Jerry Dixon (Serge Nivelle) |
Wouldn’t it be such divine fun to have one of our local
musicals headlined by Mario Cantone as the lead? Alas – I’ve been informed by a
close source that Mario would rather not work that much and if he does work, he
goes for big bucks to make it “count.”
Who’s my “in the know”? Why, it’s his husband, the new
artistic director of Village Theatre: Jerry Dixon! He’s a pretty good source!
SGN got to sit down with Mr. Dixon to have an extensive and
wide-ranging chit chat about the shape of Musical Theater and what might be
coming down the pike. Mr. Dixon is a powerfully intellectual thinker with deep
appreciation for the collaborative art that is theater and few limits on
visions for the kinds of people he’ll meet as a new ambassador for Village work
in the future.
SGN spoke to Dixon…. Ok, I’m switching to “I” and “Jerry”…. Here
is a little primer on Jerry Dixon: Wikipedia says he is an “actor, director,
lyricist, choreographer, and composer best known for his work on the Broadway
stage.” He married Mario Cantone in 2011, having been constant companions for
20 years by then!
Growing Up
While Jerry was born in Chicago, Illinois, he spent most of
his formative years in Kalamazoo, Michigan. His mother wouldn’t let him be in
the first play he auditioned for in junior high, but by high school, he was in
plays all the time.
He reports that he took piano lessons, but the family wasn’t
particularly musical. Nor theatrical. He did like being taken to theater in
Chicago by his aunts. But his piano playing was good enough that he was able to
accompany singers when they asked him for help.
Jerry said that it began dawning on him in high school that
some people around him might be gay. He doesn’t report having crushes on
people, but he felt a strong love for his best friend. “I loved my best friend
but he had a girlfriend,” says Jerry, “… we were just inseparable. It was
interesting to feel that way for a man and not be attracted to him. He was the
one who led me to my Gayness. He’d say, ‘I see you looking at that guy.’ He
could tell that I was interested and kind of pushed me to be gay.”
After high school, Jerry continued to work in theater, but
still didn’t consider it a real “career”. He went to work in a dept. store. The
owner was a patron of the arts. Jerry says, “He saw me in Pippin and called me to his office. ‘You’re really good,' he told
me. 'If you’re really interested in musicals, you have to go to New York. This
is what I’m going to do for you. But promise not to tell how much and who.’ And
he wrote me a fat check! I went to New York to do my thing and I was able to
get an apartment, go see shows every week and to choose acting jobs. Most young
people don’t have those choices.”
Jerry never felt like he had to “come out” to his family,
though he never really introduced anyone to his mom until Mario. “I suppose I
was letting them guess at it, until I met Mario,” Jerry says. “I was 30. I did
my first Broadway show, Once on This
Island, and met Mario. Someone said about me that ‘you always know what you’re
getting with Jerry.’ And I decided that I had to live up to this and wrote my
mother a letter to be clear. But it was during the AIDS crisis, so I started
the letter that I was writing as a “healthy gay man”! Just so she would know that
I was healthy! And also to share really great news that I’d found a really
great man. She was so happy that I wasn’t sick! A lot of parents found out that
their children were gay and dying at the same time at that time.”
Career Path
He’s performed in several Broadway shows, done some tv and a
couple of films, and began his association as a director with Village Theatre
about 10 years ago, when he helmed their production of Show Boat. That production was a critical hit and allowed for a
special sensitivity toward – and a spotlighting of – the lower-deck/servant
characters.
Jerry reports that he was the first African-American in the
country to direct Show Boat! Show Boat, itself, was a
boundary-breaking creation by Rodgers and Hammerstein that dealt with racism
directly. It still “holds up” despite being decades old and focused on a
historical phase of riverboat entertainment.
He’s returned over the years to direct more mainstage shows
like The Full Monty and also for
Festival of New Musicals to direct a few of those developmental concerts. His
connection to the company is very helpful to making a transition to filling the
big footsteps in the sand that remain from Mr. Steve Tomkins.
One Coast or Two?
We clarified if this job title meant that he was now going
to be ensconced in our fair environs all the time. Jerry replies, “We’re still
learning how much time I need to spend physically here because a lot of things
I need to do are not dependent on being physically in the office. Since I’ve
taken over in June, I’ve been away every month for a period of time. I told the
board that in order to forge relationships more effectively, you have to be in
front of a person where they can see, touch, smell, and (know) the meaning of
you and how you want to work with them. So they needed to allow me to travel to
meet people.
“When I travel, I’m doing so in a general way, not for a
specific project, not for hitting deadlines and certain points to meet. I call
it dream talking: what are you
thinking about doing with theater? That kind of conversation is quite different
from ‘I have a project.’ It’s very
different from being an actor and a director. This is much more broad with a
new set of possibilities.
“When I was offered this job, Steve took me to lunch and
asked me, ‘What scares you about taking this position? And if you can answer
that then you’ll be ok.’ I could not verbalize it (at the time) but I had one.
My artistic fear has always been stasis. I don’t want to look at my life five
years from now and be the same. It’s everywhere, personal, professional, my
interests even. For a job like AD where you’re in charge of the vision, you
certainly don’t want the theater to look the same as on day one.
“I was hired to be a bicoastal director, so I have my home
in New York and my home on Capitol Hill. I’m to expand the theater and use my
connections to artists. I will concentrate on that more than being onstage as
an actor, I will direct one show a year (at Village) and look to direct outside
the theater. I’ll maybe do short term readings or film as an actor.
“That’s built into the job: time away. I’m also a Tony Voter,
so I have to go to shows throughout the year. Also, I’m pursuing areas like the
Edinburgh Festival that we (Village) haven’t explored before. Then there is exporting
Village in a different way: if we’re interested in doing a three-person Medea (for instance), but we don’t want
to do it on First Stage or Main Stage, can we find someone to do it with as a co-production?
Or take it to different places as Village
Theatre Presents?
“One aspect that is unique to our company is that we have
Issaquah and Everett that allow us to see how shows work on different levels of
recognition, escapism, or challenge between the two cities. It’s one of the
things I use as a selling tool for producers to work with us, because they can
get a sense of how a tour would work because of the two different audience
pools.
“I’m excited about taking one of our Festival (of New Musicals)
shows internationally. Or to do a play because we love it and not limiting
ourselves to our four brick and mortar houses. Do we ever want to do a new play
festival? Straight plays. You can support plays without putting them in your
season. Maybe there is a new (writing) voice that needs support. Artists need
support. If we have infrastructure on how to do new work, which we do – we know
how to raise money for new work – I don’t want to limit us or our possibilities
because we haven’t done it in the past.”
Jerry has, of course, acted on Broadway. He’s performed and
worked on Off-Broadway shows. He and Mario have created cabaret type shows. He’s
written productions. Jerry is also black and gay. A person with all of those
varied experiences is going to have to bring different perspectives to bear. It’s
impossible not to.
“Broadway Quality”
A lot of times we hear that Seattle shows are “Broadway
quality.” We have certainly become a pipeline for musicals to develop here and
end up on Broadway eventually. But what about the quality of our productions
here? How can we be assured that our shows stand up to that level of quality?
Since Jerry intimately knows what Broadway Quality is, he’s a great person to
ask.
Jerry says, “There is a wow effect to Broadway musicals. Even
when shows are exported here from the East End of London, their musicals get
better. In NYC, you’ve got 8.5 million people and the talent pool is huge. The
talent pool is making that happen. You have access to the most creative people
and can audition 300 people for a principal role. It’s choice. You can have five
designers submit work on spec.
“The thing that Seattle has, in a different access to talent,
is a large pool combined with this level of work ethic that is not necessarily
the ethic of other regional pockets. (Other) regional theater productions can
look great, but the access to talent is not necessarily going to be there.
There are very few regional theaters that can say ‘most of the actors are right
from here.’ Also, there’s access to a lot of local designers, choreographers.
“But there is a level of preparedness
that you don’t get even in NYC. It’s so thrilling to walk into Day One (of a
Village rehearsal) and ¾ of your cast is ready to go (memorized) with the show.
You have 4 or 5 weeks of rehearsal (instead of 8 in New York), but you’re not
losing at all because the actors are coming in at a week 2 or 3 process and
they’re doing that on their own. I don’t email the cast and ask them to know
their script before they get to Day One. I don’t know any other pocket of
regional theater that has that.
“I get why some actors go to New York and come back and some
realize what they’ve given up leaving Seattle, with a high quality of life in
the PNW and a life in theater. In NYC, it’s shocking that they have to shrink the quality
of their life so much, down to one tiny little apartment for way more money and
compete with so many more people. And their craft is improved and so when they
cycle back, the talent pool level rises.
“It’s not just being proud. There is a level of talent here
that, when they bring their skills back (from going to New York), it’s infectious. People who haven’t
had the experience in New York look at them as shinier and smarter and people
(here) learn from their experience. And from guest directors and guest
choreographers.
“Village (also) is one of the few companies that mostly builds
its own musicals (creates its own sets, costumes, lights, sound). Village
builds, designs, and crafts. Audiences get something made for Village theatre.
It wasn’t trucked in. There’s something special about that.”
The Future for
Musical Theatre
Companies in Seattle, like most companies in the country,
are grappling with concepts of “diversity” and “inclusion” and making sure that
the actors on stage reflect a wide range of ethnicities and differences. This
helps invite audience members who may not have seen themselves on stage before.
I talked with Jerry about that trend and also where Musical Theater could and
should go in the future.
Jerry says, “We’re finally starting to believe it can go
anywhere. We’re often told Musical Theater can’t do serious subjects, shows
about mental illness, or an anti-hero story. Then you have Dear Evan Hansen – a completely flawed individual, and you have next to normal. There’s really not
anything we can‘t touch, but any tender topic needs high levels of skill.
“It’s the same as using violence and nudity in live theatre.
Your skills have to be so finely honed to make it work in live theater, so the
audience doesn’t feel assaulted. There is a trust factor going into live
theater. ‘I’m sitting down and (I’ve) paid maybe double to quadruple (as I’d
pay) for a movie ticket. Please give me something that is worth the time and
the cost.’ There is vulnerability because it’s so immediate. (An audience
member) might be exposing personal parts of yourself by how you’re reacting.
That’s how theater is not like a film or concert. Everyone is or should be
invested in what’s happening.
“We theater artists have a responsibility to take care of
that person. We should assume someone in that house is going to have mental
health issues or know someone who is transgender and struggling with their identity.
“Theater takes advantage of that trust because the audience
gives us the trust. You can do things in theater no one wants to see in movies.
Musical Theater, with the added tool of music, tends to crack people open in a
different way than spoken language.
The D Word
“Diversity, inclusion, equity. I’ve been aware of these
issues before they became buzzwords. If there are subjects that are sensitive
in any given work, are my sensibilities going to be a truly great match to
mitigate those issues? As a performer, I have gone into a room of complete
insensitivity, complete unawareness of what actors have to go through to say
certain things to each other on stage (plays/scripts where the “N” word is used
like The Scottsboro Boys). The
economics might drive you because you need the job, and you go on and do the
job and go onstage and suffer because of it.
“Something happens when a director cares about all those
things. The play is still sharp and potent, it’s still tough to say (those
words), but you leave every night as colleagues. It’s very different when
things are taken care of. Not a safe space, an aware space, an awareness of
saying terrible things to another actor, and because you’re playing the part
and it’s not to be taken personally, it can damage you if people are
insensitive.
“Kidstage is already looking like what we want to look like.
It’s the most diverse, the most dynamic. Kidstage does not have the same bottom
line so they can risk and they do. Mixed race and transgender and disabled
people – and backstage is the same thing and the orchestra. Kidstage also has
new work written for it. Even the new work, you’d think it’s like High School Musical. No! They’re writing
things about Rosie the Riveter, teenage suicide, sexual awakening, broken
homes. They know the musical can be anything.
“I can hire directors, designers, stage managers. I want to
tell people that everyone is invited. It does not happen overnight, but we’re
being proactive. None of it gets done by accident. We must recruit responsibly.
Not by quotas but toward the end of what we want. If we want the theater to be
an enriched experience, get everyone in the room. Just by showing up looking
like I do, there are people who will join us who may not have a year ago.
“There are so many writers writing the new stories we’re
going to be telling in the next 5, 10, 20 years. A lot of my job is to find
those writers. Writers and artists are sometimes steps ahead of the
practitioners of their art. The largest part of my job is to seek those artists
out. Who is thinking in a way I’m not capable of thinking but also creatively
advanced that I can see and recognize that that is what the theater needs? You
bring them in and you stick with a few creative teams or minds, writing-wise,
and your theater will be brand new season after season. Not just writers, the
choreographers, designers, directors.
“You can put most types of subject matter in front of (Village
audiences). They have a curiosity about people who are different from themselves.
In the works (for example) is Southern
Comfort based on the documentary about a small group of transgender folks living
in the Appalachian Mountains and they want to be left to themselves but someone
has to have a medical procedure. Our audiences are accepting of seeing that.
“When we do Southern Comfort,
there is not a promise that everyone (on stage) is going to be an actor who is
transgender. That isn’t the point. We need them back stage and in the box
office. Everyone we fold into the Village family, we want to keep them there.
“The ‘practitioner’ component is so far behind. (Someone
will produce) a work like The Scottsboro Boys
and everyone behind the scene is white. Not a black publicist. They do a
revival of Pacific Overtures, and no
one on the creative team is Asian. How does this happen?
“We constantly think of diversity that we can only SEE. Diversity
is a tool, not an end. It’s connection. That’s the end goal. How do I connect
to a person? It’s diversity of mind. I see: Humanity
is up on stage.”
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