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Our Tributes

Performers

Elliott Davidoff

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Waiter 1

Anderson Davies

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Truffaldino

Kamden Feth

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Porter

Mariana Oliveira Gandin

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Clarice

Sophia Gegg

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Smeraldina

Daniel Goebel Guzmán

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Silvio

Sarah Jordan

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Vivienne

Julia Kauffman

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Brighella

Jaxon McCormick

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Florindo

Caroline Schools

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Waiter 2

Dominic Tarantino

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Pantalone

Setting

Songs & Scenes

Servant of Two Masters
By Carlo Goldoni
Based on Italian Renaissance theater style, commedia dell'arte, Carlo Goldoni’s 18th century masterpiece is an enduring story of love, passion, and mistaken identity. Beautiful Clarice can’t marry her lover, Silvio. She had been betrothed to Rasponi, who appears to have returned from the dead to claim her. But the Rasponi who appears is actually Beatrice, Rasponi’s sister who is in disguise as her brother and has come to Venice to find her suitor, Florindo. Complications arise when a servant greedily seeks employment with both the disguised Beatrice and Florindo and spends the rest of the play trying to serve two masters while keeping the two unaware of the other’s presence.
Thespy Presentation
Nine to Five
Ketty Acuna, Charlotte Black, Chase Croft, Ava Curtis, Elliottt Davidoff, Anderson Davies, Sophia Gegg, Dan Goebel Guzman, Sarah Jordan, Claire Juneau, Amelia Lusk, Carrington Meyer, Veronica Marrero, Mariana Oliveira Gandin, Dominic Tarantino
Ms. Holmes and Ms. Watson Apt. 2B
Rachel Dowling, Alyssa Johnson, Saavan Ohri
Stranger to the Rain
Elliott Davidoff
Monologue Presentation
Anderson Davies, Sophia Gegg, Julia Kaufman, Mariana Oliveira Gandin, Dominic Tarantino, Kendyl Taylor
I’m Not Afraid of Anything
Sarah Jordan
Love, Death, and the Prom
Amelia Lusk, Riley McKenzie, Carrington Meyer
A Doll’s House
Julia Kaufman, Jaxon McCormick
Space Between” from MS Production of Descendants
Featuring Bianca Hunt from the MS Production of DESCENDANTS
Somewhere Over the Rainbow
Featuring students from the Lower School production of The Wizard of OZ Brinleigh DeMutis, Julia Fernandes, Carol Madureira, Eva Ruiz, Sophie Tabba

Production Staff

Thespy Board
President
Kendyl Taylor
President
Sophia Gegg
Vice President
Dan Goebel Guzman
Treasurer
Anderson Davies
Historian
Mariana Oliveira Gandin
Historian
Dominic Tarantino
Secretary
Lily Redman
Secretary
Mariann Burgos-Ramirez
Community Outreach
Ava Curtis
Production Staff
Stage Manager
Kendyl Taylor
Assistant Stage Manager
Lily Redman
Sound Board Operator
Maria Fernanda Franck Braga
Light Board Operator
Crispin Caines
Crew
Hidaya Bakeer Keira Beggrow Charlotte Black Ava Curtis Nicolas Humphrey Claire Juneau Riley McKenzie Neela McLein Saavan Ohri Thor Reed
Costume Crew
Keira Beggrow Charlotte Black Claire Juneau

Venue Staff

School Administration Staff

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Musicians

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Board Members

Student Advisory Board

Credits

Lighting equipment from PRG Lighting, sound equipment from Sound Associates, rehearsed at The Public Theater’s Rehearsal Studios. Developed as part of Irons in the Fire at Fault Line Theatre in New York City.

Special Thanks

Special thank you to Miki Noltimier and Brittany Noltimier who assisted the students in the creation of numerous costumes. 

Also, thank you to Mike Korkis for donating his time to the cast and crew, offering his expertise to help us create this amazing show.

*Appearing through an Agreement between this theatre and Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.

Actors’ Equity Association (“Equity”), founded in 1913, is the U.S. labor union that represents more than 51,000 actors and stage managers, Equity fosters the art of live theatre as an essential component of society and advances the careers of its members by negotiating wages, improving working conditions and providing a wide range of benefits, including health and pension plans. Actors’ Equity is a member of the AFL-CIO and is affiliated with FIA, an International organization of performing arts unions. www.actorsequity.org

United Scenic Artists ● Local USA 829 of the I.A.T.S.E represents the Designers & Scenic Artists for the American Theatre

ATPAM, the Association of Theatrical Press Agents & Managers (IATSE Local 18032), represents the Press Agents, Company Managers, and Theatre Managers employed on this production.

Message from Troupe President Kendyl Taylor

Good Evening and welcome to the HS Thespians Troupe 6902 Showcase. My name is Kendyl Taylor and I am one of the Presidents of Troupe 6902. We are thrilled that you came out to support us this evening. Tonight we will be showcasing our competitve One Act - The Servant of Two Masters.  We honore to be performing this play on our stage.  

Cast
Creatives

Meet the Cast

Elliott Davidoff

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Waiter 1
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Anderson Davies

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Truffaldino
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Anderson Davies is a senior at WPS and excited to finish his final year through theater. He is involved in Troupe 6902, being the treasurer, and is the Executive Board president of SGA. In the past, he has played roles such as Mr. Green in Clue, Bobby in Curtains, and Jack in the one act Charley's Aunt.

Kamden Feth

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Porter
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Kamden is a senior at Windermere Prep and is thrilled to be apart of this years production of RADIUM GIRLS! Although only coming to WPS her junior year, Kamden has since been inducted into Thespian Troupe 6902 and is an IB Theatre student. Her past WPS roles include: Ensemble in CURTAINS! and Mrs. Bennet in PRIDE AND PREJUDICE. Kamden wants to thank everyone who made RADIUM GIRLS possible and is so excited for everyone to see the show!

Mariana Oliveira Gandin

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Clarice
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Mariana is a senior at Windermere Prep and is so excited to be a part of her last show. She has recently been a part of the award-winning WPS one-act, The Servant of Two Masters, where she was awarded All-Star Cast member at the Southeastern Theatre Conference, and played Grace Fryer in the fall production of Radium Girls. She is a part of 22 Talent Agency and participates in professional film and TV projects in the Orlando and Atlanta area. She will be going to New York University's Tisch School of the Arts in the fall to continue her studies, majoring in Drama. She would like to thank her family and wonderful acting coach for all their support. 

Sophia Gegg

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Smeraldina
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Sophia (Soso) Gegg is a senior at Windermere Prep and is excited to participate in her final fall play at WPS. This year, Sophia is president of Troupe 6902 as well as the Executive Marketing Director of Student Government. She has been previously seen in other WPS productions playing Georgia Hendricks in CURTAINS and Ursula in BYE BYE BIRDIE. She will also be playing Smeraldina in the upcoming WPS one act THE SERVANT OF TWO MASTERS.

Daniel Goebel Guzmán

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Silvio
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Daniel is a seventeen year old junior at Windermere Prep and is happy to be back on the stage for Radium Girls. As a part of the Residential Life program at Windermere Prep, Dan is also a member and Vicepresident of Thespian Troupe 6902, a member of Tri-M Music Honor Society and the Spanish Honor Society. Past credits at WPS include: Harvey Johnson in Bye Bye Birdie. Christopher Belling in Curtains. Ensemble in The Legend of Sleepy Hollow and Pride and Prejudice. He also played Young Simba in The Lion King at Teatro del Parque Interlomas in Mexico City.

Sarah Jordan

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Vivienne
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Sarah Jordan has had an absolute blast participating in this production of Legally Blonde! Starting her career at only 3 years old, Sarah has continued to audition and book jobs for TV film and stage productions. Starting her freshman year, her most recent roles at WPS include Niki Harris in Curtains, Sob Sister in Radium Girls, and Beatrice in the competitive one-act The Servant of Two Masters. Sarah continues to train privately with Maddie Lane and Elaine Cotignola, along with participating in summer programs and NYC workshops. She would love to thank all of her coaches, Mrs. Fadoul and Mrs. Redman, and her agent Traci at Brevard Talent. Outside of performance, Sarah enjoys writing, wake surfing, and playing her bass guitar!

Julia Kauffman

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Brighella
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Jaxon McCormick

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Florindo
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Caroline Schools

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Waiter 2
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Dominic Tarantino

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Pantalone
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Meet the Team

BambiEllen Fadoul

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Director
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BambiEllen Fadoul is proud to be the Director the High School Theatre Department at Windermere Prep. As a graduate of Oklahoma City University with a degree in Musical Theater, Fadoul spent many years on the stage touring the world in numerous productions before relocating to Central Florida to perform with the Walt Disney Company. While working at Disney she began to teach with Disney Performing Arts as well as direct and choregraph numerous youth productions across Central Florida. Fadoul is thrilled to share her love for the theatre with her wonderful students and watch them grow daily in the classroom and in after school rehearsals. Favorite director/choreographer productions include: FootlooseChicago, Curtains, and the award-winning play, Charley's Aunt. Huge thank you to the amazing Fine Arts team at WPS, and to my wonderful family, Jonathan and Cooper, who ensure I have dinner during tech and performance weeks. You two are my favorite!

Nick Prowse

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Technical Director
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Scenic Designer
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Nick Prowse continues to dazzle Windermere with his Scenic Designs and Technical Direction for Windermere Preparatory School. Radium Girls marks his sixth show for the High School Thespian Troupe 6902, and his fourteenth for Windermere Prep's Theatre Department. This show was unique being his first drama design. He is eager to see the audiences reaction to true, unexpected story.

Crispin Caines

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Light Board Operator
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Crispin is a junior and is happy to make his Light Board Operator debut! He has been at WPS since 2018, being a part of most of the productions since. He was part of Peter Pan and Little Mermaid asProperties Master, Addams Family as Pugsley Addams, Charley's Aunt, Frozen Kids and Mary Poppins as Sound Board Operator, Pride and Prejudice as Assisstant Stage Manager, and Curtains (Assistant Technical Director). He's not sure about what he wants to do for a career, but theater will continue to hold a special place in his heart.

Marylou Neal

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Wig Designer
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Brian Skala

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Fight Choreographer
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Media

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2021 National Touring Cast

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While You Wait

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Model Citizens in WINE IN THE WILDERNESS — Review
Juan A. Ramirez
March 25, 2025

In her New York directorial debut, LaChanze returns to the work of Alice Childress, in whose play Trouble in Mind she fiercely starred on Broadway in 2021, renewing interest in the writer’s under-seen oeuvre. This time, she stages her 1969 play, Wine in the Wilderness, in a smart Classic Stage Company production featuring a sizzling Olivia Washington.

Amid the Harlem riot of 1964, the suave young artist Bill (Grantham Coleman) is looking to complete the third panel of a triptych he’s painting on Black womanhood; the first canvas depicts youthful innocence, the second an idealized African mythos. The third, he heartily rhapsodizes with Oldtimer (Milton Craig Nealy), a friendly wino who breezes into his studio, will be a cautionary tale of the kind of “messed up chick” you’d cross the street to avoid.

This is why Tommy (Washington) is picked up at a bar and brought over by his friends Sonny-man (Brooks Brantly) and Cynthia (Lakisha May). Brash, lively, and not dripping with bohemian chic, they see her as the perfect model of Black womanhood gone wrong. With Oldtimer quietly observing, the three friends take turns slighting her looks, intelligence, and lifestyle while toasting their own advancement.

As in Trouble in Mind, which patiently laid bare the workplace microaggressions faced by a Black actress, Childress is interested in everyday culture wars, here the ones waged within a subculture; what we take from our people and how we sell them out in our quest for advancement. Tommy drinks, doesn’t know the African-American history books strewn about Bill’s apartment (the intimate set is by Arnulfo Maldonado), and definitely does not use the term “African-American,” opting instead for one which deeply, and showily, offends her host. But she’s no social work case, and is definitely no stooge. When, in a woman to woman moment, Cynthia advises she should soften up and become the kind of lady men open doors for, she fires back, “What if I'm standing there and they don't open it?”

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The company of Wine in the Wilderness | Marc J. Franklin

There is a compelling conversation between Childress’s writing and LaChanze’s contemporary direction. The script doesn’t insist too hard, but it’s easy to imagine its subtext calling for these characters to be presented in a more caricaturish way which LaChanze is measured in tempering. So while Dede Ayite’s costumes and Nikiya Mathis’ wigs are characteristically rich, Tommy does not immediately read as the stereotype her peers perceive her to be. It’s a humanizing touch, trusting the author’s dialectics and her star’s ability, but one that softens the play’s blunt-force legibility. And yet LaChanze then continues this artists’ dialogue, complicating Childress’ too-clean finale with a poignantly unsettled closing tableau.

Four years after her incandescent performance in Trouble in Mind – which was both the veteran actor’s first time leading a Broadway play, and the 1955 work’s long-delayed Broadway debut – it feels as if LaChanze has clutched onto something beautiful in the elder’s work, and is now passing it forward. Washington, catching the baton, creates a performance that is compelling, evocative and all-encompassing; suggesting a woman determined on being life, whether of the party or of her own path. Out of this well-calibrated, finely acted production, the triumvirate of Washington’s performance, LaChanze’s direction, and Childress’s words, make it a must-see.

Wine in the Wilderness is in performance through April 13, 2025 at Classic Stage Company on East 13th Street in New York City. For tickets and more information, visit here.

An Aimless OTHELLO — Review
Juan A. Ramirez
March 24, 2025

The uber-prolific Kenny Leon has somewhat perfected his directorial strategy of casting extremely well then getting out of the way of his talented performers, trusting them to deliver the work cleanly, and largely on their own. If a bit of nuance goes unexplored here, or some text feels hurried there, he typically pulls it off on the strength of the material. It worked with a rollicking comedy like Purlie Victorious, it worked with an emotional meditation like Our Town. The approach does not work with Othello, his third Broadway show this season, which stumbles aimlessly and fruitlessly for nearly three hours.

Shakespeare’s works will outlive us all, but need a reason to be staged, a focus on one of the many thematic strands each contains, and through which they remain immortal. Though Leon’s two previous Shakespearean outings, both at the Delacorte, had specific takes on character and setting, there is nothing powering his Othello, leaving its two blockbuster leads, Denzel Washington and Jake Gyllenhaal, stranded.

Gyllenhaal wrangles emotion out of his Iago, if he’s not completely at home with the Bard’s language. Washington, in a statement as baffling to write as the performance was to witness, seems to have little hold on crafting his character. This Othello does not carry the triumphant stateliness of an army general victorious over general circumstance and pointed racism, but rather the affable nature of an easy mark. When the scheming Iago suggests his new wife Desdemona (Molly Osborne) might be untrue, he falls for it immediately, sapping the bonafide thriller of any sense of tragedy. Andrew Burnap, meanwhile, is rather impressive as Cassio, with Anthony Michael Lopez and Kimber Elayne Sprawl also making the most of their Roderigo and Emilia.

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The Company | Photo: Julieta Cervanates

It would be ludicrous to imply Washington and Gyllenhaal are incapable of turning in momentous, gorgeously attuned performances, so one searches for a directorial hand that emerges in other, bizarre ways. The set, by Derek McLane, whose structural minimalism is well-suited to the modern-dress costumes (by Dede Ayite), is simply not pleasant to look at, with columns sophomorically sponge-painted to suggest age. And Justin Ellington’s sound design vacillates clunkily between melodramatic, Disney-sounding strings and modern trap beats.

An introductory projection places the action in “the near future,” apparently one where the United States has invaded the story’s Venice, given the conflicting military and police patches worn onstage. This scene-setting appears following the magic trick involving Desdemona’s handkerchief which opens the show. Long before the accessory figures into Iago’s plot, it hangs mid-air against a blank stage before the performance begins. As it is invisibly whisked into the flies, the magic, drama, and knowing purpose that the gesture promises disappears almost as immediately.

Othello is in performance through June 8, 2025 at the Barrymore Theatre on West 47th Street in New York City. For tickets and more information, visit here.

Spinning a Military Operation into Musical Comedy Gold in OPERATION MINCEMEAT — Review
Andrew Martini
March 21, 2025

During World War II, the British secret service did indeed conduct a deception operation known as Operation Mincemeat, in which the British dressed a dead body in the uniform of a Royal Marine, transported him to the coast of Spain, and planted fake documents on him in the hopes that German spies would find the body and its falsified military papers and move their troops out of Sicily, leaving it open for an Allied Invasion. 

If you’re thinking this doesn’t sound like the right kind of material for a musical, fret not: in the hands of the geniuses at SpitLip (David Cumming, Felix Hagan, Natasha Hodgson, and Zoë Roberts) it’s musical comedy gold. 

The cast—which includes 3 of the 4 members of SpitLip, plus Claire-Marie Hall and Jak Malone—is a tight ensemble of bumbling clowns, who tackle the breakneck pacing with unflagging energy and megawatt charm. 

Charles Cholmondeley, the mealy-mouthed operative who comes up with the titular operation, lacks the confidence to present the idea to his boss, Colonel Johnny Bevan (Zoë Roberts, hysterical in every role she inhabits). David Cumming is hilarious and lovable as the nerd so forgettable even his coworkers can’t remember him despite working with him for six years. Just watching him walk across the stage (I can only guess the direction was to avoid bending his knees as much as possible) is a delight. His dubious savior comes in the form of his coworker Ewen Montagu, who has enough arrogance and showmanship to sell Charles’ bonkers idea and actually get it approved. Natasha Hodgson is brilliant as the pompous, Eton-educated Montagu. Her gravelly voice and swaggering walk are perfect foils to Cumming’s meek Cholmondeley. 

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The company of Operation Mincemeat | Julieta Cervantes

The five actors switch roles and swap genders throughout, sometimes turning into a new character right before our eyes with a hairpin turn or the donning of a new costume piece or prop—the clever use of costumes and set by Ben Stones.

It’s this small, ragtag sensibility that keeps the show so utterly endearing. While the story lacks propulsive action, particularly in the first act, you hardly notice due to the uproarious comedy and the show’s music—an inventive pastiche of contemporary musical theatre and pop. (Music and lyrics, as well as the book, are all by the members of SpitLip.) Director Robert Hastie keeps the farce rolling, never missing an opportunity for comedy. The script’s raucous, joke-a-minute pacing is thrilling. Wartime espionage has never been this fun.

There’s a real, beating heart at the center of the show that elevates it above mere farce. Beneath the spoofs and gags, there’s an emotional depth that makes the comedy funnier and the satire sharper. While skewering the stuffy, educated British elite, SpitLip has done its due diligence by making room among the jokes to pay homage to the real man whose body was used as a pawn in a military operation. 

Like every member of the cast, Jak Malone plays many roles, most deliciously a foppish coroner, but his tender turn as Hester Leggatt, head of the secret service’s secretarial pool, is the most poignant and well-acted. Along with Claire-Marie Hall as Jean Leslie, the young upstart who wants to be useful beyond her administrative duties, they give voice to the women often banished to the background in stories such as these. 

It’s a testament to its ingenuity that the show accomplishes all of this without ever taking itself too seriously. There are plenty of winks and nudges to the audience throughout, but make no mistake—Operation Mincemeat is some of the best of what musical theatre can be. It demands to be seen.

Operation Mincemeat runs through August 18th at the Golden Theatre in New York City. For tickets and more information, visit here.

Theatrely News
EXCLUSIVE: Watch A Clip From THEATER CAMP Starring Ben Platt, Noah Galvin, and Molly Gordon
Theatrely News
READ: An Excerpt From Sean Hayes Debut YA Novel TIME OUT
Theatrely News
"Reframing the COVID-19 Pandemic Through a Stage Manager’s Eyes"
EXCLUSIVE: Watch A Clip From THEATER CAMP Starring Ben Platt, Noah Galvin, and Molly Gordon
By: Maia Penzer
14 July 2023

Finally, summer has arrived, which can only mean one thing: it's time for camp! Theater Camp, that is. Theatrely has a sneak peak at the new film which hits select theaters today. 

The new original comedy starring Tony Award winner Ben Platt and Molly Gordon we guarantee will have you laughing non-stop. The AdirondACTS, a run-down theater camp in upstate New York, is attended by theater-loving children who must work hard to keep their beloved theater camp afloat after the founder, Joan, falls into a coma. 

The film stars Ben Platt and Molly Gordon as Amos Klobuchar and Rebecca-Diane, respectively, as well as Noah Galvin as Glenn Wintrop, Jimmy Tatro as Troy Rubinsky, Patti Harrison as Caroline Krauss, Nathan Lee Graham as Clive DeWitt, Ayo Edebiri as Janet Walch, Owen Thiele as Gigi Charbonier, Caroline Aaron as Rita Cohen, Amy Sedaris as Joan Rubinsky, and Alan Kim as Alan Park. 

Theater Camp was directed by Molly Gordon and Nick Lieberman and written by Noah Galvin, Molly Gordon, Nick Lieberman & Ben Platt. Music is by James McAlister and Mark Sonnenblick. On January 21, 2023, Theater Camp had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival.

You can purchase tickets to the new film from our friends at Hollywood.com here.

READ: An Excerpt From Sean Hayes Debut YA Novel TIME OUT
By: Kobi Kassal
29 May 2023

Actor Sean Hayes is what we in the biz call booked and blessed. On top of his Tony-nominated performance as Oscar Levant in Good Night, Oscar, Hayes has partnered with Todd Milliner and Carlyn Greenwald for the release of their new YA novel Time Out

Heralded by many as Heartstopper meets Friday Night Lights, Time Out follows hometown basketball hero Barclay Elliot who decides to use a pep rally to come out to his school. When the response is not what he had hoped and the hostility continually growing, he turns to his best friend Amy who brings him to her voting rights group at school. There he finds Christopher and… you will just have to grab a copy and find out what happens next. Luckily for you, Time Out hits shelves on May 30 and to hold you over until then we have a special except from the book just for Theatrely:

The good thing about not being on the team the past two weeks has been that I’ve had time to start picking up shifts again at Beau’s diner and save up a little for college now that my scholarship dreams are over.

     The bad part is it’s the perfect place to see how my actions at the pep rally have rotted the townspeople’s brains too.

     During Amy’s very intense musical theater phase in middle school, her parents took her to New York City. And of course she came back home buzzing about Broadway and how beautiful the piss smell was and everything artsy people say about New York. But she also vividly described some diner she waited three hours to get into where the waitstaff would all perform songs for the customers as a way to practice for auditions. The regulars would have favorite staff members and stan them the way Amy stans all her emo musicians.

     Working at Beau’s used to feel kind of like that, like I was part of a performance team I didn’t know I signed up for. The job started off pretty basic over the summer—I wanted to save up for basketball supplies, and Amy worked there and said it was boring ever since her e-girl coworker friend graduated. But I couldn’t get through a single lunch rush table without someone calling me over and wanting the inside scoop on the Wildcats and how we were preparing for the home opener, wanting me to sign an article in the paper or take a photo. Every friendly face just made the resolve grow inside me. People love and support the Wildcats; they would do the same for me.

     Yeah, right.

     Now just like school, customers have been glaring at me, making comments about letting everyone down, about being selfish, about my actions being “unfortunate,” and the tips have been essentially nonexistent. The Wildcats have been obliterated in half their games since I quit, carrying a 2–3 record when last year we were 5–0, and the comments make my feet feel like lead weights I have to drag through every shift.

     Today is no different. It’s Thursday, the usual dinner rush at Beau’s, and I try to stay focused on the stress of balancing seven milkshakes on one platter. A group of regulars, some construction workers, keep loudly wondering why I won’t come back to the team while I refuse proper eye contact.

     One of the guys looks up at me as I drop the bill off. “So, what’s the deal? Does being queer keep ya from physically being able to play?”

     They all snicker as they pull out crumpled bills. I stuff my hands into my pockets, holding my tongue.

     When they leave, I hold my breath as I take their bill.

     Sure enough, no tip.

     “What the fuck?” I mutter under my breath.

     “Language,” Amy says as she glides past me, imitating the way Richard says it to her every shift, and adds, “even though they are dicks.” At least Amy’s been ranting about it every free chance she gets. It was one thing when the student body was being shitty about me leaving the team, but the town being like this is even more infuriating. She doesn’t understand how these fully grown adults can really care that much about high school basketball and thinks they need a new fucking hobby. I finally agree with her.

     [She’s wearing red lipstick to go with her raccoon-adjacent eyeliner as she rushes off to prepare milkshakes for a pack of middle schoolers. I catch her mid–death glare as all three of the kids rotate in their chairs, making the old things squeal. My anger fades a bit as I can’t help but chuckle; Amy’s pissed-off reaction to Richard telling her to smile more was said raccoon makeup, and her tolerance for buffoonery has been at a negative five to start and declining fast.

     I rest my arms on the counter and try not to look as exhausted as I feel.

     “Excuse me!” an old lady screeches, making me jump.

     Amy covers up a laugh as I head to the old lady and her husband’s table. They’ve got finished plates, full waters. Not sure what the problem is. Or I do, which is worse.

     “Yes?” I say trying to suppress my annoyance.

     “Could you be bothered to serve us?”

     Only five more hours on shift. I have a break in three minutes. I’ll be with Devin at Georgia Tech tomorrow. “I’m sorry, ma’am,” I say, so careful to keep my words even, but I can feel my hands balling into fists. “What would you—?”

     And suddenly Amy swoops in, dropping two mugs of coffee down. “Sorry about that, you two,” she says, her voice extra high. “The machine was conking out on us, but it’s fine now.”

     Once the coffee is down, she hooks onto a chunk of my shirt, steering us back to the bar.

     “Thanks,” I mutter, embarrassed to have forgotten something so basic. Again.

     “Just keep it together, man,” she says. “Maybe you’d be better off with that creepy night shift where all the truckers and serial killers come in.”

     Honestly, at least the serial killers wouldn’t care about my jump shot.

     It’s a few minutes before my break, but clearly I need it. “I’ll be in the back room.”

     Right before I can head that way though, someone straight-up bursts into the diner and rushes over to me at the bar. It’s a middle-aged dad type, sunburned skin, beer belly, and stained T-shirt.

     “Pickup order?” I ask.

     “You should be ashamed,” he sneers at me. He has a really strong Southern accent, but it’s not Georgian. “Think you’re so high and mighty, that nothing’ll ever affect you? My kid’ll never go to college because of you and your lifestyle. Fuck you, Barclay Ell—”

     And before this man can finish cursing my name, Pat of all people runs in, wide-eyed in humiliation. “Jesus, Dad, please don’t—”

      I pin my gaze on him, remembering how he cowered on the bench as Ostrowski went off, how he didn’t even try to approach me. “Don’t even bother,” I snap.

     I shove a to-go bag into his dad’s arms, relieved it’s prepaid, and storm off to the break room.]

     Amy finds me head in my arms a minute or two later. I look up, rubbing my eyes. “Please spare me the pity.”

     She snorts and hands me a milkshake. Mint chocolate chip. “Wouldn’t dare.” She takes a seat and rolls her shoulders and neck, cracks sounding through the tiny room. “Do you want a distraction or a shoulder to cry on?”

For more information, and to purchase your copy of Time Out, click here.

Reframing the COVID-19 Pandemic Through a Stage Manager’s Eyes
By: Kaitlyn Riggio
5 July 2022

When the COVID-19 pandemic was declared a national emergency in the United States in March 2020, Broadway veteran stage manager Richard Hester watched the nation’s anxiety unfold on social media.

“No one knew what the virus was going to do,” Hester said. Some people were “losing their minds in abject terror, and then there were some people who were completely denying the whole thing.”

For Hester, the reaction at times felt like something out of a movie. “It was like the Black Plague,” he said. “Some people thought it was going to be like that Monty Python sketch: ‘bring out your dead, bring out your dead.’”

While Hester was also unsure about how the virus would unfold, he felt that his “job as a stage manager is to naturally defuse drama.” Hester brought this approach off the stage and onto social media in the wake of the pandemic.

“I just sort of synthesized everything that was happening into what I thought was a manageable bite, so people could get it,” Hester said. This became a daily exercise for a year. Over two years after the beginning of the pandemic, Hester’s accounts are compiled in the book, Hold Please: Stage Managing A Pandemic. Released earlier this year, the book documents the events of the past two years, filtering national events and day-to-day occurrences through a stage manager’s eyes and storytelling.

When Hester started this project, he had no intention of writing a book. He was originally writing every day because there was nothing else to do. “I am somebody who needs a job or needs a structure,” Hester said.

Surprised to find that people began expecting his daily posts, he began publishing his daily writing to his followers through a Substack newsletter. As his following grew, Hester had to get used to writing for an audience. “I started second guessing myself a lot of the time,” Hester said. “It just sort of put a weird pressure on it.”

Hester said he got especially nervous before publishing posts in which he wrote about more personal topics. For example, some of his posts focused on his experiences growing up in South Africa while others centered on potentially divisive topics, such as the 2020 election and the January 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Despite some of this discomfort, Hester’s more personal posts were often the ones that got the most response. The experience offered him a writing lesson. “I stopped worrying about the audience and just wrote what I wanted to write about,” Hester said. “All of that pressure that I think as artists we put on ourselves, I got used to it.”

One of Hester’s favorite anecdotes featured in the book centers on a woman who dances in Washington Square Park on a canvas, rain or shine. He said he was “mesmerized by her,” which inspired him to write about her. “It was literally snowing and she was barefoot on her canvas dancing, and that seems to me just a spectacularly beautiful metaphor for everything that we all try and do, and she was living that to the fullest.”

During the creation of Hold Please, Hester got the unique opportunity to reflect in-depth on the first year of the pandemic by looking back at his accounts. He realized that post people would not remember the details of the lockdown; people would “remember it as a gap in their lives, but they weren’t going to remember it beat by beat.”

“Reliving each of those moments made me realize just how full a year it was, even though none of us were doing anything outside,” he adds. “We were all on our couches.” Readers will use the book as a way to relive moments of the pandemic’s first year “without having to wallow in the misery of it,” he hopes.

“I talk about the misery of it, but that’s not the focus of what I wrote... it was about hope and moving forward,” Hester said. “In these times when everything is so difficult, we will figure out a way to get through and we will move forward.”

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