported myself as a freelance director, sans trust fund, sans day job,
sans inheritance, sans any of those things. I know what makes a play
good, and a good play. Twenty years in New York has given me access to an
incredible network of artists. I will have lots to learn about how to run a
theater. I will make mistakes. I will give it everything. I will be as a
brilliant, hard-working and kind as I possibly can. If that’s who you want,
give me the job.
Apparently, that’s who they wanted. I got the job the next day.