Since The 1960s This Visionary Nonprofit Has Nurtured Countless Theaters And Artists

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Jeryl Brunner profiles people who are guided by a deep and unshakable passion for what they do. Following their joy inspires them to think outside the box, take risks and triumph. Her publishing credits includes O, the Oprah Magazine, Parade, The Wall Street Journal, InStyle, Travel Leisure and more.

For more than six decades Theatre Communications Group, , has been a fierce champion for theater in the United States. With a mission to creating “a just and thriving theatre ecology” the organization is devoted to the theater community serving resident theater companies and artists with wide-ranging programs and services. Each year TCG reaches more than one million students, audience members and theater professionals.

“As an organization, we have stood for freedom of expression, equity and justice in our field, and that has evolved over time,” says Teresa Eyring, TCG's CEO who has also been the organization's executive director for 17 years. “We are very concerned about those values for artists and all theater makers.”

At the TCG Gala the theme of the evening was “our stories.” Each person who spoke on stage at the Edison Ballroom before the packed crowd was asked to share a story about how they fell in love with theater. The stories were as multi-faceted and as the inspiring honorees, Schele Williams, David Rockwell, Brian Anthony Moreland, The Shubert Foundation and Teresa Eyring. The presenters, who included theater titans Kandi Burruss, Todd Tucker, Harvey Fierstein, André De Shields, LaChanze, Kenny Leon, Michael Greif and gala co-chairs Rick Miramontez and Lauren Reid, were just as passionate.

Tony-winner André De Shields, a Baltimore native, shared how he was not permitted to enter the Hippodrome Theatre when he was growing up during the 1950s and 1960s “because of the melanin in my skin,” said De Shields. Years later he took his young nieces and nephews to that same theater to seeHistory-making director Schele Williams, the first Black woman to direct a Broadway musical in close to 50 years, shared the profound impact of the TCG recognition.

 

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