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Michael Detroit to Receive Lifetime Achievement Award

Memphis’ annual Ostrander Awards honor the season’s best local theatrical productions. 

Mostly. 

But there is one category that gives a standing ovation to someone who has had an ongoing, yearslong impact on the theater scene. 

The Eugart Yerian Award for Lifetime Achievement has put the spotlight on these singular people since 1984, and this year, the distinction will go to Michael Detroit, executive producer at Playhouse on the Square, a professional resident theater company. 

Detroit started at Playhouse when he came to Memphis in 1989. And he’s done it all: actor (stage, film, television, commercials), director, singer, costumer, choreographer, professor, creator of the Unified Professional Theatre Auditions (UPTA), civic activist, and more.

When Detroit took over at Playhouse from founder Jackie Nichols in 2018, he was more than ready, having been associate producer since 1998. As executive producer, he manages $15 million in capital assets, a $3.3 million annual budget, an endowment of more than $7 million, and 40 full- and part-time employees, including hundreds of contract actors, designers, and directors.

Being ready to take over also helped when the global pandemic hit, forcing arts organizations to rethink how to keep creating — and delivering — art. Detroit and Whitney Jo, managing director at Playhouse, were able to ensure that no staff or company member was laid off because of the pandemic. Further, they devised ways of creating online content to sustain interest and involvement.

Detroit will receive the award at the Ostranders ceremonies on August 26th at the Orpheum.

The Memphis Flyer asked Detroit about the highlights of his 35 years in Memphis.

Memphis Flyer: Tell us about your journey since you came to Memphis in 1989.

Michael Detroit: I’ve been very fortunate that I’ve been able to make a living in the arts, which is hard for anybody that goes into the arts. For me, it was a history of piecemealing things together — doing theater, doing video gigs, doing voiceovers, doing print work, and teaching and all the things you did to make a living as a younger artist. And I’ve been able to stay with it and make a living out of it. With that kind of vision in mind, my goal since I became executive producer was to strengthen our ability to have artists have the ability to make a living in Memphis — things like salaries and working conditions and hourly work weeks and all of those things, which is a challenge in any artistic format for sure. 

What are some of the initiatives behind your vision?

It goes back to things like UPTA, where we’ve got 1,100 people coming in over four days with 85-plus companies and 850 actors all looking for work that pays across the country. We’re also very committed to partnering with our friends at the Greater Memphis Chamber. Playhouse belongs to seven different chambers and I wanted to make sure that we were doing that so that we were civically engaged, not just an artistic company, but as a small business in Memphis. And that creates an awareness of employees, but just like the big folks out there, like FedEx and IP and Nike and AutoZone, we want to attract and retain the talent that we have here as actors and designers and technicians and admin folks. 

You have to have material that they want to work with and work on, but you’ve got to pay them a salary that’s of value to them. And that’s what UPTA was created for, to help folks find work, and certainly to help Playhouse find talent. Coming out of that too, making sure that what we’re bringing to the table is a lot more newer work, perhaps than we had done in the past, and certainly a greater diversity of work than we have been doing in the last, let’s say, couple of decades. So, we’re getting back to our roots in terms of types of shows we’re doing. 

You like to see where there’s a need and then take steps to meet it, right?

Yes, things like the Queer Youth Theater Program. We chose to do it, recognizing that as something that’s important for our community, we’ve been able to do that and do it proudly, do it unabashedly. It’s easy to identify issues. It’s challenging to find the right materials to put in front of folks that help push that needle in one direction or the other that reflects that diversity of our community. So yeah, we’re going to do the family shows because that’s part of our community, but then we’re going to do shows that talk about the politics that we’re dealing with right now.

I’ve also been helping theatrical licensing companies realize that Playhouse on the Square in Memphis is a treasure to be had because we can produce things here in the Mid-South that these licensing companies, quite frankly, can’t really license anywhere else. And they realize quickly when we produce things that perhaps they can be produced in other places. 

You were instrumental in organizing last year’s arts-centered mayoral forum. How did that go?

We worked with various other folks through the Memphis Cultural Coalition who had strong contacts into the various mayoral candidates committees. We got four of them here at Playhouse to talk to a full house of people, and it was specifically geared towards the arts. It’s something, as far as I know, that had never happened before, and it was extremely successful. We had four candidates committing to creating something or engaging the arts as a way for Memphis to move forward. We see that now in Mayor Paul Young’s messaging. We had a chamber event at the Memphis Botanic Garden last week, and he talked about it there, and he’s talking about it without being fed a line about it. He’s making it part of his platform. If you feed the arts, you feed business. Without a strong professional arts component, especially in a city, you become a tier-two city. And we want to be a tier-one city. It’s important to keep those organizations vital and thriving.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Ostrander Awards Cap the 2022-2023 Theater Season

The local stage community celebrated another season by honoring the best cast, crew members, and productions at the Ostrander Awards ceremonies Sunday, August 27th. 

The annual event brought play lovers to the Halloran Centre for Performing Arts & Education at the Orpheum. The numbers favored Theatre Memphis and its Next Stage, which combined to win 21 categories. The top award-winning production was TM’s zany The Play That Goes Wrong, which took seven honors, including top play and ensemble, and awards for director Ann Marie Hall, supporting actress Amy Rush, supporting actor Bruce Huffman, choreographer Courtney Oliver, and scenic designer Jack Netzel-Yates. 

The most honored in the musical category was TM’s Mary Poppins with five awards: Russell Lehman for leading actor, Tracy Thomas for feature performer, and Buddy Hart and Rence Phillips for hair, wig, and makeup. Jack Netzel-Yates pulled in two awards for props and scenic design.

The previously announced winner of the 2023 Eugart Yerian Lifetime Achievement Award was Ruby O’Gray, who has acted, directed, and produced shows in local theater since 1977. She is the first Black woman to receive the honor. Among her achievements is the Women’s Theatre Festival of Memphis, an event celebrating women’s contributions to the local stage.

Jared Johnson, who directed the musical The Scottsboro Boys at Playhouse on the Square won the plaque for best musical production. The critically acclaimed performance was based on the 1931 story of nine falsely accused Black teenagers, and the profound injustices that followed fueled the Civil Rights Movement. Despite the grim subject matter, the musical is staged as a vaudeville-style variety show. During the production, Johnson described it as “fun, makes you laugh, and is entertaining so it hides the ugly truth in plain sight.”

The Ostrander Award reflects the powerful approach taken to carry the message across. After Sunday night’s award, Johnson said, “It means so much for folks to understand what we were trying to do, which is really communicate about not just how much we should embrace our history, but also about how we should love on it and to just enjoy it even when it’s hard and painful. The beauty in our history is it makes us who we are, but more importantly, it makes us stronger. It makes us wiser so that we can move on. And guess what? If we have that one little conversation, we can mend a lot of the fences holding us back from being able to just love each other. This win, where we celebrate Black artistry and Black brilliance, makes me feel like we’re in a new world where we can recognize all the talents and it just makes me so happy.”

Ostrander Award winners:

DIVISION I

Props Design, Play: Gabrielle ‘Gabby’ D’Arcangelo Calvert; Clyde’s; Circuit Playhouse

Props Design, Musical: Jack Netzel-Yates; Mary Poppins; Theatre Memphis

Scenic Design, Play: Jack Netzel-Yates; The Play That Goes Wrong; Theatre Memphis

Scenic Design, Musical: Jack Netzel-Yates; Mary Poppins; Theatre Memphis

Lighting Design, Play: Nicole Northington; Sherlock’s Last Case; Theatre Memphis   

Lighting Design, Musical: Nicole Northington; Guys and Dolls; Theatre Memphis   

Sound Design, Play (two winners): Joe Johnson; Sherlock’s Last Case; Theatre Memphis; and Josh Crawford; Pass Over; Circuit Playhouse

Sound Design, Musical: Joshua Crawford; Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812; Playhouse on the Square

Hair, Wig, & Makeup: Buddy Hart & Rence Phillips; Mary Poppins; Theatre Memphis

Costume Design, Play: Amie Eoff; Macbeth; Next Stage

Costume Design, Musical: Amie Eoff; Guys and Dolls; Theatre Memphis

Music Direction: Dustin Pappin; Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812; Playhouse on the Square

Choreography/Fight Choreography, Play: Courtney Oliver; The Play That Goes Wrong; Theatre Memphis

Choreography, Musical: Christi Hall; Guys and Dolls; Theatre Memphis

Featured Performer, Play: Caroline Simpson; Macbeth; Next Stage

Featured Performer, Musical: Tracy Thomas; Mary Poppins; Theatre Memphis

Supporting Actor, Play: Bruce Huffman; The Play That Goes Wrong; Theatre Memphis

Supporting Actress, Play: Amy Rush; The Play That Goes Wrong; Theatre Memphis

Supporting Actor, Musical: Daniel Stuart Nelson; Jersey Boys; Playhouse on the Square

Supporting Actress, Musical: Haley Wilson; Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812; Playhouse on the Square

Leading Actor, Play: Cristian S. Nieves; Clyde’s; Circuit Playhouse

Leading Actress, Play: Natalie Jones; Macbeth; Next Stage

Leading Actor, Musical: Russell Lehman; Mary Poppins; Theatre Memphis

Leading Actress, Musical: Nichol Pritchard; Guys and Dolls; Theatre Memphis

Ensemble, Play: The Play That Goes Wrong; Theatre Memphis

Ensemble, Musical: The Scottsboro Boys; Playhouse on the Square

Direction, Play: Ann Marie Hall; The Play That Goes Wrong; Theatre Memphis

Direction, Musical: Dave Landis; Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812; Playhouse on the Square

Original Script: Ann Perry Wallace; Live Rich Die Poor; Like Bamboo Productions

Production, Play: Ann Marie Hall; The Play That Goes Wrong; Theatre Memphis; Elizabeth Perkins, Stage Manager

Production, Musical: Jared Johnson; The Scottsboro Boys; Playhouse on the Square; Tessa Verner, Stage Manager

DIVISION II

Props Design: Emily Matusik; Wire in the Garden; Rhodes Theatre Guild

Scenic Design: Justin Asher & Richard Logston; Titanic: The Musical; Harrell Theatre

Lighting Design: Melissa Andrews; Wire in the Garden; Rhodes Theatre Guild

Sound Design: Kaitlin Starnes; Wire in the Garden; Rhodes Theatre Guild

Costume Design: Newman Jones; Sense and Sensibility; University of Memphis

Music Direction: Tammy Holt; Titanic: The Musical; Harrell Theatre

Featured Performer: Rachel Adkins; Sense and Sensibility; University of Memphis

Supporting Actor, Play: Bryan Kenton; Triangle; Three Diamonds Productions

Supporting Actress, Play: Epiphany Aiken; Wire in the Garden; Rhodes Theatre Guild

Supporting Actor, Musical: Will Draper; The Rocky Horror Show; University of Memphis

Supporting Actress, Musical: Nichol Pritchard; Titanic: The Musical; Harrell Theatre

Leading Actor, Play: Adam Remsen, Wakey Wakey; Quark Theatre

Leading Actress, Play: Kathryn Dressel; Wire in the Garden; Rhodes Theatre Guild

Leading Actor, Musical: Nic Luter; Elf: The Musical; Harrell Theatre

Leading Actress, Musical: Maggie Emmendorfer; Once Upon a Mattress; Rhodes Theatre Guild

Ensemble: Wire in the Garden; Rhodes Theatre Guild

Direction: Julia Hinson; Wire in the Garden; Rhodes Theatre Guild

Production: Justin Asher; Titanic: The Musical; Harrell Theatre; Taylor Daniels, Stage Manager

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Ostrander Nominees Announced

The nominations are out.

The 39th Ostrander Awards will be held Sunday, August 27th, to celebrate the best work in local collegiate, community, and professional theater. 

Changes have been made to the structure of the awards to allow for wider consideration of the variety of productions and the presenting organizations. 

Division I includes Circuit Playhouse, Germantown Community Theatre, Hattiloo Theatre, New Moon, Playhouse on the Square, Theatre Memphis, and Theatreworks @ the Square.

Division II is Cazateatro Bilingual Theatre Group, Duke’s Eye Productions, Harrell Theatre, Like Bamboo Productions, Quark Theatre, Rhodes Theatre Guild, Three Diamonds Productions, and University of Memphis.

The primary distinction is whether the theater company has a full-time artistic or technical staff. Those companies without a full-time staff and educational institutions are categorized as Division II.

This year’s recipient of the Eugart Yerian Lifetime Achievement Award is Ruby O’Gray. The Ostranders organization says that O’Gray’s devotion to local theater since 1977 “represents the spirit of change and evolution. Her work has been primarily in self-created companies, events, and institutions.”

In 2012, she created The Women’s Theatre Festival of Memphis, Inc., a festival celebrating women’s contributions to theatre, honoring them, and creating an opportunity for their works, performances, networking, and development.

The Ostranders ceremony will be at the Halloran Center Downtown. Lobby doors, with cash bar and light refreshments, open at 6 p.m. There will be performances from the lead nominees and nominees for Outstanding Overall Musical Production. Get tickets at memphisostranders.com beginning July 30. Tickets will be $15 in advance or $20 at the door. All prior Eugart Yerian recipients are admitted free of charge. 

39th Ostrander Nominees (2022-2023 Season)         


Props Design, Division II

  • Emily Matusik, Wire in the Garden, Rhodes Theatre Guild
  • Mary Thomas Hattier, Elf: The Musical, Harrell Theatre
  • Summer Gallagher, Aloha, Say the Pretty Girls, University of Memphis
  • Summer Gallagher, Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis

Props Design, Play, Division I

  • Gabrielle “Gabby” D’Arcangelo Calvert, Clyde’s, Circuit Playhouse
  • Marques Brown, Wit, Germantown Community Theatre
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, The Play That Goes Wrong, Theatre Memphis
  • Laurie Boller, Misery, New Moon Theatre

Props Design, Musical, Division I

  • Jack Netzel-Yates, Guys and Dolls, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, Mary Poppins, Theatre Memphis
  • Kaylyn Nichols, Something Rotten!, Playhouse on the Square
  • Melissa Andrews, Evil Dead the Musical, New Moon Theatre
  • Natalie Ervolino, Sistas the Musical, Hattiloo Theatre

Scenic Design, Division II         

  • Brian Ruggaber, Aloha, Say the Pretty Girls, University of Memphis
  • Brian Ruggaber, Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis
  • Chad Rhodes, Triangle, Three Diamonds Productions
  • Natalie Ervolino, The Rocky Horror Show, University of Memphis
  • Justin Asher & Richard Logston, Titanic: The Musical, Harrell Theatre

Scenic Design, Play, Division I

  • Chris Sterling, Misery, New Moon Theatre
  • Ekundayo Bandele, Master Harold and the Boys, Hattiloo Theatre
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, Sherlock’s Last Case, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, The Play That Goes Wrong, Theatre Memphis
  • Lex von Blommestein, Clyde’s, Circuit Playhouse                                                  

Scenic Design, Musical, Division I

  • David Galloway, Evil Dead the Musical, New Moon Theatre
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, Guys and Dolls, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, Mary Poppins, Theatre Memphis
  • Marques Brown, I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change, Germantown Community Theatre
  • Phillip Hughen, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square                      

Lighting Design, Division II     

  • Anthony Pellecchia, Aloha, Say the Pretty Girls, University of Memphis
  • Becky Caspersen & Olivia Caspersen, Titanic: The Musical, Harrell Theatre
  • Chris Hanian, Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis
  • Chris Hanian, Starting Here, Starting Now, University of Memphis
  • Melissa Andrews, Wire in the Garden, Rhodes Theatre Guild

Lighting Design, Play, Division I

  • Louisa Koeppel, Misery , New Moon Theatre
  • Nicole Northington, Macbeth, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Nicole Northington, Sherlock’s Last Case, Theatre Memphis
  • Phillip Hughen, Pass Over, Circuit Playhouse
  • Sheric Hull, Clyde’s, Circuit Playhouse   

Lighting Design, Musical, Division I

  • J.D. Hopper, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square
  • Matt Webb, The Scottsboro Boys, Playhouse on the Square
  • Nicole Northington, Guys and Dolls, Theatre Memphis
  • Nicole Northington, Sondheim Tribute Revue, Theatre Memphis
  • Trey Eikleberry, Jersey Boys, Playhouse on the Square                    

Sound Design, Division II          

  • Carl Caspersen, Live Rich Die Poor, Like Bamboo Productions
  • Eric Sefton, Wakey, Wakey, Quark Theatre
  • Kaitlin Starnes, Wire in the Garden, Rhodes Theatre Guild
  • Mike O’Nele, Aloha, Say the Pretty Girls, University of Memphis

Sound Design, Play, Division I

  • Gene Elliott, Misery, New Moon Theatre
  • Joe Johnson, Macbeth, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Joe Johnson, Sherlock’s Last Case, Theatre Memphis
  • Joe Johnson, Small Mouth Sounds, New Moon Theatre
  • Josh Crawford, Pass Over, Circuit Playhouse                                           

Sound Design, Musical, Division I

  • Jason Eschhofen, Guys and Dolls, Theatre Memphis
  • Jason Eschhofen, Mary Poppins, Theatre Memphis
  • Jason Eschhofen, Sondheim Tribute Revue, Theatre Memphis
  • Joshua Crawford, Jersey Boys, Playhouse on the Square
  • Joshua Crawford, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square

Hair, Wig, & Makeup Design, Division I

  • Amie Eoff, Sondheim Tribute Revue, Theatre Memphis
  • Buddy Hart & Rence Phillips, Mary Poppins, Theatre Memphis
  • Buddy Hart, Kelly McDaniel & Rence Phillips, Guys and Dolls, Theatre Memphis
  • Ellen Ring, Arsenic and Old Lace, Theatre Memphis
  • Kathleen Kovarik, Sherlock’s Last Case, Theatre Memphis                                                

Costume Design, Division II   

  • Ann Perry Wallace, Live Rich Die Poor,  Like Bamboo Productions
  • Cole Hudson, Starting Here, Starting Now, University of Memphis
  • Heather Duzan , The Rocky Horror Show, University of Memphis
  • Lucia Hall, Wire in the Garden, Rhodes Theatre Guild
  • Newman Jones, Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis

Costume Design, Play, Division I

  • Amie Eoff, Arsenic and Old Lace, Theatre Memphis
  • Amie Eoff, Macbeth, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Marsena Sellers, School Girls; Or The African Mean Girls Play, Hattiloo Theatre
  • Rekitha Morris, Master Harold and the Boys, Hattiloo Theatre
  • Waverly Strickland, Pass Over, Circuit Playhouse                                

Costume Design, Musical, Division I

  • Amie Eoff, Guys and Dolls, Theatre Memphis
  • Amie Eoff, Mary Poppins, Theatre Memphis
  • Amie Eoff, Sondheim Tribute Revue, Theatre Memphis
  • Lindsay Schmeling, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square
  • Lindsay Schmeling, The Scottsboro Boys, Playhouse on the Square                                              

Music Direction, Division II    

  • Matthew Morrison, Elf: The Musical, Harrell Theatre
  • Nathan Thomas, Starting Here, Starting Now, University of Memphis
  • Nathan Thomas, The Rocky Horror Show, University of Memphis
  • Tammy Holt, Titanic: The Musical, Harrell Theatre                                              

Music Direction, Division I

  • Dustin Pappin, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square
  • Gary Beard, Sondheim Tribute Revue, Theatre Memphis
  • Jeffery Brewer, Guys and Dolls, Theatre Memphis
  • Jeffery Brewer, Mary Poppins, Theatre Memphis
  • Tamatha Holt, The Scottsboro Boys, Playhouse on the Square

Choreography/Fight Choreography, Play, Division I

  • Courtney Oliver, The Play That Goes Wrong, Theatre Memphis
  • Emma Crystal, Shakin’ the Mess Out of Misery, Hattiloo Theatre
  • Six Carolino, Macbeth, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis                                         

Choreography, Musical, Division I

  • Christi Hall, Guys and Dolls, Theatre Memphis
  • Courtney Oliver, Jersey Boys, Playhouse on the Square
  • Daniel Stuart Nelson, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square
  • Emma Crystal,  The Scottsboro Boys, Playhouse on the Square
  • Jordan Nichols & Travis Bradley, Mary Poppins, Theatre Memphis

Featured Performer, Division II (Only One Nominee)                                  

Featured Performer, Play, Division I

  • Art Oden & Lindsey Roberts, Much Ado About Nothing, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Cameron Massengale,   Shanktown, POTS@TheWorks
  • Caroline Simpson, Macbeth, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Hugh Raup, Arsenic and Old Lace, Theatre Memphis
  • Jaclyn Suffel, Macbeth, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis                                         

Featured Performer, Musical, Division I

  • Courtney Sage, I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change, Germantown Community Theatre
  • Dorian Davis, The Scottsboro Boys, Playhouse on the Square
  • Karl Robinson, The Scottsboro Boys, Playhouse on the Square
  • Marvin Holt, The Scottsboro Boys, Playhouse on the Square
  • Tracy Thomas, Mary Poppins, Theatre Memphis                                                   

Supporting Actor, Play, Division II     

  • Bryan Kenton, Triangle, Three Diamonds Productions
  • Jeremiah McDonald, Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis
  • Leland Odom, Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis
  • Marvin Holt, Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis
  • Prince Djae, Triangle, Three Diamonds Productions

Supporting Actress, Play, Division II                  

  • Charisse Mackey, Triangle, Three Diamonds Productions
  • Epiphany Aiken, Wire in the Garden, Rhodes Theatre Guild
  • Lauren Mathews, Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis
  • Madilyn Mobbs, Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis
  • Nolita Palomar, Wire in the Garden, Rhodes Theatre Guild

Supporting Actor, Play, Division I

  • Bruce Huffman , The Play That Goes Wrong, Theatre Memphis
  • Christopher Tracy, Macbeth, Theatre Memphis
  • Gabriel Kestrel, The Play That Goes Wrong, Theatre Memphis
  • Jesse Dunlap, Master Harold and the Boys, Hattiloo Theatre
  • J.S. Tate, Clyde’s, Circuit Playhouse                                               

Supporting Actress, Play, Division I

  • Amy Rush, The Play That Goes Wrong, Theatre Memphis
  • Annie Freres, Pride and Prejudice, Germantown Community Theatre
  • Hiawartha Jackson, Immediate Family, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Donita Johnson, School Girls; Or The African Mean Girls Play, Hattiloo Theatre
  • Jessica “Jai” Johnson, Clyde’s, Circuit Playhouse                  

Supporting Actor, Musical, Division II               

  • Aiden Saunders, Titanic: The Musical, Harrell Theatre
  • Caleb Bryant, Elf: The Musical, Harrell Theatre
  • Jacob Mohler, Titanic: The Musical, Harrell Theatre
  • Kent Fleshman, Titanic: The Musical, Harrell Theatre
  • Will Draper, The Rocky Horror Show, University of Memphis                       

Supporting Actress, Musical, Division II          

  • Amy P. Nabors, Titanic: The Musical, Harrell Theatre
  • Ashleigh Williams, Elf: The Musical, Harrell Theatre
  • Axyl Langford, The Rocky Horror Show, University of Memphis
  • Eliana Mabe, Once Upon a Mattress, Rhodes Theatre Guild
  • Nichol Pritchard, Titanic: The Musical, Harrell Theatre

Supporting Actor, Musical, Division I

  • Daniel Stuart Nelson, Jersey Boys, Playhouse on the Square
  • Jimbo Lattimore, The Scottsboro Boys, Playhouse on the Square
  • John Maness, Something Rotten!, Playhouse on the Square
  • Nathan McHenry, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square
  • Stephen Garrett, I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change, Germantown Community Theatre      

Supporting Actress, Musical, Division I

  • Brooke Papritz, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square
  • Caroline Simpson, The Wizard of Oz, Playhouse on the Square
  • Haley Wilson, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square
  • Lynden Lewis, Something Rotten!, Playhouse on the Square
  • Rebecca Johnson, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square                 

Leading Actor, Play, Division II             

  • Adam Remsen, Wakey, Wakey,  Quark Theatre
  • Christopher Tracy, Lungs, Quark Theatre
  • J.S. Tate, Triangle, Three Diamonds Productions
  • Marques Brown, What Happens to Hope at the End of the Evening, Quark Theatre
  • Nathan Kruse, Wire in the Garden, Rhodes Theatre Guild                               

Leading Actress, Play, Division II        

  • Ann Perry Wallace, Live Rich Die Poor, Like Bamboo Productions
  • Bianca McMillian, Triangle, Three Diamonds Productions
  • Eileen Kuo, Lungs, Quark Theatre
  • Emily Seatvet, Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis
  • Kathryn Dressel, Wire in the Garden, Rhodes Theatre Guild

Leading Actor, Play, Division I

  • Cleavon Meabon IV and Marc Gill, Pass Over, Circuit Playhouse
  • Cristian S. Nieves, Clyde’s, Circuit Playhouse
  • Kellan Oelkers, Master Harold and the Boys, Hattiloo Theatre
  • Kevar Maffitt, The Play That Goes Wrong, Theatre Memphis
  • Paul “PA” Arnett, Master Harold and the Boys, Hattiloo Theatre                                                     

Leading Actress, Play, Division I

  • Alice Rainey Berry, Wit, Germantown Community Theatre
  • Courtney Noisette, Clyde’s, Circuit Playhouse
  • Courtney Oliver, Who’s Holiday, Circuit Playhouse
  • Kim Justis, Misery, New Moon Theatre
  • Natalie Jones, Macbeth, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis                                       

Leading Actor, Musical, Division II     

  • Garrett Whitworth, Starting Here, Starting Now, University of Memphis
  • Jacob Greer, Once Upon a Mattress, Rhodes Theatre Guild
  • Johnathon Lee, The Rocky Horror Show, University of Memphis
  • Marvin Holt, The Rocky Horror Show, University of Memphis
  • Nic Luter, Elf: The Musical, Harrell Theatre                           

Leading Actress, Musical, Division II                  

  • Axyl Langford, Starting Here, Starting Now, University of Memphis
  • Campbell Williams, Elf: The Musical, Harrell Theatre
  • Christina Hernandez, I Love You Because, Duke’s Eye Productions
  • Jasmine Gillenwaters, The Rocky Horror Show, University of Memphis
  • Maggie Emmendorfer, Once Upon a Mattress, Rhodes Theatre Guild

Leading Actor, Musical, Division I

  • Bruce Huffman, Evil Dead the Musical, New Moon Theatre
  • Cristian Nieves, Something Rotten!, Playhouse on the Square
  • John Brenton Strauss, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square
  • Justin Raynard Hicks, The Scottsboro Boys, Playhouse on the Square
  • Russell Lehman, Mary Poppins, Theatre Memphis                                                

Leading Actress, Musical, Division I

  • Cassie Thompson, Evil Dead the Musical, New Moon Theatre
  • Katy Cotten, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square
  • Lynden Lewis, Mary Poppins, Theatre Memphis
  • Nichol Pritchard, Guys and Dolls, Theatre Memphis
  • Patsy Detroit, The Wizard of Oz, Playhouse on the Square

Eugart Yerian Lifetime Achievement Award: Ruby O’Gray  

Ensemble, Division II                   

  • Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis
  • Starting Here, Starting Now, University of Memphis
  • Titanic: The Musical, Harrell Theatre
  • Triangle, Three Diamonds Productions
  • Wire in the Garden, Rhodes Theatre Guild

Ensemble, Play, Division I

  • Clyde’s, Circuit Playhouse
  • Master Harold and the Boys, Hattiloo Theatre
  • School Girls; Or The African Mean Girls Play, Hattiloo Theatre
  • Small Mouth Sounds, New Moon Theatre
  • The Play That Goes Wrong, Theatre Memphis                                        

Ensemble, Musical, Division I

  • Five Guys Named Moe, Hattiloo Theatre
  • I Love You, You’re PerfectNow Change, Germantown Community Theatre
  • Mary Poppins, Theatre Memphis
  • Sondheim Tribute Revue, Theatre Memphis
  • The Scottsboro Boys, Playhouse on the Square

Best Original Script     

  • Ann E. Eskridge, If Pekin Is A Duck? Why Am I In Chicago?, Theatreworks @ The Square
  • Ann Perry Wallace, Live Rich Die Poor, Like Bamboo Productions
  • Marques Brown, One Man’s Christmas Carol. Germantown Community Theatre
  • Cesar Montelongo, So, You Are Dating a Latino … Now What?, Cazateatro Bilingual Theatre Group
  • Eliana Mabe, You’ll Grow Into It: A Collection of Short Plays, Rhodes Theatre Guild

Excellence in Direction, Division II    

  • Holly L. Derr, Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis
  • Julia Hinson, Wire in the Garden, Rhodes Theatre Guild
  • Justin Asher, Titanic: The Musical, Harrell Theatre
  • Tony Isbell, Lungs, Quark Theatre
  • Tony Isbell, Wakey, Wakey, Quark Theatre

Excellence in Direction, Play, Division I

  • Ann Marie Hall, The Play That Goes Wrong, Theatre Memphis
  • Claire D. Kolheim, Clyde’s, Circuit Playhouse
  • Garry Yates, Master Harold and the Boys, Hattiloo Theatre
  • John Maness, Arsenic and Old Lace, Theatre Memphis
  • Thomas L. King, Immediate Family, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis

Excellence in Direction, Musical, Division I

  • Dave Landis, Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812, Playhouse on the Square
  • Jaclyn Suffel, I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change, Germantown Community Theatre
  • Jared Johnson, The Scottsboro Boys, Playhouse on the Square
  • Jordan Nichols & Travis Bradley, Mary Poppins, Theatre Memphis
  • Whitney Branan, Sondheim Tribute Revue, Theatre Memphis                                        

Outstanding Overall Production, Division II                                   

  • Elf: The Musical, Harrell Theatre; Director: Chris Luter; Stage Manager: AK Lewellyn
  • Lungs, Quark Theatre; Director: Tony Isbell; Stage Manager: Leslie Lee
  • Sense and Sensibility, University of Memphis; Director: Holly L. Derr; Stage Manager: Luke Dabney
  • Titanic: The Musical, Harrell Theatre; Director: Justin Asher; Stage Manager: Taylor Daniels
  • Wakey, Wakey, Quark Theatre; Director: Tony Isbell; Stage Manager: Kristi Wong

Outstanding Overall Production, Play, Division I      

  • Clyde’s, Circuit Playhouse, Director: Claire D. Kolheim; Stage Manager: Emma White
  • Master Harold and the Boys, Hattiloo Theatre, Director: Garry Yates; Stage Manager: Sherronda Johnson
  • Misery, New Moon Theatre, Director: Justin Asher; Stage Manager: Mystie Watson
  • Pass Over, Circuit Playhouse, Director: Jared Johnson; Stage Manager: Cydnie Trice
  • The Play That Goes Wrong, Theatre Memphis, Director: Ann Marie Hall; Stage Manager: Elizabeth Perkins                                            

Outstanding Overall Production, Musical, Division I

  • I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change, Germantown Community Theatre; Director: Jaclyn Suffel; Stage Manager: Meredith Serna
  • Mary Poppins; Theatre Memphis; Directors: Jordan Nichols & Travis Bradley; Stage Manager: Chelsea Robinson
  • Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812; Playhouse on the Square; Director: Dave Landis; Stage Manager: Tessa Verner
  • Sondheim Tribute Revue, Theatre Memphis; Director: Whitney Branan; Stage Manager: Taylor Daniels
  • The Scottsboro Boys, Playhouse on the Square; Director: Jared Johnson; Stage Manager: Tessa Verner
Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Ostranders are Back

The Ostrander Awards are back.

After two years of pandemic mandated caution, the celebration of the local theater community is returning in person on August 28th at 6:30 p.m. at the Halloran Centre. 

The 38th Memphis theater awards will recognize and celebrate excellence in collegiate, community, and professional theater. 

The winners will be revealed at the event, but as always, the one prize announced early is the Eugart Yerian Lifetime Achievement Award, this year going to Stephen Hancock, a playwright, Ostrander-winning director, and longtime professor at the University of Memphis.

Because last year’s event was postponed, winners from 2021 will also be honored.  

Last year’s Eugart Yerian Award went to Andy Saunders. Others include the 2021 Janie McCrary Putting it Together Award, Michael Compton; the 2021 Otis Smith Legacy Dance Award, Whitney Branan; the Behind the Scenes Award, Lena Wallace Black; and the Larry Riley Rising Star Award, Donald Sutton and Abby Teel.

Tickets will be available at memphisostranders.com and will be limited to 350 guests. Tickets will be $15 in advance or $20 at the door.

Elizabeth Perkins, Ostrander director, said, “So many theatres had to postpone shows, rearrange seasons, or select different titles this year. It has been a difficult year, but also a year that has shown how supportive the theatre community is — we saw a season of actors filling in for others at the last minute all over the city.”

The nominees are:

Scenic Design for College

  • Brian Ruggaber, A Bright Room Called Day, University of Memphis
  • Brian Ruggaber, The Wolves, University of Memphis
  • Mollie West and Brian Ruggaber, R & J & Z, University of Memphis

Scenic Design for a Play

  • Jack Netzel-Yates, American Son, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, Cicada, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, The Secret Garden, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, You Can’t Take It With You, Theatre Memphis
  • Justin Asher, The Foreigner, Harrell Theatre
  • Tim McMath, Torch Song, Circuit Playhouse

Scenic Design for a Musical

  • Chris Sterling & Andrew Chandler, Shockheaded Peter, New Moon Theatre
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
  • Ryan Howell, Smokey Joe’s Cafe, Playhouse on the Square

Costume Design for College

  • Ali Flipovich, A Bright Room Called Day, University of Memphis
  • Hattie Fann, R & J & Z, University of Memphis
  • Heather Duzan, The Wolves, University of Memphis

Costume Design for a Play

  • Allison White, You Can’t Take It With You, Theatre Memphis
  • Ashley Selberg, The Secret Garden, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • J. Faye Manselle, Mississippi Goddamn, Circuit Playhouse
  • Lindsay Schmeling, A Doll’s House, Parts 1 & 2, Circuit Playhouse
  • Lindsay Schmeling, Torch Song, Circuit Playhouse

Costume Design for a Musical

  • Amie Eoff, Hello, Dolly!, Theatre Memphis
  • Amie Eoff, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis
  • Amie Eoff, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Amie Eoff, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
  • Lindsay Schmeling, Smokey Joe’s Cafe, Playhouse on the Square
  • Shockheaded Peter, New Moon Theatre

Hair/Wig/Makeup Design for a Play

  • The Secret Garden, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Torch Song, Circuit Playhouse
  • Buddy Hart and Rence Phillips, Our Town, Theatre Memphis
  • Mississippi Goddamn, Circuit Playhouse

Hair/Wig/Makeup Design for a Musical

  • Amie Eoff, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Amie Eoff, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
  • Buddy Hart and Rence Phillips, Hello, Dolly!, Theatre Memphis
  • Buddy Hart and Rence Phillips, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis
  • Shockheaded Peter, New Moon Theatre

Props Design for a Play

  • Andrew Chandler, The Complete History of America, Abridged, Germantown Community Theatre
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, Cicada, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, The Secret Garden, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, You Can’t Take It With You, Theatre Memphis
  • Reiley Duffy, Torch Song, Circuit Playhouse

Props Design for a Musical

  • Bill Short & Andrew Chandler, Shockheaded Peter, New Moon Theatre
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, Hello, Dolly!, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Jack Netzel-Yates, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis

Lighting Design for College

  • Corinne Fann, A Bright Room Called Day, University of Memphis
  • Hayes Wolfe, Ordinary Days, University of Memphis
  • Jenni Propst, R & J & Z, University of Memphis

Lighting Design for a Play

  • Haley Northington, Torch Song, Circuit Playhouse
  • Mandy Kay Heath, American Son, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Mandy Kay Heath, Cicada, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Mandy Kay Heath, The Secret Garden, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Mandy Kay Heath, You Can’t Take It With You, Theatre Memphis

Lighting Design for a Musical

  • Justin Gibson, Smokey Joe’s Cafe, Playhouse on the Square
  • Mandy Kay Heath, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis
  • Mandy Kay Heath, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Mandy Kay Heath, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
  • Melissa Andrews, Shockheaded Peter, New Moon Theatre

Sound Design for College

  • Andrew Boone, The Wolves, University of Memphis
  • Anna Johnson, R & J & Z,  University of Memphis
  • Micki McCormick, A Bright Room Called Day, University of Memphis

Sound Design for a Play

  • David Newsome, Cicada, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Jason Eschhofen, The Secret Garden, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Jason Eschhofen, Torch Song, Circuit Playhouse
  • Joe Johnson, American Son, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Marques Brown, Clue: Onstage, Germantown Community Theatre

Sound Design for a Musical

  • Eileen Kuo, Bright Star, Germantown Community Theatre
  • Gene Elliott, Shockheaded Peter, New Moon Theatre
  • Jason Eschhofen, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
  • Nathan Greene, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Nathan Greene, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis

Music Direction for College

  • Angelo Rapan, Pippin, University of Memphis
  • Tracy Thomas, Ordinary Days, University of Memphis

Music Direction for a Musical

  • Gary Beard, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis
  • Jason Eschhofen, Smokey Joe’s Cafe, Playhouse on the Square
  • Jeff Brewer, Hello, Dolly!, Theatre Memphis
  • Jeff Brewer, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Tammy Holt, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis

Choreography for College

  • Michael Medcalf, The Wolves, University of Memphis
  • Sean Carter, R & J & Z, University of Memphis

Choreography for a Musical

  • Courtney Oliver, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
  • Daniel Stuart Nelson, Smokey Joe’s Cafe, Playhouse on the Square
  • Kathy Thiele, The Addams Family, Harrell Theatre
  • Travis Bradley and Jordan Nichols, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Whitney Branan, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis
  • Whitney Branan, Shockheaded Peter, New Moon Theatre

Featured Performer in a College Production

  • One nominee

Featured Performer in a Play

  • Anne Marie Caskey, Cicada, Theatre Memphis
  • Eileen Peterson, The Secret Garden, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Hiawartha Jackson, Our Town, Theatre Memphis
  • Lance Raikes, Torch Song, Circuit Playhouse
  • Susan Brindley, You Can’t Take It With You, Theatre Memphis

Featured Performer in a Musical

  • Atam Woodruff, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Atam Woodruff, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
  • Cassie Thompson, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Jimmie Hoxie, Bright Star, Germantown Community Theatre
  • John Brenton Strauss, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Susan Brindley, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis

Supporting Actor in a College Production 

  • Austin Wall, R & J & Z, University of Memphis
  • Jasper Lane Pippin, A Bright Room Called Day, University of Memphis
  • Lance Raikes, R & J & Z, University of Memphis
  • Oscar Garcia, Pippin, University of Memphis

Supporting Actor in a Play

  • Gregory Boller, The Lifespan of a Fact, Circuit Playhouse
  • Marcus Cox, American Son, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Mark Pergolizzi, A Doll’s House, Part 1, Circuit Playhouse
  • Steve Swift, Cicada, Theatre Memphis
  • Tony Isbell, Outside Mullingar, Germantown Community Theatre

Supporting Actor in a Musical

  • JD Willis, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • JD Willis, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis
  • Kevar Maffitt, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Marcus King, Porgy and Bess, Hattiloo Theatre
  • Mateo Rueda Calvo, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis

Supporting Actress in a College Production

  • Ali Milan, The Wolves, The University of Memphis
  • Axum Langford, A Bright Room Called Day, The University of Memphis
  • Camille Long, R & J & Z, The University of Memphis
  • Jada Farmer, The Wolves, The University of Memphis

Supporting Actress in a Play

  • Ann Marie Hall, Torch Song, Circuit Playhouse
  • Ann Marie Hall, The Lifespan of a Fact, Circuit Playhouse
  • Cecelia Wingate, Cicada, Theatre Memphis
  • Daneka Norfleet, Mississippi Goddamn, Circuit Playhouse
  • Patsy Detroit, A Doll’s House, Part 2, Circuit Playhouse

Supporting Actress in a Musical

  • Cassie Thompson, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
  • Carly Crawford, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
  • Dawn Bradley, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Emily Garrett, Bright Star, Germantown Community Theatre
  • Tracy Thomas, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis

Ensemble in a College Production

  • Ordinary Days, The University of Memphis
  • Pippin, The University of Memphis
  • The Wolves, The University of Memphis

Ensemble in a Play

  • American Son, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Cicada, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Mississippi Goddamn, Circuit Playhouse
  • The Complete History of America, Abridged, Germantown Community Theatre
  • Torch Song, Circuit Playhouse

Ensemble in a Musical

  • Porgy & Bess, Hattiloo Theatre
  • Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Shockheaded Peter, New Moon Theatre
  • Smokey Joe’s Cafe, Playhouse on the Square
  • Urinetown, Theatre Memphis

Leading Actor in a College Production

  • Lance Raikes, Pippin, The University of Memphis
  • Will Draper, R & J & Z, The University of Memphis

Leading Actor in a Play

  • Emmanuel McKinney, The Mountaintop, Hattiloo Theatre
  • JS Tate, Mississippi Goddamn, Circuit Playhouse
  • Kevar Maffitt, Torch Song, Circuit Playhouse
  • Kinon Keplinger, American Son, Theatre Memphis
  • Luke Conner, Cicada, Theatre Memphis

Leading Actor in a Musical

  • Andrew Chandler, Shockheaded Peter, New Moon Theatre
  • Bruce Huffman, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
  • John Maness, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Jonathan Christian, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis
  • Justin Allen Tate, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Randall Hartzog, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis
  • Ryan Scott, Shockheaded Peter, New Moon Theatre

Leading Actress in a College Production

  • Aly Milan, R & J & Z, The University of Memphis
  • Raina Williams, A Bright Room Called Day, The University of Memphis

Leading Actress in a Play

  • Alice Rainey Berry, Cicada, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Anne Marie Caskey, The Goodbye Levee, POTS@TheWorks
  • Eileen Peterson, A Doll’s House, Parts 1 & 2, Circuit Playhouse
  • Jessica “Jai” Johnson, American Son, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Jessica “Jai” Johnson, Mississippi Goddamn, Circuit Playhouse

Leading Actress in a Musical

  • Caroline Simpson, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
  • Debbie Litch, Hello, Dolly!, Theatre Memphis
  • Deborah Manning Thomas, Marie & Rosetta, Hattiloo Theatre
  • Emily Draffen, Bright Star, Germantown Community Theatre
  • Haley Wilson, A Closer Walk With Patsy Cline, Playhouse on the Square
  • Jazmin Snowden, Porgy and Bess, Hattiloo Theatre
  • Lauren Duckworth, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis

Best Original Script

  • Ivanka vs. Reality, Theatreworks@ the Square
  • May We All, Playhouse on the Square
  • The Goodbye Levee, Theatreworks@ the Square
  • The Secret Garden, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Tumbling Down, Hattiloo

Direction of a College Production

  • Holly Derr, The Wolves, University of Memphis
  • Jamie Warrow, A Bright Room Called Day, University of Memphis
  • Thomas “TeKay” King, Ordinary Days, University of Memphis

Direction of a Play

  • Dave Landis, Torch Song, Circuit Playhouse
  • Jared Thomas Johnson, American Son,  Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Jason Spitzer, The Secret Garden, Theatre Memphis
  • Jerre Dye, Cicada, Theatre Memphis
  • Lawrence Blackwell, Mississippi Goddamn, Circuit Playhouse

Direction of a Musical

  • Ann Marie Hall, Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
  • Cecelia Wingate, La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis
  • Daniel Stuart Nelson, Smokey Joe’s Cafe, Playhouse on the Square
  • Kevin Cochran, Shockheaded Peter, New Moon Theatre
  • Travis Bradley and Jordan Nichols, Ragtime, Theatre Memphis

Best College Production

  • A Bright Room Called Day, University of Memphis
  • R & J & Z, University of Memphis
  • The Wolves, University of Memphis

Best Production of a Play

  • American Son, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis
  • Cicada, Theatre Memphis
  • Mississippi Goddamn, Circuit Playhouse
  • The Secret Garden, Theatre Memphis
  • Torch Song, Circuit Playhouse

Best Production of a Musical

  • La Cage aux Folles, Theatre Memphis
  • Ragtime, Theatre Memphis
  • Smokey Joe’s Cafe, Playhouse on the Square
  • Shockheaded Peter, New Moon Theatre
  • Urinetown, Theatre Memphis
Categories
Theater Theater Feature

Andy Saunders to Receive Theater Award

Andy Saunders has given much of his life to the local theater community and people are taking notice.

The performer, designer, director, and teacher has been part of the scene since coming to the then-Memphis State University as a graduate student in the 1960s. That half-century-plus of devotion will be recognized at the upcoming Memphis Ostrander Awards when he will be given the 2021 Eugart Yerian Award for Lifetime Achievement.

The Ostranders primarily recognize a year’s worth of excellence in local theater productions and this year’s winners will be announced on Sunday, August 29th, at the Halloran Centre. The exception to next month’s big reveal is the lifetime achievement honor named for the director of the Memphis Little Theatre (now Theatre Memphis) from 1929 to 1961.

The announcement from the Ostranders organization said Saunders has been “an indispensable presence in the Memphis theater community. … Onstage, Saunders is celebrated not only for his nuanced and charismatic acting style but also for his beautiful, operatic singing voice.”

Saunders has directed shows around town and was at Memphis University School where he taught science, speech, religion, astronomy, photography, mechanical writing, and theater production. He also produced more than 135 shows at the school during his 38-year career before retiring in 2010.

Since his retirement, he’s designed and built dozens of shows at Germantown Community Theatre. GCT executive director Brian Everson says Saunders is the “ultimate volunteer, professional, artist, and friend. GCT, in so many ways, would not be possible without Andy.”

Tickets for the Ostranders are on sale here.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Marriage Proposal, Memorials Steal the Show: Ostranders, 2018

Dawwwwww! (From the 2016 Ostranders).

Laughter, tears, goosebumps, the uncontrollable urge to dance, and the undeniable need to stretch: This year’s Ostrander Awards packed in an entire theater season’s worth of feels, including big surprises and the occasional jot of dismay. This year’s event boasted more (and better) musical numbers, with a bigger band and better production than Ostranders past.

What began in 1984 as a simple act of handing out play prizes, is now a proper mini-festival where theater makers and theater lovers can spend a few more hours with favorite shows from the past season, and sample the best work being created by top artists working in Memphis area playhouses. This year’s audience was treated to heartfelt, heart-stopping, rafter-shattering samples from Falsettos, Dream Girls, The Wild Party, Fun Home, Violet, Shrek, Once, and The Drowsy Chaperone.

A memorial for local performing artists who’ve died in the past year turned the crowd into a sobbing mess. 

Marriage Proposal, Memorials Steal the Show: Ostranders, 2018

This year’s host-free version of the Ostrander Awards took several tentative steps forwards in terms of packing in fun content and letting Memphis’ theatrical talent really show off for itself. People who do shows don’t always get to see shows, and it’s hard to overstate the revival-like affirmation of being in room filled with actors, singers, hoofers, writers, and musicians all together for the first time hearing Breyannah Tillman cut loose with “And I Am Telling You,” or falling into a stunned hush when the cast of Once hammers out a ragged Irish ballad. But between the singing and all the dancing, and the surprises, this was still a show desperately in need of an editor. 

Dreamgirls at the Ostranders

C‘mon, folks! Excluding a modest acceptance address by lifetime achievement honoree Tony Isbell, every speech and award citation would have improved with distillation. Actors may love a meaty monologue, it’s true, but when it comes to telling this night’s story well, in a reasonable amount of time, a deft sentence or two composed for speakers rather than readers, is more effective than detailed paragraphs rattled off imprecisely at a breakneck pace.

I’ll attempt an example.

The 2018 Ostrander for “Oh No You Didn’t” goes to Chase Ring. Ring upstaged everybody (including lifetime achievement honoree Tony Isbell!), when he took a knee and proposed to co-presenter, Ellen Inghram. Congratulations and raised eyebrows are both in order.

Scene stealer! Yeah, it’s a terrible, blurry photo, but it’s the best shot I got of Chase Ring proposing to co-presenter Ellen Inghram on the Orpheum stage at the 2018 Ostrander Awards.

I‘m kidding about the raised eyebrows part. And the part about giving Chase the business for being a spotlight-hogging scene thief. Mostly. But congratulations really are in order. It was lovely, and an awesome moment to share with a community that’s experienced a good deal of crisis and loss in the past 12 months. Also, any citation longer than the one above my super blurry photo of Chase and Ellen showing us what perfect storybook romance looks like, is probably too much.

Members of the cast of Once offer a lesson in ensemble performance.

I‘ll have one last report about this year’s Ostrander awards in the October issue of Memphis magazine. Until then — and until next year for Intermission Impossible’s annual Ostrander coverage — I’ll leave you with this picture of Justin Asher loving life. In Shrek ears. 

Shrek & Donkey.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Jitney, Fun Home Take Top Honors: Ostrander Winners, 2018

Fun Home at Playhouse on the Square

This season, Hattiloo completed August Wilson’s entire century-cycle with a first-rate production of Jitney, Wilson’s requiem for gypsy cab drivers working Pittsburgh’s Hill District. In the musical category, Ostrander liked Playhouse on the Square’s Fun Home, a sophisticated musical adaptation of comic book artist Alison Bechdel’s traumatic childhood. 

College Division

Set Design
The Wild Party – Brian Ruggaber, U of M

Costume Design
The Secret in the Wings – Becca Bailey, U of M

Lighting Design
The Secret in the Wings – Nicholas F. Jackson

Music Direction
Nine – Jason Eschhofen, U of M

Choreography
Nine – Jill Guyton Nee

Supporting Actress in a Drama
Five Women Wearing the Same Dress – Hiawartha Jackson, Southwest

Leading Actress in a Drama
The Servant of Two Masters – Jordan Hartwell, U of M

Supporting Actor in a Drama
The Servant of Two Masters – Tyler Vernon

Leading Actor in a Drama
Theophilus North – Ryan Gilliam, McCoy Theatre, Rhodes

Supporting Actress in a Musical
Violet – Destiny Freeman, Rhodes/U of M co-production

Leading Actress in a Musical
Violet – Jenny Wilson

Supporting Actor in a Musical
Violet – Jason McCloud

Leading Actor in a Musical
Violet – Deon’ta White

Featured/Cameo Role
Violet – Jaylon Jazz McCraven

Large Ensemble
Nine – The entire cast of ladies

Small Ensemble
Five Women Wearing the Same Dress – Ciara Campbell, Jhona Gipson, Rashidah Gardner, Mary Ann Washington, Hiawartha Jackson

Excellence in Direction of a Drama
The Servant of Two Masters – Danica Horton

Excellence in Direction of a Musical
Violet – Karissa Coady

Best Production
Violet

Ostrander Nominees and Award Winners 2018 Community and Professional Division

Excellence in Set Design
Tim McMath, Fun Home, Playhouse on the Square

Excellence in Costume Design
Amie Eoff, Shrek, Theatre Memphis Joey Miller

Shrek at Theatre Memphis

Excellence in Props Design
Betty Dilley, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Germantown Community Theatre

Excellence in Hair/Wig/Makeup Design
Buddy Hart, Rence Phillips, Charles McGowan, Shrek

Excellence in Sound Design
Joe Johnson, Eurydice, New Moon Theatre Company

Excellence in Lighting Design
Zo Haynes, Fun Home

Excellence in Music Direction
Jeffrey Brewer, Drowsy Chaperone, Theatre Memphis

Falsettos, Next Stage, Theatre Memphis

Excellence in Choreography
Travis Bradley & Jordan Nichols, Drowsy Chaperone

Best Supporting Actress in a Drama
Erin Shelton, All Saints in the Old Colony, POTS@TheWorks
Jessica “Jai” Johnson, Ruined, Hattiloo

Best Leading Actress in a Drama
Maya Geri Robinson, Ruined

Best Supporting Actor in a Drama
John Maness, All Saints in the Old Colony

Best Leading Actor in a Drama
Greg Boller, All Saints in the Old Colony

Best Supporting Actress in a Musical
Carla McDonald, Fun Home

Best Leading Actress in a Musical
Breyannah Tillman, Dreamgirls, Playhouse on the Square

Best Supporting Actor in a Musical
Napoleon Douglas, Dreamgirls

Best Leading Actor in a Musical
Justin Asher, Shrek

Best Featured Performer in a Drama
Jamel “JS” Tate, Jitney, Hattiloo

Best Featured Performer in a Musical
Annie Freres, Shrek
Carla McDonald

All Saints in the Old Colony: Greg Boller, John Maness

Ensemble
Falsettos

Excellence in Direction of a Drama
Jeff Posson, All Saints in the Old Colony

Best Production of a Drama
Jitney

Excellence in Direction of a Musical
Dave Landis, Fun Home

Best Production of a Musical
Fun Home

Gypsy Award
Christi Hall

Larry Riley Rising Star
Breyannah Tillman

Behind the Scenes
Andy Saunders.

Best Original Script
All Saints in the Old Colony POTS@TheWorks

Best Production of an Original Script
All Saints in the Old Colony

Annie Freres in Shrek

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Tony Isbell Awarded Eugart Yerian Award for Lifetime Achievement in Memphis Theater

Tony Isbell is Krapp. I mean that in the best possible sense.

In the Ostrander Awards first year of existence Tony Isbell was one of two actors nominated in the Best Actor category. He lost. Oh well. He’d be nominated many more times and win his share of play prizes. Now, after 40 years working in Memphis as an actor, director, producer, sometimes writer and occasional cult movie star, Isbell is being honored with the Eugart Yerian award for lifetime achievement.

Isbell will be honored at the Orpheum Theatre this Sunday evening when the Memphis theater community converges at the corner of Main & Beale for Memphis’ annual theater awards, The Ostranders.

Memphis Flyer: Origin stories are a good place to start. And we’ve talked about this before because, like me, you moved here from rural Middle Tennessee.

Tony Isbell: West Tennessee.

Yes, West Tennessee. But you didn’t exactly grow up in an urban environment.

I was born in Union City and lived in a 10-mile radius of Union City and Martin until we moved to Memphis. That would have been 1978. So at this point I’ve lived more of my life in Memphis than where I’m from originally.

Tony Isbell in ‘Red’

Was theater something available to you?

No. That’s a very short answer. No. I used to say the first play I ever saw I was in. The University of Tennessee at Martin is there. And I’m sure they were doing [theater there]. But when I was a kid was a long time ago. Union City was maybe 10,000 people when I was a kid. Martin was maybe 3-4000. Something like that. So this was a small agricultural community, basically. I didn’t see theater. I saw a lot of stuff on TV of course. And at that time, there was still some stuff that was kind of like live theater. Even when I was in elementary school and junior high, there were no productions in the schools.

What were your creative outlets?

I don’t know if you can classify this is creative, but… For my family, who I love, I probably seem like an alien. I love to read. And I’d read practically anything when I was a kid. But when I discovered things that were like science fiction and fantasy and stuff that today would be called magical realism, I truly fell in love. Those were the kinds of things that I loved almost from the minute I began to read. Some of the earliest books that I remember — I can’t remember the titles — but they were Norse mythology and all that stuff about the Norse gods. Mythology in general. So anything that had a kind of flavor of the fantastic.

I did watch a lot of TV. Probably more than was good for me. But I used to pester anybody I could to read to me. They would laugh at me. In a good way. I was especially fascinated by the comics in the newspaper and I always wanted to know what does this cloud say. What does this cloud say. The act of reading just fascinated me and in Elementary School I got in trouble for reading too much. That sounds crazy, I know. We had assigned days when we could go to the school library. I’d find books that I wanted to read and we go back to class and we were supposed to do something else and I’d hold the book under the desktop and begin reading it immediately and just lose myself completely. I remember one time when the teacher called on me and I was totally in another world.

I do remember being fascinated by television when I was still fairly young, and asking I don’t know if it was my father or who it was. See, I understood the people on TV were actors. I didn’t think Gunsmoke was really happening. But it suddenly struck me — how did they know what to say? “Well, somebody writes it,” I was told. I thought that was so cool. So when I was really young I thought maybe I would be a writer. And I wrote some stuff.

You still do, don’t you?

I haven’t written anything in a long time. I wrote some things for Chatterbox. But I thought I might be a writer. I enjoyed reading too much to be a writer if that makes sense. I still get ideas and I get inspired and I start reading about things I want to do and… well…

Other than that, I grew up in a very rural environment. My grandparents had a farm. They had some dairy cows. And I would spend summers with them, not even 10 miles from where my folks lived. Both my parents worked. My mother was a factory worker. Real working class sort of thing. My dad drove a truck. He drove trucks pretty much his whole life. Not like semis but like local delivery trucks and things like that.

Tony Isbell Awarded Eugart Yerian Award for Lifetime Achievement in Memphis Theater


Did you act things out? Or were you a class clown?

No. I was incredibly shy. And in many ways, I still am. But I was not the class clown or anything like that. If anything, I wanted people not to notice me. It goes back to that reading thing. I would get so involved in reading and watching shows. So caught up in that, it almost seemed like I lost track of what was going on in the real world around me. My mother was worried about me reading so much. She was really concerned that I wasn’t getting enough sunshine and fresh air and stuff. I told you before about how one time she made me give away all of my comic books. Oh my God it broke my heart. I had Spider-Man #1. She made me get rid of it. I think I got a nickel for it. It’s worth what now? $100,000 or something? Something crazy. My mother in particular was really concerned about me reading all that science fiction. She thought it was bad for me. And she didn’t know anything about it, I don’t think. She just saw the lurid covers on the paperbacks and magazines. She thought it was bad for my brain

Did you come to Memphis for school?

I went to undergraduate school at Martin. Marie and I actually got married there. In Union City. We moved to Memphis so she could go to graduate school to get her Masters. We weren’t really planning to stay here. We didn’t think much beyond her getting her Masters. She’s a speech pathologist. She works and has worked for the state of Tennessee for almost 30 years.

When did you start doing theater?

High school. And there are two people I can point to that got me into theater. One was an English teacher named Harriet Beeler. She taught English but at some point she got certified to teach speech. So she had to take some extra courses at the University at UT-Martin, which happened to be right there. One of the courses she ended up taking was a directing class. So, for her final, all the students had to direct a short play and she approached me. I don’t know why. I guess I was a good English student. She asked about doing a small role and I’d never done anything like that before, but for some reason, something in me just immediately responded. With fear and also extreme interest. So I said okay.

Isbell and Ellis in True West.

I would have been a sophomore or junior at this time. The play was this – oh my God, like the worst Lifetime movie you’ve ever seen. Big tearjerker. I don’t remember the author but it was called The Valiant and it was about this guy who was in prison for murdering a man basically because he needed murdering. I wasn’t playing that role, I was playing a role that had about two lines. A prison guard. Beeler cast a football player to play the hero because she thought he looked right. He was very popular. Well, he didn’t come to the first rehearsal. There had been some mixup or something. But then he didn’t come to the second one. Just didn’t show up. So, I don’t know if it was the second or third time he missed that she says, “Well, maybe I think he doesn’t want to do this play.” By this point, I wanted to play that role so bad. But I was too scared to say anything. So she said, “I’m going to ask Andy to do it.” Andy was another guy in the show playing a guard. And Andy was a nice guy, but he could barely say the lines. So, after about 5 minutes of him struggling with the words she said, “Maybe we should let Tony do this.” Whatever else I may not have had, I was able to read things out loud really well and that was all she needed. She was like, “Oh good you can do it.” So I ended up doing that for the directing class and to this day I can remember how I felt before I went on stage. I was 16 or 17 and I was waiting backstage and my heart was pounding. I think I was actually afraid something bad was going to happen to me because my heart was beating so hard.

So, we went out there and did it and when it was over and we got to take a bow there was such an adrenaline and endorphin rush I literally felt high. Like I was on drugs of some kind. It was unbelievable. I’d never felt like that or imagined anything like that. It was just crazy. I was wearing this grey shirt and I had sweated so much I was wet from my elbow all the way down to my hip. I’d never done anything like that before either. I couldn’t believe it. I must have been a junior because the next year we moved to a new high school, they built a new high school. And I wound up starring in the senior play which was the first senior play we’d ever done since I’d been in that school.

With Deborah Harrison in Fool for Love.

Then I went to UT Martin and studied theater with Bill Snyder all four years I was there and did lots of acting and directing. He was an interesting guy. He was from originally from Memphis but went to Yale and was a couple of years ahead of Bennett Wood who also went to Yale. So they knew each other or knew of each other. Then he went to New York. His real thing was playwriting, he was a playwright and had a minor success Off Broadway with a play called The Days and Nights of Beebee Fenstermaker. Which is partially set in Memphis and partially set in New York. It opened the same season Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf and was one of the first acting jobs for Robert Duvall. Bill Snyder was friends with Robert Duvall and Dustin Hoffman and ended up going to Actors Studio for a while. Everything he taught at Martin was extremely Actors Studio based. it was interesting because, when he would direct we would improvise everything. You know, doing it without the dialogue. He’d say, “Okay, you’re doing the play now but don’t worry about getting the words. Just get what’s going on.” It could be helpful. He hardly ever gave us blocking; all of that evolved out of the improvisation.

The show I felt like I made my really big breakthrough on was the production of Marat/Sade, which I would actually like to direct someday.

Me too, but I don’t see that happening.

I love that show. And it’s not really done. It’s like nobody does it anymore and I think it’s just as relevant now as it was back then.

Somehow that doesn’t seem like a very Actors Studio kind of play.

I never knew why he picked any of the plays that he did.

Who did you play in that?

I played The Herald. And improvising all that stuff in the insane asylum was incredibly freeing for me. I’ve told people before, and it sounds goofy. But there was one night in particular when I felt like all my my previous acting had been in a dark room and then somebody turned on the lights. It’s hard to explain. I’ve talked to other actors and they said they never had a moment like that. But it was like I understood what acting was supposed to be like. It wasn’t just saying lines. All of a sudden I was connected emotionally and I really understood the difference, I think. From that point on I was able to access it

So, after college you move to Memphis. What was the theater scene like when you arrived here? Was it welcoming?

Yes. Well, a qualified yes. When I arrived here it seemed like the only places to do theater were Circuit Playhouse and Theatre Memphis. Playhouse on the Square had either just started or was about to start. I came down from Martin a few times to see shows at Circuit. This is when it was still over on Poplar across from Overton Park. A tiny little theater.

I’d heard it was harder to get into Theatre Memphis. At that time, Circuit was doing the kinds of shows I was more interested in. So, for the first eight, nine, or ten years – I don’t know – I didn’t do any shows at Theatre Memphis. It was mostly Circuit because they did the more interesting plays for me. Also, the theater either owned or rented a house and, in the attic there was literally a space called called The Attic Theater that held, I’m not kidding you, maybe 10 seats. Maybe 12 seats. And that’s where I did some of my first stuff in Memphis, because anybody could do anything in The Attic. I did some original scripts there. All you had to do was say, “Hey, I want to do this.”

With Mark Pergolizzi in As Is.

The first play I did on a main stage was American Buffalo at Circuit. I played Bobby the kid. That was the first show I did there. It’s a wonderful show. It was the Christmas show — to literally let you know how much things have changed. I can’t remember the exact dates but it ran like December into January.

So this is my first show in Memphis really. Alan Mullikan played the shop owner and Jim Palmer played Teach. And the review was mixed to bad. It was Bob Jennings who hated any kind of thing like that anyway. Didn’t like foul language. So this was not a good show for him to see. I remember his opening of that review and it was the first time I’ve ever been reviewed in the newspaper the opening with something like… Wait. Did American Buffalo win the Pulitzer Prize or was it just nominated.

I don’t think it won. But maybe.

Maybe it was just nominated.

Glengarry Glen Ross won a Pulitzer. American Buffalo won a Tony. But maybe it won the Pulitzer, I hate that I have such a terrible memory for these things. *

Maybe it won. Or was nominated. Because, the opening of the review was something like, “The American Pulitzer committee, whether it should or not, has seen fit to award the Pulitzer Prize for drama to American Buffalo and Circuit Playhouse, whether it should or not, has seen fit to produce it.”

Oh wow. That’s really something.

He didn’t like it at all. He said something about me to the effect of “Tony Isbell, as Bobby, the mentally retarded young thug, doesn’t seem to be acting. He simply is the part.” He didn’t mean that in a good way. That was my first review.

So you wind up staying in Memphis.
It just kind of happened that we ended up staying. I never seriously thought about going to New York or Los Angeles because, frankly, I wanted to be able to do a lot of theater. I didn’t want to spend most of my time hustling auditions for shows that you don’t get. Then Marie got a pretty good job here and I ended up going to Memphis State and getting an MFA in theater because I thought I might go back to Martin to teach. But that didn’t happen, so we just ended up staying here and over the years I’ve gotten to do tons and tons of theater, which is what I wanted to do. And a little film and TV here and there. As far as being a professional, I just didn’t want to face all that. It had no appeal to me.

You bring up film and TV so maybe we should talk a little bit about “I Was a Zombie for the FBI?”

Oh, I loved that. That’s when I was working on my Master’s. I was actually approached by Marius Penczner, who was the director. He said, “Hey I’m going to be making this movie.” And I didn’t know who he was. He had seen me in some theater stuff and thought I’d make a good villain. Especially a space alien. I don’t know if this is true but he said he wrote the part with me in mind because he thought I had a cool demeanor that would work really well.

When I signed on I told everybody that I worked during the day and we’d have to work around that. Well, damned if I didn’t get laid off my job a week or two later. Then I saw the shooting schedule and was like, “I couldn’t have done this if I still had my job.” It was kind of good in that way. We shot for several weeks. Five or six weeks. Maybe a little longer.

And this launches on cable with Attack of the Killer Tomatoes or something like that, right?

They had a premiere at Ardent Studios. They set up all these big screens because there wasn’t one auditorium big enough for all the people. There were five or six rooms they set up chairs in and you could watch on big TV screens. 20-30 people to a room. Then it actually played on Channel 5 a couple of months later. It ended up playing on the USA Network’s Up All Night. I think it was in rotation with Attack of the Killer Tomatoes and they’d play it every four to six months.

Greatest hits: What are some of your favorite shows you’ve worked on?

Some of my favorite shows I’ve acted in? The Dresser at Circuit. I played Norman and it was the first year they had Ostrander awards. Myself and Jay Ehrlicher were nominated for best actor and I lost.

Jay was nominated for playing Salieri in Amadeus?

Yes, Amadeus. Also, I did Fool for Love. I loved that play. Still love that play. I got a lot of nominations in the early years. And in the later years too. It sounds like bragging, but I got nominated a lot. Acting more than directing. And I did True West a few years later at Theatre Memphis.

With Chris Ellis.

Yes. I directed Memphis’ premiere of Prelude to a Kiss and wouldn’t mind directing that again.

I like that Craig Lucas.

I did the other show of his— the Christmas Show…

Not Blue Window. Reckless!

Yes, Reckless. Loved that show.

This is all main stage stuff more or less, but you’ve also always done independent work too. Like you said you worked in the Attic. But you also produced a show in the basement at First Congo Church long before there was a theater in the basement of First Congo Church.

Thais.

Yes, Thais. And now you have a company for doing independent work. Tell me a little about Quark.

It came about as a kind of joke. I made a joke on Facebook about Krapp’s Last Tape. There’s a line in the play, “I’ve just eaten two bananas and was only able to just keep myself from eating a third.” Or something like that. I made that joke about donuts because I had, that morning, eaten three or four donuts. Adam got the reference. I knew he was a Beckett fan. He wrote his masters thesis on Beckett and he was the one person who responded with the correct line. In a post on Facebook I said it’s the one play I want to act in rather than direct and he said, “Well, let’s.” It turned out to be such a good experience. Such positive feedback from people. Even from people I didn’t think would care for it. A few months after the show I asked Adam, how about we do this on regular basis? Just a couple of shows a year.

We’re both nerdy, so we named the company Quark. Building blocks of the universe. And that’s what we want to focus on. We started with Beckett then looked at maybe doing some Pinter and said, “Maybe we want to do new things. Or things that haven’t been done here. So we started looking for new work that engages the intellect a well as emotions.

Bye, bye, Blackbird.


I love good design and I’m not just saying that because I’m married to a designer. Good, thoughtful design — which doesn’t have to be extravagant or expensive — elevates everything. But I also love work that strips everything away but the barest essentials. That’s what I love about Quark.

I wanted to get down to just the actors, the audience, and the script and let the rest be bare minimum. The main things I’m concerned with are the actors and audience. The space, the audience, the performers and what happens between them is what’s most interesting to me.

*American Buffalo did not win the Pulitzer though playwright David Mamet was confident it would. It won 3 Tony awards and the New York Drama Circle’s Award for Best New American Play. 

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Ostranders 2018: Picks, Pans, and “Who Got ROBBED?!?!”

Maness 4-ways.

You know what? As long as John Maness wins something, I don’t care about anything else this year. If the Ostrander committee misses all the rest by miles and miles, I’ll be satisfied for the ounce of justice done. Because … holy crap! After this season, the O-committee should consider a “John Maness hardest-working-person in Memphis Theater” trophy. With a roll-up-your-sleeves work ethic married to the soul of a magician and escape artist, he hammers out one unique character after another and vanishes inside them. I mean, who the hell does this guy think he is, Erin Shelton?

Nevertheless, the time has come, once again, for shade to be cast and predictions made in regard to this year’s crop of nominees and nominees that might have been if only the universe wasn’t so frequently unfair. It’s the season when the Intermission Impossible team wonders what it is our tireless, too human Ostrander judges might be smoking. When we ask the one question on every right-thinking thespian’s mind — “WHO GOT ROBBED?”

I want to see J. David Galloway take home the set design for New Moon’s lovely, immersive, and necessarily inventive design for Eurydice. I’ve been frustrated in the past by designers who quote or wink at surrealism when what’s needed is something approaching the real thing. Not every aspect of Galloway’s design was as dreamy as it might have been, but the microbudget masterpiece engaged imaginations, enabling the kind of stage magic money can’t buy.
[pullquote-1] That said, bigger, better-funded companies still have advantages in design categories and I suspect the judges may prefer Jack Yates’ outstanding work on The Drowsy Chaperone or the ordinary otherworldliness of Tim McMath’s design for Fun Home at Playhouse on the Square.

But what about the eye-candy that was An Act of God (also Yates)? What about 12 Angry Jurors, an environment so real yet another confounded patron tried to use the onstage bathroom (also Yates)? If it sounds like I’m arguing for more Jack Yates nominations, maybe I am. But I’m also making a case that there’s been some good design this season, and given a different set of sensibilities, this category might have swung another direction entirely. There might have been nods for the elegant emptiness of Bryce Cutler’s Once, at Playhouse on the Square, or the grubby, unfussy realism of Phillip Hughen’s design for The Flick at Circuit Playhouse. I look forward to seeing how this category evolves as New Moon continues to mature, and smaller Memphis’ companies leverage thoughtfulness against more tangible resources. 

Falsettos.

It’s wrong that Mandy Heath wasn’t nominated for lighting Falsettos but I can live with the slight as long as she wins the prize for Eurydice. That’s really all I have to say about that.

Once is a stunt musical — and what a terrific stunt! It’s part concert, part narrative drama, with the actors doubling down as their own orchestra. The three-chord score’s not Sondheim but casting players who are also, well… players isn’t easy. And pulling off a piece musical theater where the songs feel more like barroom romps than show tunes, requires a different kind of sophistication. I suspect the thrice-nominated Nathan McHenry will take this prize. He should take it for Once.

Who got robbed? Maybe nobody this year.

For excellence in sound design there are a few nominees, but really only one choice. Joe Johnson’s dreamy original score for Eurydice didn’t enhance the designed environment. It completed it.

I was happy to see choreographers Ellen Inghram and Jared Johnson nominated for the wit and wisdom permeating their work on Falsettos. It would be nice to see them win over the flashier entries in this category. No robberies here.

When it comes to the non-musicals, best female lead and supporting roles are almost always the toughest category to call because year after year they are overstuffed with contenders. While Kim Sanders was her usual perfect self in both A Perfect Arrangement and Laughter on the 23rd Floor, the double nomination in the supporting category may not double her odds against commanding, emotionally wrenching turns by Jessica “Jai” Johnson in Ruined and Erin Shelton in All Saints in the Old Colony. Kell Christie was the best Emelia I’ve ever seen and a perfect match for John Maness’ woman-hating Iago in New Moon’s Othello. Any other year Christie would be my #1 pick. She’s a longshot compared to Shelton and Johnson and I’m hard pressed to say who’s more deserving of the honor.

Opera 901 Showcase

Who got robbed? Although FEMMEemphis’ productions aren’t under consideration, basically the entire cast of Collective Rage. Quark’s similarly out of the running but in the young company’s very adult production of The Nether, young Molly McFarland stood shoulder to shoulder with grownup co-stars and delivered a brave, polished performance. As the youngest of the Weston daughters in Theatre Memphis’ tepid August: Osage County, Emily F. Chateau was damn near perfect — as fragile as Laura Wingfield’s glass unicorn and as likely to cut you if broken. ROBBED AS HELL!

Anne Marie Caskey does consistently professional work but she seemed miscast in Theatre Memphis’ not altogether successful production of August: Osage County. Ostrander loves Caskey (as do I) and her inclusion here might seem less bewildering if not for the absence of Michelle Miklosey’s pitch perfect Eurydice  Tracy Hansom’s good old fashioned curtain chew in Stage Kiss. Were I one of these two ladies, I’d take The Oblivains strong advice and call the police. Because, ROBBED! OMG ROBBED!

Some of the best female leads this season did their thing just outside Ostrander’s natural reach. Jillian Baron and Julia Baltz were equally badass in FEMMEmphis’ Desdemona: A Play About a Handkerchief. But let’s be real. All this talk of robbery is purely academic because each of these fantastic performances paled next to to Maya Geri Robinson’s larger-than-life depiction of a Congolese Mother Courage in Ruined at Hattiloo. And Robinson’s performance may have only been the season’s second best. I can’t say with any confidence that I’ve ever seen an actor own a show like Morgan Watson owned Sunset Baby, also at Hattiloo.

Emily F. Chateau. The F stands for F-ing ROBBED!

The list for Best Supporting Actor is strong. It’s so strong I’m picking Bertram Williams for Ruined even though I started this column cheering for John Maness in anything. The list of nominees might also have included nods to Jeff Kirwan for his performances in New Moon’s Buried Child, Eurydice or both. It’s worth noting (yet again) that every performance in All Saints in the Old Colony approached a personal best and Marques Brown was ROBBED!

I don’t know what the theater judges had against Buried Child but James Dale Green’s Dodge is a glaring best actor omission. So is Emmanuel McKinney, who gave a knockout performance as Muhammad Ali in the uneven Fetch Clay, Make Man. Both of these men should post on Nextdoor.com right away to let everybody know they were ROBBED! Once that’s been done, can we please all agree to give this year’s prize to John Maness? And can we go ahead make it for everything he touched this season? I say this with deep appreciation for and apologies to All Saints’ Greg Boller and Jitney’s Lawrence Blackwell who both delivered special, award-worthy performances in a season where the competition happened to be a little stiffer than usual.

I take it from the sheer number of nominations in the category of Best Supporting Actress in a Musical, the Ostrander judges liked Fun Home. Me too. But maybe not enough to give any category a near sweep. Especially when it might be appropriate to co-nominate Fun Home’s small and medium Alison in order to make room for Falsettos’ Jaclyn Suffel and/or Christina Hernandez who were both ROBBED!

Ostranders 2018: Picks, Pans, and ‘Who Got ROBBED?!?!’

A taste of Once‘s pre-show jam.
Like I said, Ostrander very clearly likes Fun Home this year with the odd exception of adult Alison, Joy Brooke-Fairfield. So, individual nominations aside, I’m predicting a joint win for the two Alisons. Of course Annie Freres was a force of nature as the title character in The Drowsy Chaperone. All else being equal, she was probably the most outstanding nominee in a field of outstanding nominees.

Best Female Lead in a Musical is a heartbreaker category because everybody nominated is ridiculously talented. Nobody in town has pipes like DreamgirlsBreyannah Tillman, who’s also proving to be a formidable actor. But Emily F. Chateau also had an amazing year and may have been better in Falsettos than she was in August: Osage County. Gia Welch is a precocious powerhouse. She was great in Chaperone, but might also have been nominated for work on 42nd Street or Heathers. Meanwhile, Once’s Lizzy Hinton and Shrek’s Lynden Lewis occupy opposite corners of this playing field. The former helped build a complete world out of song and mirrors.The later was almost buried in spectacle but made heart and soul so much more important than green makeup and ogre costumes.

Let me let you in on a secret: Like Lena Younger’s striving son Walter, Patricia Smith was ROBBED! She should have gotten a nod for her work in the musical adaptation of A Raisin in the Sun. I’m gonna talk about Raisin later on in this seemingly endless column, but frankly, that whole cast might want to call a personal injury attorney because they were dealt a disservice up front then ripped off by out appraisers!

Given all of Fun Home’s nominations in other categories, the omission of Joy Brooke-Fairfield feels oddly pointed. Fun Home’s a show that might challenge traditional gender divisions in these kinds of awards and when I didn’t see the older Alison included in this category, I so I double checked the whole list to make sure I wasn’t missing anything. But there was no Joy to be found anywhere, and that sentence is every bit as sad as it sounds. ROBBED!

I’d like to see Joshua Pierce win the Best Supporting Actor in a Musical category for Theatre Memphis’ superlative take on Falsettos. But I missed First Date and Dreamgirls this season and, truth be told, I don’t understand Shrek’s appeal. Too disoriented by this category to make a fair call. That almost never happens. Y’all tell me.

Best Leading Actor in a Musical is yet another heartbreaker category. Shrek’s never going to be my thing, but it’s very clearly Justin Asher’s, and he was a mighty fine ogre,  loving every second of big green stage time. Stephen Huff was so at home in Fun Home it’s now almost impossible for me to imagine anybody else in his role. And I kinda feel the same about Jason Spitzer’s near definitive take on The Drowsy Chaperone’s Man in Chair. But I’ve gotta say, having been underwhelmed by his pitchy turn in Heathers, I was most impressed by Conor Finnerty-Esmonde’s take on the hard-luck musician in Once. But when I filter out personal taste in music and storytelling and just let myself focus on the difficulty and potency of the performances represented here, one actor’s work really stands out. Villains are fun to play but nothing’s harder than a complex character who’s hard-to-like but can’t be allowed to become a villain. Cary Vaughn, in his finest of many fine performances, plowed through Falsettos like a steamroller. Still standing. Still applauding this entire cast.

Eurydice — Awfully good looking.

But what about Kortland Whalum? Where is his name? I’ll be the first to admit, Raisin was tragically underproduced. The scenic environment felt unfinished, and in an intimate space like Hattiloo, nothing sucks the soul from musical performances like warm bodies performing to cold tracks. But somehow, in spite of everything the actors had working against them, Raisin’s cast collectively overcame. I can’t blame the Ostrander for not rewarding the production, but when you factor in the odds against, no cast was more ROBBED than this one. I’ll brook zero argument: No actor deserves to this category half as much as Whalum. Folks are welcome to disagree on this point, but folks who do are flat wrong. ROBBED!

If Jamel “JS” Tate doesn’t win Best Featured Performer in a Drama for Jittny I’m personally calling in the FBI. Annie Freres is likely to win Best Featured in a musical for her flashy roll-on as the Dragon in Shrek. Or maybe it will go to Breyannah Tillman, who stuck the landing in her role as The Drowsy Chaperone’s show-stopping aviatrix. But James Dale Green stopped time with nothing but his weatherbeaten tenor, a strummed mandolin, and a compelling story to tell. That sounds like a winner to me. Who got Robbed? Once’s Chris Cotton, that’s who.

I’m totally happy if the Ensemble award goes to All Saints in the Old Colony, Falsettos, Fun Home, Jitney, or A Perfect Arrangement. All are deserving, though Jitney may be just a little bit more deserving than all the rest. But how in the blankety-blankblanblank did Once not make this list? The cast doesn’t just act together, they also make music together — acoustic music. Music largely unaided by electronics and amplification. Music so thoroughly human it connects past and future like a time machine made of skin, bone, wood and string. I’m happy if the award goes to any of the fantastic nominees, but no matter who wins the judges lose on this account. Once was the season’s ultimate ensemble show, and POTS’s ensemble crushed it. The pre-show hoedown was worth the price of admission. BOO!

As long as I’m complaining about the judges, OMG! Why is Tony Isbell nominated for excellence in direction of a drama for Death of a Streetcar Named Virginia Woolf? Don’t misunderstand, I come to praise this year’s lifetime achievement honoree, not to dis him. Isbell absolutely should have been nominated in this category, but for his work on The Nether (not eligible). Or his work on Years to the Day (also not eligible). Or maybe even his work on Stage Kiss (eligible and solid but fuck-you ignored). I’d go so far as to say he got ROBBED! in spite of bing nominated. This insubstantial work is a jarring inclusion next to Dr. Shondrika Moss-Bouldin’s unflinching approach to Ruined and the inventiveness of Jamie Boller’s Eurydice. Not to mention the hyper-detailed character development, and ensemble work Jeff Posson oversaw for All Saints in the Old Colony and the flawless world-building of Steve Broadnax’s Jitney. I’m calling this one for Posson, but it could go in almost any direction.

Best production of a drama? I like Jitney, though I’ve not pegged it as a winner in many other categories. Sometimes the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, and that’s the case here, though the parts were also quite good. Should All Saints in the Old Colony win, it’s every bit as deserving and, being a new script and the underdog here, maybe even more deserving.

I’m betting the darkhorse for excellence in Direction of a Musical and calling this one for Jerry Chipman and Falsettos. Everything else was bigger or flashier or more current in some way or another, even the stripped down Once. But life’s about balance, and Chipman’s production had nary a hair out of place that wasn’t supposed to be out of place.

Ostranders 2018: Picks, Pans, and ‘Who Got ROBBED?!?!’ (2)

Looking at the nominee spread, my gut tells me Fun Home was the judges’ favorite musical this season, and why wouldn’t it be? It was flawlessly cast, and beautifully performed. But this wasn’t the best work I’ve seen from director Dave Landis. I saw the performance with two companions. One wept openly, responding to the story and the characters. The other complained all the way home about the musical’s almost complete lack of action and visual/physical dynamics. I became the most unpopular person in the car when I said I thought they were both 100-percent right to feel the way they felt. Up to this point I’ve been #TeamFalsettos but I’m calling this one for Once. The other shows were great, but they were shows. Once was an event.

“Theaters not actively engaged in creating new material are passively engaged in their own obsolescence.” — Me.

Yeah, I totally quoted myself, but there’s not much I believe more than that. It’s one of the reasons I think the Ostrander Awards for Best Original Script and Best Production of an Original Script, may be more important than nice. In the future, judges might even consider beating the bushes a little on this front, and looking beyond the usual qualifying companies. All Saints in the Old Colony is a fantastic new script. It will win these categories, and it will know productions and awards beyond Memphis. But now would be a good time for all the folks who contributed words and music to Opera Memphis’ all-original 901 Opera Festival to cancel their credit cards because they have been ROBBED! OM might not be under consideration, but if we’re looking for superlatives, I can’t recall a more impressive example of new musical theater in the 901. Not 

Tony Isbell in ‘Red’

since OM’s 2014 production of Ghosts of Crosstown heralded the rebirth of a neighborhood.

That may not cover every category, but it’s all I’ve got for now. Who did I forget?

Also, stay tuned for a Q&A with lifetime achievement honoree Tony Isbell.

Categories
Theater Theater Feature

This year’s Ostrander Award nominees.

The 33rd Annual Ostrander Awards honoring excellence in Memphis theater will take place at the Orpheum Theatre Sunday, August 21st. Cocktails start at 6 p.m. The awards, hosted by Sister Myotis, begin promptly at 7. Tickets are $10.

The Ostranders are produced in partnership with Memphis magazine and ArtsMemphis. This season’s show sponsors are Dorothy O. Kirsch and Dr. Thomas Ratliff.

Eugart Yerian Lifetime Achievement Honorees: Jim and JoLynn Palmer

Community and Professional Division

Set Design

Justin Asher and Andy Saunders — A Streetcar Named Desire, Germantown Community Theatre

Bryce Cutler — Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

Melanie Mul — In the Heights, Hattiloo Theatre

Jack Yates — Into the Woods, Theatre Memphis

Jack Yates — The Producers, Theatre Memphis

Lighting

Jeremy Allen Fisher — Into the Woods, Theatre Memphis

Jeremy Allen Fisher — The Producers, Theatre Memphis

Zo Haynes — Peter and the Starcatcher, The Circuit Playhouse

John Horan — Billy Elliot, Playhouse on the Square

John Horan — Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

Costumes

Austin Conlee — A Streetcar Named Desire, Germantown Community Theatre

Amie Eoff — The Producers, Theatre Memphis

Rebecca Y. Powell — Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

Rebecca Y. Powell — Sister Act, Playhouse on the Square

Rebecca Y. Powell — The Matchmaker, Playhouse on the Square

Music Direction

Gary Beard — Into the Woods, Theatre Memphis

Thomas Bergstig — Billy Elliot, Playhouse on the Square

Thomas Bergstig — Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

Jeffery B. Brewer — The Producers, Theatre Memphis

Jason Eschhofen — Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Germantown Community Theatre

Sound Design

Zach Badreddine — Carrie the Musical, The Circuit Playhouse

Matt Cantelon — All The Way, Playhouse on the Square

Jason Eschhofen — Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Germantown Community Theatre

Jeremy Allen Fisher — Wait Until Dark, Theatre Memphis

David Newsome and Amanda Davis — Into the Woods, Theatre Memphis

Choreography

Geoffrey Goldberg — Billy Elliot, Playhouse on the Square

Patdro Harris — In the Heights, Hattiloo Theatre

Ellen Inghram — Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Germantown Community Theatre

Jared Thomas Johnson and Christi Hall — The Producers, Theatre Memphis

Jordan Nichols and Travis Bradley – Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

Supporting Actress in a Drama

Jessica “Jai” Johnson — Byhalia, MS, POTS@TheWorks

Michelle Miklosey — A Streetcar Named Desire, Germantown Community Theatre

Maggie Robinson — Peter and the Starcatcher, The Circuit Playhouse

Kim Sanders — The Other Place, The Circuit Playhouse

Morgan Watson — In the Red and Brown Water, Hattiloo Theatre

Supporting Actor in a Drama

Delvyn Brown — All the Way, Playhouse on the Square

David Foster — Peter and the Starcatcher, The Circuit Playhouse

Marc Gill — Byhalia, MS, POTS@TheWorks

Shadeed A. Salim — Radio Golf, Hattiloo Theatre

Christopher Tracy — A Streetcar Named Desire, Germantown Community Theatre

Leading Actress in a Drama

Jillian Barron — Byhalia, MS, POTS@TheWorks

Sarah Brown — Lettice & Lovage, New Moon Theatre Company

Natalie Jones — A Streetcar Named Desire, Germantown Community Theatre

Kim Justis — The Other Place, The Circuit Playhouse

Karen Mason Riss — Mothers & Sons, The Next Stage at Theatre Memphis

Leading Actor in a Drama

George Dudley — All the Way, Playhouse on the Square

John Moore — I Hate Hamlet, Germantown Community Theatre

Jordan Nichols — Buyer & Cellar, The Circuit Playhouse

Gregory Szatkowski — A Streetcar Named Desire, Germantown Community Theatre

Bertram Williams — Free Man of Color, Hattiloo Theatre

Supporting Actress in a Musical

Lorraine Cotten — Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

Jeanna Juleson — Billy Elliot, Playhouse on the Square

Carla McDonald — Carrie the Musical, The Circuit Playhouse

Kim Sanders — Billy Elliot, Playhouse on the Square

Montanez Shepherd — In the Heights, Hattiloo Theatre

Gia Welch — Into the Woods, Theatre Memphis

Supporting Actor in a Musical

Justin Asher — The Producers, Theatre Memphis

Jarrad Baker — Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

Curtis C. Jackson — Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

Seth Judice — Billy Elliot, Playhouse on the Square

Clark Richard Reeves — The Producers, Theatre Memphis

Leading Actress in a Musical

Susannah Corrington — Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Germantown Community Theatre

Meredith Koch — Ring of Fire: The Music of Johnny Cash, Germantown Community Theatre

Claire D. Kolheim — Sister Act, Playhouse on the Square

Maggie Robinson — Carrie the Musical, The Circuit Playhouse

Nikisha Williams — Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

Leading Actor in a Musical

Lee Hudson Gilliland — The Producers, Theatre Memphis

Jared Graham — Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Germantown Community Theatre

Philip Andrew Himebook — The Producers, Theatre Memphis

Nathan McHenry — Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

CJ Sagadia — In the Heights, Hattiloo Theatre

Small Ensemble

Byhalia, MS, POTS@TheWorks

Mothers & Sons, The Next Stage at Theatre Memphis

Ring of Fire: The Music of Johnny Cash, Germantown Community Theatre

The Compleat Wrks of Wllm Shkspr (Abridged), The Next Stage at Theatre Memphis

The Other Place, The Circuit Playhouse

Large Ensemble

All the Way, Playhouse on the Square

In the Heights, Hattiloo Theatre

Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

Peter and the Starcatcher, The Circuit Playhouse

Sister Act, Playhouse on the Square

Featured Role/Cameo

Jillian Barron — Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Germantown Community Theatre

Evie Bennett and Anna Lunati — Into the Woods, Theatre Memphis

Travis Bradley — Billy Elliot, Playhouse on the Square

Jaukeem Balcom, Daniel Gonzalez, and Ryan Patrick Jones — Sister Act, Playhouse on the Square

L. Simeon Johnson — In the Heights, Hattiloo Theatre

Best Original Script

Byhalia, MS, POTS@TheWorks

Short/Stories, Voices of the South

Best Production of an Original Script

Byhalia, MS, POTS@TheWorks

Short/Stories, Voices of the South

Direction of a Drama

Justin Asher — A Streetcar Named Desire, Germantown Community Theatre

Stephen Hancock — All the Way, Playhouse on the Square

Robert Hetherington — Peter and the Starcatcher, The Circuit Playhouse

Jeffrey W. Posson — The Compleat Wrks of Wllm Shkspr (Abridged), The Next Stage at Theatre Memphis

Anne Dauber Scarbrough — Buyer & Cellar, The Circuit Playhouse

Direction of a Musical

Lorraine Cotten — Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Germantown Community Theatre

Patdro Harris — In the Heights, Hattiloo Theatre

Dave Landis — Sister Act, Playhouse on the Square

Jordan Nichols — Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

Cecelia Wingate — The Producers, Theatre Memphis

Best Production of a Drama

All the Way, Playhouse on the Square

A Streetcar Named Desire, Germantown Community Theatre

Buyer & Cellar, The Circuit Playhouse

Peter and the Starcatcher, The Circuit Playhouse

The Other Place, The Circuit Playhouse

Best Musical Production

Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Germantown Community Theatre

In the Heights, Hattiloo Theatre

Memphis, Playhouse on the Square

Sister Act, Playhouse on the Square

The Producers, Theatre Memphis