In Your Arms

September 16 – October 25, 2015
(Opening Night: Thursday, September 24 at 8:00 p.m.)

A WORLD PREMIERE MUSICAL
Donald and Darlene Shiley Stage
Old Globe Theatre
Conrad Prebys Theatre Center

Music by Stephen Flaherty
Vignettes by Douglas Carter Beane, Nilo Cruz, Christopher Durang, Carrie Fisher, David Henry Hwang, Rajiv Joseph, Terrence McNally, Marsha Norman, Lynn Nottage, and Alfred Uhry
Direction and Choreography by Christopher Gattelli
Lyrics by Lynn Ahrens
Conceived by Christopher Gattelli and Jennifer Manocherian
Scenic Design by Derek McLane
Costume Design by Jess Goldstein
Lighting Design by Donald Holder
Sound Design by Peter Hylenski
Projection Design by Olivia Sebesky
Orchestrator, Michael Starobin
Music Director, Steven Malone
Shadow Sequence Design by Larry Reed/ShadowLight
Casting by Telsey + Company, Abbie Brady-Dalton, CSA
Associate Choreographer, Mark Myars
Production Stage Manager, Michael Domue

A company that has amassed an astounding 18 Tony Awards, 4 Pulitzer Prizes, 6 Pulitzer finalist distinctions, 3 Emmys, and 2 Academy Awards joins forces at the Globe for an exuberant world premiere dance-theatre musical! Ten of America’s best theatrical storytellers (the minds behind such hits as The Full Monty, Driving Miss Daisy, M. Butterfly, and Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike) join director-choreographer Christopher Gattelli (Newsies, The King and I) and composer Stephen Flaherty (Ragtime) to create a ravishing evening that glides, leaps, and twirls through the giddy extremes of romantic love. This unique event ranges across eras and cultures and tells its stories through the universal language of dance, from classical ballet to swing to tap to ballroom to jazz to flamenco and more. In Your Arms is as intoxicating as a sunset cocktail and as exhilarating as a first kiss.



Video

 
 
Watch a rehearsal of Donna McKechnie, musicians, and The Company of In Your Arms perform the song "In Your Arms." The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe.
Watch Old Globe Artistic Director Barry Edelstein talk about In Your Arms, plus a sneak peek at Alfred Uhry's "Love with the Top Down." The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe.
 

For downloadable b-roll, please email Susan Chicoine at schicoine@TheOldGlobe.org or Mike Hausberg at mhausberg@TheOldGlobe.org.



Publicity Photos

George Chakiris and Donna McKechnie (center) with the cast in Terrence McNally's vignette "Sand Dancing," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
George Chakiris and Donna McKechnie in Terrence McNally's vignette "Sand Dancing," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Donna McKechnie and the cast perform the title number of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Samantha Sturm (center) with the cast in Carrie Fisher's vignette "Lowdown Messy Shame," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Samantha Sturm and Jess LeProtto in Carrie Fisher's vignette "Lowdown Messy Shame," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Jonathan Sharp (foreground) with the cast in Douglas Carter Beane's vignette "Artists and Models, 1929," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
(from left) Ryan Steele and Jonathan Sharp in Douglas Carter Beane's vignette "Artists and Models, 1929," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Hayley Podschun and Brendon Stimson in Alfred Uhry's vignette "Love with the Top Down," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Hayley Podschun and Brendon Stimson in Alfred Uhry's vignette "Love with the Top Down," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Karine Plantadit and Henry Byalikov in Marsha Norman's vignette "Life Long Love," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Stephen Bienskie and Jenn Harris (foreground) with the cast in Christopher Durang's vignette "The Dance Contest," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
(foreground, from left) Stephen Bienskie, Jenn Harris, Henry Byalikov, and Hayley Podschun with the cast in Christopher Durang's vignette "The Dance Contest," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
(foreground) Glenda Sol Koeraus and Oscar Valero with the cast in Nilo Cruz's vignette "The Lover's Jacket," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Glenda Sol Koeraus and Henry Byalikov (foreground) with the cast in Nilo Cruz's vignette "The Lover's Jacket," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
(foreground) Henry Byalikov and Glenda Sol Koeraus with (background, from left) Ryan Steele and Oscar Valero in Nilo Cruz's vignette "The Lover's Jacket," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Erica Wong and Alex Michael Stoll in David Henry Hwang's vignette "White Snake," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Erica Wong and Alex Michael Stoll (center) with the cast in David Henry Hwang's vignette "White Snake," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Spencer Clark and Lyrica Woodruff in "Prologue," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Adesola Osakalumi and Marija Juliette Abney in Lynn Nottage's vignette "A Wedding Dance," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Adesola Osakalumi and Marija Juliette Abney in Lynn Nottage's vignette "A Wedding Dance," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
Jeremy Davis and Claire Camp in Rajiv Joseph's vignette "Intergalactic Planetary," part of the world premiere musical In Your Arms. In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Carol Rosegg.
In Your Arms director, choreographer, and co-conceiver Christopher Gattelli. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo courtesy of The Old Globe.
In Your Arms composer Stephen Flaherty. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Morris Macmatzen.
In Your Arms story writer Douglas Carter Beane. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Michael Childers.
In Your Arms story writer Nilo Cruz. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe.
In Your Arms story writer Christopher Durang. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Susan Johann.
In Your Arms story writer Carrie Fisher. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Riccardo Ghilardi.
In Your Arms story writer David Henry Hwang. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Lia Chang.
In Your Arms story writer Rajiv Joseph. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe.
In Your Arms story writer Terrence McNally. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe.
In Your Arms story writer Marsha Norman. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Kate Uhry.
In Your Arms story writer Lynn Nottage. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Kate Uhry.
In Your Arms story writer Alfred Uhry. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Kate Uhry.
 
 
In Your Arms lyricist Lynn Ahrens. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Photo by Neil Costa.
Jess LeProtto and Samantha Sturm with cast members of In Your Arms. The world premiere of In Your Arms, with music by Stephen Flaherty and direction and choreography by Christopher Gattelli, runs Sept. 16 - Oct. 25, 2015 at The Old Globe. Illustration courtesy of The Old Globe.
 



Cast and Creative Team

(click on image to download a high-resolution photo)
Marija Juliette Abney (Dancer) is a recent alumna of New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts graduate performance studies program. She received her undergraduate degree from The Ailey School/Fordham University B.F.A. program. She has performed in Broadway’s After Midnight and was featured as Cheetah in The Lion King. Additionally, Abney performed in New York City Opera’s final production, Anna Nicole. Her television and film credits include “The Tony Awards,” Fox Searchlight’s Black Nativity, “Dancing with the Stars,” “Good Morning America,” Live with Regis and Kelly,” “The Latin Grammy Awards,” “Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” and “The Daytime Emmy Awards.” When not on stage, Abney partners with artist Mike See as a part of the artist collaborative Refried Collective.
Stephen Bienskie (Dancer) created this role in the New York Stage and Film workshop. He has also created the roles of Buffalo Bill in Silence! The Musical (New York and Los Angeles), Greek in How to Save the World and Find True Love in 90 Minutes, Buddy in The Last Session, Jake in Zombie Prom, Cal in The Fix (Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Lead Actor, Resident Musical), Mr. Fitzpatrick in Tom Jones, Stan Weasel and Nightmare Band in Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas, and Dr. Marbury in Françoise opposite Kathleen Chalfant. Inspired by his parents’ love of rock music, he grew up singing with various bands traveling to dive bars up and down the East Coast. He was also seen as Steven Ferrel in the web series “Submissions Only.”
Henry Byalikov (Dancer) danced his way into the entertainment industry after finishing in the top four men on the first season of “So you Think You Can Dance Australia.” He became a professional on “Dancing with the Stars” in Australia and then represented Australia in the international dance competition show “Superstars of Dance” on NBC, where he and his partner received third place. Byalikov has also been featured on ABC’s hit show “Dancing with the Stars” as a professional dancer. He is well known for his principal role in the Broadway stage production Burn the Floor at the Longacre Theatre in New York. His film career includes being a featured dancer in The Great Gatsby.
Claire Camp (Dancer) began her training as a classical ballet dancer and grew to love musical theatre over time. Her theatre credits include Ms. Potiphar in Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (national tour), ensemble in Bill T. Jones’s Super Fly (pre-Broadway workshop), ensemble in Flashdance The Musical (first national tour), and Cassandra in Cats (Gateway Playhouse). She received a B.F.A. in Dance from SUNY Purchase College in 2011 and was able to perform the works of George Balanchine and Twyla Tharp. Camp is thrilled to be a part of this project and to be making her debut at The Old Globe.
George Chakiris (Dancer) won an Academy Award and a Golden Globe Award for his performance as Bernardo in the classic film West Side Story and has since enjoyed an international career in film, television, and theatre. He has starred in films with Catherine Deneuve, Claudia Cardinale, Charlton Heston, Dirk Bogarde, Lana Turner, Cliff Robertson, and Yul Brynner. Chakiris starred in the English company of David Henry Hwang’s M. Butterfly and recently completed Le Lido, a French miniseries. His extensive theatre credits include Company with Elaine Stritch, The Corn Is Green, and Elizabeth the Queen with Kim Hunter. In England, Chakiris won rave reviews in The Passion of Dracula on the West End and in the BBC/PBS miniseries Notorious Woman with Rosemary Harris. His television credits include “Murder, She Wrote” and a recurring role on “Dallas.” He recently was honored as Officier de L’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Minister of Culture.
Spencer Clark (Dancer) hails from Seattle, Washington, and is delighted to be back performing on the West Coast. He was most recently seen as Tommy Djilas in Maine State Music Theatre’s production of The Music Man. His New York credits include shows at Carnegie Hall, The Joyce Theater, Delacorte Theater, 54 Below, Schimmel Center, and Park Playhouse. Clark is a senior at Pace University where he is working toward a B.F.A. in Commercial Dance. He has received additional training at Pacific Northwest Ballet School and Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet.
Jeremy Davis (Dancer) is pleased to be making his Globe debut with In Your Arms. His Broadway credits include Bert Healy in Annie, The Last Ship, South Pacific, Billy Elliot: The Musical, 9 to 5, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Ghost The Musical, and The People in the Picture. He has also been on tour with Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, South Pacific, Thoroughly Modern Millie, and The Who’s Tommy. Davis is a graduate of the University of Michigan and has been an Actors’ Equity member since 1998. In addition to his performing work, he and his wife run a portrait photography studio in Manhattan.
Jenn Harris (Dancer) last appeared at the Globe in The Women. She has appeared Off Broadway in Silence! The Musical, Modern Orthodox (Lucille Lortel and Theatre World Awards), All in the Timing, The Understudy, and New Jerusalem. Her regional credits include Hairspray, Pageant Play, The Heidi Chronicles, and Blithe Spirit, and her other New York credits include The Plank Project, My Deah, Our Hit Parade at Joe’s Pub, QWAN Company’s SWAN!!! and NOTES!!! She has appeared on film and television in Gayby, 5 Doctors, Better Living Through Chemistry, A Case of You, “High Maintenance,” “30 Rock,” “Eastsiders,” Comedy Central’s “New Timers,” “Alpha House,” “Bored to Death,” “Law & Order,” “Law & Order: Criminal Intent,” and “Meet the Agents” on YouTube. Harris’s solo show, The Moment You Been Waiting Four, premiered at The Duplex this year, and “New York is Dead,” a web series for which she co-writes, produces, and co-stars, will premiere in early 2016.
Glenda Sol Koeraus (Dancer), “La Argentinita,” is a Buenos Aires-born flamenco dancer who, over the past decade, has established herself as one of the top flamenco dancers/choreographers in New York City. As a scholarship recipient of the Jerome Foundation’s Travel and Study Grant, the Cristina Heeren Foundation scholarship, and the Jacob’s Pillow Cultural Traditions Program, Koeraus has studied with many of the great dancers and teachers of flamenco. Since her move to New York, she has appeared at illustrious venues such as Lincoln Center, The Town Hall, Symphony Space, and The Joyce Theater. Koeraus has toured internationally with Soledad Barrios & Noche Flamenca for six years, and she has also participated in Zeffirelli’s production of La Traviata at Metropolitan Opera. More recently, she has been featured in the workshop of In Your Arms (New York Stage and Film/Powerhouse Theater), Zorro (Alliance Theatre), and Latin Quarter (Revel Casino Hotel in Atlantic City). She was also the choreographer and solo dancer for Portland Opera’s production of Carmen. She is currently touring the U.S. and abroad as a solo dancer and singer for the world-renowned Gala of the Royal Horses.
Jess LeProtto (Dancer) is happy to be a part of In Your Arms at The Old Globe. He has been singing and dancing since the age of five. He has performed with Jimmy Fallon for MTV’s Video Music Awards and made appearances on “Law and Order: Special Victims Unit, “One Life to Live,” and “Smash.” LeProtto’s Broadway credits include On The Town, Newsies, Bye Bye Birdie, Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, and The Boy from Oz. His Off Broadway credits include A Trees Grows in Brooklyn at City Centers Encores!, and he has been on the national tours of Radio City Christmas Spectacular and Broadway’s Leading Men. LeProtto made the Top 8 of the eighth season of the hit television show “So You Think You Can Dance,” followed by the national tour, where he was also dance captain.
Donna McKechnie (Dancer) received the Tony Award for her performance in the original Broadway production of A Chorus Line. Her other Broadway shows include The Visit, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, The Education of H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N, Sondheim: A Musical Tribute (which she also choreographed), On the Town, Promises, Promises, Company, and State Fair, for which she received the Astaire Award. McKechnie also played the lead in Bob Fosse’s last production of Sweet Charity, for which she received a nomination for the Helen Hayes Award. She has starred in numerous productions in London’s West End as well as Paris and Tokyo. McKechnie has also guest starred extensively with symphony orchestras throughout the country, as well as on television and in film. Her memoir, Time Steps: My Musical Comedy Life, was published by Simon & Schuster.
Adesola Osakalumi (Dancer) was the lead in both the Broadway and international tours of Fela! as well as Fela! The Concert, and he also appeared in the Broadway revival of Equus. His New York and regional credits include In Your Arms (New York Stage and Film/Powerhouse Theater), Ngwino Ubeho (Sundance Institute Theatre Lab), Eyewitness Blues (New York Theatre Workshop), and Jam on the Groove (Minetta Lane Theatre, Drama Desk Award nomination). His film appearances include Sex and the City 2, Crazy Beats Strong Every Time, The Accidental Husband, Across the Universe, Enchanted, and Idlewild. As a choreographer his work includes the films School of Rock and Marci X; Broadway Bares; and commercial work for ESPN, Old Navy, PBS Kids, Halifax Bank, and Advil. Osakalumi is a New York native and a recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts grant and a Bessie Award.
Karine Plantadit (Dancer) has danced on Broadway in Warren Carlyle’s After Midnight, Twyla Tharp’s Come Fly Away (Tony, Astaire, and Drama Desk Award nominations) and Movin’ Out, Arlene Phillips’s Saturday Night Fever, and Julie Taymor’s The Lion King. Her other New York theatre credits include Bloomer Girl and Golden Boy (City Center Encores!) and the Disney project Dream Giver. Her films include Taymor’s Frida and Across the Universe, Ted 2,and Chicago. Her television credits include “Sex and the City,” “Starved,” and Hymn: Remembering Alvin Ailey. Plantadit studied acting with Brad Calcaterra, Seth Barrige, and Michael Howard, voice with Rob La Rocco, and dance at The Ailey School in New York and Rosella Hightower School in France.
Hayley Podschun (Dancer) has been involved with In Your Arms since the very first meeting back in 2008. Originally from Kansas, Podschun has been performing on Broadway and in national tours since the age of 12 with credits including Glinda in the national tour of Wicked, Chaplin, Anything Goes, the Broadway and national tour productions of Hairspray, Pal Joey, Sunday in the Park with George, The Sound of Music, and the original Strawberry in Freckleface Strawberry Off Broadway. Her film and television credits include Hail, Caesar!, Tammy in Hairspray, and “Louie.” Podschun has been seen regionally as Peter in Peter Pan (Artpark), Elle in Legally Blonde (Arvada Center for the Arts and Humanities), Lila in Holiday Inn (Goodspeed Musicals), Wendy in Peter Pan (Paper Mill Playhouse), and Penny in Hairspray (Music Circus). She is also a red carpet correspondent and producer for BroadwayStyleGuide.com.
Jonathan Sharp (Dancer) has danced on Broadway in Fiddler on the Roof, Dance of the Vampires, The Rocky Horror Show, Carousel, and The Red Shoes. His notable Off Broadway credits also include Ziegfeld Follies of 1936 (City Center Encores!) and Anyone Can Whistle (Carnegie Hall).He has danced with Pennsylvania Ballet, Stars of American Ballet, Boston Ballet, and, as a guest artist, with Lyon Symphony Orchestra in France, Los Angeles Ballet, City Ballet of Los Angeles, California Ballet, San Diego Ballet Dance Company, Beaumont Civic Ballet, Westside Ballet, Pacific Festival Ballet Company, Inland Pacific Ballet, LA Opera, San Francisco Opera, and The Dallas Opera. His television credits include “Gilmore Girls,” “Jack & Jill,” “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit,” and “Another World.” He is currently a full-time faculty member at Idyllwild Arts Academy.
Ryan Steele (Dancer) has been seen on Broadway in the 2009 revival of West Side Story, Billy Elliot: The Musical, Newsies (Astaire Award nominee), and Matilda The Musical. His other stage credits include The Wild Party (New York City Center), Radio City Christmas Spectacular, and Carmen (Houston Grand Opera). His film and television credits include Peter Pan Live!, Five Dances, Ted 2, “Smash,”and numerous award shows.
Brendon Stimson (Dancer) is thrilled to be making his Globe debut. His Broadway credits include Newsies, Honeymoon in Vegas, and West Side Story. He received his B.F.A. in Musical Theater from Syracuse University.
Alex Michael Stoll (Dancer) has been a part of In Your Arms from the first full workshop in New York City to the mainstage of New York Stage and Film’s Powerhouse Theater season. Stoll has appeared on Broadway in If/Then, West Side Story, Evita, and Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark. He also appeared as Young Mike in Andrew Hinderaker’s Colossal at Dallas Theater Center as part of The Kennedy Center’s National New Play Network Rolling World Premiere series. His television and film credits include The Sound of Music Live!, “The Oscars,” “The Tony Awards,” “The Kennedy Center Honors,” “Gossip Girl,” “Smash,” and A Million Ways to Die in the West.
Samantha Sturm (Dancer) is elated to be making her Old Globe debut. She has been seen on Broadway in the original casts of The Addams Family, Nice Work If You Can Get It, Matilda The Musical, and On the Town. She performed in the national tours of Cats and Evita and has several regional credits. Sturm was also a soloist with Asaph Dance Ensemble.
Oscar Valero (Dancer) is a multitalented flamenco dancer, choreographer, singer, and percussionist. He was performing professionally by 17, and in 1998 he became a soloist with the Antonio Canales Flamenco Company and the María Pagés Dance Company. He has danced at Festival de Jerez, Festival de Cante de las Minas, and La Bienal de Flamenco de Sevilla. He performed at festivals in Lyon, Bogotá, Tel Aviv, Spoleto, and Tokyo with Antonio Canales and in Boston and New York City with María Pagés. In 2006 Valero inaugurated the Flamenco Festival in Valencia. In 2009, the premiere of his Fuerza, El Swing del Flamenco received raves at The Joyce Theater, then at the renowned Baryshnikov Arts Center, JCC Arts Center, and Connelly Theater. He was in the film The Pink Panther 2 with Steve Martin and in Metropolitan Opera’s Carmen and La Traviata. Now a San Diegan, he can be seen at local venues, holds flamenco workshops, and teaches in the UC San Diego dance department, in addition to traveling for guest performances as an artist and choreographer.
Erica Wong (Dancer) began her ballet training at age five at Hawaii State Ballet in Honolulu, when her father thought dance classes would help her improve her martial arts skills. At age 18, she went on to win The American Ballet Competition in Austin, Texas. She then joined Ballet Theatre of Maryland as a featured soloist, as well as Milwaukee Ballet. Wong has been a guest artist with London’s New Generation Ballet, Southern Michigan Classical Ballet, and Hawaii State Ballet. In January 2015, she was crowned Hawaii’s 66th Narcissus Queen, having won the talent competition of the Chinese beauty and cultural pageant, as well as the title.
Lyrica Woodruff (Dancer) is from Pacific Palisades, California, and began her ballet training at the age of five at the Westside School of Ballet under the mentorship of Yvonne Mounsey. She started acting at the same time and spent two years on the television series “Boston Public.” She has also guest starred on many shows, including “Private Practice,” “Bunheads,” and “Switched at Birth.” At 14, Woodruff was invited to train year-round at The School of American Ballet in New York City. Upon graduating, she received the prestigious Mae L. Wien Award for Outstanding Promise. Woodruff was featured in Susan Stroman’s musical Little Dancer, which premiered at The Kennedy Center in Washington, DC, where she also understudied the title role. Recently, she has performed as a guest artist, dancing the principal roles in The Nutcracker, Spring Waters, Le Corsaire, and Balanchine’s Who Cares?
  Stephen Flaherty (Music) is the composer of Ragtime (Tony, Drama Desk, and Outer Critics Circle Awards, two Grammy Award nominations), Rocky, Seussical (Grammy and Drama Desk nominations), and Once on This Island (Tony nomination, Olivier Award for Best Musical). His additional Broadway credits include original songs for Chita Rivera: The Dancer’s Life and incidental music for Neil Simon’s Proposals. Flaherty has also written four musicals at Lincoln Center Theater: The Glorious Ones (OCC and Drama Desk nominations), Dessa Rose (OCC and Drama Desk nominations), A Man of No Importance (OCC Award for Best Musical, Drama Desk nomination), and My Favorite Year. His other theatre credits include Little Dancer (The Kennedy Center), Lucky Stiff, and Loving Repeating: A Musical of Gertrude Stein (Chicago’s Jefferson Award for Best New Musical). His work for film includes Anastasia (two Academy Award and two Golden Globe nominations), the documentary After the Storm, and Lucky Stiff. This year celebrates Flaherty’s 31-year collaboration with lyricist-librettist Lynn Ahrens.
  Douglas Carter Beane (Story) is the author of the plays Shows for Days, The Nance, The Little Dog Laughed (Tony and Olivier Award nominations), Mr. and Mrs. Fitch, As Bees In Honey Drown (Outer Critics Circle John Gassner Award), Music from a Sparkling Planet, The Cartells, Mondo Drama, The Country Club, and Advice from a Caterpillar. His musicals include Xanadu (Tony nomination), Sister Act (Tony nomination), Lysistrata Jones (Tony nomination), Rodgers + Hammerstein’s Cinderella (Tony nomination), and The Bandwagon. Beane penned the screenplays for To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar and Advice from a Caterpillar (Aspen Rooftop Comedy Festival Best Feature). His opera credits include Die Fledermaus (repertory of Metropolitan Opera), and his television credits include The Nance (PBS’s “Live from Lincoln Center”). His current projects include writing and directing Fairycakes and Robin Hood.
  Nilo Cruz (Story) won the Pulitzer Prize and the Steinberg/ATCA Award for Drama for his play Anna in the Tropics and was nominated for a Tony Award. His opera Bel Canto, based on Ann Patchett’s book, will premiere in December at Lyric Opera of Chicago.
  Christopher Durang (Story) is one of the country’s most beloved and widely produced contemporary American playwrights. Among his best known plays are Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You, Beyond Therapy, The Marriage of Bette and Boo, Laughing Wild, Betty’s Summer Vacation, the Pulitzer Prize finalist Miss Witherspoon, and Why Torture Is Wrong, and the People Who Love Them. Known for absurdist humor and raging satire, Durang’s style has influenced an entire generation of writers. But even the anger of an enfant terrible must recede, and his most enjoyable and commercially viable comedy to date, Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, swept the 2013 Best Play category, winning the Tony, New York Drama Critics’ Circle, Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle, Drama League, and Off Broadway Alliance Awards, as well as delighting Globe audiences last season. In 2013 he was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame.
  Carrie Fisher (Story), actress, writer, and daughter of Debbie Reynolds and Eddie Fisher, made her film debut in Shampoo and became a cultural icon playing Princess Leia in the original Star Wars trilogy. She starred in such hits as When Harry Met Sally, Hannah and Her Sisters,and The Blues Brothers. Her television credits include “Laverne & Shirley” and “Sex and the City,” and her appearance in “30 Rock” was Emmy Award-nominated. Fisher’s bestselling novel, Postcards from the Edge, netted her the Los Angeles PEN Literary Award for Best First Novel, and her Postcards screenplay for the Oscar-nominated film starred Shirley MacLaine and Meryl Streep. Three novels and two memoirs have followed: Delusions of Grandma, Surrender the Pink, The Best Awful, Wishful Drinking,and Shockaholic. Her one-woman Broadway show Wishful Drinking was filmed for HBO and was Emmy-nominated. Fisher will reprise her role of Princess Leia in the much anticipated Star Wars: The Force Awakens.
  David Henry Hwang’s (Story) work includes the plays M. Butterfly, Chinglish, Yellow Face, Kung Fu, Golden Child, The Dance and the Railroad, FOB, and the Broadway musicals Aida (co-author), Flower Drum Song (2002 revival), and Disney’s Tarzan. He is America’s most-produced living opera librettist and has worked with composers Philip Glass, Osvaldo Golijov, and Bright Sheng, among others. Hwang is a Tony Award winner and three-time nominee, a three-time Obie Award winner, and a two-time finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. He is currently a writer-producer for the Golden Globe-winning television series The Affair, and he is developing an original series, “Shanghai.” Hwang won the 2011 PEN/Laura Pels Award, 2012 Inge Award, 2012 Steinberg/ATCA Award, 2014 Doris Duke Artist Award, and 2015 IPSA Distinguished Artist Award. He serves as Head of Playwriting at Columbia University School of the Arts and was recently the Residency One Playwright at New York’s Signature Theatre Company.
  Rajiv Joseph’s (Story) Broadway play Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo was a 2010 Pulitzer Prize finalist for Drama and was awarded a grant for Outstanding New American Play by the National Endowment for the Arts. Joseph’s New York productions include Guards at the Taj (Atlantic Theater Company), The North Pool (Vineyard Theatre), Gruesome Playground Injuries, Animals Out of Paper, and All This Intimacy (Second Stage Theatre), The Leopard and the Fox (AlterEgo Theatre Company), and Huck & Holden (Cherry Lane Theatre). His other recent plays include Mr. Wolf (South Coast Repertory), The Lake Effect (Crossroads Theatre Company), and The Monster at the Door (Alley Theatre). He received his B.A. in Creative Writing from Miami University and his M.F.A. in Dramatic Writing from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts. He served for three years in the Peace Corps in Senegal and now lives in Brooklyn.
  Terrence McNally (Story) was awarded the Dramatists Guild Lifetime Achievement Award and is the winner of Tony Awards for his plays Love! Valour! Compassion! and Master Class and his books for the musicals Ragtime and Kiss of the Spider Woman. In 1996, he was elected to the Theater Hall of Fame. This past season he was represented on Broadway by It’s Only A Play and his book for The Visit. Mothers and Sons, his 20th Broadway production, received a 2014 Tony nomination for Best Play. McNally’s other plays include Frankie and Johnny in the Clair De Lune; Lips Together, Teeth Apart; The Lisbon Traviata; Corpus Christi; The Ritz; and A Perfect Ganesh. He also wrote the libretto for the opera Dead Man Walking, which had its premiere at San Francisco Opera. His newest opera, Great Scott, will be premiering at Dallas Opera in October 2015. His teleplay Andre’s Mother won an Emmy Award.
  Marsha Norman (Story) won the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for her play ‘night, Mother and a Tony Award for the book to her musical The Secret Garden. She is Co-Chair, with Chris Durang, of the Playwriting Program at The Juilliard School. Her newest projects include the book for the musical King Kong and a play about trafficking and violence toward women worldwide. She won a Peabody Award for her work in television and has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Rockefeller Foundation. She won the Margo Jones Award, the Sidney Kingsley Award, and the William Inge Lifetime Achievement Award in Playwriting. She writes and lectures frequently on playwriting and the musical book. She serves on the board of the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize. She is a Founder and President of The Lilly Awards Foundation and serves on the Steering Committee of the Dramatists Guild of America.
  Lynn Nottage (Story) is a Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and a screenwriter. Her plays have been produced widely in the United States and throughout the world. They include Sweat (American Revolutions commission at Oregon Shakespeare Festival); By the Way, Meet Vera Stark (Lilly Award); Ruined (Pulitzer Prize and Obie, Lucille Lortel, New York Drama Critics’ Circle, Drama Desk, and Outer Critics Circle Awards); Intimate Apparel (Steinberg/ATCA and New York Drama Critics’ Circle Awards); Fabulation, or The Re-Education of Undine (Obie Award); Crumbs from the Table of Joy; Las Meninas; Mud, River, Stone; Por’knockers; and POOF! She and composer Ricky Ian Gordon are adapting Intimate Apparel into an opera (Metropolitan Opera/Lincoln Center Theater commission). Nottage is the recipient of a MacArthur “Genius Grant” Fellowship, Dramatists Guild Hull-Warriner Award, the inaugural Horton Foote Prize, Helen Hayes Award, and Lee Reynolds Award. She is a member of the Dramatist Guild.
  Alfred Uhry (Story) is distinguished as the only American playwright to have won a Pulitzer Prize, an Academy Award, and two Tony Awards. Uhry began his professional career as a lyric writer under contract to the late Frank Loesser. He made his Broadway debut in 1968 as lyricist for Here’s Where I Belong. His first major success was Broadway’s The Robber Bridegroom (book and lyrics) and five recreated musicals at Goodspeed Opera House. Uhry’s first play, Driving Miss Daisy, opened Off Broadway in 1987 and won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1988. The film, starring Morgan Freeman and Jessica Tandy, won Academy Awards for Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay in 1990. His work includes The Last Night of Ballyhoo (Tony Award), Parade (Tony Award), Lovemusik (Drama Desk Award nomination), and Without Walls (starring Laurence Fishburne). In 2014, he was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame.
  Christopher Gattelli (Direction, Choreography, Co-Conceiver) was awarded the 2012 Tony, Drama Desk, and Outer Critics Circle Awards for his choreography for Disney’s Newsies (now on its first national tour). As a choreographer, his Broadway credits include current hits Amazing Grace and The King and I (Lincoln Center Theater), South Pacific (Tony and OCC nominations), Sunday in the Park with George, Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, Godspell, The Ritz, Martin Short: Fame Becomes Me, 13, and High Fidelity. His Off Broadway credits include Dogfight (Lucille Lortel Award), Altar Boyz (Lortel and Joe A. Callaway Awards, Drama Desk nomination), Bat Boy: The Musical (Lortel Award), tick, tick… BOOM!, 10 Million Miles, Adrift in Macao, and I Love You Because. His choreography has also been seen on the West End and in London in South Pacific, Sunday in the Park with George, and tick, tick… BOOM! His national and international tour credits include Altar Boyz, Godspell, Grease, and the world premiere of Disney Theatrical’s Pooh’s Perfect Day, as well as South Pacific at the Sydney Opera House. His regional choreography credits include The Jungle Book (Goodman Theatre, Huntington Theatre Company), Little Miss Sunshine (La Jolla Playhouse), Me and My Girl and O Henry’s Lovers (Goodspeed Opera House), and Tom Jones (North Shore Music Theatre). His credits as a director-choreographer include the Off Broadway production of Silence! The Musical (Time magazine’s Top 10 of 2011), the world premiere of Jim Henson’s Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas and Radio Girl (Goodspeed Musicals), and Departure Lounge (The Public Theater’s New York Shakespeare Festival). He recently directed and choreographed the original workshop of In Your Arms, which he also co-created, at New York Stage and Film, and he recently choreographed the Coen brothers’ feature film Hail, Caesar!
  Lynn Ahrens’s (Lyrics) theatre credits include Ragtime, Once on This Island, Seussical, Chita Rivera: The Dancer’s Life, My Favorite Year, Rocky, A Man of No Importance, Dessa Rose, The Glorious Ones, Madison Square Garden’s A Christmas Carol, Lucky Stiff,and the recent Kennedy Center world premiere of Little Dancer. Her film and television credits include the feature animation Anastasia (20th Century Fox), A Christmas Carol (NBC), Camp (IFC), “Schoolhouse Rock” (ABC), and many others. She is a Council Member of the Dramatists Guild of America and co-founded the Dramatists Guild Fellows Program. Her honors include Tony, Emmy, Olivier, Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle, and Lilly Awards and nominations for the Academy Award, Golden Globe Award, and Grammy Award. In 2014, together with her longtime collaborator, composer Stephen Flaherty, she received the Oscar Hammerstein Award for Lifetime Achievement.
  While this is Jennifer Manocherian’s (Co-Conceiver) first experience as co-conceiver, she has been a producer on Broadway for over 25 years.
  Jess Goldstein (Costume Design) has designed, among many others, On the Town, Jersey Boys, Newsies, The Merchant of Venice with Al Pacino (Tony Award nomination), Henry IV with Kevin Kline (Tony nomination), The Rivals (2005 Tony Award), The Apple Tree with Kristin Chenoweth, Orphans with Alec Baldwin, Buried Child, Proof, Take Me Out, Love! Valour! Compassion!, How I Learned to Drive, Dinner with Friends, The Mineola Twins (Lucille Lortel and Henry Hewes Design Awards), Il Trittico for Metropolitan Opera, and Tony Goldwyn’s film A Walk on the Moon. Goldstein is a graduate of the Yale University School of Drama and has taught design there since 1990. He was the 2015 recipient of the Irene Sharaff Lifetime Achievement Award.
  Donald Holder (Lighting Design) previously designed the Globe’s The Times They Are A-Changin’. His Broadway credits include The Lion King and South Pacific (Tony Awards), The King and I, The Bridges of Madison County, Golden Boy, Ragtime, Movin’ Out, Gem of the Ocean, A Streetcar Named Desire, Les Liaisons Dangereuses, and Juan Darien (all Tony-nominated), On the Twentieth Century, You Can’t Take It With You, Bullets Over Broadway, Cyrano De Bergerac, Thoroughly Modern Millie,and The Boy from Oz, among others. His regional credits include La Jolla Playhouse, South Coast Repertory, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Mark Taper Forum, Goodman Theatre, Steppenwolf Theatre Company, Denver Center Theatre Company, Center Stage, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Long Wharf Theatre, Huntington Theatre Company, Alley Theatre, and many others. His opera credits include The Magic Flute, Two Boys,and Otello (Metropolitan Opera), Carmen (Houston Grand Opera), and Moby-Dick and Death and the Powers (The Dallas Opera). He also designed seasons one and two of the NBC television series “Smash.”
  Peter Hylenski (Sound Design) is a Grammy, Olivier, and four-time Tony Award nominee. His selected Broadway credits include Something Rotten!, After Midnight, Motown The Musical, The Scottsboro Boys, Side Show, Rock of Ages, Rocky, Bullets Over Broadway, Shrek The Musical, On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, Lend Me a Tenor, Elf, Wonderland, Cry-Baby, The Times They Are A-Changin’, The Wedding Singer, Sweet Charity, Martin Short: Fame Becomes Me, Little Women, and Brooklyn. His other credits include Le Rêve and ShowStoppers (Wynn Las Vegas), Ragtime (London), Rocky: Das Musical (Hamburg), King Kong (Melbourne), How To Train Your Dragon Live Spectacular (international arena tour), Walking with Dinosaurs (international arena tour), Bull Durham, and Mame. Hylenski is also a producer and engineer for film, album, and television projects. He has engineered commercials for clients such as Sony, Levi’s, General Mills, and Mercedes-Benz and was the re-record mixer and sound supervisor on his fifth film for the American Museum of Natural History, titled Dark Universe.
  Olivia Sebesky (Projection Design) recently designed Ever After (Paper Mill Playhouse), The Spoils, Sticks and Bones, and Intimacy (The New Group), “Fake Off” (truTV), the Nasser bin Hamad Awards with OnTheFly (Bahrain), In Your Arms (New York Stage and Film), Spam (3-Legged Dog), Vegas Nocturne (Spiegelworld/The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas), WikiMusical (New York Musical Theatre Festival), The Architecture of Becoming (Women’s Project/New York City Center), Alice + Olivia Fashion Show at Sleep No More (New York Fashion Week), God Hates This Show (HERE Arts Center, Joe’s Pub), The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity (Company One), and Yesterday Happened: Remembering H.M. (Underground Railway Theater). She received the 2013 Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding Design.
  Michael Starobin’s (Orchestrator) credits include If/Then, Annie, Dogfight, Leap of Faith, Queen of the Mist, People in the Picture, Sondheim on Sondheim, Next to Normal (Tony Award), The Glorious Ones, Grinch, Adrift in Macao, The House of Bernarda Alba, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, Assassins (Tony Award), The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, A New Brain, A Christmas Carol, Hello Again, Guys and Dolls, My Favorite Year, Falsettos, In Trousers, Sunday in the Park with George, Once on This Island, Closer Than Ever, Legs Diamond, Romance/Romance, Carrie, Birds of Paradise, Rags, 3 Guys Naked, and Von Richthofen. His films include The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Life with Mikey, Home on the Range, Tangled, and Lucky Stiff.
  Steven Malone (Music Director) was the associate music director/conductor for the Broadway production of Newsies. Other Alan Menken shows he has worked on, both regionally and on Broadway, include The Hunchback of Notre Dame (associate music director), Sister Act, Leap of Faith, The Little Mermaid, and Disney’s upcoming live-action film of Beauty and the Beast. Malone was the assistant music director for NBC’s live telecast of Peter Pan starring Christopher Walken and Allison Williams and was the children’s vocal conductor for The Sound of Music Live! starring Carrie Underwood. He has been a music director and pianist for numerous workshops of new musicals, companies, and events, including The Public Theater’s Shakespeare in the Park, Actors Theatre of Louisville’s Humana Festival, Nashville Opera, The Kennedy Center Honors, and the Tony Awards. With Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Ahrens, Malone has worked on Little Dancer at Lincoln Center, the just-released feature film Lucky Stiff, and, as associate music director, Flaherty and Ahrens’s upcoming stage production of Anastasia.
  Telsey + Company (Casting) cast the Broadway productions and tours of Fiddler on the Roof, The Color Purple, China Doll, Misery, Allegiance, On Your Feet!, Sylvia, Spring Awakening, Hamilton, Something Rotten!, An American in Paris, Finding Neverland, The King and I, Hand to God, Kinky Boots, Wicked, The Bridges of Madison County, If/Then, The Sound of Music, Love Letters, Newsies, Pippin, Motown, Rock of Ages, and Million Dollar Quartet. Their Off Broadway credits include Atlantic Theater Company, LAByrinth Theater Company, MCC Theater, Second Stage Theatre, and Signature Theatre Company. Their regional credits include American Repertory Theater, Goodspeed Musicals, La Jolla Playhouse, New York Stage and Film, Paper Mill Playhouse, Westport Country Playhouse, and Williamstown Theatre Festival. They cast the films Fun House, Tallulah, Ithaca, The Intern, Ricki and the Flash, Focus, The Last Five Years, Song One, A Most Violent Year, and Into the Woods. Their television credits include “Flesh and Bone,” “Masters of Sex,” and numerous commercials.
  Mark Myars (Associate Choreographer) served as associate choreographer of If/Then (Broadway, upcoming national tour); associate choreographer of Beaches (Drury Lane Theatre); and dance supervisor and assistant choreographer of seven worldwide productions of Wicked. Myars is the choreographer of Gotta Dance!, a revue that celebrates the evolution of dance on Broadway. His other Broadway credits include Footloose, Wicked, 9 to 5, Come Fly Away, and West Side Story. He also appeared Off Broadway as Dream Hannibal in Silence! The Musical. His film credits include Center Stage, The Producers, Across the Universe, Rock of Ages, Life of an Actress the Musical, and Winter’s Tale.
  Michael Domue (Production Stage Manager) recently worked on Noir and The Unbuilt City at New York Stage and Film, where he worked on last season’s workshop of In Your Arms. His regional credits include Dracula, A Christmas Carol, Topdog/Underdog, Sherlock Holmes: The Final Adventure, Becky Shaw, The As If Body Loop, Natural Selection, The Shaker Chair, Pure Confidence, The Ruby Sunrise, and The Lively Lad (Actors Theatre of Louisville/Humana Festival), The Mourners’ Bench, Camelot, Cabaret,and A Christmas Carol (Trinity Repertory Company), and productions at Philadelphia Theatre Company, Olney Theatre Center, Swine Palace, and 17 summer seasons at Totem Pole Playhouse. His Off Broadway work includes Urge for Going, Knives and Other Sharp Objects, The Last Cargo Cult, and The Ruby Sunrise (The Public Theater). Domue’s additional credits include Master Class, A Streetcar Named Desire, Company, and Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day (The Kennedy Center), and he has been part of the stage management teams at Radio City Music Hall on productions of the New York Spring Spectacular and Radio City Christmas Spectacular.
  Jess Slocum (Assistant Stage Manager) previously worked at The Old Globe on Twelfth Night, Buyer & Cellar, Bright Star, Othello, Water by the Spoonful, The Winter’s Tale, A Doll’s House, Pygmalion, A Room with a View, Richard O’Brien’s The Rocky Horror Show, the 2011-2013 Shakespeare Festivals, Rafta, Rafta…, Robin and the 7 Hoods, Alive and Well, Sammy, Cornelia, Since Africa, Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, and The Glass Menagerie. Her Broadway credits include In the Heights. Her regional credits include Side Show, Ruined, The Third Story, Memphis,and Most Wanted (La Jolla Playhouse) and Post Office (Center Theatre Group). Her San Diego credits include Mo`olelo Performing Arts Company, North Coast Repertory Theatre, and Lamb’s Players Theatre. She is a graduate of Vanderbilt University.