The Monan Professorship in Theatre Arts
The Rev. J. Donald Monan, S.J. Professorship in Theatre Arts is a endowed professorship that brings regionally and nationally renowned theatre artists to work and teach at Boston College on an annual basis
Established in 2007 by a generous gift to the university, this distinguished position is named in honor of University Chancellor and former Boston College President J. Donald Monan, S.J. The position also commemorates the late Trustee E. Paul Robsham, M.Ed. 83, a major benefactor of the theater arts facility named for his son, the E. Paul Robsham Jr. Theater Arts Center.
The creation of this Professorship celebrates in perpetuity the longstanding relationship between Father Monan, the Robsham family, and the Boston College Theatre department.
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Previous Monan Professors

Larry Sousa
Larry Sousawhose extensive career as a director, choreographer, designer, educator, and performer has spanned Broadway, regional theater, television, film, and higher education for more than 30 yearshas joined Boston Colleges Theatre Department this academic year, as the Monan Professor in Theatre Arts.

Bryce Pinkham
An American stage and screen actor, Bryce is most widely known for originating the role of Monty Navarro in the Tony-winning production of泭A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder, for which he was nominated for Tony, Grammy, and Drama Desk awards.泭 He also notably appeared in the Broadway revival of泭The Heidi Chronicles泭as Peter Patrone, for which he was nominated for an Outer Critics Circle Award and a Drama League Award for Distinguished Performance.泭 His other Broadway credits include original roles in泭Holiday Inn,泭The Great Society,泭Ghost, and泭Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson泭and the upcoming泭Ohio State Murders泭with Audra McDonald.
Bryce's on-screen appearances include as a series regular on the Civil War drama Mercy Street, guest appearances in HBO's泭Julia, Baz Lurman's Netflix series泭The Get Down, and Robert DeNiro's feature film泭The Comedian, as well as泭The Good Wife泭(CBS),泭Proven Innocent泭(FOX)泭Person of Interest泭(CBS),泭Blindspot泭(N勛圖厙)泭The Blacklist泭(N勛圖厙).泭
As a singer Bryce has performed in concert venues across the country, most notably Carnegie Hall, The Chicago Lyric Opera, Lincoln Center, and The Library of Congress.泭 泭
As a writer, Bryce has published articles in泭American Theater Magazine泭and泭Yale Alumni Magazine.
泭泭In 2012 Bryce helped found Zara Aina, a not-for-profit that uses the power of theatrical storytelling to empower under-resourced youth. In May 2013, Bryce led a team of American artists on Zara Ainas pilot program to Madagascar.泭 Bryce is also a frequent collaborator with Outside the Wire, a social impact theater company that serves many communities but particularly focuses on military audiences. His most notable international tours include Guantanamo Bay, Japan, Kuwait, and Qatar.泭泭
A graduate of the Yale School of Drama, Bryce was awarded the Leonore Annenberg Foundation Early Career Fellowship in 2012.泭
In 2023 Bryce will serve as the Monan visiting professor at Boston College.
Bryce holds a BA from Boston College and an MFA in Acting and bio-writing from the Yale School of Drama.

Summer L. Williams
Summer L. Williams has been an active artist in Bostons theatre scene since the 1990s as a director, producer, and educator. As part of her Monan Residency, she will teach directing and direct the Theatre Department's April 2022 production of泭The Rocky Horror Show.泭 She is a泭founding member of Company One Theatre and currently serves as its Associate Artistic Director. She is also on the Board of Directors for both StageSource and the Coolidge Corner Theatre.
Her recent directing credits include泭Wolf Play泭(2020),泭School Girls, or The African Mean Girls Play泭(2019),泭MISS YOU LIKE HELL泭(2019), the world premiere of泭Leftovers泭(2018),泭Wig Out!泭(2018), Smart People (2017),泭Barbecue泭(2017),泭Revolt. She Said. Revolt Again.泭(2016),泭Bootycandy泭(2016), and泭An Octoroon泭(2016). She has directed for Company One, SpeakEasy Stage Company, BU's Playwrights' Theatre, Brandeis University, Clark University, the Theater Offensive, and Huntington Theatre Company, among others.
In 2009, 2016, and 2018, Williams won Elliot Norton Awards for Outstanding Director; she has been nominated for three IRNE (Independent Reviewers of New England) Awards.
Williams is a teacher of drama and a director at Brookline High School. She holds a B.A. in Theater and an M.A.Ed. in Urban Education.
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Paula Plum
Chestnut Hill, MA (August 1, 2020) The Boston College Theatre Department is thrilled to announce PAULA PLUM as the Rev. J. Donald Monan, S.J. Professor in Theatre Arts for the 2020-2021 academic year.
With over 40 years of teaching experience, Paula Plum is a thrilling addition to the 勛圖厙 Theatre faculty. Plum taught acting, directing, and voice for twelve years at UMass Lowell, and has been a泭private acting coach泭for Union and Non-Union actors for nearly twenty years. Since 2009, Plum has also been teaching the Shakespeare Work Out, for Actors Shakespeare Project, a six-week acting intensive that focuses on voice, body, and breath.
Plum is a founding member of Actors Shakespeare Project, a Boston theater company that performs and works in found spaces, schools, and theaters to present and explore the robust language, resonant stories, and deeply human characters in Shakespeares plays. Plum is also an ASP teaching artist and a member of their resident acting company.
Her stage credits include泭Antony and Cleopatra, Macbeth, Phedre泭(Actors Shakespeare Project);泭Ivanov,泭Mother Courage泭(American Repertory Theater);泭Top Girls, Tartuffe泭(Huntington Theatre Company);泭The Roommate, Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Death of a Salesman,泭33 Variations泭(Lyric Stage Company);泭The Children,泭Clybourne Park泭(SpeakEasy Stage Company), and many others.
From drama, comedy, and clowning, to period pieces, Shakespeare, and contemporary plays- Plum has done it all. Ed Siegel, critic-at-large for WBURs The ARTery, says that Paulas range [as an actor] is extraordinary. The Theater Mirror stated that Plum brings tenderness and quiet strength to the role of Hazel in the 2020 production of泭The Children. WBUR applauded her 2017 performance in泭Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,泭stating that Plum is a warm, vulnerable if convincingly vulgar and brassy Martha. The Arts Fuse described that same performance as charismatic, sexy, and shameless, and her 2014 performance as Linda in泭Death of a Salesman, as brilliantly nuanced.
Plum is the recipient of four IRNE Awards for Best Actress (Wit, Miss Price, The Heiress,泭and泭Plum Pudding), as well as three Elliot Norton Awards for Best Actress (Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Lost in Yonkers,泭and泭Miss Witherspoon). Plum was selected by the Boston Theater Critics Association to receive the 2004 Elliot Norton Award for Sustained Excellence, which pays tribute to the recipients body of work and their outstanding contributions to theater in Boston.
In 2009, Plum was one of five actors nation-wide to be awarded a three-year grant from the泭William and Eva Fox Foundation泭for a resident actor fellowship at SpeakEasy Stage Company of Boston. During her residency, she developed an original workshop called Handling the Hot Moments which explores how actors negotiate intimacy on stage. The concept and findings from the workshop led to a published article in American Theater Magazine. The grant also allowed her time to write and perform in泭What Lips My Lips Have Kissed, an original work about the life of poet Edna St. Vincent Millay.
Her directing credits include productions at Actors Shakespeare Project, Gloucester Stage Company, Lyric Stage Company, Merrimack Repertory Theatre, Stoneham Theatre, and others. Since 2003, Plum has been the Artistic Director of the WGBH touring concert,泭A Christmas Celtic Sojourn. Inspired by Brian ODonovans泭A Celtic Sojourn, the much beloved annual event draws on Celtic, Pagan, and Christian traditions to celebrate the music of the season with music, singing, and dancing (WGBH).
When asked about the longevity of her career, Plum responded: I really dont ever give up. Theres so much rejection in this business, but I keep going back. I think persistence is even more important than talent in terms of survival in the theater. You have to be willing to continually put yourself out there. (Boston University)
During her residency at Boston College, Plum will teach two classes: The Actor and the Mask in Fall 2020, and Directing II in Spring 2021. She will also direct Shakespeares泭Twelfth Night泭for the Theatre Department.
Plum studied mask, clown, and acrobatics at the Philippe Gaulier School in Paris, and also trained at The London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts. She holds a BFA from Boston University where she was honored with the 2003 Distinguished Alumna Award.泭

Maurice Emmanuel Parent
The Boston College Theatre Department announces award-winning actor, director, and arts educator, Maurice Emmanuel Parent, as the Rev. J. Donald Monan, S.J. Professor in Theatre Arts for the 2018-2019 academic year.
Parent is an actor with nearly 15 years of professional experience. He has over 40 acting credits at theatres across the nation and abroad, having performed with some of Bostons oldest and most respected companies such as Actors Shakespeare Project, Commonwealth Shakespeare Company, Huntington Theatre Company, Lyric Stage Company, New Repertory Theatre, and SpeakEasy Stage Company, among others.
On his recent role as Reggie the factory foreman, in Dominique Morisseaus泭Skeleton Crew泭(Huntington Theatre Company, 2018),泭The Arts Fuse泭called Parents performance a stand out, generating the plays most emotional moments, while泭Broadway World泭praised his powerfully emotional and authentic portrayal. Regarding his performance as Mr. Bones inThe Scottsboro Boys泭(SpeakEasy Stage Company, 2016) Joyce Kulhawik, President of the Boston Theater Critics Association, declared that 同arent brings his dazzle to the role, while TheaterMania called his performance a revelation. On his title role in Christopher Marlowes泭Edward II泭(Actors Shakespeare Project, 2017), The Boston Globe applauded his performance, calling it dynamic and spellbinding, adding that Parents portrayal of the titular monarch reaches a level of transfixing intensity.泭TheaterMania泭hailed his performance as flawless, and hypnotic, stating that Parents 如erformance of Edward is a unique thrill that cements his status as one of the most astonishing talents on the Boston theater scene.
Parent won the 2017 ArtsImpulse Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Musical for his role of Mr. Bones in泭The Scottsboro Boys泭(SpeakEasy Stage Company). He has been nominated for four Elliot Norton Awards by泭The Boston Theater Critics Association, winning twice for Outstanding Actor (Midsize Theater): in 2017 for Actors Shakespeare Projects production of泭Edward II, and in 2008 for three extraordinary performances in the same season:泭Some Men泭at SpeakEasy Stage,泭Angels in America Parts I and II泭at Boston Theatre Works, and泭The Wild Party泭at New Repertory Theatre. He has also been nominated for six Independent Reviewers of New England (IRNE) Awards, winning for Best Actor in a Drama for泭The Convert泭(Underground Railway Theatre, 2017), Best Supporting Actor in a Musical for泭The Snow Queen泭(New Repertory Theatre, 2016), and again for Best Supporting Actor in a Musical for泭The Color Purple泭(SpeakEasy Stage, 2015).
In addition to his regular performance work, Parent is the co-founder and Executive Director of泭The Front Porch Arts Collective, a black-led theatre company committed to advancing racial equity in Boston through theater. In an interview with泭The Improper Bostonian, Parent explained, The greater purpose of showing ethnically specific theater is to help people see the world through other vantage points that they may not have access to. The non-profit will open its second season on November 30, 2018 with a co-production, directed by Parent, with the泭Lyric Stage Company泭of Daniel Beatys泭Breath and Imagination泭which tells the story of the first world-renowned African American classical vocalist, Roland Hayes.
Parents history as an educator extends back nearly a decade. Currently he is a Teaching Artist with Actors Shakespeare Project and a Performing Arts Specialist at the Martin Luther King School (K-8). He is also an Adjunct Professor at Tufts University, where he teaches acting, and at Boston University, where he teaches music theatre technique.
During his residency at Boston College, Parent will lead two workshops for Theatre students, giving instruction on auditions and Shakespeare performance (both workshops will be offered in October 2018). He will offer creative support to the Theatre Departments Season productions of泭Pride and Prejudice泭(November 2018) and泭Hamlet泭(February 2019). Parent will also teach two courses: the first, Musical Theatre Performance will be taught in fall 2018 and will explore storytelling in both solos and duets, using tools uniquely available to the music theatre actor; the second, Devised Theater, will be offered in the spring of 2019 and will focus on creating a devised piece called泭The Identity Project, which will explore race, gender, sexuality, and more through live performance. Performances for泭The Identity Project泭will take place in April 2019 during the annual 勛圖厙 Arts Festival.
Maurice Parent embodies boundless energy, enthusiasm and talent that he utilizes to the fullest on stage and off, says 勛圖厙 Theatre Department Chair, Crystal Tiala. As a teacher, dancer, actor, singer, director and social activist, he connects effortlessly with everyone in his presence. His talents and creative energy seem to have no earthly limitations. We are honored to have him join our Department this year.

Nick Scandalios 87 and Scott Clyve泭
Chestnut Hill, MA (August 23, 2017) The Boston College Theatre Department is thrilled to announce producer Nick Scandalios 87 and designer Scott Clyve as the Rev. J. Donald Monan, S.J. Professors in Theatre Arts for the 2017-2018 academic year.
Nick Scandalios has made an extensive impact in the theatre world. He is the Executive Vice President of the泭Nederlander Organization, one of the largest owners of legitimate theatres in the world. Now in its 105th泭year, the Nederlander Organization has produced over 100 Broadway and touring productions, giving a home to several Tony-winning hits including泭Hamilton, Waitress, Next to Normal, Wicked, The Lion King, Chicago, West Side Story, Cats, and泭Annie, among others. The company has built an impressive network of historically significant theatres across the country, managing multiple venues around the U.S., and in Londons West End. Scandalios has been with the Nederlander Organization for nearly 30 years.
Scandalios is the Immediate Past Chairman of the Board of Governors of The泭Broadway League, a full-service trade association dedicated to fostering increased interest in Broadway theatre and supporting the creation of profitable theatrical productions. He is also on the Board of Trustees for泭Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, a nonprofit organization that draws upon the talents, resources, and generosity of the theatre community on Broadway, Off-Broadway and across the country by raising funds for AIDS-related causes across the United States.
Scandalios humanitarian efforts also extend beyond theater, as he is the Immediate Past Chair and current member of the Emeritus Board of泭Family Equality Council泭(FEC), a national advocacy organization committed to securing family equality for LGBTQ parents, guardians, and allies. He was the 2016 Honoree at FECs annual Night at the Pier gala, a celebration of the people and organizations that have made an impact on the LGBTQ community.
Scandalios was the recipient of the 2016 Boston College Arts Council Alumni Award for Distinguished Achievement, which recognizes alumni who have achieved an outstanding level of distinction and public recognition for contributions in art-related professions. And in 2008, Scandalios was presented with the Commercial Theater Institutes Robert Whitehead Award for outstanding achievement in commercial theater production.
In the Fall 2017 semester, Mr. Scandalios will be a guest speaker for the course, Principles of Theatre Management, taught by StageSource Executive Director, Julie Hennrikus. The class will join him for an insiders tour of the Nederlander Organization in NYC, as well as at a backstage tour at one of Nederlanders theatres, culminating in an evening performance of one of the companys current Broadway hits.
It is a great honor to have Nick Scandalios, a man who has been part of the massive revitalization of for-profit theater on Broadway and elsewhere, return to Boston College to interact with our students, says Crystal Tiala, Chair of the Theatre Department. A product of the Carroll School of Management and 勛圖厙 Theatre, Nick is as generous and kind a person as he is a brilliant businessman.

Sheri Wilner
Sheri Wilner, award-winning playwright and arts educator, is the author of more than 20 full-length and one-act plays, most recently a new musical called泭Cake Off,泭which premiered in October 2015 at the Signature Theatre in Arlington, VA and received a Helen Hayes Award nomination for Outstanding Musical Adaptation.泭Cake Off泭will be produced this August and September at the Bucks County Playhouse in New Hope, PA.
Wilner currently works as the Director of the Dramatists Guild Fellows Program in NYC, which provides a year-long professional development workshop to a selected group of emerging playwrights and musical theatre writers. Prior to that appointment she was the Master Playwright for the Miami-Dade Department of Cultural Affairs Playwrights Development Program, conducting a series of weekend workshops over the span of two years with a small class of professional Miami playwrights. She has also taught playwriting at Vanderbilt University, where she was the Fred Coe Playwright-in-Residence, and Florida State University, where she headed the playwriting division of the MFA Writing for Stage and Screen program.
Her plays have been published in over a dozen anthologies, and have been performed at major regional and national theatres including the Old Globe, the Guthrie Theater, the Actors Theatre of Louisville, the Eugene O'Neill Playwrights Conference, the Williamstown Theatre Festival, and several seasons of the Boston Theatre Marathon at the Boston Playwrights Theatre. Her work has also been produced in Australia, Denmark, Germany, India, Ireland, Japan, and the United Kingdom.
During her residency, Wilner will teach two courses for the Theatre department. The first, Writing Wrongs: Writing the Issue-Based Play, will explore the process of transforming emotional responses to social and political hot topics into complex, engaging works for the theatre; and the second, Contemporary Female Playwrights, will address the lack of gender parity in American theatre by reading and creatively responding to plays authored by a diverse range of female playwrights. Along with Boston playwrights Melinda Lopez (Playwright-In-Residence at the Huntington Theatre Company) and Kate Snodgrass (Artistic Director of Boston Playwrights Theatre), Wilner will write a new ten-minute play to accompany our Season opening production of泭Waiting for Lefty泭(October 13-16, 2016), directed by Assistant Professor Patricia Riggin.
Sheri Wilners expertise extends well beyond her highly acclaimed body of work as a playwright, Crystal Tiala, Chair of the Theater Department explains. She has made it her mission to advocate for gender parity in her field. Her participation in research and subsequent publications bring to light how biased choices made by producers have resulted in significantly fewer opportunities for women. Her presence in our department will fuel some fascinating discussions of both gender and racial parity in the entertainment industry.
The Theatre department will produce her play,泭Kingdom City, (March 22-26, 2017) directed by Associate Professor, Dr. John Houchin. The play, which premiered at the La Jolla Playhouse outside San Diego two years ago, follows a female theatre directors struggle to produce a provocative play in a conservative, religious town in the mid-west (based on a real-life incident that occurred in Fulton, MO).泭The Los Angeles Times泭declared it a potentially major new American play.
She has been the recipient of several prestigious fellowships including the Howard Foundation Fellowship in Playwriting (2008,泭Kingdom City), the Bush Foundation Artist Fellowship (2007), The Playwrights Centers Jerome Foundation Fellowship (2005-2007), and the Dramatists Guild Playwriting Fellowship (2000-2001). She has twice been a co-winner of the Actors Theatre of Louisvilles Heideman Award for her plays泭Labor Day泭(1998) and泭Bake Off泭(2001), both of which premiered at the annual Humana Festival of New American Plays. Wilner attended Cornell University (B.A., English), as well as Columbia University where she received her MFA in Playwriting.

Michelle Miller 98
Michelle Miller, 勛圖厙 class of 98, has become the consummate modern entertainment professional.泭As a professional actor and singer, she has performed in off-Broadway shows, in the International Fringe Festival, at Lincoln Center in NYC, and at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, UT. In New York Michelle was a founding member of Any Minute Now Productions with which she performed and produced泭The Triumph of Love The Musical,泭John & Jen, and泭Hello Again!泭She has also sung with the New Haven Symphony, The Kansas City Jazz Orchestra, as well as the Boston Pops under the batons of John Williams, Marvin Hamlisch and Keith Lockhart.
In recent years Ms. Miller has been working as a producer, photographer, and scriptwriter. Beginning with Project Explorer, an award-winning non-profit educational film company whose mission is to bring the world into the classroom with free multimedia content and lesson plans that improve students global awareness and cross-cultural understanding.泭The Castle Project, a film about Colorados infamous haunted mansion, was produced, filmed, and story-boarded by Miller and was featured in the documentary film corner of the Cannes Film Festival in 2013. Miller was also nominated for six Heartland Emmy Awards for her work as a producer and photographer on泭The Rocky Mountain Experience泭(2014, 2013), a PBS adventure sports series. The series won the 2013 award for Best Television Pilot at the Nevada Film Festival.
Ms. Miller is also active in humanitarian and philanthropic efforts. As the Vice-Chair on the Board of Trustees for泭ASTEP, a non-profit designed to connect artists with underserved youth around the world, she produced eighteen concerts in NYC with award-winning composers and Tony-nominated performers, highlighting and promoting new musical works, and fundraising to benefit ASTEPs international service projects. Personally, Ms. Miller has taken five extended service trips to a rural community outside Bangalore, India for the泭Shanti Bhavan Childrens Project泭doing fundraising, project development, and teaching some of the countrys poorest children everything from Social Studies and English, to Visual Arts, Music, Theater, and Dance.
"Michelle Miller is an exciting choice for the 2015-2016 Monan Professorship. She is an extraordinary actress, singer, filmmaker, and teacher with enormous compassion for humanitarian causes, says Theatre department Chair, Crystal Tiala. Michelle is a shining example of what a Boston College education is all about and the quintessential role model for our students."
In 2009 Michelle was inducted as a Dame of Malta into The Knights of Malta, a thousand year old Catholic organization that invites members based on their commitment to faith, philanthropy and service. Michelle was invited not only for her work with Shanti Bhavan and ASTEP, but for her years of inner city outreach and extensive work with泭Christmas in October, which has been rehabilitating inner city homes for 30 years and was founded by her father. Through the Knights of Malta Michelle has made eight pilgrimages to Lourdes, France to care for the sick.
As the 2015-2016 Monan Professor in Theatre Arts, Ms. Miller will direct Rodgers & Hammersteins泭Carousel泭(October 21-25, 2015), hailed by泭Time泭magazine as the best musical of the 20th泭Century. Her compassionate and collaborative teaching style will be put to good use in an advanced musical theater performance class using a one-on-one approach to identify and work through physical and emotional blocks unique to each student in order to capture their true potential. The class will explore how to embody the character through personalizing the text and freeing the natural voice.
Her work will include collaborating with Theatre students, Department professors, and guest artists alike. She will serve as the vocal coach for the fall production of Charles L. Mees泭Big Love泭(November 19-22, 2015) directed by Dr. Scott T. Cummings, as well as the consultant for the new Irish musical,泭Learning How to Drown, written by 勛圖厙 Theatre Alumna Patricia Noonan 07 (February 17-21, 2016), and as a guest lecturer for the Independent Television & Film course. She will also lead a number of vocal performance workshops (open to all interested 勛圖厙 students).
In the last 17 years Michelle Miller has taken her theater training and professional development and merged those skills with her commitment to service and activist work to become a world-class educator and leader in the arts. The Theatre department is proud to welcome her back to Boston College for the 2015-16 academic year.

Tina Packer
Tina Packer泭is the Founding Artistic Director of泭Shakespeare & Company, one of the largest and most critically acclaimed Shakespeare Festivals in North America, currently celebrating its 36th泭season. Packer founded Shakespeare & Company in 1978 with the goal of creating a sustainable and vital program of performance, training, and education of the highest standard that holds language as the center of the theatrical experience. With her vision and leadership, the Company has become a home for theatre professionals from all over the world. It is also one of the largest theatre-in-education programs in the northeast, reaching upward of 50,000 students annually with performances, workshops, and residencies.
Packer is also a published author. Her book,泭Power Plays: Shakespeares Lessons in Leadership & Management泭(2001), co-written with John Whitney, spent several weeks on the Business Best-Seller charts. Her childrens book,泭Tales from Shakespeare泭(2004) received the Parents Choice Award. Her forthcoming book,泭Women of Will泭(2015) is the result of a lifelong exploration into Shakespeares famed yet misunderstood heroines; it is based on her five-part performance piece of the same name which enjoyed critical acclaim in its off-Broadway run this past year. She has also been the subject of TV and film specials;泭Sex, Violence & Poetry: a Portrait of Tina Packer泭was produced by WGBH, and泭Brush Up Your Shakespeare,泭an hour-long concert special泭in partnership with the Boston Pops and Boston Philharmonic Orchestra on PBS.
Born in Wolverhampton, England, Packer trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, was an Associate Artist with the Royal Shakespeare Company, and performed in the West End in over 20 productions for B勛圖厙 and ITV television. She has lectured or been the keynote speaker at over 30 colleges and universities including Columbia, Harvard, and M.I.T, and has received six honorary doctorate degrees.
She received the 1992 Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding Direction in Boston, the 1996 Boston Theatre Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre, and the 2001 Elliot Norton Award for Continued Excellence in Theatre. She was also the 1999-2000 Arts Recipient of the Commonwealth Award, Massachusetts highest cultural recognition.

Melinda Lopez
Chestnut Hill, MA (July 30, 2019) The Boston College Theatre Department is thrilled to announce award-winning playwright Melinda Lopez, as the Rev. J. Donald Monan, S.J. Professor in Theatre Arts for the 2019-2020 academic year.
Hailed by WBUR as one of Bostons most important writers, Melinda Lopez was the 2019 recipient of the Massachusetts Cultural Councils (MCC) Award in Dramatic Writing, as well as the Boston Theater Critics Associations (BTCA) Elliot Norton Prize for Sustained Excellence for consistently enriching the Boston theater community as a playwright, actress and educator.
With a body of work that spans more than two decades, Lopezs plays have been performed around the country at such notable theaters as Steppenwolf Theatre Company, The Guthrie Theater, Laguna Playhouse, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Shakespeare and Company, The Huntington Theatre Company, and ArtsEmerson, among others. In a 2015 interview with MCC, Lopez explained that as a Cuban-American, she intentionally places brave, complicated, and uncompromising Latina women at the center of her work, frequently focusing on the stories of Cuban or Cuban-American characters.
Her most recent work,泭Yerma泭(Huntington Theatre Company, 2019), is an adaptation and new translation of Federico Garc穩a Lorcas play of the same name. Described as a woman consumed by her dream of motherhood, Yerma defies her husband and confronts her community which ultimately propels her into a collision with the universe that is urgent and terrible in scope.泭Arts Fuse泭affirmed that Lopez succeeds at putting her own stamp on the work without disrupting or diverting the plays dramatic contours吆her] translation makes the language of the play approachable without losing the beauty of Lorcas poetry.
Her one-woman show,泭Mala- which Lopez wrote and performed- was presented at ArtsEmerson in 2016. The play is described as an utterly unsentimental journey towards the end of life-- an irreverent exploration of how we live, cope, and survive in the moment (melindalopez.com). WBURs The ARTery applauded the production as an exquisitely fashioned theater piece, brimming with humor, frustration, and honesty, and Boston Magazine called it her most profound work yet.泭Mala泭won the BTCA Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding New Play, and Lopez earned the Arts Impulse Award for Best Solo Performance. In honor of the world premiere of泭Mala and in recognition of her many accomplishments Mayor Martin J. Walsh, proclaimed October 29, 2016 to be Melinda Lopez Day in the city of Boston for which he urged his fellow Bostonians to celebrate her enormous contribution to the theatre field both locally and throughout the world.
From 2013 to 2019 Lopez was the playwright-in-residence at the Huntington Theatre Company as part of the Mellon Foundations National Playwright Residency Program, which provides salary, benefits, and a flexible research and development fund for a diverse group of American playwrights at selected theaters around the country. In 2010 she was named a Woman of Courage Honoree by泭La Alianza Hispana, an organization whose mission is to improve the lives of the Latino community of Massachusetts. Her play泭Sonia Flew泭won the 2004 Independent Reviewers of New England (IRNE) Award and the BTCA Elliott Norton Award for Best New Play and Best Production. In 1999 she was the first recipient of the Charlotte Woolard Award, given by The Kennedy Center to a promising new voice in American theatre for her play,泭The Order of Things.
In addition to her work as a playwright, Lopez is also an accomplished actress, having performed at regional theaters across the country. She is also a freelance writer for泭HowlRound Theatre Commons, a free and open platform for theatremakers worldwide that amplifies progressive, disruptive ideas about the art form and facilitates connection between diverse practitioners. Additionally, she has been an Assistant Professor of Playwriting at Boston University since 2008, as well as a visiting lecturer of theatre and performance at Wellesley College since 2001. She has a M.A. in Playwriting from Boston University and a B.A. in Drama from Dartmouth College.
In a 2017 interview with the泭50 Playwrights Project,泭Lopez was asked what advice she had for playwrights at the beginning of their career. She responded:泭Surround yourself with people who believe in you. Write what you want to write. Tell the truth. Be good to everyone you work with and work for. Listen to actors. Have faith, have faith, have faith.
During her residency at Boston College, Lopez will teach two classes: Contemporary American Theatre in Fall 2019, and Playwriting I in Spring 2020. In January 2020, the 勛圖厙 Theatre Department will mount a full production of her play泭Back the Night, which explores the rise in sexual violence on college campuses, to be directed by Pascale Florestal.

David R. Gammons
David R. Gammons泭is a director, designer, visual artist, and theatre educator.
Recent directing projects include the Boston premieres of泭The Motherf**ker with the Hat泭(2013 Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding Production),泭Red泭(2012 Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding Production), and泭Blackbird泭at SpeakEasy Stage Company;泭Medea,泭The Hotel Nepenthe,泭The Duchess of Malfi, and泭Titus Andronicus泭(2007 Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding Director) for Actors Shakespeare Project; the world premieres of泭The Farm泭by Walt McGough and泭The Salt Girl泭by John Kuntz at Boston Playwrights Theatre; the New England premieres of泭Cherry Docs,泭The Lieutenant of Inishmore泭and泭My Name is Rachel Corrie泭at The New Repertory Theatre; and泭The Winters Tale泭as part of the Shakespeare Exploded Festival at the American Repertory Theatre. Other recent directing credits include Marlowe's泭Doctor Faustus泭at the Modern Theatre; Adrienne Kennedys泭Funnyhouse of a Negro泭with Brandeis Theatre Company; Eric Bogosians泭subUrbia泭at MIT;泭Romeo and Juliet泭at The Boston Conservatory; and a revival of Arthur Kopits泭Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mammas Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad泭as the inaugural production at Harvard Universitys New College Theatre. Mr. Gammons recent directing projects have been nominated for twenty-three Elliot Norton Awards and thirty Independent Reviewers of New England (IRNE) Awards.
Mr. Gammons is a graduate of the Directing Program of the American Repertory Theatre Institute for Advanced Theatre Training at Harvard University, where he directed productions of Shakespeares泭Twelfth Night, Marlowes泭Edward II, Artauds泭The Cenci, Genets泭The Balcony, and Pinters泭Party Time泭and泭The New World Order. While a directing student, he assisted on A.R.T. productions directed by JoAnne Akalaitis, Ron Daniels, Robert Scanlan, and David Wheeler.
He was the founder and artistic coordinator of Philadelphias No More Masterpieces, a performance collective dedicated to generating original dance-theatre work, and conceived and directed their world-premiere productions泭Spanking the Maid,泭A Crying of Bones, and泭Heavens Sake. Other original dance-theatre works he has created include泭Teen Tragedy Trilogy泭for Headlong Dance Theatre (winner of a 1999 Bessie Award for Outstanding Choreography as part of泭St*r W*rs and Other Stories),泭A Winters Tale泭for Pig Iron Theatre Company,泭Raising Rapunzel泭for Phantom Theatre, and泭Exquisite Corpses泭for Lorraine Chapman: The Company.
Stage designs for the American Repertory Theatre include Robert Woodruffs production of泭Richard II, Robert Scanlans production of泭Beckett Trio: Eh Joe, Ghost Trio, and Nacht und Tr疇ume泭(which toured to Strasbourg, France), and Spencer/Coltons original dance work泭Winter Circus. Other Boston area designs include泭King Lear,泭Titus Andronicus,泭The Tempest,泭The Duchess of Malfi, and泭The Hotel Nepenthe泭for Actors Shakespeare Project; and designs for SpeakEasy Stage, Coyote Theatre, and Theatre Offensive among many others. Mr. Gammons has designed numerous sets and costumes for productions at the A.R.T. Institute for Advanced Theatre Training, Suffolk University, Philadelphias Headlong Dance Theatre, Pig Iron Theatre Company, and Concord Academy.
Mr. Gammons has served as the Director of the Theatre Program at Concord Academy for the past fourteen years, where he has taught courses in acting, directing, playwriting, and design, and directs a company of performers devoted to developing original experimental work for the stage. At Concord he has directed plays by Sophocles, Shakespeare, Chekhov, Pirandello, Brecht, and Suzan-Lori Parks, and has conceived and directed the world-premiere productions泭3SisTerZ,泭Beauty Sleeping,泭Sea of Troubles,泭LHOOQ,泭When I look up to the sky I get a scary feeling,泭Tyger/Tiger,泭Double Negative,泭(Her) House,泭Howl,泭Permanent Fatal Errors,泭Flux,泭Volta, and泭4am. He has delivered guest lectures on the craft of drama at Harvard University, Emerson College, Brandeis University, Wellesley College, The Boston Conservatory, and Suffolk University, and taught Continuing Education courses at the Arden Theater in Philadelphia. In the fall of 2011, he was a Visiting Lecturer in Theatre at Suffolk University. In 2013-2014, David will serve as the Rev. J. Donald Monan S.J. Professor of Theatre Arts at Boston College.
Mr. Gammons is a graduate of Harvard University with a degree in Visual and Environmental Studies, and studied sculpture, painting, and photography with Ritsuko Taho, Nan Freedman, Rosamund Purcell, and Christopher James. At Harvard he was awarded the 1992 Peter Sellars Directors Prize. As an undergraduate, he is best remembered for his production of Antonin Artauds泭Jet of Blood, in which the audience was suspended on swings amidst the action.

Robbie McCauley
Robbie McCauley泭is an OBIE Award playwright for泭Sallys Rape,泭and an internationally recognized performance artist and director. Her most recent play,泭Sugar,泭directed by Maureen Shea at ArtsEmerson in Boston received wide critical acclaim,and for her performance an IRNE Award.
Directing credits include Adrienne Kennedys泭Sleep Deprivation Chamber泭at Penumbra Theatre Co in Minnesota, and Janet Langhart Cohens泭Anne and Emmett泭at the Jack Morton Theater in Washington D.C. and at Roxbury Repertory Theater in Boston.
Acting credits include泭For Colored Girls Whove Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf泭on Broadway, and泭Fences泭at the Tyrone Guthrie in Minnesota.
She toured with The Arts Company and with New Performance Video as writer and performer in cities across the country and abroad facilitating dialogues on race between local whites, blacks, and other ethnicities.
Widely anthologized, including泭Extreme Exposure;泭Moon Marked and Touched by Sun;泭and泭Performance and Cultural Politics, Robbie McCauley recently retired from the faculty of Emerson College, which conferred on her Professor Emerita.
Dr. John Bell
Dr. John Bell泭is a puppeteer, scholar, and teacher whose interests combine practice and theory. He started performing as a puppeteer with the泭Bread and Puppet Theater, and as a member of that company for over a dozen years learned about the global breadth of puppetry. Recognized as one of the preeminent historians of puppet theater in the US, he performs, directs, and otherwise collaborates with Great Small Works, a Brooklyn-based theater collective. He is the author of Strings, Hands, Shadows: A Modern Puppet History (Detroit Institute of Art), and edited Puppets, Masks, and Performing Objects (MIT Press). His newest book, American Puppet Modernism, a study of US confrontations with puppet and object theater over the past 150 years, will be published by Palgrave-Macmillan in July 2008.
While studying for his Ph.D. in theater history at Columbia University he began to create shows with the group of friends who became Great Small Works. He conceived and directed the Great Small Works production泭A Mammal's Notebook: The Erik Satie Cabaret, and with his wife Trudi Cohen and son Isaac Bell has created various Great Small Works projects in Boston, where the family lives. He is the author of Strings, Hands, Shadows: A Modern Puppet History, and edited Puppets, Masks, and Performing Objects; a forthcoming book project is American Puppet Modernism. He is a Contributing Editor to The Drama Review and the Historian of Puppetry International, for whom he edited the Fall/Winter 2006 issue devoted to puppet scripts. He is recognized internationally as an expert on the history of puppet theater.
John's activities at the Center in Spring 2008 include his course "Performance, Art, Technology: Practice and Theory," an undergraduate and graduate class offered through the Music and Theater Arts Department. The class will explore the relationships among technology, culture, and performance in different societies at different times in two ways: by reading, discussing, and writing about texts, films, and images; and by creating performances in different media that respond to the techniques and issues raised in the class. The course will culminate with the design, construction, and performance of site-specific elements around the MIT campus as part of Professor Thomas DeFrantz's Dance All Over MIT performances in May.

Paul Daigneault
Paul Daigneault泭is the Founder and Producing Artistic Director of泭SpeakEasy Stage Company泭in Boston, a mid-sized resident regional theater that is currently celebrating its twentieth season. His leadership has made SpeakEasy one of the most successful and respected professional theaters in New England, with a strong reputation for producing regional premieres of contemporary musicals and plays. He has directed more than half of SpeakEasy's roughly one hundred productions over the past twenty years.
Daigneault is a 1987 graduate of Boston College, the first 勛圖厙 alum to hold the prestigious Monan Professorship in Theatre Arts. During his year-long residency, he will direct a production of Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine's critically acclaimed musical Into the Woods as part of the celebration of the 30th anniversary of the Robsham Theater Arts Center. He will also teach an advanced class in Musical Theater Performance, serve as a mentor to student directors, and guest lecturer in other courses.
Daigneault has not been a stranger to Boston College in recent years. For the Theatre department, he directed Craig Lucas's Blue Window in 2002 and the irreverent musical Urinetown in 2008. In 2007, in recognition of his success with SpeakEasy, Paul received the Alumni Award for Distinguished Achievement from the Arts Council of Boston College.
Founded in 1992 SpeakEasy worked out of St. Augustine's School in South Boston where Paul taught sixth and seventh grade. In 2007, SpeakEasy was named the Pavilion Resident Theater for the Boston Center for the Arts, where it performs in the Nancy and Ed Roberts Studio Theater for more than half the year. In 2008, the company received StageSource's Theater Hero Award, given annually to "an exceptional member of the Greater Boston theatre community who has demonstrated a history of service and commitment to the community through leadership, support, inspiration, innovation and promotion of the art of theatre throughout the region."
The Monan Professorship in Theatre Arts was established in 2007 by a generous gift to Boston College in honor of University Chancellor and former 勛圖厙 President J. Donald Monan S.J.. The position, which also commemorates the late Trustee E. Paul Robsham, enables the Theatre department to bring nationally and internationally known professional theatre artists to Boston College to teach and work with undergraduate students. Daigneault will be the fifth visiting Monan Professor in Theatre Arts, following actor Karen MacDonald in the current 2010-2011 academic year, as well as director Carmel O'Reilly, actor Remo Airaldi, and Broadway music director Mary Mitchell Campbell.

Karen MacDonald
Karen MacDonald泭is a Boston-based actor who has worked all over the USA and toured to international festivals. She is the recipient of the 2010 Eliot Norton Prize for Sustained Excellence awarded by the Boston Theatre Critics Association and the 2010 Robert Brustein Award for Sustained Achievement in the Theatre presented by the American Repertory Theatre. During her Monan residency, she will teach master classes in acting and improvisation, serve as an acting coach for Theatre Department productions, and offer workshops in audition technique.
Karen MacDonald is an accomplished actor who has distinguished herself in a wide variety of classic and contemporary roles, from Madame Arkadina in Chekhov's泭The Seagull泭and the title role in Brecht's泭Mother Courage and Her Children泭to cutting-edge new plays by Rinde Eckert, Charles Mee, and Anne Washburn. She is a founding company member of the American Repertory Theatre, where she appeared in seventy productions and worked with such renowned directors as Robert Woodruff, Andrei Serban, Martha Clarke, JoAnne Akalaitis, and Les Waters. Last season, she appeared at the Huntington Theatre Company as Kate Keller in Arthur Miller's泭All My Sons泭directed by David Esbjornson,泭and as Mary Todd Lincoln in Paula Vogel's泭A Civil War Christmas,泭at the New Rep in泭boom泭and at the Merrimack Repertory Theatre playing all seven roles in Robert Hewett's泭The Blonde, The Brunette and the Vengeful Redhead.
"We feel lucky to have Karen as a member of our community this year," said Scott T. Cummings, Chair of the Theatre department. "Our students will be learning from a master." The citation on the 2010 Eliot Norton Prize celebrated her as "an actress of phenomenal versatility, who for three decades has enriched our stages with indelible characterizations."
MacDonald received her professional training at Boston University and began her career in Boston with The Proposition, famous for its improvisational comedy revues, and was a founder of Next Move Theatre. She has worked in New York at the Roundabout, Second Stage, Playwrights Horizons and Theatre for a New Audience and at major resident theaters around the country (Hartford Stage, Berkeley Rep, Long Wharf Theatre, The Goodman in Chicago, and others). From 1993-95 she was a company member of Houston's Alley Theatre, where she worked with legendary diretor Jos矇 Quintero.
In the 2010-2011 theater season, during her teaching residency at Boston College, Boston audiences can see MacDonald perform in the Huntington Theatre Company's production of泭Bus Stop, the Boston Playwrights Theatre production of泭Two Wives in India, Arts Emerson's泭The Color of Rose泭and泭The Drowsy Chaperone泭at SpeakEasy Stage Company.
The Monan Professorship in Theatre Arts was established in 2007 by a generous gift to Boston College in honor of University Chancellor and former 勛圖厙 President J. Donald Monan S.J.. The position, which also commemorates the late Trustee E. Paul Robsham, enables the Theatre Department to bring nationally and internationally known professional theater artists to Boston College to teach and work with undergraduate students. MacDonald is the fourth Monan visiting artist, following director Carmel O'Reilly, actor Remo Airaldi, and Broadway music director Mary Mitchell Campbell.
For more information on Karen MacDonald, the Monan Professorship, or the 勛圖厙 Theatre department, contact Scott T. Cummings at 617-552-4012.
Carmel O'Reilly
Carmel O'Reilly泭most recently directed泭Trojan Barbie, a new play by Christine Evans, at the American Repertory Theatre,泭Dead Mans Cell Phone泭by Sarah Ruhl for the Lyric Stage Company, and泭The Seafarer泭by Conor McPherson for The Speakeasy Stage Company.
She is founder and Artistic Director of the S繳g獺n Theatre Company, for which she directed the Elliot Norton award-winning productions of泭The Sanctuary Lamp泭and泭St Nicholas.泭St Nicholas泭was later re-staged as a co-production with the A.R.T.
Carmel has also won Elliot Norton awards for Outstanding Director for泭The Lonesome West,泭Bailegangaire泭and泭This Lime Tree Bower,泭while泭The Seafarer泭recently won an Elliot Norton Best Ensemble award.
She has also recently directed Mary Zimmermans泭Metamorphoses泭for Harvard University, Heather Raffos泭9 Parts of Desire泭for both the Lyric Stage and the Kitchen Theatre (Ithaca, NY), and Oscar Wildes泭Lady Windermeres Fan泭for Emerson Stage.

Remo Airaldi
In his 16th year as a resident company member at the American Repertory Theater,泭Remo Airaldi泭has performed in over sixty A.R.T. productions. Previous roles include Casca in泭Julius Caesar, The Master of Ceremonies in泭The Onion Cellar, Mr. Bumble in泭Oliver Twist, The Valet in泭No Exit泭(in Cambridge and on tour at Hartford Stage and Montclair Performing Arts Center), Arleguin in泭Island of Slaves, Peter in泭Romeo and Juliet, the Captain, Mister Green, and Head Porter in泭Amerika, Nurse in泭Dido, Queen of Carthage, the Constable in泭The Provoked Wife, McCann in泭The Birthday Party, Francis Flute in泭A Midsummer Night's Dream, Mesrou in泭La Dispute, Ilya Ilych Telegin in泭Uncle Vanya, Old Man in泭Lysistrata, Cucurucu in泭Marat/Sade, Prince of Aragon in泭The Merchant of Venice, Father Donnally/Doctor in泭The Marriage of Bette and Boo, Antonio in泭The Tempest, Matt of the Mint in泭The Threepenny Opera, Mistress Quickly/Governor of Harfleur/Le Fer in泭Henry V, Pozzo in泭Waiting for Godot, Chorus/Doorkeeper in泭The Orestia, Pishtchik in泭The Cherry Orchard, Mistress Quickly in泭Henry IV, parts one & two, along with several other roles.
Airaldi has also taught acting at Harvard University.

Mary-Mitchell Campbell
A composer, music director, music supervisor, orchestrator, conductor, and teacher.泭Mary-Mitchell Campbell泭is one of the brightest and most acclaimed musical artists in New York theatre. She won a 2006-2007 Drama Desk Award for her orchestration of泭Company, for which she also served as music director.
Ms. Campbell has worked on New York productions of泭Next to Normal,泭Company, Sweeney Todd,泭Beauty and the Beast,泭The Scarlet Pimpernel,泭The Prince and the Pauper,泭First Lady Suite,泭The World of Nicky Adams,泭Our Town,泭Go Go Beach,泭The Screams of Kittle Genovese,泭The Audience, and泭Sweet Charity泭at Lincoln Center.
Mary-Mitchell also holds the distinction of being one of the youngest individuals to ever serve on the faculty at the Julliard School.
She is the founder and chair of Artists Striving to End Poverty, an international organization that seeks to empower young children through self-expression.
Mary-Mitchell is a native of North Carolina and holds degrees from the North Carolina School of the Arts and Furman University.