Daniel Gurskis, Dean, College of the Arts
Department of Theatre and Dance
Randy Mugleston, Chair
Daniel Gurskis, Dean, College of the Arts
Department of Theatre and Dance
Randy Mugleston, Chair
February 16 I 17 I 18 I 23 I 24 I 25, 2023
Director Tommy Schrider
Fight/Intimacy Director Rick Sordelet
Choreographer/Movement Director Vanessa Butler
Voice/Diction Coach Sarah Koestner
Projection Design Maggie Mckeon
Cast
Usher/God Understanding ........................................................................................ Caitlyn Capre
Death Maxine Stillwagon
Everybody Emery Myers, A’lysai Robinson
Somebodies Allie McGowan, Yazmery Milian, Anna Moceri, Jared Preston
Girl/Time Nala McCalla
Love Andrew Linden
Understudies Alex Fontes, Arianna Marmol, Mark Page, Liat Rimoni
Time and Place
Here and Now and for All Time
Everybody is presented by arrangement with Dramatist Play Service. www.dramatists.com
Duration: 90 minutes, no intermission.
In consideration of both audiences and performers, please turn off all electronic devices. The taking of photographs or videos and the use of recording equipment are not permitted. No food or drink is permitted in the theater.
Art by Alexa McClinticDaniel Gurskis | Dean
Ronald L. Sharps | Associate Dean
Christine Lemesianou | Associate Dean
Linda D. Davidson | Assistant Dean
Zacrah S. Battle | College Administrator
Christopher Kaczmarek | Chairperson, Department of Art and Design
Anthony Mazzocchi | Director, John J. Cali School of Music
Keith Strudler | Director, School of Communication and Media
Randy Mugleston | Chairperson, Department of Theatre and Dance
Wiley Hausam | Director, Arts + Cultural Programming
Hillery Makatura | Director, Performance Operations
Patricia Piroh | Director, Broadcast and Media Operations
Megan C. Austin | Director, University Galleries
Hillery Makatura | Director
Andrew Dickerson | Production Manager
Colin Van Horn | Technical Director
Kevin Johnson | Senior Production Engineer
Gene Lotito | CART Facilities Director
Laurel Brolly | Business Administrator
Jason Flamos | Lighting Supervisor
Stephanie Benjamin Flores | Wardrobe Supervisor
Robert Hermida | Audience Services Director
William Collins, Maureen Grimaldi | House Managers
Jeff Lambert Wingfield | Box Office Manager
Yazeed Alomar, Jabob Batory, Susanne Oyedeji, Eliezer Ramirez | Box Office Leads
Susan R. Case | Program Copy Editor
Bart Solenthaler | Program Layout Design
Heather Benton | Coordinator of Acting
Mysti Stay | CoordInator of Design, Technology, and Management
Peter J. Davis | Production Manager
Cara Scalera | Assistant Production Manager
Cyndi Kumor | Production Associate
Jordan Conklin-Yousef | Production Office Assistant
Lisa Grimes | Social Media and Promotion Manager
Rick Sordelet | Intimacy/Fight Director
Donna Scro Samori | Mental Health Consultant
Erhard Rom | Scenic Design Mentor
Benjamin Merrick | Technical Director
Daniel Haussler | Head Carpenter
Robert Dietze | Stage Carpenter Mentor
Jeanette Meises | Scenic Charge Artist
Alison Merrick | Props Supervisor
Adam Rigg | Costume Design Mentor
Kaitie Adams | Hair/Makeup Design Mentor
Judith Evans | Costume Shop Supervisor
Jeanette Aultz | Assistant Costume Shop Supervisor
Amanda Phillips Balingit, Arden Donnelly, Katie Pippin | Drapers
Marlene Olson Hamm | Wardrobe Supervisor
Nick Kolin | Lighting Design Mentor
Osman M. Morales | Head Electrician
Zachary Brienza | Electrician
Kimberly O’Loughlin | Head Sound Technician/ Sound Design Mentor
Steven Brown | Sound Technician
Mysti Stay | Stage Management Mentor
Haley Amann | Assistant Director
Charlotte LaBudde | Production Dramaturg
Skyler Davis, Jess Vaccaro | Lighting
Elli Caunitis | Sound
Kayla Krumrei | Stage Manager
Brianna Donnelly | Assistant Stage Manager
This production is part of the Montclair State University Department of Theater’s Studio Series, which allows students and faculty to produce work quickly and simply, free from the constraints and costs of fully staged productions. It is a laboratory for exploration that emphasizes acting as an art form. These performances give us the unique opportunity to explore a creative process that requires less production support and focuses more on character, speech, voice, and movement.
For as long as humans have been making art, we have been grappling with the unexplainable. One of the many reasons morality plays like Everyman, from which Everybody is derived, were created was to come to terms with the devastation the Black Plague brought upon Europe. Death had become a part of life, on a scale which had never been seen and has yet to be replicated. While the scale may be lessened, it’s hard to find anyone today who wasn’t affected in some way by the Covid-19 pandemic. When large numbers of people could not gather together, productions were held on Zoom and watched alone on our computer screens. And now that it’s safe for us to share the space, we can all experience what can only be offered by live theater, a communal catharsis, where the cast, crew, and audience create a unique performance every single night.
Today, in a world so obsessed with individualism, what can truly be said about Everybody ? How can we generalize 7.8 billion people? There must be something that bonds all of us together. How about our humanity, our capacity to love, to understand each other? Sometimes it feels like even that is waning. So what is the great equalizer, the one fundamental thing that binds all of us together? Everyone dies, and will deal with grief, loss, and what happens in the end. Dealing with death is the most essential part of life, and that’s true for Everybody.
—Charlotte LaBudde, Production DramaturgTommy Schrider (Director) is an actor and educator. He teaches acting at Montclair State University, where he has also directed The Last Days of Judas Iscariot and the BFA Senior Showcase. His work as an actor includes War Horse (Vivian Beaumont) on Broadway. He has appeared Off-Broadway at Theater for A New Audience, Red Bull, Brooklyn Academy of Music, Ensemble Studio Theatre, and Keen Company, among others. Regional credits include Yale Rep, South Coast Rep, Huntington, Westport Playhouse, and Berkshire Theatre Festival. Recent TV credits include The Americans, POSE, Blacklist, and Elementary. He has also taught at The New Group/LIU Brooklyn, Marymount Manhattan, Playwrights Horizons Theater School/NYU, the Powerhouse Theater Training Program at Vassar College/New York Stage & Film, and at Avenues:
The World School. He received his MFA from NYU/Tisch School of the Arts Graduate Acting Program.
Rick Sordelet (Fight/Intimacy Director) has served as this country’s most prolific fight director for over 28 years. He and his son, Christian, created Sordelet Inc., an action-based company providing stunt coordination, fight direction, and intimacy consulting for film, television, and theater. He has worked on over 80 shows on Broadway, from Beauty and the Beast and Lion King all the way to Tina. Sordelet recently returned from the UK, where he revived the fight direction on Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, coming to Broadway next season. The Sordelets are the resident fight directors for the Santa Fe Opera, where they staged the fights for As You Like It and Eugene Onegin. They are also stunt coordinators for television and film: 12 years with Guiding Light, four years with One Life to Live, both seasons with Kevin Can Wait and The Crew, both starring Kevin James. Their most recent film is Ben Is Back starring Julia Roberts. Sordelet taught at Yale School of Drama for 22 years as well as at Kean University, Montclair State, and the William Esper Studio. From fight direction and teaching, Sordelet developed into a writer as well, selling several screenplays and a television series. He and his partner, David Blixt, run an E-publishing company called Sordelet INK.
Vanessa Butler (Choreographer/Movement Director) is a working actor and teaching artist based out of New York City. She began training in dance at an early age and participated in regional dance competitions before entering into pre-professional ballet programs with the Milwaukee Ballet and the Rock School of Ballet. She turned to acting later in life and is currently teaching movement at Stella Adler Studio for Acting and MSU. Butler has choreographed for the Sacramento Ballet, SOUL PRIDE (Beer & Ballet repertoire) in 2008, and Central Connecticut State University’s production of Rent in 2013. She holds an MFA in Acting from California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) and received a BFA in Fine Art from Carnegie Mellon University. vanessarbutler.com
Sarah Koestner (Vocal Coach) has previously taught voice and acting at NYU and Rutgers University. She was mentored by Scott Miller in the Graduate Acting program at NYU and is a certified teacher of the Miller Voice Method. She earned her MFA in Acting at Rutgers University, where she trained under William Esper and Lloyd Richards, and received her BFA in Acting from Emerson College. New York theater credits include The Libertine, Love Song, Waiting for Lefty, The Truth about Christmas,
and Betrayal. Regional credits include The Understudy, The Libertine, The Maids, Doubt, Landscape of the Body, and She Stoops to Conquer. She has been a vocal coach on numerous productions at MSU including The Rover, Black Snow, Orlando, As You Like It, Big Meal, and Top Girls. She is a proud member of Actors’ Equity.
Maggie Mckeon (Projection Design) is a projection designer who also works through different mediums as an actor and content creator. She has designed multiple shows for Ogunquit Playhouse’s Arts Academy as well as Montclair State University’s production of The Last Days of Judas Iscariot by Stephen Adly Guirgis. She is happy to be back at her alma mater and she thanks Tommy, the cast, and crew for a wonderful process and collaboration.
Caitlyn Capre (Usher/God/Understanding) is a senior BFA Acting major at MSU. She was raised in both East Windsor, NJ, and Atlanta, GA. Her previous theatrical credits at MSU are #14 in The Wolves, Chorus: The People in ’Tasha, and Girl in The Big Meal. In the fall of 2022, Capre interned with Emmy award–winning casting director Judy Henderson, CSA.
Alex Fontes (Understudy) is a sophomore BFA Acting major. This is the third mainstage production he has worked on since coming to MSU. The content of Everybody resonated with him and he is happy to contribute to giving the audience an unforgettable journey through life!
Andrew Linden (Love) is a senior this year, and this is their final role at MSU! Linden was recently seen in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time (Christopher Boone), As You Like It (Forester/Lord), and Top Girls (Pope Joan/Nell). Linden was also recently costumer designer and head of wardrobe/makeup for Dance Nation and is using their costuming skills for this production of Everybody as well.
Arianna Marmol (Understudy) is a sophomore BFA Acting major. They are grateful to be working on this show, which happens to be their third mainstage production.
Nala McCalla (Girl/Time) is a very passionate person who is always ready to work. She previously was in Black Snow earlier this year and is excited to be a part of this amazing cast.
Allie McGowan (Somebody) is a junior Theatre Studies BA and is in her first year at MSU. She transferred from Bergen Community College, having received her associate degree in 2021. Some of her credits at MSU include American Horror M.I.L.F., the Hunger M.I.L.F.s, and Pride and Prejudice through MSU Players. She is grateful for the opportunity to continue her involvement in the Theatre Department.
Yazmery Milian (Somebody) is a current junior in the BFA Acting program. She did her first mainstage production last semester playing Ashlee in Dance Nation, and Everybody is her second mainstage show. She is extremely grateful for the guidance she has received from the director and the amazing collaboration of the entire cast and crew.
Anna Moceri (Somebody) is a senior BFA Acting major at MSU. Past credits include Amiens in As You Like It, Punk Girl/Ensemble/Dance Captain in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, and Amina/Dance Captain in Dance Nation. She is thrilled to be closing out her college career with Everybody.
Emery Myers (Everybody) is a sophomore BFA Acting major transfer. He has been in The Big Meal and Black Snow the past few seasons and is overwhelmed with gratitude to be working on this show with the cast and crew and Tommy Schrider.
Mark Page (Understudy) was ecstatic to learn that his first role at MSU would be in the production of Everybody. With this being his first role as an understudy, he happily took his opportunity to learn from his fellow actors. He is appreciative of this experience and would do it all over again.
Jared Preston (Somebody) is a BFA Acting junior. He is thrilled to be a part of his first studio production at MSU. Previously they have appeared in ’Tasha, As You Like It, and Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, most recently assistant directing Black Snow.
Liat Rimoni’s (Understudy) latest productions at the Arts Academy were A Doll’s House (assistant director), Medea (Medea), and Facing Our Truth (Rebbeca/Raheem). Her most recent production was in her fall semester of her freshmen year at MSU, where she played Gloria/Mathew/Soldier 2 in Stephen Adly Gurguis’s The Last Days of Judas Iscariot.
A’Lysai Robinson (Everybody) is a junior BFA Acting major at MSU. Everybody is her fourth production at MSU; she previously played Simon the Zealot/Loretta/Soldier in
The Last Days of Judas Iscariot by Stephen Adly Guirgis and Zuzu in Dance Nation by Clare Barron. She is honored to have had the opportunity to play the character of Everybody and have grown and learned so much through this process with the guidance of director Tommy Schrider.
Maxine Stillwagon (Death) is a senior in the BFA Acting program and is excited to be a part of this production as her last show at MSU. Her previous credits include Dance Nation (Maeve), The Last Days of Judas Iscariot (Bailiff), a staged reading of Randi & Roxanne (Headmistress), and Theatre on the Move (Swing).
We respectfully acknowledge that Montclair State University occupies land in Lenapehoking, the traditional and expropriated territory of the Lenape. As a state institution, we recognize and support the sovereignty of New Jersey’s three state-recognized tribes: the Ramapough Lenape, Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape, and Powhatan Renape nations. We recognize the sovereign nations of the Lenape diaspora elsewhere in North America, as well as other Indigenous individuals and communities now residing in New Jersey. By offering this land acknowledgement, we commit to addressing the historical legacies of Indigenous dispossession and dismantling practices of erasure that persist today. We recognize the resilience and persistence of contemporary Indigenous communities and their role in educating all of us about justice, equity, and the stewardship of the land throughout the generations.