On My Decision To Pursue and Then Later Accept The Position of
Artistic Director At The Hangar Theatre
Post #1: To Be An AD Or Not To Be An AD
Since I was an undergrad, I can
remember people telling me that I should be an Artistic Director. The effect of this, of course, was that it made
me want to do everything but. I have never responded well to “should.”
Beatrice Basso |
When I got too old for the
Associate gigs, I threw my hat in for Artistic Directorships. With one exception, from a theatre far too
large for someone with no institutional experience like me, my resumes went
unanswered, ignored like love letters sent to someone way out of your league.
Marco Barricelli |
And yet, my friends and colleagues,
people I really trusted, insisted that being an Artistic Director would be a
good match for me. Marco Barricelli, who
is incapable of telling a lie, would say, “They’d be lucky to have you.” Lucky to have me? Me, who reveled in 20 years
of freelancing? Me, who prided himself on being a creature of chaos? Me, who
could barely make a budget for myself, let alone for an institution? Basking in
my own self-deprecation professionally, as I did romantically so often in my
twenties, I thought, “Really, who’d be lucky to have me?”
A few years ago, rather
unintentionally, however, the unlikeliest thing happened. After years of swearing I’d never do it and a
decade after it was fashionable for someone my age, I founded a theatre company:
The Upstart Creatures. Every other month, we present a reading of a
politically relevant, large-cast play and build a three or four course gourmet
meal around it. And admission is free. I
have described it, often, as the best thing I do with my life, and at every
event, I am humbled by the artists who volunteer their time and talent for
free, rehearsing and cooking and serving.
I am humbled by the Pastors Scott and Tiffany at the Metro Baptist
Church on West 40th St., who welcomed us into their Sanctuary Arts
Program and who host our events. And I’m
humbled by everyone who shows up and attends and engages and eats and watches
our little shows, giving whatever they can at the end so that we can continue
presenting for free.
Me at an Upstarts Creature event. |
My goal as the AD of The Upstarts
was to produce plays that I would want to both direct and attend. As a freelance director, I have never agreed
to direct a play I didn’t love. La Jolla Artistic Director Christopher Ashley,
when I was assisting him a fifteen years ago, would like to torture me with
“what if” scenarios: “What if you got
asked to direct a play on Broadway you didn’t like? Or just sort of liked?” But as much as I’d love the paycheck, that
wasn’t for me. It’s not just me being
finicky, the way I can be with food (“You cooked that broccoli for how
long?”). I know that if I’m not
passionate about something, if I can’t really get behind it, if I don’t
believe, then I’m not going to be able to muster that special thing that lets
other people believe. And it makes
sense, I suppose, that the company I founded incorporated the two things about
which I feel most passionately: theatre and food. And did I mention it’s free? Some of my happiest moments are watching
undergrads in our audience, sitting next to more traditional (read: older)
audience members, eating and watching and interacting with each other.
Our little company has prospered
(our first gala is November 7th!), and much to my surprise, I
enjoyed all of the admin stuff that scared me away from Artistic Directorship
in the first place. Or rather, I should
say, my idea of being an AD (my therapist and I can figure out where this came
from) was of someone very organized, sort of boring, sort of patriarchal, who had
sacrificed creativity for authority.
But with The Upstarts, I learned I
didn’t have to be any of those things to lead a company; that Artistic Directorship wasn’t directing’s
nemesis. It was its fraternal twin: a
creative endeavor, just as fulfilling and exciting on its own terms. I directed the first three Upstarts events,
until I realized that directing those readings was the least interesting part
for me. By getting an incredible roster
of guest directors (Suzanne Agins, Andy Goldberg, Estefania Fadul, Morgan
Gould) to direct the readings, it left me free to do the stuff I didn’t have
experience in: producing and cooking for 100 people.
Margaret Shackell-Dowell |
All of these things were going
through my mind when the President of the Hangar Board (and now a great friend
and ally) Margaret Shackell-Dowell emailed me, four hours before I was going to
get on a plane to Istanbul, asking if I wanted to apply for the interim
position. (I’ve already blogged about how
I became the interim artistic director, so I won’t get into that here).
So what happened during my Interim
Year that made me apply for the full-time job?
Come back next week to read that post…
Great blog, I enjoyed reading it.
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