1 minute read

MEET NICHOLAS

HOMETOWN: HAWTHORN WOODS, ILLINOIS

PASSIONS: THEATER, TECHNOLOGY, BRINGING PEOPLE TOGETHER

COLLEGE: NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY

Nicholas loves to write code, often just for fun. He enjoys applied mathematics, and has spent summers working in tech support positions at a pharmaceutical company. But when you see him on stage, you feel like he’s truly found his home. Nick made his Taft stage debut in Shrek, The Musical, set hearts aflutter as a prince in Into the Woods, and earned a prestigious Halo Award nomination for his comedic work in Chicago—just a few of his favorite Taft roles.

The most challenging one to date: Christopher Boone in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime, a 15-year-old on the autism spectrum. “It was hard,” says Nicholas. “The character is so different from who I am as a person. It is way out of my comfort zone, and a long way from Shrek, where everyone is dancing and happy all the time.” The role required Nicholas to memorize reams of dialog, including an “afterwards,” of sorts, where he delivered a highly technical accounting of the solution to Christopher’s favorite problem on his “A-Levels” mathematical exams. The key, Nicholas notes, is understanding the character—not to mention understanding the math. “Whenever you do a play or a musical you have to find the balance between knowing every word from rote memory and being able to go on and get past it even if you trip on a couple of words. If you know a character well enough, you know what that character would say in a situation. That helped me a lot in this production.”

This article is from: