What I did last week: work at The Kennedy Center in a reading of Gabriel Jason Dean’s “The Transition of Doodle Pequeno”, directed by Wendy Bable….awesome play, and got to work with some awesome people…

Pic not from the actual reading but from shenanigans at a reception where they may or may not have been lots of free ‘spirits’…

What I did last week: work at The Kennedy Center in a reading of Gabriel Jason Dean’s “The Transition of Doodle Pequeno”, directed by Wendy Bable….awesome play, and got to work with some awesome people…

Pic not from the actual reading but from shenanigans at a reception where they may or may not have been lots of free ‘spirits’…

…Directed by yours truly at Raleigh Little Theatre in conjunction with PlayMakers Rep. and the Dept. of Dramatic Art at the University of North Carolina…

May 8th at 12:30pm (the day you will be voting AGAINST Amendment 1)

…Directed by yours truly at Raleigh Little Theatre in conjunction with PlayMakers Rep. and the Dept. of Dramatic Art at the University of North Carolina…

May 8th at 12:30pm (the day you will be voting AGAINST Amendment 1)

happiest of birthdays to THE MAN. :) …i know i know i’m a nerd…
thedailywhat:

Bard Chart of the Day: Shakespeare took his last breath 396 years ago today — but did we ever really lose him? Esquire columnist Stephen Marche, author of How Shakespeare Changed Everything, gives us a little perspective:

“Shakespeare is the foremost poet in the world. All of the scriptwriting books cite him as the dominant influence on Hollywood. He has had more influence on the novel than any novelist. The greater the artist, the more he or she was influenced by Shakespeare. Dickens and Keats were more inspired by Shakespeare than anybody, and their familiarity with Shakespeare seems to have made them more original, not less.”

[explore]

happiest of birthdays to THE MAN. :) …i know i know i’m a nerd…

thedailywhat:

Bard Chart of the Day: Shakespeare took his last breath 396 years ago today — but did we ever really lose him? Esquire columnist Stephen Marche, author of How Shakespeare Changed Everything, gives us a little perspective:

“Shakespeare is the foremost poet in the world. All of the scriptwriting books cite him as the dominant influence on Hollywood. He has had more influence on the novel than any novelist. The greater the artist, the more he or she was influenced by Shakespeare. Dickens and Keats were more inspired by Shakespeare than anybody, and their familiarity with Shakespeare seems to have made them more original, not less.”

[explore]

…a handful of shots from the first event I had a hand in producing,…a staged reading of Dustin Lance Black’s 8…

…it took a small village to pull off, (my co-producers: Tim Scales & Dan VanHoozer), the Department of Dramatic Art at the University of North Carolina, and the Graduate Acting Program…

…also lucky to have Gavin Creel, Jenny Kanelos, and Jose Llana join us for an amazing evening… 


"That’s what it’s all about, doors and sardines. Getting on, getting off. Getting the sardines on, getting the sardines off. That’s farce. That’s - that’s the theatre. That’s life."

Noises Off, Michael Frayn

…saw Noises Off at PlayMakers Repertory Company…
…funny funny funny funny funny funny funny…if you’re in the Chapel Hill/North Carolina vicinity…go go go…it closes this weekend!…

…saw Noises Off at PlayMakers Repertory Company…

…funny funny funny funny funny funny funny…if you’re in the Chapel Hill/North Carolina vicinity…go go go…it closes this weekend!…

"After all, brevity is the soul of wit."

Wit, Margaret Edson

…saw Manhattan Theatre Club’s Broadway revival of Wit, starring Cynthia Nixon,…
…a brilliant play, brilliantly performed by its lead…i would say run and see it, but alas, it has closed!…

…saw Manhattan Theatre Club’s Broadway revival of Wit, starring Cynthia Nixon,…

…a brilliant play, brilliantly performed by its lead…i would say run and see it, but alas, it has closed!…

…previews have started for the Henry IV & Henry V repertory…
…playing until March 4…at PlayMakers Repertory Company…
…come see, come see…see you from the stage! :)

…previews have started for the Henry IV & Henry V repertory…

…playing until March 4…at PlayMakers Repertory Company…

…come see, come see…see you from the stage! :)

"Now, who here has ever seen a play?"

— Nilaja Sun, No Child