Crazy for You Crew

Director
Jason Burgess
Music Director
Joseph Rivers
Choreographer
Amy Burgess
Technical Director
Kyle Tieman
Costume Designer
Laura Martin
Student Technical Director
Robert Chalk
Student Technical Director
Cooper Gamble
Production Stage Manager
Bradley Groneck
Assistant Stage Manager
John Dougherty
Assistant Stage Manager
Rowan Cavanaugh
Assistant Music Director/Assistant Director
Alix Tibbs
Lighting Designer
Nate Culyer
Assistant Lighting Designer/Electrician
Charlie Kreyling
Assistant Lighting Designer/Programming
KJ Langlinais
Sound Designer
Liam Morris
Assistant Sound Designer
Cooper Alerding
Assistant Sound Designer
Jack Street
Sound Board Op
Colin Gastright
Sound Board Op
Daniel McCoy
Lights/Sound Crew
Benjamin Anderson
Lights/Sound Crew
Will de Sola
Lights/Sound Crew
Mason Hardesty
Lights/Sound Crew
Mason Stull
Lights/Sounds Crew
Brayden Taft
Student Costume Head
Emersen Slaby
Student Costume Head
Megan Reichert
Assistant Student Costume Head
Alanna Gorrigan
Makeup Designer
Annie Perkins
Assistant Make-up Designer
Rachel Fessler
Assistant Make-up Designer
Sylvie Martin
Costume Run Crew/Make-up Crew
Sydney Beach
Costume Run Crew/Make-up Crew
Emma Doerr
Costume Run Crew/Make-up Crew
Avery Emmerich
Costume Run Crew/Make-up Crew
Payton Pope
Costume Run Crew/Make-up Crew
Alyssa Welch
Costume Run Crew/Make-up Crew
Chloe Zeit
Props Designer
Raegan Ziegler
Raegan Ziegler
Olivia Hart
Assistant Props Designer
Jillian Kendall
Props Crew
Natalie Hurles
Props Crew
Celia Lacourt
Props Crew
AnnaLucy Surrey
Props Crew
Addison Tallent
House Manager
Paige Barber
Assistant House Manager
Georgia Horton
House Crew
Reagan McPhedran
House Crew
Mollie Spears
Set Deco Head
Emma Cooper
Set Deco Head
Caroline Slaby
Assistant Set Deco Head
Ryan Groneck
Set Construction/Set Deco/Run Crew
Marshall Anstaett
Set Construction/Set Deco/Run Crew
Stella Halbauer
Set Construction/Set Deco/Run Crew
Natalie Horton
Set Construction/Set Deco/Run Crew
Grace Reynolds
Set Construction/Set Deco/Run Crew
Shreya Vaghela

George Gershwin (Composer) was born in Brooklyn on September 26, 1898, and began his musical training when he was 13. At 16 he quit high school to work as a "song plugger" for a music publisher, and soon he was writing songs himself. "Swanee," as introduced by Al Jolson, brought George his first real fame and led to his writing a succession of 22 musical comedies, most with his older brother, Ira. The Gershwins' shows include Lady Be Good, Oh, Kay!, Strike Up the Band, Girl Crazy, and the Pulitzer Prize winning Of Thee I Sing. From his early career George had ambitions to compose serious music, and his classical masterpieces include "Rhapsody In Blue," "Concerto In F," "An American In Paris" and "Second Rhapsody." In the late '20s George became fascinated by the DuBose Heyward novel Porgy, recognizing it as a perfect vehicle for opera using jazz and blues idioms. The folk opera Porgy and Bess had its Broadway premiere in October of 1935. In 1937 George was at the height of his career. While working on the score of The Goldwyn Follies in Hollywood, he collapsed, and on July 11, died of a brain tumor. He was not quite 39 years old.

Ira Gershwin (Lyricist) the first songwriter to be awarded the Pulitzer Prize, was born in New York City on December 6, 1896. In 1917 The Evening Sun published his first song ("You May Throw All The Rice You Desire But Please Friends, Throw No Shoes"). Four years later Ira enjoyed his first major stage success, Two Little Girls in Blue, written with another Broadway newcomer, Vincent Youmans. In 1924 Ira and his brother, George, created the smash hit Lady Be Good and went on to continue their remarkable collaboration through a dozen major stage scores, producing such standards as "Fascinating Rhythm," "The Man I Love," "S' Wonderful," "Embraceable You," "I Got Rhythm," "But Not For Me" and others far too numerous to mention. During his long career, Ira also enjoyed productive collaborations with such songwriters as Harold Arlen, Vernon Duke, Kurt Weill, Burton Lane and Jerome Kern, with whom he created his greatest song hit of any one year, "Long Ago And Far Away." Ira Gershwin died on August 17, 1983, in Beverly Hills, California.

Ken Ludwig (Conceiver/Bookwriter) has had six shows on Broadway, seven in London's West End, and many of his works have become a standard part of the American repertoire.  His 28 plays and musicals  have been performed in over 30 countries in more than 20 languages and are produced throughout the United States every night of the year.  Lend Me a Tenor won two Tony Awards and was called “one of the classic comedies of the 20th century by The Washington PostCrazy For You was on Broadway for 5 years and won the Tony and Olivier Awards for Best Musical. In addition, he has won the Edgar Award for Best Mystery of the Year, two Laurence Olivier Awards, two Helen Hayes Awards, and the Edwin Forrest Award for Contributions to the American Theater.  His plays have starred, among others, Alec Baldwin, Carol Burnett, Tony Shaloub, Joan Collins and Hal Holbrook. His stage version of Murder on the Orient Express was written expressly at the request of the Agatha Christie Estate, and his latest play, Dear Jack, Dear Louise, won the 2020 Charles MacArthur Award for Best New Play of the Year and is optioned for Broadway. His book How To Teach Your Children Shakespeare, published by Penguin Random House, won the Falstaff Award for Best Shakespeare Book of the Year, and his essays are published in the Yale Review. He is a graduate of Harvard and Cambridge and is a frequent guest speaker for groups as varied as The Oxford-Cambridge Society, The Jane Austen Society of North America, The Folger Shakespeare Library, and The Baker Street Irregulars. For more information, see his website at www.kenludwig.com

Mike Ockrent (Conceiver) was an award-winning British stage director known for his larger-than-life Broadway musicals, as well as his smaller niche plays. Ockrent established himself in London, having directed Educating Rita and Follies. He made a name for himself on these shores when Me and My Girl transferred from London to New York in 1986 and earned 13 Tony Award nominations. He also directed Broadway's 1996 hit Big. Ockrent died of leukemia.