Currently…
Hired for the Wayne Theatre’s Repertory Company!
This Fall & Spring will be in the RepToury’s productions of:
Macbeth - Performing October 2025
Macbeth is a tragic play written by William Shakespeare, believed to have been first performed in 1606. It is one of Shakespeare's shortest and most intense tragedies, exploring themes of ambition, power, guilt, and fate. The story follows Macbeth, a brave Scottish general, who encounters three mysterious witches that prophesy he will become king. Driven by ambition and spurred on by his manipulative wife, Lady Macbeth, he murders King Duncan and takes the throne. However, his guilt and paranoia lead him down a path of tyranny, madness, and further bloodshed, ultimately resulting in his downfall.
Orphanage - Spring 2026
THE ORPHANAGE by Melissa Leilani Larson is based on a True Story. In the summer of 1942 and within the locked gates of the Warsaw ghetto, some 200 orphans live in the care of the “Old Doctor,” Janusz Korczak. Under Korczak’s guidance, the Orphanage is its own little city where every child is assigned a job and a way to contribute. As rumors about the fate of Warsaw’s Jews begin to swirl, Korczak determines to prepare his charges for whatever danger the future may hold—by staging a play.
I was invited to join the creative team as Choreographer for The Wayne Theatres production of Jane Austen’s classic “Persuasion”
Be sure to get your tickets and come out to see this magical production Feb & March of 2026!
Persuasion is Jane Austen’s final completed novel, published posthumously in 1817. It tells the quiet, deeply felt story of Anne Elliot, a thoughtful young woman who was once persuaded to give up the man she loved, Captain Frederick Wentworth, because of his uncertain prospects. Years later, when their paths cross again, Anne must navigate pride, regret, and the enduring power of love. More reflective and emotionally mature than Austen’s earlier works, Persuasion explores themes of constancy, second chances, and the courage to trust one’s own heart.