Department News 11-05-18

This week, the Theatre and Media Arts Department will host two outside reviewers for our National Association of Schools of Theatre (NAST) self-study.  Wade Hollingshaus  has headed up the report preparation, with help from each of our area heads and Rodger Sorensen, who generously met with Wade over the summer to help him figure out all the pieces the report needed to cover.  The report has been sent off to the reviewers and to the NAST offices.  The schedule is available at the front desk in the office.  In the meantime, here is a brief introduction to the two outside reviewers who will be visiting the department on November 6 – 9, 2018.

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Anne D’Zmura has served as resident director at the nationally acclaimed Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis where she directed Peer Gynt, Bert’s Folly, Billy and Dago, and Poster of the Cosmos; artistic associate for the NYC-based The Acting Company where she directed the national tours of Macbeth and The Tempest; artistic associate for the Playwright’s Center where she spearheaded the Stage-Time New Play Series and co-artistic director for Yale Cabaret. Some additional directing credits include Tony Award winning South Coast Repertory World Premiere of Silent Sky by Lauren Gunderson.  She was assistant director for Trevor Nunn on Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia on Broadway. Anne has directed many new play development workshops at theatres including South Coast Repertory, Playwright’s Center, BACA Downtown, Bristol Riverside Theatre, The Acting Company and Women’s Project Theatre.  Anne currently serves as Head of Directing of Theatre Arts at California State University, Long Beach where she also served as Chair and Artistic Director and initiated EPIC (Educational Performance in Community) and the Affinity Series in collaboration with the faculty and staff. Anne’s work on ecology and theatre is in Readings in Performance and Ecology published by Palgrave Macmillan. Anne served as guest artist/scholar at Carnegie Mellon where she was invited to develop a course and project merging theatre and ecology for the Drama School and The Center for Arts and Society.  Anne continues to develop international arts activism projects.  Anne is a member of SDC, SAG-AFTRA. She received her BA from Hampshire College and her MFA in Directing from Yale School of Drama.

DeAnna Toten Beard

DeAnna Toten Beard, MFA, PhD is Professor of Theatre History and teaches a variety of theatre studies courses at the undergraduate and graduate level. Dr. Toten Beard joined the Baylor faculty in 2002. In 2012, she was named a Baylor Teaching Fellow. Dr. Toten Beard has also taught in the Baylor Interdisciplinary Core and is currently co-director of the Baylor in Oxford study abroad program.  Dr. Toten Beard is an active historian with research interests in early twentieth century U.S. theatre and drama. Her specializations include American expressionism, modernist theatre design, and depictions of World War I on the American stage. Among her publications are “The Little Theatre Movement” in  Blackwell’s Companion to American Literature (2017); “Inspiration and Atmosphere in Getting Together A War Play: Stage Authenticity and the WWI Soldier on the Broadway Stage” in Theatre Annual (2015);  “Performance, Preparedness, and Playing with Fire: Major General O’Ryan and U.S. Military Theatricality in the World War I Era” in Public Theatre and Theatre Publics (2012); “Artisan to Artist: The Impact of Gallery Exhibitions of New Stagecraft in the U.S., 1914-1919” in New England Theatre Journal  (2007); and “American Experimentalism, American Expressionism, and Early O’Neill” in A Cambridge Companion to Twentieth-Century American Drama (2005).  She is the author of the monograph, Sheldon Cheney’s Theatre Arts Magazine: Promoting a Modern American Theatre, 1916-1921 (2009). Dr. Toten Beard is also the editor of The Texas Theatre Journal, published annually by the Texas Educational Theatre Association.  Dr. Toten Beard devotes professional service to the work of the National Association of Schools of Theatre (NAST) as a visiting evaluator of programs around the country.  From 2012-2017, she served as Commissioner for NAST and 2018 she began a term as Chair of the Commission on Accreditation.  DeAnna Toten Beard earned a Doctor of Philosophy in Theatre History, Literature, and Criticism from Indiana University, a Master of Fine Arts in Dramaturgy from Stony Brook University, and a Bachelor of Arts in Theatre and English Literature from the University of Mary Washington.


Kyle Stapley was able to attend the second annual LA TV and Film Connection Fall Social held at the LDS Institute Building at UCLA this past weekend.  He felt the social was very successful, organized by some of our alums, Caitlyn Stratton-Walton, Julia Glausi, and Jordan Peterson.  About 175 people attended, including many BYU alums, LDS people in the industry, and media arts, theatre, and animation alums, and other friends. The highlight of the event was the Alumnus of the year award, given to David Wardle, who graduated from BYU Law School in 2002.  In addition to his law firm experience, Wardle has worked as in-house counsel, running the legal departments of independent film distributors First Look Studios and Millennium Entertainment. David was given the award for his work with the Whittaker Group, which has been working to provide opportunities for media arts graduates in the LA area. Also presenting at the social was Virginia Pearce, the director of the Utah Film Commission, and Kyle who made a presentation about internships. At the conference, it was announced that the Whitaker Group and LA Connection would merge under the Whitaker Society.  This group will start scholarships for media arts students and encourage internships.  Colton Griffiths from the BYU’s Career Center also presented a new service similar to LinkedIn  for students and alumni to connect with each other and companies offering jobs/internships.  Many companies represented at the conference would like to use this service.  Kyle is excited about the possibilities of this annual event and would  love to get more current media arts faculty and students to attend.

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Dr. Kirsten Pullen was hosted by the Women Studies Conference for Bodies of Women that was held last week.  As one of several speakers invited to present at the conference, Dr. Pullen titled her presentation, “Watching Women: The Body of the Performer, the Performing Body, and the Body of the Audience.” She specifically presented on the bodies of actresses during the 19-20th centuries, including Lena Horne and other greats. Kirsten holds a Ph.D. and M.A. in Theatre Research from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and is currently the chair of the theatre department at the University of Illinois at Champaign Urbana, the alma mater of Bridget BentonAmy Peterson Jensen, and Rory Scanlon. She is a performance historian with particular emphasis on female performers and performance theory during the 20th and 21st centuries in the United States. She has published books through top notch publishers at Cambridge University Press and Rutgers University Press.  Dr. Pullen is also an active member in the American Society for Theatre Research, serving as a member of its Executive Committee from 2011–2014. After her well-attended presentation, Kirsten also hosted several round table discussions for students around campus and took a tour of the theatre spaces in the Harris Fine Arts Center.

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Benjamin Thevenin attended the “Taking Back the Web” conference hosted by the Centre for Critical Media Literacy at the Dublin Institute of Technology in Dublin, Ireland a few weeks ago. After presenting “Play & Pedagogy: Toward an Object-Oriented Media Literacy Education” to an international audience, he was able to travel around Ireland a bit with his wife Emily, who served her mission in the country 15 years ago. It was lovely. Here’s photographic evidence!

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This weekend is your last chance to see BYU’s Production of Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap! Come enjoy this unique production directed by David Morgan who has expertly mixed the aspects of film noir and horror mystery theatre. For more information about showtimes and tickets, click here.

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Department News 10-15-18

Every year, our colleagues in arts production breathe a collective sigh of relief the week after Homecoming.  Many of those in arts production focus their efforts on producing one of the largest shows of the year, Homecoming Spectacular, as a service to the university community.  Jennifer Reed directed the show this year. Part of her job is to determine what BYU groups will be in the show. Once that is determined, she works on potential collaborations with BYU groups and headliners.  She will suggest numbers for the groups to sing that seem to go along with a subtle theme.  This year, the subtle theme was, “The light in our lives, happiness and sunshine.” The headliners’ music really determines what direction the show will go. Jennifer was excited to see that vision come together for a very successful show this year. It was the largest Spectacular, selling 20,500 tickets! The audience loved it! When Jennifer originally invited Colbie to headline the show, she realized Colbie didn’t know what she was getting into, but she had a wonderful experience in large part because of our awesome students.  A fun behind the scenes story: Jennifer really wanted to have beach balls drop on the audience during the finale, and it was a bit of a battle to get the Marriott Center to agree. They finally did and dropped over 500 beach balls, which was the perfect end to a fun and uplifting night!  Jennifer is especially grateful to her key collaborators on Spectacular:

  • Marianne Ohran: Lighting Designer
  • Russ Richins: Set Designer and Production Manager
  • Justin Hemsely: Projection Designer
  • Aaron Kopp: Sound Designer
  • Jared Patching: Technical Director
  • Jodi Maxfield: Key Choreographer
  • Bridget Benton: Talent Liasion/Producer

She is extremely appreciative to all the students who helped, without whom the show would not have gone on.  TMA students involved included Sarah Barrus, Kirsten Busse, Grant Porter, Matthew Kupferer, Susan Kupferer,  Dayne Joyner, Christina Porter, Jacob Anderson, Paige Whitaker, and Emma Nulton.  Below is a photo of the Spectacular crew with this year’s show’s stars, Colbie Caillat and David Archuleta.

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Each semester, students put their playwriting and producing skills to the test in creating short plays that exhibit the skills and talents they’ve acquired. Microburst Theatre is a fresh and exciting showcase of those short plays. In a showcase directed by George Nelson, this year’s production will feature six new works which will be shown in the evening from Thursday, October 18 to Saturday, October 20. For tickets and showtimes, click here.

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Bryson Frehner, who is currently the production manager for Divine Comedy, gave this report about the group’s first show of the semester which happened over the weekend:  “The show this last weekend was really fun. The group performed 4 sold out shows of “Mamma Mia Maid” with strong performances, especially considering that there were six new cast members. Fun fact: this year’s Divine Comedy cast has more women than men for the first time ever (6 to 5)! They all felt very comfortable on stage, they all had great moments and they made a lot of people laugh. All the laughter and sketches aside, something that I noticed and loved is how diverse the cast is this year. There’s a great variety in body types, faces, comedic styles and even ethnicity.  I also feel a very positive, unique and fresh vibe from this group, something I don’t think I’ve ever felt or seen. There’s a beautiful sense of unity and camaraderie that is coming through their performances and chemistry with each other. I was really impressed with this first DC show and I am excited to see what more great things come from this group of 11 very talented comedians.”  Newbies this semester include Austin Judkins, Garet Allen (media arts major!), Kiara Mercedes, Kiri Case, McKay Fritz and Naomi Winters.  George Nelson is the TMA faculty liaison for the group with TMA.


Two of our retired faculty Barta Heiner and Janet Swenson currently have shows up in Utah.  Barta directs the current show at the Covey Center, Angel Street, a 1938 script that was made into a well-known film in 1944 under the name Gaslight, which starred Charles Boyer and Ingrid Bergman.  In fact, the term “gaslighting, to cause a person to doubt his or her sanity through the use of psychological manipulation,”  came from the film.  Later, the play was produced on Broadway.  This “Victorian Thriller” plays through Oct. 27. For tickets, click here.

From Utah Theatre Bloggers: “Heiner … helped the actors create strong characters who had years of stories behind them. Every character had depth and a lifetime of experience they carried around with them. Jack had his secrets, Bella had family difficulties, Rough had years of investigative inquiries. Heiner was able to help the actors figure out their stories and avoid two-dimensional characters that would only exist during the scenes they were in.”

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Janet Swenson designed costumes for Tuacahn’s production of Cinderella, which closes on Friday, Oct. 19 of this week.  From Front Row Reviewers, https://frontrowreviewersutah.com/?p=7828 : “I was also immediately taken away by the incredible costumes designed by Janet Swenson. All of the dresses, hats, men’s elaborate suits are appropriate and beautiful. Every member of the cast has exquisite attire the entire show. This show requires some instant onstage costume transformations, which are cleverly and impressively done.  Magic happens right before your eyes, and if you aren’t paying close enough attention, you will miss it.  From rags to riches, Cinderella’s ball gown seems to appear out of nowhere.”

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Alumni News

Recent media arts graduate, Sariah May, who wrote and directed the student capstone film, “I Love My Robot Boyfriend,” has had the film accepted into numerous film festivals.  The most recent one, Citizen Jane, is pretty cool!  They’ll fly her our and treat her like royalty!  Here is a current list of 12 festivals the film has gotten into: Utah Film Festival, LDS Film Festival, Alternative Film Festival (ALTFF), Eye Film Festival, Best Short Fest (semi-finalist), Calcutta International Cult Film Festival, Breaththroughs Film Festival, Lady Filmmakers Film Festival, Cineyouth Film Festival (won best comedy), For Film’s Sake, FilmQuest, and Citizen Jane Film Festival.