JUN 22–JUL 28, 2024
ALLIANCE THEATRE
encoreatlanta.com | 3 BABBLE LAB FROM THE ARTISTIC DIRECTORS Between Us 7 FEATURE “The Meaning is in the Pleasure of the Sound” ..................... 9 Playwright and Actress Autumn Ness on Communication, Children’s Theatre, and Babble Lab STORY BY ASHLEY ELLIOTT Program Highlight ................ 13 Family Activities 16 Program Notes ................... 19 Your Story, Your Stage 27 Synopsis ......................... 28 DEPARTMENTS About the Alliance Theatre 31 Board of Directors ................ 32 Sponsors 33 Annual Fund ..................... 35 Alliance Theatre Staff 39 Page 9 Page 13 Page 17
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SENIOR ACCOUNT DIRECTOR NASHVILLE Kelli Dill kelli@encoremagazine.com
SENIOR ACCOUNT DIRECTOR CHARLOTTE Hila Johnson hila@encoremagazine.com
EDITOR IN CHIEF
Robert Viagas robert@encoremagazine.com
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
Tamara Hooks tamara@encoremagazine.com
DIGITAL MEDIA DIRECTOR
Jennifer Nelson jennifer@encoremagazine.com
PROGRAM PRODUCER Ashley Elliott ashley.elliott@alliancetheatre.org
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There is such joy in the exploration of sound. Listening to little ones discover the sound of their own voice is one of life’s great rewards. As is listening to the glorious noise of nonsense. Which might make no sense at all. But sometimes it’s the things that make no sense that invite the biggest giggles and the largest wonders. It’s what fueled the Dadaist artists last century and what inspired Autumn Ness, the writer and performer of this piece, to immerse herself in the sound poetry of that movement. Nonsense, you could argue, may even be necessary! It helps us transcend our self-seriousness by inviting a sense of playfulness and encouraging creativity. It invites joy for no apparent reason, which might be the most joyful experience of all. It’s no wonder savvy educators have leaned on gibberish and nonsense words to help with phonics and language acquisition for years.
Creating something new requires the willingness to discover the unexpected, to embrace the nonsense of not understanding. How joyful then to observe our inquisitive scientist on her journey to discover new sounds. How gratifying to welcome an artist as curious and creative as Autumn Ness to our stage for this new play. And what an absolute gift to welcome you, those new to theatre and our longtime friends, to the wonder of the Babble Lab!
Tinashe Kajese-Bolden
Jennings Hertz Artistic Director & Christopher Moses
Jennings Hertz Artistic Director
betweenus | 7
“THE
MEANING IS IN THE PLEASURE OF THE SOUND”
Playwright and Actress Autumn Ness on Communication, Children’s Theatre, and Babble Lab
STORY BY Ashley Elliott
For playwright and actor Autumn Ness, theatre has been “the passion” since she was young. “I think I got started the way most people do, just loving big stories and playing through them in my head.” She’s always taken creative liberties with the art, which explains a choice she made at her very first audition when she was eight years old — Hansel and Gretel, coincidentally at Children’s Theatre Company.
“They gave us a little side to read, and I took one look at it and decided, ‘This isn’t what they need to see,’” Ness says. “I knew Hansel and Gretel was a scary play, and I thought the director should see how well I can be scared. So when it was my turn to stand in front of the director’s table, I put down the sides, opened my mouth, and screamed as loud and as long as I could. And everyone behind the table laughed. And I thought, How dare they?! Don’t they know this is important to the play? They called a few days later, and I had gotten the part. I can only imagine why they chose the little girl who clearly needed an exorcism!”
Since she started her career in theatre at Children’s Theatre Company, Ness was elated to write the script for Babble Lab. In a world where children’s theatre gets unfairly assessed and seems “somehow diminished or lesser than, ... it’s so important to write quality work for children and families!” Ness says. “Theatre for youth and families is where it’s at right now. I think of Naomi Iizuka and Cheryl West in America, and Shonna Reppe and Bodil Alling overseas. Making such real and artful work without a nod to it being somehow for a younger audience.”
programfeature | 9
To bring the script to fruition, Ness acknowledges that they could have “thrown some random letters on the floor.” Instead, she drew inspiration from the Dada theatre movement and sound poetry, especially the poem Ursonate by Kurt Schwitters. “It’s about 25 pages of nonsense words, but it’s a thrilling read!” It seemed a perfect fit to help her on her journey into the lab for Babble Lab
She also traveled to the Netherlands to study under Jaap Blonk, who she describes as “the world’s greatest authority on sound poetry.” Under his tutelage, she learned to not make the sound poetry “somehow be a disguise for true meaning. The meaning is in the pleasure of the sound. That’s a very hard lesson for a control freak Virgo like me!”
When the time came to start to bring the production to life, Ness “wrote some very basic puppet and static projection interactions” because she knew she “wanted these words and sounds to be the other characters in the play.” Then Projections Designer Jorge Cousineau joined the project and “basically opened up the sky with what he’s capable of.”
Since there weren’t any more limits to the animation interactions they could have, they spent the first three weeks of rehearsal playing with live animation as they worked before solidifying what they wanted it to look like. After that, they practiced the timing relentlessly, getting the precision just right so that all the interactions between The Scientist and the animations would be as satisfying as possible.
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre | encore 10
Autumn Ness in Children’s Theatre Company’s 2024 World Premiere production of Babble Lab. Photo by Glen Stubbe Photography.
Due to the unpredictability of the show’s audience, they had to break each animation up into very small sections so that The Scientist can respond in real time to what the audience gives her. The final product has upwards of four hundred cues. “Our Stage Manager is Wonder Woman,” Ness says.
In developing this project, Ness could barely contain her excitement, failing to “play it cool” at production meetings as the designers worked their magic. “It’s so humbling to have teams of people wanting the show to be exactly what you need,” says Ness. “I was so happy when we began previews and the shops and artistic team could sit amongst the kids and see their reaction to what had been built. I hope they felt like their hard work was worth it when they heard the kids’ reactions.”
Ness also pulled from her personal experience of watching her own children’s developmental journey to develop this script. “Their road to communicating was not smooth,” Ness explains, “as is the case for so many families. Talking, learning their letters, reading, writing. When you picture these childhood milestones, you think of joy and success. You never predict that getting to a milestone has tears and worries and fears.”
In addition to being entertained, Ness hopes that audiences can walk away learning something about what it means to make mistakes and learn from them. In Babble Lab, The Scientist makes a discovery after making a mistake, which leads her to more discoveries while also battling the consequences of the mistake she made.
“What does it mean to have words?” Ness asks. “Words can make people laugh, but they can hurt. Words can get out of control. You can have the biggest vocabulary in the world and still not be able to say what you mean or what you are feeling.”
As The Scientist goes on this journey alongside the youngest audience members, they observe as she learns how to get her needs met, express herself, and connect with others.
“I hope audiences recognize that the journey to using our own voice is difficult, and that we make mistakes in figuring out how we want to use that voice,” Ness says. “But it’s so important kids know that there is no one in the world who has their same point of view, and they have the power to express themselves and be heard.”
encoreatlanta.com | 11
ARE YOU MY DADA?
How the Arts Allow Us to Reflect on Early Literacy and Language Learning
WRITTEN BY Kay Nilest
In Babble Lab, a scientist discovers the joy and chaos of language when an experiment causes sounds to take on life and sow chaos in her laboratory. When crafting this nonsensical celebration of sound, Playwright Autumn Ness took inspiration from Dada. Although this may seem like another bit of babble, Dadaism is a 20th century artistic movement in which artists rejected the logic, reason, and division associated with modern capitalism and nationalism. Instead, they embraced themes of nonsense and irrationality
In the literary tradition, “Dadaism is trying to represent the sound over sense. Sound over meaning,” says Daniel Walter, Professor of Linguistics and German at Emory University’s Oxford College. “The point is to focus more on the sound.” This is seen in artistic developments such as “sound poetry,” or poetry that leans more into the aural sounds of the words, rather than their meanings.
programhighlight | 13
Cover of the Dadaist book of poetry, Zang Tumb Tumb, by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti. Zang Tumb Tumb is an early example of a sound poem in which the poet took liberties with sound and format to represent the events of the WWI Battle of Adrianople.
At its core, Dadaism is about using art to challenge our preconceived notions and expectations. In a similar way, Babble Lab, through its playful representation of sounds and sense, allows us to explore a new way of seeing language learning.
“Preschoolers are already Dada,” says Ness. “They are bizarre, joyous, wondrous, and abstract.” Language learning begins before we are born. Studies show that we begin processing sounds and rhythms from inside the womb. That experience intensifies in our early years of life as we build up our mental bank of recognizable sounds. It’s noteworthy to highlight that we build our bank of sounds, not words.
“[When learning language] children pay attention to pure sound, and then they add meaning afterwards,” says Walter. “They have no concept that language has meaning until they start attaching sound patterns they already recognize to objects, and that’s not something they’re doing from birth.” Once children begin attaching meaning to sounds, the real work begins. Learning a language requires countless hours of listening, speaking, writing, and reading.
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre
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A young learner during one of our Babies Off Book sessions.
“I think one of the funniest things that people say is…language is just so easy for children.” Walter highlights that learning a language is an involved process. Although his research primarily focuses on adult second language learners, Walter is able to reflect on the challenges of learning a language while raising his three children under the age of five years old. “It’s not easy for anyone. All we ask of our three- and four-year-olds is to learn the languages we’re speaking on a daily basis. That’s their only job, and they do it every moment that they’re not sleeping.” It can be grueling and uncomfortable, and that’s before one begins to consider learning challenges such as dyslexia or ADHD. Then, it can feel like the letters and sounds themselves are running away or playing tricks on you, similar to what the scientist experiences on stage.
Through a show like Babble Lab, young learners and their families experience the joy of language without any strings attached. “The arts,” Walter says, “have the opportunity to bring in some of these critical ideas and force people to think Is it really easy for kids to learn language? When do children start learning? Why are the sounds important in how my child learns another language?”
As a story that presents the playfulness of words and sounds, Babble Lab offers another narrative for language learning that is open, non-judgmental, and crosses boundaries of language and culture. It invites everyone into the space to share in a nonsensical explosion of learning. But, just because it’s nonsense doesn’t mean it doesn’t have meaning or, more importantly, impact. Babble Lab shows children that learning language can be fun, and it reminds adults of the genuine labor that our young people undergo on a daily basis to communicate their basic needs and wants.
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ACTIVITY SECTION
BY Children’s Theatre Company, Diana Morales Joaquin
THINGS TO TALK ABOUT BEFORE THE PERFORMANCE
• What’s your favorite letter? What sound does it make?
• What instruments do you think they’ll use in the performance?
THINGS TO LOOK AND LISTEN FOR DURING THE PERFORMANCE
Look for...
1. Science equipment.
2. Letters moving.
3. A metal slinky.
Listen for...
1. The sound of a deflating balloon.
2. Sounds that make you laugh.
3. A sound that’s in your name.
THINGS TO TALK ABOUT AFTER THE PERFORMANCE
• Did the Scientist speak gibberish?
• Could you understand what she was saying?
• What surprised you during the play?
• Did the letters ever come into the audience?
• What was your favorite part of the play?
| programhighlight 16
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre
encoreatlanta.com | 17
JAN 18–MAR 2 2025
A world premiere stage adaptation of the beloved, Newberry Awardwinning picture book DOCTOR DE SOTO
By IDRIS GOODWIN
Based on the book by WILLIAM STEIG
Produced in partnership with Seattle Children’s Theatre
NOV 9–DEC 24 2024
One
By CHARLES DICKENS
Adapted by DAVID H. BELL
Directed by CAITLIN HARGRAVES
Original direction by LEORA MORRIS
Coming Soon in the 2024/25 SEASON Plus many more! Tickets and memberships available at alliancetheatre.org Our stories are not simply told for you, but with you. SHARE YOUR STORY. PRESERVE YOUR STAGE .
posting of photos taken before the show, during intermission, or in our lobbies is not only allowed but strongly encouraged! We do kindly ask that you refrain from taking pictures, recording audio, or capturing video during the performance to allow our audiences and performers to stay connected with each other during our brief time together.
The
of Atlanta’s most
holiday
treasured
traditions.
ALLIANCE THEATRE
TINASHE KAJESE-BOLDEN
Jennings Hertz Artistic Director
CHRISTOPHER MOSES
Jennings Hertz Artistic Director
MIKE SCHLEIFER Managing Director
present
BY
AUTUMN NESS
DIRECTION BY SARAH AGNEW
SCENIC DESIGN MICHAEL SOMMERS COSTUME DESIGN ANNIE CADY CASTING RAIYON HUNTER STAGE MANAGER LIZ CAMPBELL* LIGHTING DESIGN WU CHEN KHOO SOUND DESIGN KATHARINE HOROWITZ PROJECTION DESIGN JORGE COUSINEAU Scenic construction for the 2024/25 Season is generously supported by The Home Depot Foundation.
A
Theatre Company
Alliance Theatre World Premiere
Originally commissioned and developed by Children’s Theatre Company, Minneapolis, Minnesota. This Production is made possible by a joint grant to Autumn Ness and Children’s Theatre Company from Theatre Communications Group, and the William and Eva Fox Foundation. FAMILY SERIES SPONSORED BY
Children’s
and
Co-Production
*AUTUMN NESS
CAST
UNDERSTUDIES
. . The Scientist
MORGEN CHANG The Scientist
STAGE MANAGERS
*LIZ CAMPBELL Stage Manager
*AUTUMN NESS Assistant Stage Manager
MADELINE CONRAD Stage Management Production Assistant
PRODUCTION AND DESIGN ASSISTANCE
HAYLEE SCOTT
STACY MCINTOSH HOLT
CRAIG GOTTSHALK
Production Management Lead
Production Consultant
Associate Projection Designer
VICTOR ZUPANC Composer
FOR THIS PRODUCTION
EMMA MOULEDOUX Sound Engineer
MONICA SPEAKER Wardrobe
ADIRAH ROBINSON Stagehand
JOY DIAZ Light Board Operator
SPECIAL THANKS
Dr. Daniel Walter from the Oxford College of Emory University The Atlanta Speech School
*Denotes a member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States
The Alliance Theatre operates under an agreement between the League of Resident Theatres (LORT) and Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States, and the Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers, an independent national labor union. The Alliance Theatre at the Woodruff is a member of Theatre Communications Group (TCG), the national organization for the American theatre, and is a member of the League of Resident Theatres (LORT), the International Association of Theatre for Children and Young Audiences (ASSITEJ/USA), The Atlanta Coalition of Theatres, the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, the Atlanta Convention and Visitors Bureau, and the Midtown Alliance.
Photos may be taken in the theater before the performance, and following the performance. If you share your photos, please credit the designers.
Photos, videotaping or other video or audio recording of this production is strictly prohibited, is a violation of United States Copyright Law, and is an actionable Federal Offense.
This production is approximately forty-five minutes long and has no intermission.
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre | programnotes
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20
AUTUMN NESS
(Playwright/The Scientist/Assistant Stage Manager) is a native of the Twin Cities in Minnesota, where she has been a member of the resident acting company at Children’s Theatre Company Minneapolis for 24 seasons! While at CTC, Autumn has performed in over 70 productions, many of them world premieres. During her time with CTC, Autumn has had the opportunity to perform across the country, but this is her first time in Atlanta! Autumn is a recipient of the 2018 TCG Fox Foundation Fellowship, the 2020 MRAC Next Step Fund, and the 2022 MN State Arts Board Creative Support Grant. Autumn lives with her husband, fellow actor Reed Sigmund, and her boys Sawyer and Sullivan in Stillwater, Minnesota.
MORGEN CHANG (u/s The Scientist) [she/her] last appeared in An American Tail the Musical with Children’s Theater Company. She loves exploring new work and has been an actor and collaborator with Jungle Theater, the Playwrights’ Center, and Interact Center for the Arts. She currently serves as Programs Manager for Theater Mu in St. Paul, MN.
SARAH AGNEW (Director) is a theater maker based out of the Twin Cities. She has performed in theaters nationwide and was a company member of Theatre de la Jeune Lune where she collaborated in the creation of multiple new works. She has toured the state with two shows she created for Sod House Theater: Arla Mae’s Booyah Wagon and Table. She is currently a producer of children’s television for Children’s Minnesota.
encoreatlanta.com | 21 Take CENTER STAGE this summer. Build cha racter. Grow confdence. Be creative. alliancetheatre.org/camps
MICHAEL SOMMERS (Scenic Design) has worked in the Theatre Arts for forty years as a director, designer, playwright, composer, performer, puppeteer, builder, and scenic painter. He co-founded Open Eye Figure Theatre in 2000 and in 2008 opened the doors to a permanent venue in south Minneapolis, where he created over forty original works for the Open Eye stage. He is a Professor Emeritus of the Department of Theatre at the University of Minnesota and the recipient of numerous grants and awards.
ANNIE CADY (Costume Design) [she/ her] is excited to be a part of Babble Lab at the Alliance Theatre! Favorite costume designs include The Hobbit and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, both at The Children’s Theatre in Minneapolis. Annie holds an MFA in Costume Design and Technology from the University of Minnesota and is currently the costume designer and Chair of the Theatre Department at Normandale Community College in Bloomington, Minnesota.
WU CHEN KHOO (Lighting Design) [he/him] is a lighting designer, stagehand, production manager and labor organizer. He is based in Minneapolis, Minnesota and works internationally. Some of his lighting designs have been seen at Penumbra Theatre, Theater Mu, Theatre de la Jeune Lune, the Fitzgerald Theater, Children’s Theatre Company and the Guthrie Theater. He co-founded the education program Technical Tools of the Trade, which aimed to train, connect and support people through the skills of technical theatre. He is a founding member of the Class & the Arts collective and The Mothership, both groups of workers organizing to build Solidarity and hold space for critical engagement with issues of social justice including through the arts & entertainment industry. He is the Production Manager for the Macalester College Theater and Dance Department in Saint Paul, Minnesota. He is a proud member of IATSE. He shares his life with his partner Kristin and children Teng Jin and Yi Lian.
KATHARINE HOROWITZ (Sound Design) is a theatrical sound designer, composer, and teaching artist in
Minneapolis, MN, and is thrilled to be making her Atlanta debut. She has designed critically-acclaimed and award-winning shows for the Guthrie Theater, Children’s Theatre Company, The Jungle Theater, Creede Repertory Theatre, Great River Shakespeare Festival, Second City Theatricals, and many others. Katharine is a professional member of the Theatrical Sound Designers and Composers Association (TSDCA), a 2017 McKnight Theatre Artist Fellow at the Playwrights’ Center in Minneapolis, a graduate of the University of Iowa. She once donated a body part for a prop in a show! www.katsound.com
JORGE COUSINEAU (Projection Design) is very pleased that we finally get to share this delicious madness in Atlanta. Jorge is a filmmaker and theater designer with a wide range of interests, focusing on sets, lights, sound, and projections. He originally trained as a painter in Dresden, Germany, where he was born, found his love in performance in the nineties, and followed it to Philadelphia, where he lived for over 20 years before relocating to Biddeford, Maine. His work has been seen and heard internationally, regionally, and all over Philly. Jorge is a recipient of the Pew Fellowship in the Arts, several Barrymore Awards and the Lucille Lortel Award in New York City.
RAIYON HUNTER (Casting) is a director, producer, and arts administrator from New Orleans, Louisiana. She currently works as the Casting Director of Children’s Theatre Company (Minneapolis, MN). She enjoys supporting the theatre’s pursuits to open access and craft opportunities to recruit professional actors and young artists who are passionate, imaginative contributors to this field. Previously, she worked as a Spelman Leadership Fellow at the Alliance Theatre (Atlanta, GA) where she has worked on a multitude of shows in varying capacities ranging from Casting Associate to Director on productions such as Do You Love the Dark, Darlin’ Cory, Bina’s Six Apples, Good Bad People, Confederates, and more. Additionally, she has been in residency at Oregon Shakespeare Festival under Nataki Garrett and The Repertory Theater of St. Louis under Hana Sharif.
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre | encore 22
LIZ CAMPBELL (Stage Manager) [she/ her] Favorite Alliance credits include: A Tale of Two Cities, A Christmas Carol, The Incredible Book Eating Boy, The Many Wondrous Realities of Jasmine Starr-Kidd, Bina’s Six Apples, Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed, Max Makes a Million, The Wizard of Oz, The Dancing Granny, Cinderella and Fella, Ugly Lies the Bone, Pancakes, Pancakes!, Tiger Style!, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Musical, James and the Giant Peach, Shrek, and Charlotte’s Web. Other local credits include: The Shining (The Atlanta Opera), The Drowsy Chaperone, Camelot, The World Goes ‘Round, Million Dollar Quartet, Monty Python’s Spamalot, and Ragtime (Atlanta Lyric Theatre); In the Continuum (Synchronicity Theatre); Book of Will and It’s a Wonderful Life (Theatrical Outfit). She has been the Stage Manager for the GHSMTA (Shuler Awards) since 2015. She holds a BFA in Theatre from Niagara University. Member of Actors’ Equity Association. Co-founder of Atlanta Theatre Artists for Justice. Love to Ali and Maggie.
MADELINE CONRAD (Stage Management Production Assistant) [she/her] is so excited to work with the Alliance again! Previous credits include Fat Ham, The Incredible Book Eating Boy (Alliance Theatre); Guys and Dolls and Matilda the Musical (Atlanta Lyric); Sweat, RENT, She Kills Monsters, The SpongeBob Musical, and Everybody (Kennesaw State University). She is a senior Theatre and Performance studies student at Kennesaw State University. Madeline is delighted to be a part of the Babble Lab team and thanks her wonderful family and mentors for their love and support.
CHILDREN’S THEATRE COMPANY
(CTC) is the nation’s largest and most acclaimed theatre for young people and serves a multigenerational audience. It creates theatre experiences that educate, challenge, and inspire more than 200,000 people annually. CTC is the only theatre focused on young audiences to win the Special Tony Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre and is the only theatre in Minnesota to receive three Tony nominations (for its
production of A Year With Frog and Toad). CTC is committed to creating world-class productions at the highest level and to developing new works, more than 200 to date, dramatically changing the canon of work for young audiences. CTC is the most significant provider of theatre education opportunities in the region. Every year, thousands of children experience theatre for the first time at CTC. Our student matinees and education programs demonstrably benefit the community, from the intergenerational conversations sparked by our world premieres, to the sequential skillbuilding that happens in our Theatre Arts Training, to the pre-K focus of our Early Childhood Initiative. ACT One is CTC’s comprehensive platform for access, diversity, and inclusion in our audiences, programs, staff, and board that strives to ensure the theatre is a home for all people, all families, reflective of our community. www.childrenstheatre.org.
TINASHE KAJESE-BOLDEN
(Jennings Hertz Artistic Director) began her tenure at the Alliance in 2018 as the BOLD Associate Artistic Director, assuming her current role in 2023. Originally from Zimbabwe, KajeseBolden combines her commitment to great art, deep education and community empowerment with an agile enthusiasm and unflappable, calm energy to inspire new possibilities. Kajese-Bolden honed her directing and producing skills as a freelance director working in regional houses across the country and on set. As a director and actor, she fosters deep ongoing collaborations with playwrights and has mounted innovative and critically acclaimed productions that merge elegant, theatrical designs with complicated human stories. A Princess Grace Award 2019 Winner for Directing, and Map Fund Award recipient as a director and actor, she has worked on and Off-Broadway as well as recurring roles in the Marvel universe “Guardians of the Galaxy: Holiday Special,” Suicide Squad, “Hawkeye,” and CW’s “Valor,” “Dynasty,” HBO’s “Henrietta Lacks,” Ava Duverney’s “Cherish the Day,” among others. Up next, she is developing a new Opera, Forsythe is Flooding: The Joy of Lake Lanier, and proudly serves on the
encoreatlanta.com | 23
ARTS-ATL Artist Advisory Council. “My mission is the pursuit of what connects our different communities and how we create art that liberates us to imagine a more inclusive future.”
CHRISTOPHER MOSES (Jennings Hertz Artistic Director) has been working in professional theatre for twenty years and in 2022 was awarded the Governor’s Award for Arts in Humanities for his body of work. In January of 2011, Chris took on the position of Director of Education at the Alliance Theatre, overseeing the Alliance Theatre Institute (twice recognized as an Arts Model by the Federal Department of Education), Theatre for Youth & Families, and the Acting Program. Since taking over this position, Chris has expanded the reach and impact by making the Alliance Theatre Education department a vital resource for advancing the civic agenda of Atlanta. This work is accomplished through deep and sustained partnerships with social service organizations throughout the city. Under his leadership, the Alliance launched its Kathy & Ken Bernhardt Theatre for the Very Young program, which provides fully interactive professional theater experiences for children of all abilities from ages newborn through five years old; the Alliance Teen Ensemble, which performs world premiere plays commissioned for and about teens; the Palefsky Collision Project, where teens produce a new work after colliding with a classic text; expanded the Alliance’s summer camp program to include over 3,000 children in multiple locations across Atlanta; and Alliance@work, a professional development program designed for the business sector — the latest offering of which uses theatre practice to create a culture of civility in the workplace. In 2014, Chris added the title Associate Artistic Director, and has continued to expand the Alliance’s education offerings. During his tenure in this position, the Alliance has produced over a dozen world premiere plays for young audiences, including Pancakes, Pancakes! by Ken Lin, The Dancing Granny by Jireh Breon Holder, Max Makes a Million by Liz Diamond, and The Incredible Book Eating Boy by Madhuri Shekar. Currently,
the Alliance serves over 100,000 students pre-k—12 each season, as well as over 4,000 adults through its extensive education offerings. In 2023, he was named Artistic Director of the Alliance Theatre.
MIKE SCHLEIFER (Managing Director) joined the Alliance Theatre in 2014 as the General Manager and in 2016, assumed the role of Managing Director. During his time at the Alliance, Mike has led the administrative and producing team on over 100 productions including bringing Tuck Everlasting and The Prom to Broadway. He was one of the architects of the “On the Road” season while a multi-million dollar renovation of the Coca-Cola Stage was underway. Mike is excited to have started the Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Committee at the Alliance and to serve on the board of the League of Resident Theatres and True Colors Theatre Company. Prior to Atlanta, he spent 13 years at Baltimore’s Center Stage working in several roles including Associate Producer, Production Manager and Resident Stage Manager. While in Baltimore, Mike was an adjunct faculty member at Towson University and has guest-lectured all over the country. Mike began as a Stage Manager and has dozens of stage management credits between his time in New York and working regionally. Mike is married to theater director and educator Laura Hackman and the proud father of two boys, Jack and Ben.
ACTORS’ EQUITY ASSOCIATION
(AEA) Founded in 1913, AEA is the U.S. labor union that represents more than 51,000 professional 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
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre
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THE IMAGINE CAMPAIGN
Coming soon to Peachtree Street: THE GOIZUETA STAGE FOR YOUTH AND FAMILIES
IMAGINE a state-of-the-art performance space built specifically to deliver the best professional theatre for young audiences this country has to offer.
IMAGINE year-round access to transformative arts experiences empirically proven to improve mental health, literacy, and hope for their own future.
IMAGINE theatre as a birthright for children of all ages and economic backgrounds in our city, across the state, and around the world.
AND JOIN US IN MAKING IT A REALITY. Over the next two years, the Woodruff Arts Center will transform the existing Rich Theatre into Atlanta’s year-round venue for youth and family programming. As a crucial component of this project, the Alliance Theatre is proud to launch The Imagine Endowment, a special $10 million fund providing access subsidies for audiences of all backgrounds and vital resources to equip and maintain Atlanta’s new home for youth, educators, and caregivers in perpetuity. With your help, geography and ticket prices will never be attendance barriers for the bright, empathetic, and creative audiences of tomorrow
ENDOWMENT CONTRIBUTORS
Special thanks to our early champions of the Imagine Campaign for their vision and generosity. Kenny Blank // Campaign Chair
Anonymous
Kristin Adams
James Anderson
Elizabeth Armstrong
Ken Bernhardt & Cynthia Currence
Cindy & Bobby Candler
Around the Table Foundation
Joel Babbit & Virginia Shackelford
Terri Bonoff & Matthew Knopf
Jennifer & Brian Boutte
Ann & Jeff Cramer
Jeffrey & Roxanne Cashdan
Joe Crowley & Phil Mack
Linda & Eugene Davidson
Reade & Katie Fahs
Howard & Ellen Feinsand
Richard & Marsha Goerss
John & Laura Hardman
Mr. & Mrs. Quill Healey II & Family
The Hertz Family Foundation
Jocelyn J. Hunter
Malvika Jhangiani & Dipankar Bandyopadhyay
John Keller
James & Lori Kilberg
Phyllis Kozarsky & Eliot Arnovitz
Timothy Hardy & Allegra Lawrence-Hardy
Alan McKeon & Evelyn Ashley
Hays & Anna Mershon
Hala & Steve Moddelmog
Phil & Caroline Moise
Starr Moore & the James Starr Moore Memorial Foundation
Victoria & Howard Palefsky
Papa John’s Foundation
Jamal & Tiffany Powell
Patty & Doug Reid
For more information about Alliance Theatre’s Imagine Campaign or to make an endowment contribution, please contact Trent Anderson, Director of Development, at trent.anderson@ alliancetheatre.org or (404) 733-4710.
For information about the capital renovation and the Woodruff Arts Center’s Experience Atlanta, Experience Woodruff Campaign, please contact Kristin Hathaway-Hansen at kristin.hathaway-hansen@woodruffcenter.org.
Robert & Margaret Reiser
Ronald E. Ridgeway
Maurice & Tricia Rosenbaum
Mark & Ruth Rosenberg
Mike Schleifer & Laura Hackman
The Selig Foundation // Linda & Steve Selig, Cathy & Steve Kuranoff
Kristen and Jordan Silton
William & Margie Sleeper
E. Kendrick & Caryl Smith
Chandra Stephens-Albright & Warren Albright
Benny & Roxanne Varzi
Rebekah & Mark Wasserman
Donor listings are current as of April 5, 2024, and every effort is made to ensure accuracy. Please contact us to request a correction.
With deep respect for each child in their audience, Babble Lab gets everyone’s attention and holds it through nonsense and discovery. As you watch, you’ll notice something amazing happening. With no instruction to do so, very young children begin to participate in the performance. Engaged and enthusiastic, they are paying rapt attention. Slowly, the show begins to make a sort of sense for the youngest in the room, and they want to be a part of it.
The Chinese character for “to listen” embodies what it means to truly listen, representing open ears, eyes, mind and heart, resulting in undivided attention. Listening is a learned skill, and when modeled for children, profoundly impacts their development. Rather than demanding children be quiet, when we teach them to listen, we are creating a safe space for learning, an opportunity for them to connect with us, and a better chance for positive relationships, and to find their voices to tell their own stories.
Babies are born wanting to communicate, and the deepest learning happens when they are in relationship. The brain they are growing is constructed over time, beginning before birth and continuing into adulthood. For the first three years of life, that growth is exponential, with more than 1 million neural connections being formed each second. The language a child receives in this time, initially without meaning, (like Babble Lab) can be thought of as “language nutrition,” as it is as critical to early brain development as healthy food is for the growth of the body.
If you think of a child’s world as their ecosystem, you begin to recognize how central language is and should be. Language-centered ecosystems, through which language nutrition is intentionally delivered by caring adults make the most of their brains’ rapid growth, when it is uniquely receptive. It paves the way for literacy — which is the greatest determinant of opportunity.
Atlanta is home to the only birthing center in the world that centers language. Grady Hospital has fully integrated these principles into their care through Talk With Me Baby (TWMB). Now a national initiative, TWMB focuses on the early language development that aligns with early brain growth — and all of Grady’s staff ensures that every family leaves the hospital knowing that they play a critical role in their baby’s brain development and to enact that role by talking — intentionally and often, with their babies.
Grady Hospital, along with other institutions like the Alliance Theatre, is committing to Atlanta’s children and their voices. This commitment needs to become a universal promise, integral to the fabric of our city. This will advance literacy, further equity, and ensure every child can enjoy their right to find — and use — their own voice for a lifetime.
Ryan Lee-James, PhD, CCC-SLP Chief Academic Officer Atlanta Speech School
yourstoryyourstage | 27
SYNOPSIS
Strap on your safety goggles and clean out your ears! When an experiment unexpectedly goes awry, a concoction of sneaky, sprightly L E T T E R S takes over a weird and wondrous science lab. Watch them jump into jars, spring from drawers, bounce around the room, and even play hide-and-seek as our scientist makes her surprising findings: Bluku terullala blaulala loooo! Rakete bee bee? Rekate bee zee! Enjoy the blubbering and blibbering exploration of spoken blurbbles as they spring forth in this one-of-a-kind, gee-gaw-filled laboratory.
GET SOCIAL
Connect with us and other audience members on your Alliance experience. Share your comments and photos on Facebook , Instagram , Twitter, and TikTok with hashtags #BabbleLab and #AllianceTheatre. Plus, search your social media platforms with those hashtags for fun, behind-the-scenes content from our cast, crew, and creative team.
www.alliancetheatre.org alliancetheatre alliancetheatre alliancetheatre alliancetheatre
Commit to 20 hours of ushering at the Alliance and receive:
• Alliance Theatre swag!
• 15% off current ticket prices for all Alliance Theatre productions
• 20% off Alliance Theatre Acting Classes
• ONE complimentary ticket for ANY production in the current season Ever wanted to be a part of the Alliance team? Here’s
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre | synopsis 28
ushers!
for details.
your chance! Join our volunteer
Visit alliancetheatre.org/usher
ABOUT THE ALLIANCE THEATRE
Founded in 1968, the Alliance Theatre is the leading producing theatre in the Southeast, reaching more than 165,000 patrons annually. The Alliance is led by Jennings Hertz Artistic Directors Tinashe Kajese-Bolden and Christopher Moses, and Managing Director Mike Schleifer. The Alliance is a recipient of the Regional Theatre Tony Award® for sustained excellence in programming, education, and community engagement. In January 2019, the Alliance opened its new, stateof-the-art performance space, The Coca-Cola Stage at Alliance Theatre. Known for its high artistic standards and national role in creating significant theatrical works, the Alliance has premiered more than 135 productions including eleven that have transferred to Broadway. The Alliance education department reaches 90,000 students annually through performances, classes, camps, and in-school initiatives designed to support teachers and enhance student learning. The Alliance Theatre values community, curiosity, collaboration, and excellence, and is dedicated to representing Atlanta’s diverse community with the stories we tell, the artists, staff, and leadership we employ, and audiences we serve.
OUR MISSION
To expand hearts and minds onstage and off.
OUR
VISION
Making Atlanta more connected, curious, and compassionate through theatre and arts education.
LAND ACKNOWLEDGMENT
In the sincerest efforts to gain further understanding of the history that has brought us to reside on this land and to accept the knowledge that colonialism is a current and ongoing process under which we need to build our mindfulness of our present participation, we hereby acknowledge this native land of the Muscogee Creek Nation.
aboutthealliance | 31
| boardofdirectors
OFFICERS
Chair
E. Kendrick Smith
Vice Chair
Allison O’Kelly
Immediate Past Chair
Jocelyn Hunter
Treasurer
Glenn Weiss
Ex-Officio
Hala Moddelmog
LIFETIME DIRECTORS
Rita Anderson
Ken Bernhardt
Frank Chew
Ann Cramer
Linda Davidson
Laura Hardman
Hays Mershon
Richard S. Myrick
Helen Smith Price
Bob Reiser
Jane Shivers
H. Bronson Smith
Ben White
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Kristin Adams
Norman Adkins
Kimberly Ajy
James Anderson
Farideh Azadi
Marc Balizer
Deisha Barnett
Alba Baylin
Maggie Blake Bailey
Bridget Blake
Kenny Blank
Terri Bonoff
Jennifer Boutté
Kristen Burke
Jeff Cashdan
Madeline Chadwick
Miles Cook
LeighAnn Costley
Joe Crowley
Katie Fahs
Reade Fahs
Howard Feinsand
Rick Gestring
Richard Goerss
Claire Gotham
Lila Hertz
Jocelyn Hunter
Malvika Jhangiani
Alexander Johnson
Jane Jordan Casavant
Anne Kaiser
John Keller
Matthew Kent
Andjela Kessler
Jim Kilberg
Jesse Killings
Carrie Kurlander
Allegra Lawrence-Hardy
Robert Masucci
Jean Ann McCarthy
Alan McKeon
Dori Miller
Jeffrey Miller
Hala Moddelmog
Phil Moïse
Allison O’Kelly
Victoria Palefsky
Jackie Parker
Paul Pendergrass
Anne Rambaud Herren
Stephanie Ray
Patty Reid
Margaret Reiser
Matthew Richburg
Robyn Roberts
Maurice Rosenbaum
Steve Selig
Kim Sewell
Mital Shah
Bill Sleeper
E. Kendrick Smith
Chandra Stephens-Albright
Charlita Stephens
Mark Swinton
Julie Teer
Richard Valladares
Benny Varzi
Roxanne Varzi
Rebekah Wasserman
Glenn Weiss
Wai Wong
Todd Zeldin
ADVISORY BOARD
Advisory Board Co-Chair
Laura Hardman
Advisory Board Co-Chair
Phil H. Moïse
Joe Alterman
Luis Andino
Johanna Brookner
Merry Hunter Caudle
Elizabeth Cooper
Mamie Dayan-Vogel
Candice Dixon
Malaika Dowdell
Everett Flanigan
Brandon Fleming
Mary Beth Flournoy
Les Flynn
Natalia Garzón Martínez
Lydia Glaize
Emmanuel Glaze
Meghan Gordon
Tevin Goss
Jeff Graham
Dr. Eve Graves, Ph.D.
Erica Greenblatt
Shauna Grovell
Della Guidry
Campbell Hastings
Elizabeth Hollister
Zenith Houston
Mallika Kallingal
Jodi Kalson
Jennifer Lee
JoJasmin Lopez
Theo Lowe
Carlton Mackey
Nelly Mauta
Tre’Von McKay
Monica McLary
Juan Meija
Caroline Moore
Laura Murvartian
Zach Nikonovich Kahn
Amy Norton King
Susan Sim Oh
Kathy Palumbo
Aixa Pascual
Kisan Patel
Marion Phillips
Alexis Rainey
Daniel Regenstein
Michelle Robinson
Wendy Schmitt
Dr. Shenara Sexton
Beverly Brown Shaw
Brian Stoltz
Maria Storts
Alicia Thompson
Ana Urrego
Emily Washburn
Melinda Weekes-Laidlaw
Angie Weiss
Stuart Wilkinson
Joni Williams
VOLUNTEER LEADERSHIP
President, STARS
Andjela Kessler
Chairman, Theater
Advocates
Patricia Walsh
Chairman, Theater Ushers
Edwina Sellan
Chairman, Hospitality
Susan Stiefel
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre
32
ALLIANCE SPONSORS
Alliance Sponsors are businesses, corporations, and institutions that have supported the work of the Alliance Theatre. We thank them for their generosity and support.
$500,000+
Chick-fil-A Foundation | Rhonda & Dan Cathy
Delta Air Lines, Inc.
Lettie Pate Evans Foundation
Robert W. Woodruff Foundation
$250,000+
Anonymous
The Coca-Cola Company
Georgia Department of Early Care and Learning
WestRock
$100,000+
Accenture
Helen Gurley Brown Foundation
Georgia Power
The Home Depot Foundation
Invesco QQQ
John H. and Wilhelmina D. Harland Charitable Fund
King & Spalding
Norfolk Southern PNC
The Rich’s Foundation
Shubert Foundation
Warner Bros. Discovery
Zeist Foundation
$50,000+
AT&T Foundation
Cadence Bank
City of Atlanta Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs
Georgia Council for the Arts
Georgia Natural Gas
Google
Jones Day
Kendeda Fund
Liz Blake Giving Fund
Molly Blank Fund of the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation
National Endowment for the Arts
National Vision
Wellstar Foundation
$25,000+
Black Leadership AIDS Crisis Coalition, powered by AIDS Healthcare Foundation
Comcast
Fulton County Board of Commissioners
Graphic Packaging
The Imlay Foundation, Inc.
Johnny Mercer Foundation
Kaiser Permanente
Northside Hospital
Peach State Health Plan
Southwire
$10,000+
AEC Trust
Alexander Babbage
Alston & Bird
Do a Good Day Foundation
Edgerton Foundation
Eversheds Sutherland
George M. Brown Trust of Atlanta
Georgia-Pacific
John & Mary Franklin Foundation
SCANA Energy
South Arts
The Harold & Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust
$5,000+
Anonymous
Frances Wood Wilson Foundation
Osiason Educational Foundation
Perkins&Will
Publix Super Market Charities
By attending our theater, you have made a powerful statement about how important the arts are to you. Make another statement of support louder than any standing ovation. Visit alliancetheatre.org and click on Donate.
sponsors | 33
Family Series Sponsor
Official Hotel Official Research Partner
Major funding for this organization is provided by the Fulton County Board of Commissioners
This program is supported in part by the Georgia Council for the Arts through the appropriations of the Georgia General Assembly. GCA also receives support from its partner agencythe National Endowment for the Arts.
Major support is provided by the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs.
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre
government
| encore 34
Individual, foundation, and corporate donors contribute more than $10 million to the Alliance Theatre so that we are able to present exceptional theater and educational programming to our community. We are deeply grateful for your support. To find out more about the benefits of giving or to make your gift, visit us at alliancetheatre.org/waystogive or call 404-733-5157.
Listed below are pledges and gifts to the Alliance Theatre Annual Fund.
PREMIERE SUPPORT
Spotlight $100,000+
Dan & Garnet Reardon
The SKK Foundation
Artistic Director’s Circle
$50,000+
Ms. Stephanie Blank
Starr Moore & the James Starr Moore Memorial Foundation
Chairman’s Circle
$25,000+
The Antinori Foundation Around the Table Foundation
Ann & Jeff Cramer
Katie & Reade Fahs
Heidi & David Geller
David & Carolyn Gould
Jocelyn J. Hunter
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Ivester
Jesse Killings
Daniel Marks & Keri Powell
Rosemarie & David Thurston
Leadership Circle
$15,000+
Ali and Farideh Azadi
Maggie Blake Bailey & Andrew Bailey
Brian & Jennifer Boutté
Martha & Toby Brooks
Jane Jordan Casavant
Roxanne & Jeffrey Cashdan
Barbara & Steve Chaddick
Ellen & Howard Feinsand
Doris & Matthew Geller
Anne & Scott Herren
Doug & Lila Hertz
Jane & J. Hicks Lanier
Kristie L. Madara
Mr. & Mrs. Barry McCarthy
Phil & Caroline Moïse
Allison & Shane O’Kelly
Victoria & Howard Palefsky
Patty & Doug Reid
Bob & Margaret Reiser
Patricia & Maurice
Rosenbaum
Linda & Steve Selig
Mr. & Mrs. David B. Sewell
Ms. Mital Shah
William & Margarita Sleeper
Dean DuBose & Bronson
Smith
Mr. & Mrs. E. Kendrick Smith
Dr. & Mrs. Dennis Lee
Spangler
Mark Swinton
Tim & Maria Tassopoulos
Benny & Roxanne Varzi
Mr. & Mrs. Art Waldrop
Amy & Todd Zeldin
Director’s Circle $10,000+
Ms. Kristin Adams
Mr. & Mrs. Norman Adkins
James Anderson
Deborah L. Bannworth & Joy Lynn Fields
Alba C. Baylin
Deisha Barnett
Terri Bonoff & Matthew Knopf
Judge JoAnn Bowens
Madeline Chadwick
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Chubb III
Ezra Cohen Charitable Fund
Miles & Nicole Cook
LeighAnn & Chad Costley
Joe Crowley & Phil Mack
Rick Gestring
Marsha & Richard Goerss
Claire Gotham
Malvika Jhangiani
Mr. Alexander Johnson & Mrs. Susan Somersille Johnson
Anne & Mark Kaiser
John C. Keller
Mr. Matthew D. Kent & Mr. Joseph C. Miller
Mr. James Kieffer
James & Lori Kilberg
Timothy Hardy & Allegra
Lawrence-Hardy
Ms. Evelyn Ashley & Mr. Alan B. McKeon
Dori & Jack Miller
Jeffrey Miller
Paul Pendergrass & Margaret Baldwin
Diane & Mark Perlberg
Jamal & Tiffany Powell
Wade Rakes & Nicholas Miller
Matt Richburg
Robyn Roberts & Kevin Greiner
Lynne & Steve Steindel
Carol & Ramon Tomé Family Fund
Dana & Obi Ugwonali
Waffle House
Ms. Kathy Waller & Mr.
Kenny Goggins
Mark & Rebekah Wasserman
Ramona & Ben White
Suzy Wilner
R. Wai Wong
BENEFACTORS
$5,000+
Anonymous (2)
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas* J. Asher
Lisa & Joe Bankoff
Mr. & Mrs. Roland L. Bates
Ken Bernhardt & Cynthia Currence
Natalie & Matthew Bernstein
Franklin & Dorothy Chandler
Ann & Jim Curry
Diane Durgin
Kathy & Jason Evans
Dr. Cynthia J. Fordyce & Sharon Hulette
Dr. & Mrs. Marvin Goldstein
Tad & Janin Hutcheson
Jason & Laurie Jeffay
In honor of Carol Jones*
Mr. Charles R. Kowal
Dr. & Mrs. John Lee
Burrelle Meeks
Mr. & Mrs. Norman J. Radow
Mr. George Russell, Jr. & Mrs. Faye Sampson-Russell
Alan & Cyndy* Schreihofer
Charlita Stephens & Delores
Stephens
Susan & Alan* Stiefel
Maria-Ruth Storts
Chuck Taylor & Lisa CannonTaylor
Ms. Cathy Weil
Marjan & Navid Yavari
annualfund | 35
$2,500+
Anonymous (2)
Dr. & Mrs. Raymond Allen
Ellen Arnovitz
Ms. Raluca Bighiu
Ron & Lisa Brill Charitable Trust
Mr. & Mrs. W. Kent Canipe
Candace Carson
Rita & Ralph Connell
Linda & Gene Davidson
Marcia & John Donnell
Mr. Fredric M. Ehlers & Mr. David Lile
Mrs. Anuja Gagoomal & Dr. John Stites
Eve Joy Eckardt
The Robert S. Elster Foundation
Karen & Andrew Ghertner
Mr. David F. Golden
Dr. & Mrs. John B. Hardman
Ariana Hargrave
David Heinsch
Henry & Etta Raye Hirsch Heritage Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. J. Michael Hostinsky
Linda & Richard Hubert
Mr. & Mrs. Wyatt T. Johnson
Leonard Lee
Judith Lyon & Ron Bloom
Lloyd & Mary* McCreary
Hala & Steve Moddelmog
Clair & Thomas Muller
Joan Netzel & John Gronwall
Mr. & Mrs. Travis Newberry
Sam & Barbara Pettway
Ali & Layla Rahimi, ALYKA Health
Don & Rosalinda Ratajczak
Ms. Kristin L. Ray
Dana Rice
Mr. & Mrs. Mark Rosenberg
Jane & Rein Saral
Ms. Donna Schwartz
Kashi Sehgal
Mallie Sharafat
Mr. & Mrs. S. Albert Sherrod
Mr. David C. Shih
Brian Shively & Jim Jinhong
Henry N. & Margaret P. Staats
Judith & Mark Taylor
Julie Teer
Kathy Gillespie Tomajko
Bryan & Carrie Williams
The Zaban Foundation
$1,500+
Anonymous (2)
Gregory and Wanda Adams
Trent Anderson & Leandro Zaneti
Mr. E. Scott Arnold
Mr. & Mrs. Hugh S. Asher
Marie & Brad Foster
Dr. Aubrey Bush & Dr. Carol Bush
Melodie H. Clayton
Susan & Edward Croft
Gail Crowder & Claude Wegscheider
Tim & Tina Eyerly
Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. Flexner
Sandeep Goyal & Taylor
England
Della & Theo Guidry
Warren M. Gump
Mrs. Elaine L. Hentschel
Ashley & Elton James
Boland & Andrea Lea Jones
Randy & Connie Jones
Mark Keiser
Andjela & Michael Kessler
David Long & Starane Shepherd
Ms. Addie P. Mathes & Mr. Richard Knittel
Greg & Gillian Matteson
Fabienne Moore
Dennis & Debra Murphy
Denis Ng & Mary Jane Panzeri
John & Helen Parker
Mr. & Mrs. Armond Perkins
Peg Petersen
Dr. Denise Raynor
Dr. & Mrs. Fredric Rosenberg
Mr. & Mrs.* Charles B. Shelton III
Ms. Amy Speas
Chandra Stephens-Albright & Warren Albright
Dr. & Mrs. Harry Strothers
Valerie & Anthony Thomas
Stan & Velma Tilley
Ms. Avril Vignos
John T. & Patricia Walsh
Mr. & Mrs. Glenn Weiss
Penn & Sally Wells
Kim Boldthen & Carolyn Wheeler
Adrienne Whitehead
William & Nancy Yang
PATRONS
$1,000+
Anonymous
Mr. Reza Abree
Mr. George T. Baker
Jill Blair and Fay Twersky
Robert Blondeau & Kristen Nantz, in memory of Betty Blondeau Russell
Michelle Burdick
David Cofrin & Christine Tryba-Cofrin
Richard & Grecia Cox
Celeste Davis-Lane
Drs. Bryan & Norma Edwards
Howard & Ellen Eisenberg
Dr. Azy Esfandiari, City Springs Dental Studio
Dr. Marla Franks & Rev.
Susan Zoller
Richard Goodjoin & Kelvin Davis
Louise S. Gunn
Drs. Cathie & Hugh Hudson
Ms. Floria Izadi
Veronica Kessenich
Amy & Jeremy King
Mr. & Mrs. Asghar
Memarzadeh
Anna & Hays Mershon
Stacia Minton
Mr. Kasra Naderi & Mrs. Arezoo Akhavan
Debbie & Lon Neese
Susan C. Puett
Lois & Don Reitzes
Ryan Roemerman
Deborah W. Royer
Ms. Kerri Sauer
Jane E. Shivers
Ann Starr & Kent Nelson*
Andrea Strickland & N. Jerold Cohen
Nossi Taheri & Hope Vaziri
Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth G. Taylor
Lynne Winship
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre | encore 36
ALLIANCE THEATRE MONTHLY SUSTAINER SOCIETY
We would like to thank our donors who have committed to giving us a recurring monthly donation to the Alliance Theatre Annual Fund. Join today: www.alliancetheatre.org/sustainer
Dr. & Mrs. Marshall Abes
Mr. Faraz Ahmed
Mr. E. Scott Arnold
Dr. Evelyn Babey
Dr. Deloris Bryant-Booker
Dean Jordan & Lee Burson
Mr. Brandon Bush
Karen & Harold Carney
Mr. Quentin David Cashman
Elizabeth Corrie
Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Cowart*
Christopher Cox & Draco Bohannon
Gray & Marge Crouse
Nash Ditmetaroj
Malaika Dowdell
David & Jessica Felfoldi
Eric & Christina Fisher
Brenda Fleming
Les Flynn
Christine & Andrew Fry
Emmanuel Glaze
Caroline Gold
Katie Goodman
Erica Greenblatt
Bryant Gresham & Alexander Bossert
Shauna Grovell
Ms. Jo Ann Haden-Miller & Mr. William Miller
Penn Hansa
Lindsey E. Hardegree
Ms. Linda Hare & Mr.
Gerald Barth
Dr. & Mrs. David M. Hill
Ms. Becca Hogue
Karen Jones
Kelley J. Jordan-Monné
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Kalista
Amy & Jeremy King
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Kraft
Dr. Andrea W. Lawrence
Ms. Lauren Linder & Mr. Jonathan Grunberg
Christian & JoJasmin Lopez
Stephen Lynch
Ms. Alison Main
Ms. Jaime McQuilkin
Heather & Jim Michael
Lori & Jonathan Peterson
Ms. Kendrick Phillips
Marion Phillips
Marc & Jean Pickard
Dana & Jacqueline Powe
Brenda Pruitt
Mr. Howard Rowe
Barbara Schreiber
Tom Slovak & Jeffery Jones
Charles Thompson
Ms. Stephanie Van Parys & Mr. Robert A. Cleveland
Mamie Dayan-Vogel & Steven Vogel
Ben Warshaw
Caitlin Way
David & Amy Whitley
Mr. & Mrs. Napoleon A. Williams
it’s easy to scan and give!
encoreatlanta.com | 37 JOIN OUR DONOR COMMUNITY AND KEEP OUR LITTLE ONES Improve literacy for Atlanta youth by funding Alliance Education programs and early exposure to the arts! www.alliancetheatre.org/annualfund
| matchinggifts&legacysociety 38
MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES
Many companies offer a matching gifts program for employees and retirees. You can double, or even triple, your gift at no additional cost to you simply by asking your employer! Think of how much further your donation can go.
We would like to thank the following companies who have matched contributions to the Alliance Theatre Annual Fund. To find out more about matching gifts, contact Emma Seif at emma.seif@alliancetheatre.org.
AIG Corporation
American Express
Aon Risk Solutions
The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation
AT&T
Bank of America/Merrill
BlackRock
Bryan Cave-Powell
Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.
Chubb Charitable Foundation
The Coca-Cola Company
Deloitte
Equifax Inc. Foundation
John and Mary Franklin Foundation
GE Energy
LEGACY SOCIETY
Georgia Power
Goldman Sachs Matching Gift
Goldstein
Google
Hearst Foundations
Home Depot Foundation
Honda Motor Co.
IAC, Inc
IBM
JPMorgan Chase
Kimberly-Clark
Lynch
Macy’s Foundation
McDonald’s Corporation
McMaster-Carr Supply
Microsoft Corporation
Norfolk Southern Corporation
Principal Financial Group Foundation
Prudential Financial
Publix Super Markets
Salesforce.com, Inc.
Sprint
SunTrust Foundation
Thrivent Financial for Lutherns
Veritiv Corporation
Verizon Corporation
The Walt Disney Company
Wells Fargo Yahoo!
Celebrating our supporters who have made a legacy gift to the Alliance Theatre.
The Legacy Society celebrates individuals who have made a planned gift to the Alliance Theatre. Making a planned gift is a wonderful way to show your support and appreciation for the Alliance Theatre and its mission, while accommodating your financial, estate planning and philanthropic goals. With smart planning, you may increase the size of your estate and/or reduce the tax burden on your heirs. Just as important, you will know that you have made a meaningful and lasting contribution to the Alliance Theatre.
To learn more about the Legacy Society, please contact Lindsay Ridgeway-Baierl at lindsay.ridgeway-baierl@alliancetheatre.org.
Anonymous
Rita M. Anderson
Roland & Linda Bates
Kathy* & Ken Bernhardt
Anne & Jim Breedlove
Ezra Cohen
Ann & Jeff Cramer
Susan & Edward Croft
Sallie Adams Daniel
Linda & Gene Davidson
Terry & Stacy Dietzler
Diane Durgin
Elizabeth Etoll
Ellen & Howard Feinsand
James Edward Gay*
Laura & John Hardman
Nancy & Glen Hesler
P.J. Younglove Hovey
David A. Howell*
Lauren & David Kiefer
David Kuniansky
Virginia Vann* & Ken Large
Edith Love*
Lauren & John McColskey
Anna & Hays Mershon
Caroline & Phil Moïse
Winifred & Richard Myrick
Victoria & Howard Palefsky
Armond & Sharon Perkins
Jam Pomerantz
Helen M. Regenstein*
Margaret & Robert Reiser
Betty Blondeau-Russell*
Tricia & Neal Schachtel
Debbie* & Charles Shelton III
Jane E. Shivers
Roger Smith & Christopher Jones*
Ron* & Kathy Tomajko
Lee Harper & Wayne Vason
Terri & Rick Western
Ramona & Ben White
* deceased
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre
ARTISTIC
Jennings Hertz Artistic Directors Tinashe Kajese-Bolden, Christopher Moses
Producer & Casting Director
Producing & Casting Assistant
Distinguished Artist in Residence
Jody Feldman
Brant Adams
Pearl Cleage
Associate Producer Amanda Watkins
BOLD Producing Associate
Spelman Leadership Fellows
Emory Summer Literary Intern
Kay Nilest
Jayla Dyas, Kerrington Griffin
Kailey Albus
Reiser Lab Artists Round 10 Jemma Yarbrough, Cait Greenamyre, Melissa Word, Dalyla Nicole, K. Parker, Amanda Washington, Vynnie Meli, Jimmica Collins, and Cedwan Hooks
Production Management
Director of Production
Associate Directors of Production
Costume and Wardrobe Director
Costumes
Associate Costume Shop & Wardrobe Director
Lawrence Bennett
Courtney O’Neill, Haylee Scott
Laury Conley
Melanie Green
Design Assistant Summer Barnes
Drapers
Tonja Petersen, Cindy Lou Who
Crafts Master Diana L. Thomas
1st Hands/Stitchers
Wardrobe Supervisor
Wardrobe
Wig Master
Lyudmila Fesenko, Brett Parker, Margaret Tennant
Hauzia Conyers
Monica Speaker
Lindsey Ewing
Electrics
Director of Lighting & Projections
Associate Director of Lighting & Projection
Rachael N. Blackwell
Steve Jordan
Staff Electricians Joy Diaz, Rochelle Riley, Neil Anderson
Properties
Props Department Director
Suzanne Cooper Morris
Props Artisans Kathryn Andries, Bruce Butkovich
Props Artisan/Buyer
Technical Director
Scenery
Kimberly Townsend
Kyle Longwell
Associate Technical Directors Rigel Powell, Luke Robinson
Shop Supervisor
Lead Welder
Carpenters
Charge Scenic Artist
Scenic Artist
Sound Director
Assistant Sound Director
Patrick Conley
Chris Seifert
Kevin Dyson, Parker Ossmann, Marlon Wilson
Kat Conley
Amanda Nerby
Sound
Teaching Artists
Abigail Bowers, Abigail Kincheloe, Addison Peacock, Alexandria Walker, Allison Gardner, Andi Stanesic, Andrea Washington, Angel Fabian Rivera, Ann Marie Meeker, Anna McCarthy, Anna Oakley, April Andrew Carswell, Aria Armstead, Audrey Myers, Autumn Stephens, Avery Sharpe, Barry Mann, Brad Raymond, Brandon L. Smith, Brantley Waller, Brie Wolfe, Brittani Minnieweather, Brittany Loffert, Caitlin Slotnick, Caleb Vaughn, Calyria Jyvonne Reynolds, Cara Mantella, Caroline Donica, Casey Navarro, Chanel Davis, Chase Anderson, Chelcy Cutwright, Chelsea Brown, Cece Campbell, Chloe Lomax, Christopher Nastasi, Clayton Landey, Coriana Raynor, Courtney Moors-Hornick, Da’Quan Cooney, Cody Benfield, Dan Triandiflou, Daniel Caffrey, Daniela Santiago, Danielle Montgomery, Davia Weatherill, David DeVries, David Kote, Deja Holmes, Dru Sky Berrian, E Haeberlin, Ebony Golden, Ebony Tucker, Elaina Walton, Ethan Davis, Eugene Russell, Gloria Martin, Hananya Allen, Hannah Chatham, Hannah Church, Harriet Bass, Hayden Weiss, Hollie Rivers, Imani Quinones, Isaac Breiding, Issa Solis, Ja’Siah Young, Jada Gorgor, James Patrick, James Williams, Javaron Conyers, Jeremiah Hobbs, Jessenia Ingram, Jetta Whitehurst, Jimez Alexander, John Doyle, Joseph Quintana, Josh Price, Julia Walters, Julie Woods Robinson, Julissa Sabino, Karen Aguirre, Kate Varner, Katherine Taylor, Katie Causey, Katie Wickline, Kierra Edwards, Kim Baran, Kira Rockwell, Kristian Martinez, Lamar Hardy, Lauren Alexandra, Laurin Dunleavy, Lee Osorio, Lilly Heidari, Lon Bumgarner, Lydia Rice, Maddy Roberts, Madeleine Noe, Madison Junod, Madison VandenOever, Marc Collins, Marcia Faith Harper, Marcia Harvey, Marielle Martinez, Marissa Kovach, Marquelle Young, Mary Claire Page, Mary Michael Patterson, Matt Baum, Matthew Caleb Brown, Maxwell H. Breaux, Maya Lawrence, Megan Cramer, Megan Wartell, Melissa “Mel” Ottaviano, Monteze Sutton, Morayo Otujo, Morgan Rysdon-Moulitsas, Myah Harper, Natalie Brown, Nicole Price, Nicolette Emanuelle, Patricia de la Garza, Patrick McColery, Phillia Prior, Rachel Da Silva, Razaria Denae Copeland, Riley Schatz, Rimothy Miracle Bennett, Robyn Sutton-Fernandez, Rodney Williams, Ryan Dinning, Sarah Mack Price, Sarah Oguntomilade, Sarah Wallis, Sariel Toribio, Shane Simmons, Shaniya Horton, Sharon Foote, Sierra Christensen, Stephen Ruffin, Tafee Patterson, Terence Lee, Theresa Davis, Tiffany Hobbs, Tramaine Jones, Tylia De’Armond, Vallea Woodbury, William Amato, Wynne Kelly, Zuri Petteway
Teen Ensemble Members
Lily Erera, Jordyn Nelson, Malachi S Chaney, Ella Grace Pavlovsky, Simon Link, Helena Skylark Denton, Haley Smith, Sam Yates, Cordelia O’Bradovich, Minnah Dunlap, Abigail May Watson, Ella Dameron, August Marks, Caleb Vaughn, Kennedy O’Neil, Anna Schwartz, Julianna Grace Pillsbury, Caroline Chu, Tomi Fawehinmi, Sophia Sánchez, Adler Horstemeyer, Ronnie McCoy, Morgan Stamper, Bailey Rodgers, Aria Armstead, Sage Mae
MANAGEMENT
Managing Director
Company Manager
Assistant Company Manager
Director of Finance
Clay Benning
Aaron Vockley
Sound Engineers Tamir Eplan-Frankel, Emma Mouledoux, Graham Schwartz
Stage Management
Stage Managers Liz Campbell, R. Lamarr Williams, Barbara Gantt O’Haley
Stage Management Production Assistants
Stage Operations
Stage Operations Manager
Assistant Stage Operations Manager
Flyman
Automation Stagehand
Samantha Honeycutt, LaMarr White, Jr
Scott Bowne
Kate Lucibella
Willie Palmer Parks
John Victor Mouledoux Jr.
Crew Chief Bryan Perez
EDUCATION
Dan Reardon Director of Education
Naserian Foundation Head of Early Childhood Programs
Head of Youth & Family Programs
Head of Secondary Curriculum & Partnerships
Education Accounting Assistant
Administrative & Adult Program Manager
Camp Administrative Manager
Head of Strategic Initiatives
Alliance@Work Creative Director
Alliance@work Sales Associate
Head of Elementary School Programs
Out of School Program Manager
Artist in Residence & Teen Program Manager
Resident Artist & Allyship Program Director
Head of Education Advancement
Education Production Coordinator
Teaching Artist Liaison
Christopher Moses
Hallie Angelella
Olivia Aston Bosworth
Liz Davis
Isabella Aguilar Irias
Robert Hindsman
Jayson T. Waddell
Aierelle Jacob
J. Noble
Sarah Prewitt
Rebecca Pogue Fields
Robyn A. Rogers
Sam Provenzano
Maya Lawrence
Kristen Silton
Jay Williams
Blake Fountain
Administration & Finance
Controller & Head of Administration
Staff Accountant
Accounting Coordinator
Accounts Payable Lead
Associate Director, Data Operations & Strategy
Mike Schleifer
Laura Thruston
Sara Cook
Valerie Thomas
Elecia Crowley
Jasmine Burton
Julie Hall
Sharette Driver
Christina Dresser
Management Assistant Joseph Quintana
Development
Director of Development
Associate Director, Corporate Partnerships
Manager, Board Relations & Special Events
Associate Director, Strategic Institutional Advancement
Coordinator, Development Operations & Institutional Giving
Director of Individual Giving
Manager, Individual Giving
Trent Anderson
Natalie Adams
Kailan Daugherty
Collins Desselle
Tanesha Ferguson
Edward McCreary
Lindsay Ridgeway-Baierl
Manager of Annual Fund & Donor Relations Emma Seif
Marketing & Patron Services
Director of Marketing & Communications
Manager of Web & Digital Communications
Marketing & Promotions Coordinator
Kathleen Covington
Anna Birtles
Ashley Elliott
Graphic Designer Felicity Massa
Marketing & Public Relations Manager
Mashaun D. Simon
Social Media Manager & Content Producer Aniska Tonge
Associate Director of Data & Ticketing
Patron Services Manager
Danielle Hicks
Genesis Gates
Patron Services Coordinators Andi Stanesic, Maiya Moran, Sydney Michelle
Patron Services Associates Zuri Petteway, Natalie Brown
Box Office Associate
Season Ticket Concierge
Education Sales Coordinator
Group Sales & Student Matinee Manager
David Posada
Ken McNeil
Quintara Johnson
Jocelyn Rick
Group Sales & Student Matinee Coordinator Chelsea Street
Lead Front of House Managers Lauren Alexandra, Robyn E. Sutton-Fernandez
House Managers
Barbara O’Haley, Brittany Mangham, Phillia Prior, Leah Thomas
staff | 39
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