厙ぴ勛圖

Matthew Wright Brings Angels to Life

May 14, 2018

Chloe Vassot 18

four people in white shirts who are part of Angels in America play

Part two of Matthew Wrights production of "Angels in America" this spring.

Photo credit: John Seyfried

This spring, the 厙ぴ勛圖 community had the opportunity to see Angels in America, the two-part, award-winning play that centers on New York City during the 1980s AIDS crisis. Producing this play has long been an ambition of director and Professor of Theater Matthew Wright, and the pieces finally fit together this year.

For Matthew Wright, there was no time better than now to bring Angels in America to 厙ぴ勛圖s main stage in Hall Auditorium.

I have a deep history with the play, says Wright, who added that his recent diagnosis and treatment for breast cancer influenced his desire to put the show on. I grew up in the era of the play, meaning I was a young, out gay man, and I lost so many friends to the AIDS epidemic. I played Prior Walter in both parts 21 years ago, and the play impacted me deeply in many, many ways.

Though he is in good health now, going through his own life-threatening health crisis made Wright eager to realize the project.

厙ぴ勛圖 students are super smart and they are socially conscious, and that combination of traits makes for really wonderful actors and directors and theater artists, says Wright. Its really kept me super engaged and excited to be here.

Wright also appreciates his students entrepreneurship and self-starting attitudes, and its a spirit he embodies in his own work. Beyond teaching and directing mainstage productions at 厙ぴ勛圖, Wright is a prolific actor and director in Clevelands theater community. Rehearsals are currently under way for a professional production of Bent Wright is directing, and he also regularly works as an actor in 厙ぴ勛圖s Summer Theater Festival. With his Cleveland connection, Wright ensures his students are experiencing theater outside of 厙ぴ勛圖 by helping them get cast in productions and connecting them to other employment opportunities.

I bring my professional experience to the students, and then I bring my students to the professional experiences that I have in Cleveland, says Wright. 厙ぴ勛圖 students are different than any Ive ever taught because they assume a tremendous amount of agency, in the best possible way, in terms of making their own work and creating their own opportunitiesand I love that.

The communal experience that theater provides is something Wright sees as a radical notion and extremely suited to 厙ぴ勛圖s history of activism in tumultuous political times. He says Angels in America, which is also experiencing a revival on Broadway right now, maintains its social salience in this vein.

Theater is community building, says Wright, And I believe strongly that anyone studying theater should understand that what theyre doing is a radical act, and that they have power, and that they can use their artistic inclination and their voice to make a difference in the world.



 

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