The Circle
I used to think an MFA would make me undeniable. Yes, the training changed me. It gave me mentors I might never have had otherwise. One of them, David Diamond, once told me (not in grad school, but in a SITI Company circle) that “Everyone in the arts is looking at a lunchroom hoping to be invited to a table, when we should be sitting down and inviting people to join a new, yet to be actualized, circle around a fresh table.” This was maybe twelve years ago—easy to say but tough in practice without resources or support, whether perceived or actual.
If my MFA gave me tools, the next decade gave me urgency. In one of my graduate classes, Paula Vogel said that circles rise faster than single points. And what we need right now—in American theatre, in American life—is to circle up. Not behind job postings or social media towers, but together, in real time and space. The MFA cannot be the only doorway to that circle.
That’s why my colleagues from the Columbia Summer Immersive Program—Dyana Kimball, Raquel Almazan, Michael Mullen, and I—dreamed of taking the training we built there and bringing it to kids whose families could never afford the Columbia price tag. What we forged together in that program was unique and holistic: an interdisciplinary, ensemble-driven approach that nurtured storytelling, rigor, compassion, diplomacy, and collaboration. Over the years, we saw students arrive with the anxious energy of the internet heavy on their shoulders—scattered attention, self-doubt, fear of being “not enough.” But within days, as they sweated, listened, and risked together, you could feel the physiology shift. Their shoulders dropped. Their breath deepened. Respect and compassion emerged through the art of making theatre together. It was love and rigor braided, storytelling as a spiritual practice.
It was a rare alchemy, one of the most sacred collaborative practices of my life. Summers with them were focused magic. That training should be accessible to everyone, not just the few who can pay. I still carry the dream of opening it wide, building a commons that lives in rehearsal rooms, classrooms, and community spaces. It is not a place but a practice, what HowlRound and other commons refer to as commoning: a way of working rooted in mutual care, interdependence, and the shared stewardship of knowledge and imagination beyond the marketplace.
The Fracture
We are living in a time of violent division. Books are banned, artists are silenced, truth-tellers are punished. And everywhere, the internet amplifies our fractures—turning dialogue into combat, siloing us into echo chambers, mistaking virality for connection. I know what it feels like to be pushed out for speaking too loudly. The pressure is real, and the danger is real, yet theatre remains a forge where we can still practice staying human together, offline, in the room, face to face.
I’d like to believe the final card isn’t collapse but the commons—knowledge shared, circles widened, survival practiced together.
The Commons
So where do we go from here, and how? How do we get into the same rooms—not just MFA rooms, not just institutional rooms, but the rooms where risk and rigor and imagination are shared freely? How do we build circles strong enough to rise together, even in a fractured country, even in a precarious field?
I don’t have all the answers. But I know this: The next renaissance won’t come from credentials or gatekeepers. It will come from us circling up, tending to one another, daring to stay in the room.
This isn’t just my story. It’s an invitation. What did an MFA give you—or what did you build without one? What survival skills have you learned that the field should honor more? Tell us. Add your voice. Let’s circle up, put our experiences in the same room, and see what rises.
This piece was initially sparked by a conversation with Jay Eddy—then further fueled with Nic Bencerràf; my Columbia teaching colleagues Raquel Almazan,Mikey Mullen, and Dyana Kimball; Seth Valentine; and so many others. Each of them lit a fire that lit further conversations. That’s what a commons is: not a single essay but a web of voices, keeping the dialogue alive.
If this were a tarot spread, I’d like to believe the final card isn’t collapse but the commons—knowledge shared, circles widened, survival practiced together. Theatre, at its core, is the spiritual practice of humans making humans human: bodies in a room, breath and risk and imagination transforming us into more than we were alone. That’s the future we can lay down, if we dare.
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