Posts tagged Staff Writer
Liz McCartney Talks Playing Mrs. Brice in Funny Girl & Doing it Cause You Can't Not Do It!

I had gone on for Mrs. Strakosh and Mrs. Meeker, but I hadn’t been on for Mrs. Brice until Beanie Feldstein’s final performance as Fanny. She was so giving and generous and genuinely surprised when I started to sing, that it crossed one thing off my bucket list. But I am so happy to be performing with my friend Julie Benko. Julie is phenomenal and it’s cute that she calls me her “standby sister”, because I am old enough that I could actually be her mother!

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"If You Connect With the Material, Run After it." - Chatting w/ Dear Evan Hansen's Ann Sanders!

If you have the instinct to play a scene a different way… Try it… You cannot do anything wrong. You will never lose going after and exploring meaningful, truthful work and relationships. Also, equally important… Do not attempt to wax off your mustache before getting publicity photos. Leave these things to the professionals.

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U.K. Actress Karen Johal Discusses her Upcoming Projects & What Keeps Her Motivated!

I think for me it's the drive to work on projects that I watch and that excites me. There is so much being made and so many new stories being told and I stay motivated because of the excitement I feel. I am a south Asian Actor and a lot of what is being made now is representative of the culture I grew up in or of other minorities. Looking at things like Ms. Marvel, the variety of possibilities keeps me ambitious for the future.

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"Don't be so hard on yourself. That hamster wheel in your mind ain't worth it." Chatting w/ Luke Wygodny!

Advice to young people... Don't be so hard on yourself. That hamster wheel in your mind ain't worth it. The likes & numbers on your social media are not important. What's important is that you continue to look out for yourself and find the artist within. At the end of the day, we all leave at some point... Why waste your beautiful concentration on the things that don't matter. Dream and make them come true.

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Shawn W. Smith Discusses Rock of Ages, JCS, & Taking Care of Your Mental Health!

If you ever are doing a show where you walk off the stage at night and you don't feel more satisfied, fulfilled, or purposeful than when you stepped onto the stage, it's time to leave that show. There are plenty of days when I don't have what I think is needed to do my job, and I don't want to go on stage. But I almost never leave the stage feeling worse off for having done the job. When I feel worse off, the job is no longer worth its rewards.

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Ariella Serur discusses 1776, Working w/ Partner Sav Souza & Being your Biggest Fan!

We try not to give in to the mentality of "the show must go on" and, instead, encourage each other to listen to our physical and mental health first and foremost when assessing if we can go on for a certain performance. Because of this, the standbys have been on a lot and it's been amazing to watch the company come together to support each other in this way night after night.

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Claudia Mulet Discusses In the Heights, Growing up in Cuba and Not Fearing Change!

This is the third time I’ve had the pleasure to be part of In the Heights. The first time was in 2019 with a wonderful cast in Portland Center Stage. The second time I had the wonderful opportunity to be the associate director alongside Luis Salgado as director. This production was very revealing for me and my career. Being in a creative position within a show that I know so well, telling a story that is very close to my heart, really opened up a new perspective of seeing theater and my position as an immigrant, a woman, and a Latina in this medium.

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Cole Burden Discusses 9 to 5 & Healthily Navigating the Ups & Downs of Your Career!

Honestly, if you can have a career in anything else you should do that. There is being an artist and then there is the career of being an artist. It’s just challenging emotionally, physically, and financially.If you are like me and you absolutely have to do it, it is the highest of the high and the lowest of the low so you have to navigate those ups and downs and constantly seek healthy ways to bridge that gap. It’s a life’s work and one I am deeply grateful for.

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Julie Benko discusses Funny Girl & Cultivating Your Own Creative Outlet!

The hardest part of an actor’s life is the time between gigs: You always wonder if you’ll ever work again (at least I do). Writing lifts some of that pressure off because you realize you can still enjoy making theater in your own imagination, which can be a surprisingly fun place to be. There is so much in this business that is out of one’s control. Cultivating your own creative outlet is a great way to make yourself feel that you are in the driver’s seat.

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