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Dancers of New York

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  • November 2018
    • Nov 15, 2018 Madelyn Ho, East Broadway, F Nov 15, 2018
  • March 2018
    • Mar 5, 2018 Jessica Castro, 116 Street Station, 6 Mar 5, 2018
  • March 2017
    • Mar 20, 2017 Cece Xie, Astor Place, 6 Mar 20, 2017
    • Mar 11, 2017 Jackie Aitken, 1 Avenue Station, L Mar 11, 2017
    • Mar 9, 2017 Billy Griffin, Canal Street, A-C-E Mar 9, 2017
    • Mar 7, 2017 Andrew Winans, 18 Street Station, 1 Mar 7, 2017
    • Mar 2, 2017 Darius Wright, Spring Street, A-C-E Mar 2, 2017
  • February 2017
    • Feb 28, 2017 Ashley Talluto, 96 Street Station, Q Feb 28, 2017
    • Feb 25, 2017 Amanda LaMotte, Grand Central Station, S-4-5-6-7 Feb 25, 2017
    • Feb 24, 2017 Clay Thomson, Rector Street, R-W Feb 24, 2017
    • Feb 23, 2017 Nikki Croker, 14 Street Station, A-C-E Feb 23, 2017
    • Feb 22, 2017 Colin Shea Denniston, Rector Street, 1 Feb 22, 2017
    • Feb 20, 2017 Lainee Hunter, Lexington Avenue / 63 Street Station, F-Q Feb 20, 2017
    • Feb 17, 2017 Jordana Lerner, 69 Street / Fisk Avenue Station, 7 Feb 17, 2017
    • Feb 16, 2017 Alden LaPaglia, Church Avenue Station, B-Q Feb 16, 2017
    • Feb 13, 2017 Lindsay Janisse, 125 Street Station, 2-3 Feb 13, 2017
    • Feb 8, 2017 Mary Page Nance, 207 Street Station, 1 Feb 8, 2017
    • Feb 7, 2017 Emily Blake Anderson, 68 Street / Hunter College Station, 6 Feb 7, 2017
    • Feb 6, 2017 Kellene Rottenberger, 51 Street Station, 6 Feb 6, 2017
    • Feb 5, 2017 Karli Dinardo, 57 Street Station, F Feb 5, 2017
    • Feb 1, 2017 Madison Eastman, Main Street / Flushing Station, 7. Feb 1, 2017
  • January 2017
    • Jan 27, 2017 Jessica Ice, Queens Plaza, E-M-R Jan 27, 2017
    • Jan 25, 2017 Ali Koinoglou, Franklin Street, 1. Jan 25, 2017
    • Jan 21, 2017 Vanessa Mitchell (Women's March Special Feature) Jan 21, 2017
    • Jan 19, 2017 Penny Wildman, Bowling Green Station, 4-5 Jan 19, 2017
    • Jan 16, 2017 Carlos Morales, Dyckman Street Station, 1 Jan 16, 2017
  • December 2016
    • Dec 17, 2016 Evan Ruggiero, 34 Street / Herald Square Station Dec 17, 2016
    • Dec 15, 2016 Lucia Daisog, Myrtle Avenue, J-M-Z Dec 15, 2016
  • November 2016
    • Nov 10, 2016 Kory Geller, 61 Street / Woodside Station, 7. Nov 10, 2016
  • October 2016
    • Oct 4, 2016 Liz Beres, Queensboro Plaza Station, N-Q-7 Oct 4, 2016
  • September 2016
    • Sep 22, 2016 Chaz Wolcott, Third Avenue, L Sep 22, 2016
  • August 2016
    • Aug 26, 2016 Hannah Fonder, 33 Street Station, 6 Aug 26, 2016
    • Aug 22, 2016 Nicholas Palmquist, 53 Street / 5 Avenue Station, E-M Aug 22, 2016
    • Aug 5, 2016 Taylor Daniels, 157 Street Station, 1 Aug 5, 2016
  • July 2016
    • Jul 29, 2016 Jess LeProtto, W 4 Street / Washington Square Station, A-B-C-D-E-F-M Jul 29, 2016
    • Jul 26, 2016 Khori Michelle Petinaud, 47-50 Streets Rockefeller Center Station, B-D-F-M Jul 26, 2016
    • Jul 25, 2016 Alexa Kobylarz, Houston Street, 1 Jul 25, 2016
  • June 2016
    • Jun 19, 2016 Elizabeth and Lara Teeter, Christopher Street / Sheridan Square, 1 Jun 19, 2016
    • Jun 14, 2016 J'royce Jata, 116 Street Station, 2-3 Jun 14, 2016
  • May 2016
    • May 25, 2016 Richard Riaz Yoder, 42 Street Station / 5 Avenue-Bryant Park, B-D-F-M-7 May 25, 2016
    • May 20, 2016 Chloe Campbell, 110 Street Station, 2-3 May 20, 2016
    • May 3, 2016 Richard J. Hinds, 34 Street Station, 1, 2, 3 May 3, 2016
    • May 2, 2016 Gwynedd Vetter-Drusch, 207 Street Station / Inwood, A May 2, 2016
  • April 2016
    • Apr 28, 2016 Phil Colgan, South Ferry Station, 1 Apr 28, 2016
    • Apr 27, 2016 Kimberlee D. Murray, 28 Street Station, 6 Apr 27, 2016
    • Apr 26, 2016 Katie Hagen, 23 Street Station, 6 Apr 26, 2016
    • Apr 24, 2016 Lizz Picini, 28 Street Station, N-R Apr 24, 2016
    • Apr 16, 2016 Abby Jaros, 23 Street Station, N-R Apr 16, 2016
    • Apr 13, 2016 Alison Sullivan, Fulton Street Station, A-C-J-Z-2-3-4-5 Apr 13, 2016
  • March 2016
    • Mar 25, 2016 Lori Ann Ferreri, Clinton-Washington Avenues Station, G Mar 25, 2016
    • Mar 23, 2016 DJ Petrosino, 39 Avenue Station, N-Q Mar 23, 2016
    • Mar 18, 2016 Brittany Cavaco, 34 Street Station / Hudson Yard, 7 Mar 18, 2016
    • Mar 17, 2016 Derek Mitchell, 23 Street Station, 1 Mar 17, 2016
    • Mar 10, 2016 Rileigh McDonald, 7 Avenue Station, B-D-E Mar 10, 2016
    • Mar 4, 2016 Brandon Leffler, 42 Street Station / Port Authority, A-C-E Mar 4, 2016
  • February 2016
    • Feb 29, 2016 Brinda Guha, Utica Avenue, A Feb 29, 2016
    • Feb 28, 2016 Scott Shendenheim, 36 Street Station, M-R Feb 28, 2016
    • Feb 18, 2016 Renee Gagner, 14 Street Station, 1-2-3 Feb 18, 2016
  • January 2016
    • Jan 22, 2016 Francesca Granell, 116 Street Station, 1 Jan 22, 2016
    • Jan 21, 2016 Paloma Garcia-Lee, 28 Street Station, 1 Jan 21, 2016
    • Jan 19, 2016 Sharrod Williams, Canal Street, 1 Jan 19, 2016
    • Jan 17, 2016 Cory Lingner, 79 Street Station, 1 Jan 17, 2016
    • Jan 15, 2016 Lorin Latarro, Bedford Avenue, L Jan 15, 2016
    • Jan 14, 2016 Brandon Hudson, 191 Street Station, 1. Jan 14, 2016
    • Jan 13, 2016 Adam Soniak, Dyckman Street Station, A Jan 13, 2016
    • Jan 10, 2016 Caitlin Evans, 135 Street Station, B-C Jan 10, 2016
  • December 2015
    • Dec 18, 2015 Ryan VanDenBoom, Prospect Park Station, B-Q-S Dec 18, 2015
    • Dec 16, 2015 Whitney Cooper, Court Square Station, E-G-M-7 Dec 16, 2015
  • November 2015
    • Nov 29, 2015 Chris Rice, 50 Street Station, C-E Nov 29, 2015
    • Nov 12, 2015 Jennifer Jancuska, Atlantic Avenue Station / Barclays Center, B-D-N-Q-R-2-3-4-5 Nov 12, 2015
    • Nov 11, 2015 Mallory Davis, 50 Street Station, 1 Nov 11, 2015
    • Nov 6, 2015 Jon Rua, 36 Avenue Station, N-Q Nov 6, 2015
    • Nov 5, 2015 Kahlia Davis, 86 Street Station, B-C Nov 5, 2015
    • Nov 3, 2015 Sarah Juliet Shaw, Steinway Street Station, M-R Nov 3, 2015
  • October 2015
    • Oct 28, 2015 Marc Kimelman, 2 Avenue Station, F Oct 28, 2015
    • Oct 27, 2015 Nora Moutrane, 34 Street Station / Penn Station, A-C-E Oct 27, 2015
    • Oct 12, 2015 Monica Azpeitia, 23 Street Station, C-E Oct 12, 2015
    • Oct 10, 2015 Brittany Weir, 96 Street Station, 6 Oct 10, 2015
    • Oct 5, 2015 Al Blackstone, 52 Street Station, 7 Oct 5, 2015
    • Oct 1, 2015 James Washington, 168 Street Station, A-C-1 Oct 1, 2015
  • September 2015
    • Sep 17, 2015 Ben Lanham, 5 Avenue / 59 Street, N-Q-R Sep 17, 2015
    • Sep 15, 2015 Andrew Nemr, 23 Street Station, F-M Sep 15, 2015
    • Sep 12, 2015 Kayley Stevens, 103 Street Station, 1 Sep 12, 2015
    • Sep 2, 2015 Elliott Mattox, 163 Street Station, C Sep 2, 2015
  • August 2015
    • Aug 28, 2015 Quinten Busey, 175 Street Station, A Aug 28, 2015
    • Aug 21, 2015 Sierra and Marlene Glasheen + Hazel Kandall, 59th Street / Lexington Avenue, N-Q-R-4-5-6 Aug 21, 2015
    • Aug 18, 2015 Payton Carvalho, 103 Street Station, B-C Aug 18, 2015
    • Aug 7, 2015 Julieta Severo, Prince Street, N-R Aug 7, 2015
  • July 2015
    • Jul 14, 2015 Oren Korenblum, 155 Street Station, C Jul 14, 2015
    • Jul 12, 2015 Maria Sinclaire, 96 Street Station, B-C Jul 12, 2015
    • Jul 5, 2015 Alex Alampi, 57 Street / 7 Avenue Station, N-Q-R Jul 5, 2015
    • Jul 4, 2015 Natalie Zisa, 59 Street / Columbus Circle Station Jul 4, 2015
    • Jul 3, 2015 Taylor Green, Parkside Avenue, Q Jul 3, 2015
    • Jul 2, 2015 Anna Davis, 66 Street / Lincoln Center Station, 1 Jul 2, 2015
  • June 2015
    • Jun 25, 2015 Megan Levinson, 81 Street Station, B-C Jun 25, 2015
    • Jun 24, 2015 Amy Miller, 86 Street Station, 1 Jun 24, 2015
    • Jun 23, 2015 Michelle West, 145 Street, 1 Jun 23, 2015
    • Jun 18, 2015 Savannah Butler, Lexington Avenue / 53 Street - E, M Jun 18, 2015
    • Jun 17, 2015 Anna Terese Stone, 181 Street, 1 Jun 17, 2015
    • Jun 11, 2015 Paul HeeSang Miller, 116 Street Station, B-C Jun 11, 2015
    • Jun 9, 2015 Sofie Eriksson, Chambers Street, A-C Jun 9, 2015
    • Jun 5, 2015 Kim Faure, 72 Street Station, 1-2-3 Jun 5, 2015
    • Jun 1, 2015 Mike Kirsch, 145 Street Station, A-B-C-D Jun 1, 2015
  • May 2015
    • May 28, 2015 Abigayle Horrell, 86 Street Station, 4-5-6 May 28, 2015
    • May 25, 2015 Justin Boccitto, 190 Street Station, A May 25, 2015
    • May 21, 2015 Kelsey Andres, 49 Street Station, N-Q-R May 21, 2015
    • May 18, 2015 Sarah Fagan, 137 Street Station / City College, 1 May 18, 2015
    • May 14, 2015 Katey Kephart, 215 Street Station, 1 May 14, 2015
    • May 11, 2015 Angela Palladini, 125 Street Station, 1 May 11, 2015
    • May 7, 2015 Jason Wise, 110 Street Station / Cathedral Parkway, B-C May 7, 2015
    • May 4, 2015 Ryan Kasprzak, 30 Avenue, N-Q May 4, 2015
  • April 2015
    • Apr 30, 2015 Sophie Lee Morris, Astoria Ditmars Blvd, N-Q Apr 30, 2015
    • Apr 27, 2015 Bekah Howard, 14 Street Station / Union Square, L-N-Q-R-4-5-6 Apr 27, 2015
    • Apr 23, 2015 Josephine Kelly, 110 Street / Cathedral Parkway, 1 Apr 23, 2015
    • Apr 20, 2015 Maureen Kelley, Vernon Blvd / Jackson Ave, 7 Apr 20, 2015
    • Apr 18, 2015 Courtney Rottenberger, 7 Avenue Station, B-Q Apr 18, 2015
    • Apr 17, 2015 Anne Marie Snyder, 46 Street Station, M-R Apr 17, 2015
    • Apr 14, 2015 Eloise Kropp, 96 Street Station, 1-2-3 Apr 14, 2015
    • Apr 13, 2015 Shauna Sorensen, 46 Street Station, 7 Apr 13, 2015
  • February 2015
    • Feb 21, 2015 Phoebe Tamble, 125 Street, A-B-C-D Feb 21, 2015

Phil Colgan, South Ferry Station, 1

April 28, 2016

How did you start dancing?

I started dancing because of my older sister. It was very much like Mike from A Chorus Line. You should know that when I was younger, I was unhealthily obsessed with her. She’s still my best friend, but she was my idol when I was growing up—to the point where I would wear a blanket over my head with a hair tie because she wore a ponytail, so I would wear a ponytail... Anything she did I had to do. She played soccer, and I played soccer. She did theatre, and I did theatre. She danced, so I had to dance. I’d be in the back corner literally doing all the steps with her and her classmates. My mom noticed it and thought to put me in some kind of dance training. I started when I was 7.

Was that out of jealousy? [laughs]

It was out of admiration! Complete admiration for her. She’s just the coolest person. Always has been a big support system for me. So when I was younger, I wanted to do anything and everything to be like her.

What does she do now?

She’s a pharmacist. Very different path than I took [laughs].

How did you grow as a dancer from there?

It was a roundabout path to get here. I grew up as a competition dancer and did theatre in school. In high school, I focused a lot more on dancing than theatre. I realized how much I needed dance in my life in high school as a crutch and as a way to express myself. My senior year of high school I got back into community theatre. A bunch of my friends were auditioning for a local production of Hairspray, and they forced me to go. I got cast as one of “The Nicest Kids in Town”, and it was one of the most fun experiences I’ve ever had. I got the bug that summer. And then that fall, I started college at NYU, and I still had no aspiration to be a professional dancer. I knew I wanted to do something around entertainment, but I didn’t know where it was.

When I was at NYU, I got a call from my high school theatre director—I did theatre the last two years of high school with him. He asked me to choreograph their upcoming production of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. When I was little, I was the kind of kid to be in my basement for hours upon hours choreographing and re-directing shows. When I was 8, I completely re-blocked and choreographed “The Small House of Uncle Thomas” from The King and I because I didn’t like the way my choreographer did it back then. I was 8 and had this whole vision with props and everything.

It was just so clear back then that I should do something artistic when I grew up, especially on the other side of the table. When I got that call from my director, everything clicked. I realized that I put that dream—I spent years and years down in my basement doing that—on hold and forgot about it. And then everything made sense once I got that job. I started realizing that maybe I can do this as a profession and get paid for it. It was my first paycheck from any theatre-related job.

Once that was over, I got bored, so I started auditioning for random shows that were coming up. I figured why not give it a go. So the first audition I went to was the West Side Story National Tour. I was petrified and still not set on doing it as a living. I was still only doing community theater back home. Once I got over the anxiety of the audition and figured out that I could actually handle myself in that kind of situation, I realized I could stick it out.

When did you audition for West Side?

That audition was at the end of my freshmen year. I didn’t get it. It was a first of many auditions I didn’t get. But I used auditioning as training. I didn’t go to a conservatory for school, despite that being the popular belief when I was at NYU because I was so involved in all the theatre stuff. I actually went to the Gallatin school, which is for individualized study. Instead of declaring a traditional major, you create your own using all the different courses and areas of study that NYU has to offer. So I mainly focused on entertainment and theatre, more so on the production side. I was able to do acting training and voice training through different programs there, and I used auditioning as a litmus test for where I was. I remember after I had gotten through the West Side Story audition, the next 10 auditions I never got asked to sing. But once I settled into it a little more and got comfortable dancing in front of creative teams, they called me back to sing, and I soon realized I need more than just “16 Going On 17” in my binder. I needed an actual rep of songs and a book. I also learned very quickly I needed to take voice lessons. Gradually getting to each step in the audition process helped me realize where I was in my training and acted as a good ruler or test for what I needed to work on.

Instead of learning from a theatre program, you learned your way through auditions.

Totally. I spent two and a half years of solid auditioning. I got some callbacks, but I actually stopped when I started to get work. I told myself to stop and finish school first; it was important for me to finish. I loved what I was doing at school, and I didn’t feel like I was done with it.

However, I did go through a period where I felt like I wanted to leave school because some of my best friends booked work and left for some really exciting jobs. And granted, I was auditioning for fun and auditioning for experience, but when you’re young, you still have that mindset of “they’re doing it, so I should be doing it.” But I realized that wasn’t my path. I gained solace in that my junior year of college. I realized it’s okay to finish it out, and I’m happy I finished.

What happened after?

I immediately started working, which was nice. I finished class on a Tuesday night—took the last course of my senior year, handed in my last paper, moved out of my apartment that same night, and Wednesday morning I drove up to the Finger Lakes to start West Side Story. Luckily I’ve been working ever since, and it hasn’t stopped.

What are you up to now?

Right now, I am between jobs, which is good because I am figuring out what I like to do other than being in a job. My career is so important to me and I love it so much, but you throw your all into it, so I’m trying to figure out what else I like so that on the days that get really hard, I have something else. But right now, I don’t know what that “else” is or if I am ever going to find it. I like that I enjoy doing both performance work and choreography. When audition days are really tough, I get to go to a studio with my friends and create something and use that side of my brain. As much as the two are linked, they are separate for me. But yeah, right now it’s about figuring out what I like doing.

What are your aspirations?

I definitely want to continue performing, hopefully on Broadway eventually. I want to base myself in New York and be a part of the community here. I wouldn’t be surprised if I stopped performing within the next four to five years, though because I do want to move to the other side of the table, and start directing and choreographing professionally. I’ve been lucky to have had that experience a couple times. It’s been a thrill. It’s as much a dream come true as performing is for me. There’s something about creating that I really love.

How was working for A Bronx Tale?

It was crazy. It was the most fun and the hardest professional experience I’ve had to date. I was a swing for it. Swinging is no game—it’s the biggest challenge I’ve ever had but also the most rewarding. I actually never went on during the show. I was told from people who had swung before that the payoff is when you get to go on, so as much as it stunk that I didn’t get to go on, the experience was so great that I was so content and still got so much out of it.

Our creative team was insane for that show. Being a swing, we were next to them so much. We had our own table during the rehearsal process and tech that was right next to theirs. So to hear someone like Jerry Zaks or Sergio Trujillo, who have made such strides in their career and have such a mark on theater and the community, figure out a problem and talk about it and to be able to hear how they deal with situations was a master class for me. And it was fascinating to try to get into their brain as a swing—because you have to see the whole picture. You’re not focusing on yourself and your one track. You’re focusing on the entire show and how you can fit into that show. Also, A Bronx Tale was really music heavy. I covered a Doo-Wop group, so everything was in four part harmony, and I had to learn all the harmonies for the entire show. I never had to do that before, and it was crazy, but it taught me a lot about musicality and theory.

It really was a two and a half month master class on every side of the business. Everyone, cast and creative, led by example. During the entire process, everyone in that room was always at 110%, whether it was from 10am to 6pm or the entire tech day. To see that work ethic was really exemplary for me. To see the creative team work together was a gift, especially this early on in my career. It was a dream.

I didn’t realize you only graduated last year.

Yeah, it was very recent. I’ve been one of the youngest, if not the youngest, in every cast so far. Almost all of them.

What’s it like to often be the youngest one in the cast?

People sometimes don’t realize I am this young, but people have taken me under their wing a little bit, which has been really nice. In A Bronx Tale and a bunch of other projects, people have set really good examples for me and have offered me tips. For example, one of the girls I did a Christmas gig with, Sara Andreas, had swung Catch Me If You Can on Broadway and a bunch of other shows. She offered me advice right before I started the job—just little things here and there to help, but she was very candid with me about the position. To have gracious people like that, whose careers I hope to emulate and who have been really successful, has been the best thing about being the young one in the cast. I’ve been lucky enough to be around seasoned professionals.

Toughest time?

Probably dates back to high school. I went to an all boys catholic school in Staten Island, and that’s not the easiest place to be a male dancer. But those were really formative years for me because I got picked on, but those were the years when I realized how much I loved dance and how necessary it is for me, for my brain, and for my heart.

Freshman and sophomore year I was really self conscious about it. Anyone would bring it up and that heat came over me—I got so self conscious and wanted to crawl out of my skin a little bit. But junior and senior year, everyone knew. If people said stuff, I didn’t care anymore, and people started respecting me for it.

It’s been cool to see people reach out since I’ve started doing it professionally and have gotten to do some things that people have taken notice of—not that it’s any kind of validation. I didn’t look for the validation or need it. But it’s funny because you stick to your guns a little bit, and people respect you. It’s something I learned through those years. It also taught me how I can never give it up, which I am really thankful for.

As much as it sucked at the time, I am really happy that I went through that stuff. I mean, kids can be mean. My mom asked if I was sure I wanted to continue dancing in high school. I said, “Yeah, I am in.” Granted, at times it got harder and harder, and I considered quitting. That’s actually why I initially didn’t do theatre at school. I didn’t want to give people another reason to pick on me. When the director learned that I danced, he was like, “What’s up with you? Why are you not in my show? You need to come audition for my show. You have to.”

I am so happy because I met so many friends there that I am still close to. It was a very gradual progression to get back into it and realize I am going to do it professionally, but those years really taught me about passion—what it means to have a passion and own it. The lack of confidence I might have had gave me somewhere to go and to build it up and figure out who I really was. To own who you are at 16 is so hard. It’s hard at any age, let alone a 16 year old having to defend himself and what he loves to do. But it teaches you a lot.

Advice from your experience?

Brett Smock, who runs the Finger Lakes Musical Theatre Festival, told me something that I think is so smart. Basically, “Don’t rip out opportunities from in front of yourself because you think your life has to go a certain way.” Personally, I am someone who likes to plan—not micromanage, but I like to write my biography and story before it happens. I am the kind of person who gets a callback email, and I immediately plan out my next year [laughs]. That’s the part of the excitement of this industry, but if something surprises you and comes your way, you should be open to it rather than saying “XYZ should’ve happened first, so I am not going to do that.” You can’t hold yourself back just because you think your story is suppose to go a certain way.

Happiest moment?

One of them is my first experience as a director and a choreographer. It was the culmination of my college life and the life long dream I spoke about earlier. I directed and choreographed Catch Me If You Can at NYU. We started with minimal funds. We had no idea how the hell we were going to pull it off. It was stressful, I probably got an ulcer and lost a little hair because of it [laughs]. But I am so thankful that I had the creative team I did, because by the time we got to casting and in the room, I settled into it, and I said, “Now we can have fun.”

That whole experience—collaborating with a really good group of people with positive energy—that’s what every single person who worked on it brought. I’ve had other experiences like that. West Side Story at Finger Lakes was exactly like that. Everyone just wanted to be there at all times. There was no ego in the room. You just brought yourself and what you love to do, and it was all about the work. Catch Me If You Can was all about the work. Everyone wanted to make it the best show possible. I’ve never had a reaction to a show like I did watching my own work on stage, especially in such a big way. We did it in a 860 seat theatre downtown. It was the most visceral reaction I’ve ever had watching a show. I’ve never felt something pay off as much as that did.

Is there any last thing you want to share with the world?

Be nice to people, not just in theater but in any profession and in any area of life. We are all here, auditioning in New York, because we have some level of talent. You are in the room because you want to be and because at some point, someone has said or you have said to yourself that you can do it. So what else sets you apart then? And I’m not talking about being nice to people to get a job. You shouldn’t be nice to people for any kind of ramification other than putting it out to the universe to foster something more positive.

It’s easy to be negative and easy to complain. It’s easy to find what’s wrong with the situation. But it’s so much easier just to be nice to people. It changes the room. It changes the show. It changes everything when you put out a positive energy. It’s not like we’re in film where we can watch the movie we created. We’re not working towards that. We’re working towards the intangible experience of theatre. What do we take from it? We take the relationships with people and the experiences that we’ve had. If you’re not adding something positive to that, then there’s no use in you being here. There’s no use in going to work everyday if you’re not loving it and putting in something positive for yourself and those around you.

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