On My Decision To Pursue and Then Later Accept The Position of
Artistic Director At The Hangar Theatre
I had no idea how to prepare for the summer. The previous Artistic Director of the Hangar,
Jen Waldman, was basically as kind and helpful as someone could be, as were prior
Artistic Directors Peter Flynn and Kevin Moriarty. But some things must be experienced. And running the Hangar in the summer was one
of those things.
I also loved being the bridge between staff and artists and
technical crew. Like the director of a
musical has to make sure that dance and music and design are all talking to
each other, the AD becomes the intersection of all the various contributors. I’ve been the artist enough that that was
familiar to me. But getting to know what
the full-year staff and shop heads have to do to make the theatre run was
undoubtedly the most educational, and the most humbling, part of my summer. I
don’t know how Adam Zonder is able to find such extraordinary interns and
staff, but spending time with them, learning about how their passion for the
theatre motivates them (I’m thinking about Kerri Lynch talking to our Aces
group before Constellations, and
Christy Perez and the countless conversations she and I had, along with so many
others) all served to teach me how little I knew about the industry in which
I’ve spent my entire adult life.
Post #2: The Summer, In Brief
I have realized (again, remember, code for “discovered in
therapy”) that doing new things is scary for me. Sometimes I get off on this scariness – like
going to a firing range to shoot shotguns for my 37th birthday, or
traveling to new places. But sometimes,
the inability to visualize is just terrifying.
Peter Flynn |
Jen Waldman |
Normally, when rehearsing a play, I look forward to my day
off like a traveler in a desert stumbling toward an oasis. When I was rehearsing a play this summer, my
“days off” were often busier than a normal rehearsal day. And exhausting as that could be, it was
actually the transitions during actual rehearsals days that were truly challenging:
staying in an artistic and creative space while having to use my ten-minute
break to problem-solving logistical challenges.
It’s hard to wear two hats at the same time, especially when, like me,
you don’t have the cheekbones for hats.
In a funny way, it’s like directing a play, especially on a thrust: the
transitions are often harder to stage than the scenes themselves.
Although the rehearsal days were longer, they were easier in
many ways than the non-rehearsal days.
Why? Because the energy of rehearsal
reflects and recycles the energy you put into it. For me, administration isn’t like that. At least, not yet. There are certainly parts of AD’ing that are incredibly
rewarding, but it doesn’t replenish the way that exchanging energy with artists
in rehearsals does.
And then there was the driving. While I have lived in New York City for my
entire adult life, I know how to drive.
I just don’t enjoy it. And I
especially don’t enjoy when I’m about to be late, and have four phone calls to
make, and suddenly find myself on (another) one-way road taking me in the
opposite direction from where I need to be.
Seriously, one of the greatest accomplishments of the summer was
figuring out the roads of downtown Ithaca.
So why did I decide to apply for the gig?
Well, much to my surprise, I discovered I really loved the
day-to-day of Artistic Directing. As a
freelancer, working at other people’s theatre, my critical mind would
inevitably kick-in and wonder, “How I would do this differently if I were AD.”
It threw me back to middle or high school, when I was a young actor in the
school plays who had no idea he was going to be a director. I would sit in the back of the house, and
wonder why Mrs. Anzuini didn’t have Roses and Strawberries and Milk enter from
the back of the house in the big number of Oliver!
A photo from "Who Will Buy?", from Oliver, that I found on the internet. |
Just as becoming a director let me try out those staging
ideas, being an AD let me experiment with the administrative ones. Some of them worked, just like I imagined, and
some of them worked in ways I would’ve never imagined. And many of them didn’t. And that was okay, too. Like being in a rehearsal. The confidence to try and fail and move on
was integral to surviving the summer.
Christy Perez, Hangar SM Apprentice, making pasta! |
There are lots of other things that made me want to pursue
the job full-time: the great joy of being able to hire artists I know and
believe in, like Suzanne Agins, Linsay Firman, Shoko Kambar, Suzanne Chesney
and Nick Francone. The joy of getting to
meet new artists that I can’t wait to work with again (just about everyone who
worked on the mainstage, honestly – all brilliant and hard-working and kind and
generous).
And then there were little things as well – all the artists
and teachers from Syracuse who joined us as artists and audience members, all
that gorgeous Orange in Ithaca. Annie
the Muffin Lady (who bakes fresh muffins for the first rehearsals) and her
husband Tony, who took me and Rafa on their sailboat on Cayuga Lake, where
every hour feels like one full day of vacation.
The Hangar Board, who host dinners for the mainstage artists. The Drama League directors and the Lab
Company, who impressed me daily with their courage and hard work and bravery. My Associate Artistic Director, Brad
Raimondo, who made it impossible to imagine a more brilliant ally.
For those of you who have never been to Ithaca, it’s hard to
describe the magic that permeates the town (unofficial motto: “ten square miles
surrounded by reality”). But even more
than the Hangar itself was the way the equation of the theatre in that
community played itself out. The people
who come to see plays at the Hangar really want to be there. They care about the play. They care about the institution. When we announced that we’d be re-introducing
a Fifth Show into the summer season it was greeted with applause every
time.
Summer theatres like ours can’t necessarily provide the same
resources that a LORT can. Our pay isn’t
as high. The housing isn’t as good. And all summer I wrestled with trying to
answer the question of what we can provide that might make up for that. The answer is the community. Something magical happens in the summer. And something especially magical happens in
Ithaca.
And it’s the reason, ultimately, that I decided to accept
the job. I had the privilege of seeing
how that magic was conjured, and what it meant to everyone associated with the
theatre: artists, staff, technicians, interns, and most of all the audience and
community.
But before I accepted the job, of course, I had to apply for
it…
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