We had a great preview tonight. This photo makes me laugh, so I’m sharing it. Here are Michelle Held, Drew Parker and I in a fun moment from The Understudy. (I’m the short one on the left!)
So, life is busy. Starting performances of The Understudy this week, my son had his 12th birthday, my daughter and wife just got back from a trip to Washington DC where they did all sorts of cool things. Busy, but good!
Here’s a fun video from Tech Day of The Understudy, at Williamston Theatre:
And from tech day, here’s a shot of a fun little corner of the set that I like!

And a picture that I like a lot from the show:
(Michelle Held, me, Drew Parker)
Also, my friend Michelle (who is in The Understudy, and pictured above), did a photoshoot for a talented photographer, Chris Arace, and I think this is a really cool picture!
Click on the picture to go to his website!
Maggie, hugging a panda bear statue. I love this picture! 🙂

A couple more shots from Max’s birthday party:
Everyone who came got moustaches to wear. Just because. And, as you can see, they took them very seriously.
and…
Here’s a handful of the party-goers relaxing outside!
I hope everyone out there is having as wonderful a week as I am! 🙂
The universe is change; our life is what our thoughts make it.
-Marcus Aurelius
This is a neat thing for me – I’m celebrating a milestone…
This week, I am celebrating 20 straight years of making a living in the theatre.
That’s a little amazing since, unless I stop to think about it, I’m pretty sure I’m still in my mid-20’s. 🙂 (Wait… Where did these gray hairs come from?!)
Start by doing what’s necessary, then what’s possible; and suddenly you are doing the impossible.
-St. Francis of Assisi
I remember discussing college with my Dad, when I was in high school, and I told him that I wanted to go to school for theatre. I don’t think he was surprised (I’d been doing theatre all through high school), but I saw that look of Dadly worry in his eyes. All he said, though, was “Do you think you can make a living at it?”. I said I thought I could, and that was all he needed – he nodded, and said “Then your Mom and I will help any way we can.”
I’m incredibly grateful for that support, and I’m really proud to be able to show them a career where, for two decades, every job I’ve had has been theatre related. I truly, truly hope that Jeanne and I are able to respond to our kids like that when the time comes.
I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.
-Maya Angelou
For fun, I made a quick list:
California Theater Center, The Purple Rose Theatre Company, The Gem, Urban Stages in Manhattan, Studio Arena in Buffalo, Otterbein University, Eastern Michigan University, Michigan State University, Performance Network Theatre, Tipping Point Theatre, MeadowBrook Theatre, The City Theater, Williamston Theatre, apprentice, stage manager, sound designer, actor, director, literary manager, associate artistic director, house manager, writer, producer, set designer, teacher/instructor/adjunct professor, understudy.
So, although I’m amazed that 20 years have come and gone, I’m also incredibly thankful, and grateful for the opportunities I’ve gotten, the people I’ve worked with, the lessons I’ve learned, and the stories I’ve helped to tell. Man oh man, I hope the next 20 are as fun the first 20 were!
Depend upon yourself. Make your judgement trustworthy by trusting it. You can develop good judgement as you do the muscles of your body – by judicious, daily exercise. To be known as a man of sound judgement will be much in your favor.
-Grantland Rice
The hardest thing to learn in life is which bridge to cross and which to burn.
-David Russell
Make the decision, make it with confidence, and the world will be yours.
-Jaren l Davis
Nothing happens unless first a dream.
-Carl Sandburg
We’ve started rehearsals for The Understudy! It’s going to be a ton of fun, and a nice challenge. Recently I’ve concentrated so much on directing and producing, it’s been a long time since I was onstage. It’ll be great to stretch those muscles again, and to remind myself of the challenges of things that I, as a director, ask actors to overcome regularly!

A ballpark is a magical place, don’t you think? It stops time. It’s a place where a father and son can sit together on a lazy afternoon enjoying the game and decades later, in those same seats, that son can sit with his son, and it’s as if nothing’s changed. Time moves differently inside a ballpark.
-Ernie Harwell, from Ernie by Mitch Albom
Today…
…we had a press conference for Ernie, and our Stage Manager Megan took this shot from the booth! Press Conferences are odd things, and I don’t do them often, so it was fun.
Speaking of baseball…
Last night we played some catch in the yard! Awesome.

Speaking of awesome things, The Town Pump has awesome fried pickles, and lunch today was pretty darned great.
Also…
We start rehearsal for this show next week, and I’m looking forward to it. It’s been a long time since I’ve been onstage, and I’m anxious to work out those muscles again!
So, challenges, opportunities, quality family time… a week full of reminders that all of those are important. Thanks, Universe.
28,000 people saw this show last season! And the team is back to do it again!

A view from the lighting table in the back of the house.

Stage Manager Megan Buckley and Sound Designer Steve Shannon!

Actors TJ Corbett and Will Young!
Somehow I missed getting Tech Day photos of two amazing people, Assistant Stage Manager Andrea Kannon and Projections Designer Alison Dobbins, but they were there too and helped make the day go perfectly!
Random pics from a Dad, director, baseball fan, celebrating some good things on this beautiful Sunday!

Today, we had a great Easter! The kids had a great time hunting baskets and eggs this morning, the Easter Bunny did a nice job hiding things this year!

Speaking of Easter – Maggie and I spent Easter afternoon at the ballpark! 🙂
And… speaking of baseball…



I’m happy to be in rehearsals for the remount of Ernie at the City Theatre in Detroit.
This weekend, we had a great time visiting our friends Crystal and Steve, and I had to take a picture of these desserts that we made. Crystal did all the prep, making the mousse and homemade whipped cream and slicing the fruit, but Steve and I were given the task of putting them together – and this is what they looked like! Chocolate coffee mousse, lots of fresh fruit, shaved chocolate… oh man, now I want another one. Or 7.
Lastly… I worked with a great stage manager, Sam, this weekend on a project in NYC, and she came in with this shirt that made us all laugh, and I had to share it. (Warning – yes, this is a little risque. Skip it if that’s not your thing, but this type of humor is exactly my thing… and I suppose if you’re a regular reader of this journal, you already know that!)
Have a great week, folks, and whatever you’re doing this week, have fun doing it.
Listen up, young up-and-coming directors:
You will inevitably, when watching the final preview and your rehearsal hours are over, figure out a way to fix that moment/scene/beat change/transition that’s been bugging you for weeks. And then, as you watch the show, celebrating the fact that you’ve figured it out, you’ll realize that all you need is another few hours of rehearsal and one costume change… neither of which you’ll get. So you watch the show, and when that moment comes, you just imagine your improved version in place of what’s happening… and file it away to use at a later date.
Theatre: Art with a deadline. And that deadline can be pretty firm.
It’s been a long week, but a good one. I’m getting closer to being healthy again, which is nice, and we just finished tech week for The Usual: A Musical Love Story, which is a lot of fun! (And despite the fact that I keep calling it a sweet, quirky little musical , it’s pretty BIG in a lot of ways, which meant that tech week was a busy, challenging, fun and rewarding process!)
It’s interesting though, I was asked a couple different versions of the question “You’re really doing a musical comedy about a romance between nerds?”… And my answer, of course, was YES! I think folks are thinking pocket-protector-wearing tape-on-glasses and pants-hiked-up-to-waist nerds, in a very typical “Revenge of the Nerds” fashion – and I can see where they’d get that, but it’s the 21st century! Nerds are in! Geek is chic! The old definition has gone out the window, and those nerds of the past have grown into adults with real world lives and problems! I mean, it’s a musical with songs about computers from the 80’s, sex toys, being a geek and Switzerland! What’s not to love about that?! But sometimes folks want to hear WHY? It sounds SILLY – Isn’t it theatre? Art? Where’s The Message?! (Capital M, trademark, glowy halo around the word, and a gentle rolling timpani playing as you say it – “The Message!?”)
So, I often find myself struggling to give a good explanation about the “Why” when it comes to “Why did you pick this play over that?” or “Why on Earth would you do THAT one?”. Often, the answer that I really want to give is simply “It spoke to me”.
I avoid that answer more often than I should, I think, and I think it’s because it’s a more “touchy feely” answer, and less quantifiable to many people, but the truth is that it’s often the biggest, simplest reason. I don’t often refer to myself as an “artist”, but I am one. The people I work with are artists, what we make is art, and there’s an art to doing it well. And, I think, one of the constant truths of art is that when it works it DOES speak to you, and often in ways that are hard to define. (One of the big challenges of what we do is to MAKE ourselves define it, through the process, as clearly as possible, so that we can excavate it off the page and breathe life into it on the stage. Sometimes, though, it’s just a gut feeling: “This moment works better like this” or “That moved me. The other way didn’t”.) And, of course, there’s no way of knowing if the fact that something spoke to ME is enough to make it speak to others, but you take the risk and you build it and share it because, well, that’s what artists do.
It’s late. I’m rambling, and I’m sleepy, but from a great week of working with great people on something I love. I never know if a show is going to please audiences as much as it pleases me, or if every experiment is going to turn out to be a giant success or an exercise in weathering public disapproval. What I do know, is that when I read something, if it speaks to me, I have to pursue it, and then I always hope to share both the creation of it AND the final product with people who I HOPE get as excited about it as me! On the way home tonight I was thinking about that, and realized that I needed some quotes about it!
Art is man’s expression of his joy in labor.
-Henry A. Kissinger
The essence of all beautiful art, all great art, is gratitude.
-Friedrich Nietzsche
Art is the unceasing effort to compete with the beauty of flowers – and never succeeding.
-Gian Carlo Menotti
The work of art may have a moral effect, but to demand moral purpose from the artist is to make him ruin his work.
-Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Art is what’s left over after you’ve defined everything else.
Michael Vitale
There are many thoughts on what Regional Theatre should be. Regional Theatres are tasked with providing entertainment, enlightenment and value to a community, all while adding to the growth of the industry as a whole. Employment for artists and administrators should come with affordability and a diverse mix of challenges and experiences for audiences, artists and administrators alike. On and on it goes, there are as many “shoulds” as there are theatres. And yet, the challenge that connects the theatres is this: paying your bills while following your mission. This article is an interesting read about that topic.
“Two Major Regional Theatres Struggle With Change”
This whole “Spider Man on Broadway” debacle has been amazing to watch. Now there’s a big lawsuit coming (or a big out-of-court settlement), but what’s interesting is the apparent power struggle and lack of leadership this production suffered from. Or maybe it was too much leadership? I don’t know, but this article is interesting, and as a producer AND a director, I can’t wait to see how it all turns out!
“Reputations Could Be Tarnished In Broadway Lawsuit”
Lastly….