Selected Works

Theatre Showcase

Explore a curated collection of my recent theatre projects.

Director / Set Design

The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged)

Written by Adam Long, Daniel Singer and Jess Winfield

Featured are all 37 of Shakespeare’s plays, meant to be performed in 97 minutes, by three actors. Fast paced, witty, and physical, it’s full of laughter for Shakespeare lovers and haters alike.

2024 Nominations

Metrolina Theatre Association

Best Director

Best Female Actor

Best Male Actor

Erica Owens

Jamie Hutteman

Nathan Morris

Actress / Bella

Lost in Yonkers

Written by Neil Simon

Directed by Jamie Hutteman

By America’s great comic playwright, this memory play is set in Yonkers in 1942. Bella is thirty-five years old, mentally challenged, and living at home with her mother, stern Grandma Kurnitz. As the play opens, ne’er-do-well son Eddie deposits his two young sons on the old lady’s doorstep. He is financially strapped and taking to the road as a salesman. The boys are left to contend with Grandma, with Bella and her secret romance, and with Louie, her brother, a small-time hoodlum in a strange new world called Yonkers.

Video Excerpt from Act II

Director / Set Design

The Outsider

Written by Paul Slade Smith

Ned Newley doesn’t even want to be governor. He’s terrified of public speaking; his poll numbers are impressively bad. To his ever-supportive Chief of Staff, Ned seems destined to fail. But political consultant Arthur Vance sees things differently: Ned might be the worst candidate to ever run for office. Unless the public is looking for… the worst candidate to ever run for office. A timely and hilarious comedy that skewers politics and celebrates democracy.

Video Excerpt from Act I

Director / Set Design

Let’s Murder Marsha

Written by Monk Ferris

A happy housewife named Marsha, hopelessly addicted to reading murder mysteries, overhears her loving husband discussing her upcoming birthday surprise with an interior decorator. To her ears, though, it sounds like they are planning to murder her!

Director / Set Design

Ghost of a Chance

Written by Flip Kobler & Cindy Marcus

Bethany is bright, strong, independent, beautiful and has zero self esteem. She has brought her fiancée, Floyd, and his mother, Verna, up to her cabin in the woods, the site of the hunting accident that killed Chance, her first husband. Much to her consternation, he or rather, his ghost is still there.

Video Excerpt from Act II

Actress / Ruth Condomine

Blithe Spirit

Written by Noel Coward

Directed by Pamela Thorson

A smash comedy hit in London and New York, this much-revived classic from the playwright of Private Lives concerns fussy, cantankerous novelist Charles Condomine, who has remarried but finds himself haunted (literally) by the ghost of his late first wife, Elvira. Clever, insistent and well aware of Charles’ shortcomings, Elvira is called up by a visiting “happy medium,” the eccentric and flighty Madame Arcati. As everyone’s personalities clash, Charles’ current wife, Ruth, is accidentally killed. She “passes over” and joins Elvira, allowing the two “blithe spirits” to haunt the hapless Charles into perpetuity.

Actress / Suzannah

‘Til Beth Do Us Part

Written by Jones, Hope & Wooten

Directed by Ginger Heath

A career-driven woman’s life is upended by her new, overly-efficient assistant, Beth, who begins to take over her home and marriage, convincing her she needs to get rid of her husband.  Chaos follows as Beth inserts herself into every aspect of Suzannah’s life, leading to a humorous and chaotic situation. 

Actress / Felicia

I Hate Hamlet

Written by Paul Rudnick

Directed by Ginger Heath

Andrew Rally seems to have it all: celebrity and acclaim from his starring role in a hit television series; a rich, beautiful girlfriend; a glamorous, devoted agent; the perfect New York apartment; and the chance to play Hamlet in Central Park. There are, however, a couple of glitches in paradise. Andrew’s series has been canceled; his girlfriend is clinging to her virginity with unyielding conviction; and he has no desire to play Hamlet. When Andrew’s agent visits him, she reminisces about her brief romance with John Barrymore many years ago, in Andrew’s apartment. This prompts a seance to summon his ghost. From the moment Barrymore returns, dressed in high Shakespearean garb, Andrew’s life is no longer his own. Barrymore, fortified by champagne and ego, presses Andrew to accept the part and fulfill his actor’s destiny. The action becomes more hilarious with the entrance of Andrew’s deal-making friend from LA, spouting the laid-back hype of the Coast and offering Andrew a fabulous new TV deal worth millions of dollars. The laughs are nonstop as Andrew wrestles with his conscience, Barrymore, his sword, and the fact that he fails as Hamlet in Central Park.