Arms and the Man

May 9 - June 14, 2015
(Opening Night: Thursday, May 14, 8:00 p.m.)
Donald and Darlene Shiley Stage
Old Globe Theatre
Conrad Prebys Theatre Center

By George Bernard Shaw
Directed by Jessica Stone
Scenic Design by Ralph Funicello
Costume Design by David Israel Reynoso
Lighting Design by Austin R. Smith
Original Music and Sound Design by Mark Bennett
Vocal Coach, David Huber
Casting by Caparelliotis Casting
Stage Manager Annette Yé

George Bernard Shaw's most romantic comedy! The beautiful Raina Petkoff is about to marry the heroic soldier Sergius. But the battlefield sweeps into her boudoir when an enemy soldier takes refuge under her bed. Soon she will have to decide between her romantic ideals and the surprising sensations of new love. Arms and the Man, one of the wittiest and most charming plays of the English stage, mixes smarts and silliness in a wonderfully entertaining tale of love and war.



Production Photos

Zach Appelman as Captain Bluntschli and Wrenn Schmidt as Raina Petkoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Wrenn Schmidt as Raina Petkoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Enver Gjokaj as Major Sergius Saranoff and Wrenn Schmidt as Raina Petkoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Enver Gjokaj as Major Sergius Saranoff and Wrenn Schmidt as Raina Petkoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
(from left) Marsha Mason as Catherine Petkoff, Conrad John Schuck as Major Paul Petkoff, Wrenn Schmidt as Raina Petkoff, and Enver Gjokaj as Major Sergius Saranoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
(from left) Zach Appelman as Captain Bluntschli, Enver Gjokaj as Major Sergius Saranoff, and Wrenn Schmidt as Raina Petkoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Enver Gjokaj as Major Sergius Saranoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Zach Appelman as Captain Bluntschli in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Marsha Mason as Catherine Petkoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Conrad John Schuck as Major Paul Petkoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Greg Hildreth as Nicola in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Sofiya Akilova as Louka in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Marsha Mason as Catherine Petkoff and Conrad John Schuck as Major Paul Petkoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Wrenn Schmidt as Raina Petkoff and Zach Appelman as Captain Bluntschli in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Enver Gjokaj as Major Sergius Saranoff and Sofiya Akilova as Louka in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Greg Hildreth as Nicola and Sofiya Akilova as Louka in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
(from left) Zach Appelman as Captain Bluntschli and Enver Gjokaj as Major Sergius Saranoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
(from left) Conrad John Schuck as Major Paul Petkoff, Marsha Mason as Catherine Petkoff, and Wrenn Schmidt as Raina Petkoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.



Publicity Photos

Zach Appelman, Wrenn Schmidt, and Enver Gjokaj, appearing as Captain Bluntschli, Raina Petkoff, and Major Sergius Saranoff, in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
The cast of George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Seated: Zach Appelman, Wrenn Schmidt, and Enver Gjokaj. Standing: Ernest Sauceda, Marsha Mason, John Conrad Schuck, director Jessica Stone, Jake Millgard, Greg Hildreth, and Sofiya Akilova. Photo by Jim Cox.
The cast of George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Seated: Zach Appelman, Wrenn Schmidt, and Enver Gjokaj. Standing: Ernest Sauceda, John Conrad Schuck, Marsha Mason, Globe Artistic Director Barry Edelstein, director Jessica Stone, Jake Millgard, Greg Hildreth, and Sofiya Akilova. Photo by Jim Cox.
Wrenn Schmidt appears as Raina Petkoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Enver Gjokaj appears as Major Sergius Saranoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Zach Appelman appears as Captain Bluntschli in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Marsha Mason appears as Catherine Petkoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Conrad John Schuck appears as Major Paul Petkoff in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Greg Hildreth appears as Nicola in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Sofiya Akilova appears as Louka in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Jake Millgard appears as a Russian Soldier in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Ernest Sauceda appears as Village Musician in George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at TheThe Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Jessica Stone, director of George Bernard Shaw’s romantic comedy Arms and the Man, running May 9 – June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox.
Nobel Prize-winning playwright George Bernard Shaw. Shaw's Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, will run May 9 - June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo courtesy of The Old Globe.
George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man, directed by Jessica Stone, will run May 9 - June 14, 2015 at The Old Globe. Art courtesy of The Old Globe.



Cast and Creative Team

(click on image to download a high-resolution photo)
Sofiya Akilova (Louka) is delighted to be making her Globe debut! She hails from New York City, where she recently completed her M.F.A. in at New York University Graduate Acting. Her recent theatre credits include The Fairytale Lives of Russian Girls (Yale Repertory Theatre), A Bicycle Country, Tripolitania, and Becoming Sylvia (Williamstown Theatre Festival), and The Cherry Orchard andEdward Bond’s Restoration (NYU Grad Acting). Her recent film and television credits include Listen Up Philip, “TURN: Washington’s Spies” (AMC), “Alpha House”(Amazon), and “Allegiance” (NBC).
Zach Appelman (Captain Bluntschli) is particularly thrilled to be making his Globe debut, as it is where he saw his first Shakespeare play at the age of nine. Appelman recently starred in the title roles in Hamlet (Hartford Stage) and Henry V (Folger Theatre), as well as Demetrius in Julie Taymor’s production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Theatre for a New Audience). His other stage credits include War Horse (Broadway), Romeo and Juliet (Chicago Shakespeare Theater), Arcadia, Death of a Salesman, and The Winter’s Tale (Chautauqua Theater Company), and King Lear and As You Like It (Shakespeare Santa Cruz). Appelman can be seen in the current season of “Beauty and the Beast” and will be seen in an upcoming untitled feature film from director Joshua Marston. His previous television and film credits include “Homeland,” “Sleepy Hollow,” “Black Box,” “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit,” and Kill Your Darlings. Appelman holds a B.F.A. from UC Santa Barbara and an M.F.A. from Yale University School of Drama.
Enver Gjokaj (Major Sergius Saranoff) just completed the first season of the Marvel series “Agent Carter” for ABC. He is also known for his transformational work as Victor on Joss Whedon’s science fiction fantasy series “Dollhouse.” His recent films include Would You Rather with Brittany Snow and Marvel’s The Avengers. Gjokaj studied at UC Berkeley before earning an M.F.A. in Acting from New York University. Shortly after graduating, he appeared on stage in Mark Lamos’s production of As You Like It (New York Shakespeare Festival) and in The Cherry Orchard with Kate Burton. His early roles also included Taking Chance with Kevin Bacon (HBO), Overture Films’ Stone with Robert De Niro, and the Showtime pilot “Filthy Gorgeous” opposite Isabella Rosselini. Born and raised in Northern California, Gjokaj currently resides in Los Angeles.
Greg Hildreth (Nicola) has appeared on Broadway in Rodgers + Hammerstein’s Cinderella, Peter and the Starcatcher, and Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson. His Off Broadway credits include Peter and the Starcatcher (New York Theatre Workshop) and Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson at (The Public Theater). Hildreth has worked regionally at Paper Mill Playhouse, La Jolla Playhouse, Center Theatre Group, Williamstown Theatre Festival, and Huntington Theatre Company. His film and television credits include Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, “The Good Wife,” “Royal Pains,” “Kings,” and “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.” Hildreth received a B.F.A. in Acting from Boston University and the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art.
Marsha Mason (Catherine Petkoff) returns to The Old Globe, where she was previously seen in Twelfth Night, directed by Jack O’Brien. She received Academy Award nominations for The Goodbye Girl, Cinderella Liberty, Only When I Laugh, and Chapter Two, and two Golden Globe Awards. Her television credits include “Frasier” (Emmy Award nomination), Life with Judy Garland: Me and My Shadows, a featured role on ABC’s hit “The Middle,” and a recent guest starring role on “Madam Secretary.” Mason’s numerous Broadway starring roles include Impressionism with Jeremy Irons, Steel Magnolias, The Night of the Iguana, The Good Doctor, King Richard III, and Cactus Flower, and her Off Broadway roles include I Never Sang for My Father, A Feminine Ending, Wintertime, Amazing Grace, and Old Times. Regionally, Mason starred in All’s Well That Ends Well, A Doll’s House, You Can’t Take It with You, The Crucible, Cyrano de Bergerac, Hecuba, The Tale of the Allergist’s Wife, and Deathtrap. She directed Neil Simon’s Chapter Two at Bucks County Playhouse last year. She has performed in The Prisoner of Second Avenue in London and written her memoir, Journey: A Personal Odyssey. For 20 years she was a biodynamic farmer in New Mexico and has a line of organic herbal body products, Resting in the River. Mason is proud to serve as a member of the Tony Awards Nomination Committee.
Jake Millgard (Russian Soldier) recently appeared in the Old Globe/University of San Diego Graduate Theatre Program productions of Pericles, Prince of Tyre, Trelawny of the ‘Wells’,and, most recently, Clybourne Park. His New York credits include Sex and Violence, On Campus, and Remembering Kimberly. His regional credits include Dracula and A Christmas Carol (Actors Theatre of Louisville), The Full Monty (Northern Stage), and Art, The Odd Couple, and Lips Together, Teeth Apart (Mount Baker Theatre’s Summer Repertory Theatre), and he went on tour with From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. He also appeared in the premiere of The Open Road Anthology (Humana Festival of New American Plays). Some of his television and film credits include “Grimm,” Pudding Face, Placebo, and Frank and Barry.
Ernest Sauceda (Village Musician) is excited to make his Globe debut in Arms and the Man. A San Antonio native, Sauceda has performed at venues such as the White House, Hollywood Bowl, and The Kennedy Center. His most recent roles include Indio in West Side Story, Universal Studios Japan, Dollywood, the Fiddler in Fiddler on the Roof, Ritchie Valens in The Buddy Holly Story, and the premiere of Jonah at Sight & Sound Theatres. His violin training includes study with Dr. Michael Twomey and Angela Caporale. He has been a semifinalist in the Kingsville International Strings Competition and was a featured violin young artist at the Cactus Pear Music Festival at age 17. Sauceda has also been a Top 5 Finalist for the Best Male Performer Award through the International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions. He is actively performing as a singer/dancer, as well as a studio violinist.
Wrenn Schmidt (Raina Petkoff) began her acting career under Tony Award-winning director Anthony Page in the Broadway national tour of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? with Kathleen Turner and Bill Irwin. Her New York theatre credits include The Master Builder opposite John Turturro (Brooklyn Academy of Music), the world premieres of Be a Good Little Widow (Ars Nova) and Jailbait (Cherry Lane Theatre’s Cherry Pit), Eugene O’Neill’s Beyond the Horizon (Irish Repertory Theatre), and the Broadway production of Come Back, Little Sheba (Manhattan Theatre Club). Schmidt has worked extensively in television on HBO’s “Boardwalk Empire” as Julia Sagorsky, CBS’s “Person of Interest” as Dr. Iris Campbell, and FX’s “The Americans” as KGB handler Kate, among others. Her film work includes Preservation (Tribeca Film Festival), Our Idiot Brother, Client 9, and How to Follow Strangers. Her upcoming work includes Sony Pictures’ I Saw the Light opposite Tom Hiddleston and Cinemax’s newest series, “Outcast,” created by Robert Kirkman of “The Walking Dead”. Schmidt graduated from South Carolina Governor’s School for the Arts and Humanities, followed by Meadows Southern Methodist University, where she received her B.F.A.
Conrad John Schuck (Major Paul Petkoff) this year celebrates his 52nd year working as an actor. He began his career in regional theatres from Cleveland to San Francisco. He is best known as Lt. Enright from “McMillan & Wife” starring Rock Hudson. Broadway knows him as Daddy Warbucks in Annie or Buffalo Bill in Annie Get Your Gun starring Reba McEntire. He appeared with Reba again in the Carnegie Hall concert of South Pacific. Most recently he played in Nice Work If You Can Get It with Matthew Broderick. Off Broadway saw him in The Exonerated, The Streets of New York, and, at Playwrights Horizons, We the People. In London he played opposite Charlton Heston in The Caine Mutiny. Moviegoers have enjoyed Schuck in many movies from MASH, as Painless, to Woody Allen’s The Curse of the Jade Scorpion. His recent television appearances include “Law & Order,” “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit,” and “NYPD Blue.” Schuck is married to the well-known artist Harrison Houlé. Together they have three sons, six grandchildren, and an eclectic menagerie of friends.
  George Bernard Shaw (Playwright) is the second-most produced playwright in Globe history, following only William Shakespeare. Shaw was born in Dublin on July 26, 1856 and immigrated to London in 1878. His first significant attempt at literature was as a novelist; he produced five novels between 1879 and 1888. Eventually he turned to criticism: first art and music (enough to fill volumes) and later theatre. Shaw’s theatre criticism was particularly significant for pointing the way to a theatre he himself would soon create: a theatre of paradox and wit, one that sought engagement with the world and contemporary issues rather than escape from them. As a playwright, Shaw turned out an impressive body of work including more than 50 plays. Some of his better known plays include Man and Superman (1903), Major Barbara (1905), Pygmalion (1912) – which would later be turned into the musical My Fair Lady – and Saint Joan (1923). By the time of his death in 1950, Shaw had received world fame unprecedented for a literary figure and was hailed by worshipers as one of the greatest playwrights in the English language.
  Jessica Stone (Director) recently made her Globe debut directing Christopher Durang’s Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike. She has worked as an actress on and Off Broadway, and in television and film, for the last 20 years. Her Broadway credits include Anything Goes, Butley, The Odd Couple, The Smell of the Kill, Design for Living, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, and Grease. Her Off Broadway credits include Crimes of the Heart, Krisit, The Country Club, June Moon, Tenderloin,and Babes in Arms. She has performed in regional theatres across the country including Huntington Theatre Company, Mark Taper Forum, Geva Theatre, McCarter Theatre Center, and 10 seasons at Williamstown Theatre Festival. Concurrently, she was an assistant/associate director on and Off Broadway to Nicholas Martin, Joe Mantello, David Warren, and Christopher Ashley. Stone’s directing career began in earnest with her 2010 production of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum for the Williamstown Theatre Festival’s Main Stage, a production that was met with critical acclaim. Her directing credits now include Absurd Person Singular (Two River Theater Company), June Moon and Neil Simon’s Last of the Red Hot Lovers (Williamstown), and Charlotte’s Web (TheatreworksUSA). She currently lives in Brooklyn with her husband and two sons.
  Ralph Funicello (Scenic Design) is an Associate Artist of The Old Globe and has designed the sets for over 80 productions for the company including the recent productions of Quartet, Water by the Spoonful,and the Summer Shakespeare Festivals 2004-2013. Elsewhere, Funicello has designed scenery on and Off Broadway and for many theatres across the country and abroad, including Lincoln Center Theater, Manhattan Theatre Club, American Conservatory Theater, A Contemporary Theatre, Mark Taper Forum, Arizona Theatre Company, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Berkeley Repertory Theatre, Milwaukee Repertory Theater, Denver Center Theatre Company, The Shakespeare Theatre Company, Guthrie Theater, South Coast Repertory, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Huntington Theatre Company, Intiman Theatre, Stratford Shakespeare Festival, Royal Shakespeare Company, Theatre Royal Bath, New York City Opera, LA Opera, and San Diego Opera. He currently holds the position of Powell Chair in Set Design at San Diego State University.
  David Israel Reynoso (Costume Design) recently designed the Globe’s productions of Water by the Spoonful, Time and the Conways, Double Indemnity, and Be a Good Little Widow. Reynoso is the Obie Award-winning costume designer of the Off Broadway hit Sleep No More (Punchdrunk/Emursive), and he is also a Helen Hayes Award nominee for Healing Wars (Arena Stage). He is also recognized locally for his designs of The Darrell Hammond Project, Kingdom City,and the DNA New Work Series presentation of Chasing the Song (La Jolla Playhouse). His other work includes Futurity, Cabaret, The Snow Queen, Alice vs. Wonderland, Trojan Barbie, Copenhagen, No Man’s Land, Hamletmachine, Ajax in Iraq,and Abigail’s Party (American Repertory Theater), The Comedy of Errors and Othello (Commonwealth Shakespeare Company), The Woman in Black (Gloucester Stage Company), and Dead Man’s Cell Phone (The Lyric Stage Company). Reynoso is also the recipient of the Elliot Norton Award, a Craig Noel Award nomination, and multiple IRNE and BroadwayWorld Award nominations.
  Austin R. Smith (Lighting Design) is a New York City-based lighting designer working in theatre, dance, opera, live music, and the intersection thereof. Previously at The Old Globe he designed The Royale and Anna Christie. His other selected credits include RoosevElvis (the TEAM), Queen of the Night, When January Feels Like Summer (The Ensemble Studio Theatre), Charles Ives Take Me Home and Massacre (Rattlestick Playwrights Theater), Stand-Up Tragedy (site-specific), Jesus in India (Ma-Yi Theater Company), Regina Spektor’s What We Saw from the Cheap Seats (world tour), Futurity (American Repertory Theater), Sleep No More (New York City), and Three Pianos (American Repertory Theater, New York Theatre Workshop, Ontological-Hysteric Theater; Obie Award). His upcoming projects include Theatre for One with Christine Jones, Anne Washburn’s adaptation of Iphigenia in Aulis, and national/international tours for RoosevElvis.
  Mark Bennett (Original Music and Sound Design) previously worked on the Globe productions of Twelfth Night directed by Jack O’Brien, Golda’s Balcony directed by Scott Schwartz, and Pygmalion and Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike directed by Nicholas Martin. His recent Broadway scores include Macbeth, Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, Driving Miss Daisy, The Coast of Utopia (2007 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music in a Play), Henry IV, Golda’s Balcony, and The Goat, among others. His Off Broadway credits include An Iliad (Obie Award), Mad Forest,and My Children! My Africa! (New York Theatre Workshop) and eight scores for The Public Theater’s Shakespeare in the Park. His La Jolla Playhouse scores include A Midsummer Night’s Dream directed by Christopher Ashley (Craig Noel Award), An Iliad (Craig Noel Award), and, as composer and co-lyricist, the musical Most Wanted. He was composer for Sam Mendes’s The Bridge Project, 2009-2012 (Brooklyn Academy of Music, The Old Vic) and Barry Edelstein's As You Like It (Williamstown Theatre Festival). He received the 1998 Obie Award for Sustained Excellence in Sound Design, 1998 Bessie Award, Ovation Award, American Theatre Wing Award, and 14 Drama Desk Award nominations.
  David Huber (Vocal Coach) most recently worked on last year’s Globe productions of The Royale, Bright Star, and The Two Gentlemen of Verona. His other previous Globe credits include The Winter’s Tale directed by Jack O’Brien, The Tempest, The Two Gentlemen of Verona, and The Merchant of Venice, among several others. He has studied voice with Master Linklater Voice teacher David Smukler, Eric Armstrong, and Kate Burke. He is a graduate of the Graduate Voice Teacher Diploma Program at York University in Toronto. His regional theatre credits include Actors Theatre of Louisville, Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, Pittsburgh Playhouse, PCPA Theaterfest, Texas Shakespeare Festival, Center REP Theatre, Centennial Theater Festival, and Mo’olelo Performing Arts Company. Huber is currently on faculty at Grossmont College and has been a faculty member at MiraCosta College in the Actor’s Academy for the last two years. He is also a graduate of the Old Globe/USD M.F.A. Program.
  Caparelliotis Casting (Casting) recently cast the Globe productions of Rich Girl, Buyer & Cellar, The White Snake, The Twenty-seventh Man, Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, The Royale, Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, Water by the Spoonful, Time and the Conways, Bethany, The Winter’s Tale, The Few, Double Indemnity, The Rainmaker, Other Desert Cities, Be a Good Little Widow, A Doll’s House, The Brothers Size, Pygmalion, and Good People. Their Broadway casting credits include Fish in the Dark, It’s Only a Play, Disgraced, Holler If Ya Hear Me, Casa Valentina, The Snow Geese, Lyle Kessler’s Orphans, The Trip to Bountiful, Grace, Dead Accounts, The Other Place, Seminar, The Columnist, Stick Fly, Good People, Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo, The House of Blue Leaves, Fences, Lend Me a Tenor, and The Royal Family. They also cast for Manhattan Theatre Club, Second Stage Theatre, Atlantic Theater Company, LCT3, Ars Nova, Goodman Theatre, Arena Stage, Ford’s Theatre, and three seasons with Williamstown Theatre Festival. Their recent film and television credits include HairBrained with Brendan Fraser, “Odyssey” (upcoming, NBC series), “How to Get Away with Murder” (ABC pilot), “Ironside” (NBC), and Steel Magnolias (Sony for Lifetime).
  Annette Yé (Production Stage Manager) served as stage manager for The Old Globe’s The Royale, Quartet, Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, The Few, Pygmalion, God of Carnage, Anna Christie, Groundswell, and the 2010 production of Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas! Her other Globe credits include A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder, Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas! (2011-2014), Boeing-Boeing, The First Wives Club, Opus, Dancing in the Dark, Hay Fever, and the Summer Shakespeare Festivals 2008 and 2010-2013.
  Laura Zingle (Assistant Stage Manager) is thrilled to be back at The Old Globe after recently working on Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas! (2014). Her La Jolla Playhouse credits include The Grift, Kingdom City, El Henry, Kamchatka (Without Walls Festival), His Girl Friday, and Hands on a Hardbody. At San Diego Repertory Theatre she was production stage manager of Detroit. Her other regional credits include a workshop of different words for the same thing (Center Theatre Group), AFI Fest 2013, Spoleto Festival USA, Opera NEO, and Palomar College Dance. Zingle is the production manager and stage manager of San Diego Gay Men’s Chorus. She has an M.F.A. in Stage Management from UC San Diego and is a proud member of AEA.