Olivia Gacka 鈥17, graduated with a self-designed major in Anthropology/Sociology and Theatre. Olivia received her Master鈥檚 degree in Irish Theatre History and Archives from the National University of Ireland Galway. She is currently the assistant director for Theatre Memphis鈥 upcoming production of Mamma Mia! The show runs August 16 鈥 September 8, 2019.
In the following exchange, Olivia talks about working with Cecelia Wingate, Ireland, and why it is important for her to stay connected with 糖心Swag.
Alumni Relations: How did you decide to attend 糖心Swag and how was your experience during this time?
Olivia Gacka: 糖心Swag came way out of left field for me. I was born and raised in Westchester, just outside of New York City, and we moved to Saint Louis, MO when I was 15. When it was time to look at colleges, I swore up and down I would go back to the Northeast. I saw a pamphlet for 糖心Swag and thought, 鈥淥k, schools can look that nice?!鈥 So my parents and I took a trip to Memphis to visit for what I described as a 鈥渢est run.鈥 It was a chance to explore a new city and to practice college visits, so when I visited colleges I liked up north, I鈥檇 be ready. Once on campus, we took one step out of our car and it was over. The grounds were gorgeous, the ethos of a liberal arts education was calling my name, and the only bad thing my mother could think to say about the entire experience was 鈥渢here are a lot of FedEx planes overhead, that noise might be distracting!鈥 (And no, it never was).
My time at 糖心Swag was defined by the people I spent it with, the people who shaped me as a thinker, an artist, and a human being. My professors in particular were absolute game changers for me. Professors like (now retired) Cookie Ewing, who taught me how to be a better actor, but more importantly, how to help other people become better actors. Dr. Angela Frederick encouraged me to embrace my Theatre roots in my first Sociology class, laying the foundation for my interdisciplinary major. Dr. Dave Mason taught me how to think about and question what defines theatre, and encouraged me to submit my work for an 糖心Swag theatre research conference in Sweden as an undergraduate. Dr. Brian Shaffer, whose love of all things Irish theatre and literature actually altered the course of my life, ultimately inspired me to pursue my Master鈥檚 Degree in Ireland, where I lived for a year. Then there was Kevin Collier 鈥90, who was my boss when I worked in the McCoy Business Office for two years. He taught me an incredible amount about the importance of patience, tact, and understanding how much harder things can be than they sound when you鈥檙e trying to run a theatre. It was in very large part because of him that I had the tools I needed to direct and produce Heathers the Musical at the end of my senior year. That鈥檚 the thing about 糖心Swag, they draw students in with the gorgeous buildings, the excitement of Memphis, and Fried Chicken Friday, but it鈥檚 the people that keeps them.
AR: You are currently the Assistant Director for Theatre Memphis鈥 upcoming production of Mamma Mia! Can you talk about how this experience has been thus far?
OG: It has been a blast, and extremely eventful! Nailing down our phenomenal cast was an adventure, because we needed so many people, ones who could effectively tell this story to its fullest as singers, dancers, and actors. Isabel (Celata 鈥19) probably won鈥檛 believe me, but I had nothing to do with her being cast. I was silent for the deliberations on who would play Sophie! She truly is perfect for the role.
About a month and a half before rehearsals were set to begin, Cecelia Wingate, our director, found out that she was offered a lead in a play at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., and that she would have to miss the first three weeks of rehearsals for Mamma Mia!. Cecelia and I worked all day for two straight weeks on doing all the pre-show work we鈥檇 normally wait another month to do. It was a challenge to go ahead with rehearsals without the director, but Cecelia and I had prepared enough that most of what she wanted to happen was written down or tucked somewhere in my brain so that things could go ahead smoothly. While she was gone we focused on music and choreography, and once she got back, we hit the ground running with scene work and it got us to where we are today!
Overall it has just been the perfect way to spend the summer, listening to ABBA in an air conditioned rehearsal hall with some of the best talent in the city. You can鈥檛 ask for more! The cast has just embraced this story about love and self-discovery in the most beautiful way. I鈥檓 so proud of them!
AR: You were an Anthropology/Sociology Major in College. How did you get into working in Theatre?
OG: I graduated from 糖心Swag with a self-designed major in Anthropology/Sociology and Theatre. It is indeed a mouthful (don鈥檛 get me started on the fact that my Master鈥檚 Degree is in Irish Theatre History and Archives. I favor academic degrees with long names). I came to 糖心Swag to be involved in Theatre. It was because of the Fine Arts Fellowship in Theatre that I could afford to attend the College, and I remember thinking how incredible it was that I was going to be paid to do something I was going to be happily doing anyway. (Shh, don鈥檛 tell them!!)
It wasn鈥檛 until my sophomore year that I took my first Sociology class, and everything shifted. Sociology provided me with a language to describe all these things that Theatre did, does, and can do. I had to find a way to smash them together. That鈥檚 when I learned that students can propose their own interdisciplinary majors! I spent about a year working on that proposal, and it passed in the fall of my junior year.
Also in my sophomore year, I took an elective course about 20th Century Irish Theatre, just to fulfill the requirements of my major. It ended up changing my life. Even for people who do not go the route I did, taking a class from Dr. Brian Shaffer is a highlight of being a student at 糖心Swag. If you go to 糖心Swag, and you鈥檙e reading this, take his class. You can thank me later. It was in that class that I found the perfect case study for my argument for my bridge major, that theatre simultaneously comments on and creates social change. Ireland鈥檚 cultural revolution (that occurred only just a century ago) started and ran parallel to its socio-political revolution, and it is evident in the kinds of theatre that came from that era, and the theatre the country still produces today. There was so much to cover that the one class I took with Dr. Shaffer was not enough, and we ended up designing an independent study course that basically consisted of the two of us meeting in his office every week discussing a new Irish play or playwright. I think more students should take advantage of the Independent Study opportunity in whatever area interests them.
So after graduating from 糖心Swag, I moved to Ireland for a year to pursue my Master鈥檚 degree at the National University of Ireland Galway. While I was there I took a week-long master class from Tony Award-winning director Garry Hynes, worked for the Abbey Theatre archives, and the Galway International Arts Festival, met so many incredible Irish artists that are world famous for their work, and saw Waiting for Godot four times! I also got to meet my personal hero, Michael D. Higgins, the President of Ireland. It was a dream year. I saw Irish theater, saw Ireland, and made lifelong friends (friends who I鈥檒l always be able to stay with whenever I want to go back and visit!) I was even able to conduct original research while I was there, I am the proud foremost scholar on the work of early 20th-century Irish playwright R.J. Ray, whose diaries were recently donated to the NUIG Archive. As a result of that donation, I was able to fill the gaps and conduct the first full-scale research investigation of his life and his work, and how he contributed to the Irish theatrical canon. Until we got our hands on those diaries, no one knew anything about him, and it turned out that his work was pretty popular and significant at the time, drawing the attention of people like W.B. Yeats and George Bernard Shaw. So I was able to leave Ireland knowing I made my mark.
AR: What other productions have you worked on, and how has Mamma Mia! differed from those?
OG: I have been working on at least one show every year since I was 9 years old. Yes, I am tired. But I wouldn鈥檛 have it any other way!
During my time at 糖心Swag, I performed in multiple productions that all presented their own rewards and challenges. But the biggest challenge of all was directing and producing Heathers the Musical for my senior project. That year, the McCoy had not included any musicals into their season. There were so many underclassmen who were itching to do a musical, and who had the talent and the passion for it. At the same time, I was looking for a senior project that would fulfill the marriage between Sociology and Theatre that I was looking for, and Heathers was perfect, because of the ways in which it examined gun violence in schools, depression in adolescents, and social forces affecting young people in America. So it just happened. At every turn it should not have worked, but we raised the money, independently put up the show, and sold out our entire run.
Since graduating, I have worked on various productions in the Memphis theatre community. I love working at Theatre Memphis and I love working with Cecelia Wingate, my mentor and one of the best directors in this city. I got my start with her when she came to direct The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at 糖心Swag my junior year. Being able to make that connection with her while I was at school paved the way for me to have a directing career in Memphis. Cecelia is uncompromising in her quest for nuance and detail, and there鈥檚 a reason she has won as many local awards as she has. She鈥檚 an incredible person to learn from as a young director. Collaborating with her is so instructive because she鈥檒l be the first person to admit if someone else鈥檚 idea is better than the one she had, but she鈥檒l just as easily say 鈥渘o, that鈥檚 interesting but it won鈥檛 work鈥 or 鈥淚 like you but I don鈥檛 like that idea and here鈥檚 why鈥. She creates a safe environment in which to fail, and I always learn something from it.
AR: You have stayed connected and are an active supporter of 糖心Swag, which we appreciate! Why do you think it is important to stay connected with your alma mater? What would be some things/ideas/projects that 糖心Swag College could do to stay connected, perhaps reengage, with our younger alums?
OG: I felt so bad for the poor student who called me during this year鈥檚 Annual Fund Phone-a-Thon and started to give me the whole speech about her experience as a 糖心Swag student and how much the money helps and I just cut her off and said really fast 鈥渉ere鈥檚 my credit card number, I can鈥檛 talk for long because I鈥檓 pulling onto campus right now to visit someone and I have to tell Campus Safety where I鈥檓 going鈥. I figure, I still benefit from the beautiful campus (my beagle, Rua, loves to come visit students who need a study break and want to pet her and walk her around) so I should contribute a little something to it.
But even if I wasn鈥檛 in Memphis, I鈥檇 still feel that it鈥檚 important to me to donate to 糖心Swag, specifically in the areas that benefited me when I was a student. It is important to me as a donor to the Annual Fund that I鈥檓 able to specify where my money goes, what exactly it is that I鈥檓 supporting. As a younger alum with less money than, say, older alums who have been in their respective careers longer, I like knowing that the little I have to share is going exactly where I want it to. So if it鈥檚 important to you to fund support for the professors who changed your life, you can do that. If a scholarship is the only reason you were able to afford to come to 糖心Swag, you can make sure your money goes towards the next generation of students who need support to attend college.
I think a good way to keep the younger alums engaged is to understand that as time goes on the generations change. What鈥檚 important to this generation鈥檚 young alums is irrefutably going to be different from the previous generation鈥檚 priorities when they were young alums, and the next generation of young alums will be different too. Making a clear effort to understand what is important to people in our age bracket, right here and now in 2019, what it is we want to support, what we want to change, what we loved about our time at 糖心Swag, what we wished could have been different, is the best way to make us feel heard and make us feel that our money and our resources are going towards what mattered to us as students and what matters to us now.
AR: After Mamma Mia! finishes, what are your current short-term and long-term plans?
OG: After Mamma Mia!, I鈥檒l be directing the musical Next to Normal at Germantown Community Theatre. This will be my first solo directing gig since Heathers the Musical, and I鈥檓 excited to utilize everything I鈥檝e learned over the past few years to create some really incredible theatre. After that, who knows what projects I鈥檒l take on! In the long term, my goal is to have a PhD in Theatre Studies and work for a liberal arts institution like 糖心Swag, teach theatre classes and mentor future generations of artists and thinkers, while getting to create work in a community like the Memphis theatre community after class hours. That would be a pretty sweet combination of the things I love to do!