COMPANY ONE’S STAGE ONE EDUCATION PROGRAMS
In service of Company One Theatre’s mission to build community at the intersection of art and social change, C1’s Stage One programming focuses on developing authentic relationships with, and among, young people and early career artists, fostering a sense of belonging where they are encouraged to access their voices and express themselves.
We do this through our In-School Residencies, Professional Development for Actors, Teen Internships, and Youth Matinees.
Interested in bringing a Stage One residency to your school? Reach out to Mark VanDerzee, Education Director, at mvanderzee@companyone.org.
IN-SCHOOL RESIDENCIES
Stage One uses theatre in the classroom to support young people in the process of becoming changemakers who practice active and responsible citizenship: a skill set that will serve the student, their communities, and ultimately, all of us.
Theatre Elective Residencies
Classes for grades 9-12 designed to center the stories and experiences of young people of color, with a focus on personal and social development skills.
Theatre Integration Residencies
Theatre instruction supporting multilingual learners ages 11-22 develop their voices through literacy and creative development.
After-School Residencies
Programs for grades 6-8, helping students develop their creative voices by creating original work meaningful to their communities.
Anti-Racism Residencies
Short-term residencies designed to engage young people and educators in conversations about racism and injustice.
See full list of partner schools
Boston Adult Technical Academy
Boston Community Leadership Academy
Dearborn Academy
Fenway High School
Jeremiah Burke High School
Josiah Quincy Upper School
Orchard Gardens
Tech Boston
Watertown High School
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR ACTORS
Calling all actors! C1’s Prodessional Development for Actors (PDA) course provides a low cost alternative to expensive theatre courses offered by higher education institutions. Stage One aims to bridge the wealth gap often associated with training in the arts as we believe that cost shouldn’t be a barrier to gain the skills needed to work in theatre. Aimed at helping actors of all experiences, participants will hone their craft through in-depth character script analysis and monologue work, preparing them for future auditions and roles. Participants will also explore their individual responsibility towards equity and social justice as theatre practitioners, an avenue of study not often found in college courses and programming.
Spring 2024 PDA Information
Auditions: Tuesday, April 2
Classes: Every Tuesday from April 30 – June 18, 6:30-9:30pm
Showcase Dress Rehearsal: Monday, June 24, 5-10pm
Showcase Performance: Tuesday, June 25, 5-10pm
YOUTH MATINEES
Each of our productions feature morning performances exclusively for youth and student groups. These performances include a post-show discussion with actors and members of the creative team. Curriculum guides are provided to use for debriefing and deepening the learning around the show’s themes.
For more information, email boxoffice@companyone.org!
TEEN INTERNSHIP PROGRAM
C1’s Teen Internships provides opportunities for leadership and work experience in a community arts setting. Teens learn literacy skills, college and career readiness skills, and changemaker skills.
“Without knowing it, you help[ed] me believe in myself and give me confidence…. Because of you I’m not afraid anymore to make my voice my strongest weapon.”
– Former teen intern Lucy Jura
Would you or a teen that you know like to learn more about the program? Email stageone@companyone.org for more information!
STAGE ONE SEASON 25 TEACHING ARTISTS
Our teaching artists bring cultural responsiveness and years of experience to the classrooms of our partner schools. Their ability to adapt to the needs of each class is key to the success of our programs. Through an emphasis on communication, collaboration, and flexibility, these artists are vital additions to any school’s arts programming.
Annalise Guidry
In-School Teaching Artist
Dev Luthra
In-School Teaching Artist
James Milord
In-School Teaching Artist
Joye Prince
In-School Teaching Artist
Vincent Siders
In-School Teaching Artist
Kayla Tomas
In-School Teaching Artist
Josh Glenn-Kayden
PDA Teaching Artist
Regine Vital
PDA Teaching Artist
SEASON 25 TEACHING ARTIST BIOS
Dev Luthra he/him
Dev Luthra trained at East 15 Acting School, London, England and at Shakespeare and Company in Lenox, MA. Acting credits include Sorin/Seagull and Attorney/The Gaaga at Arlekin Players; Iago/Othello at Dreamrole Players (EPC production); Antigonus, Old Shepherd, Bottom/The Winter’s Tale and Midsummer Night’s Dream at Bay Colony Shakespeare Company, Dance Teacher Pat/Dance Nation, Father/Brilliant Adventures and Azdak/Caucasian Chalk Circle (Apollinaire Theatre Company), Mr. Biedermann/Firebugs (Huellas Vivas), Orsino/Twelfth Night (Sun Valley Shakespeare Festival) Northumberland/Henry IV, parts 1 & 2 (Actors Shakespeare Project), M. le Comte/N. Bonaparte (Pilgrim Theatre), Leonato/Much Ado About Nothing (Public Theatre) Worcester/1 Henry IV (Palace Theatre). Dev teaches at Wheelock Family Theatre and Company One. His courses focus on Shakespeare, devised theatre, acting, and playwrighting. He also offers residencies at schools throughout the area. He has taught acting, movement, dramatic literature and poetry at Boston College and Emerson College and at Boston University’s Prison Education Program. Dev served as the Artistic Director of And Still We Rise Productions, a theatre company committed to the advocacy of the rights of people impacted by the prison system. Macbeth’s Children, an adaptation of Shakespeare’s play, co-written with Michael Bettencourt, won an AATE New Play award. His play Secret Asian Man is a piece focusing on the experience of being raised in two cultures. Of Anglo-Indian parentage, he has lived and worked in the Northeast since 1978.
James Milord he/him
James Ricardo Milord is a Boston native Haitian-American actor. He earned a Norton nomination for Best Actor in his lead performance of Joe Turner’s Come and Gone (Huntington Theatre) in 2023. He also appeared in the premier of K-I-S-S-I-N-G (Huntington Theater). The previous year he was seen in Common Ground Revisited (Huntington Theatre), while completing productions of Paradise Blue (Gloucester Stage) and the premier of Young Nerds of Color (Central Square Theatre). Prior to the pandemic, Mr. Milord was seen in Pipeline (WAM, Front Porch, & Central Sq. Theatre). Other credits include A Christmas Carol (Underground Railway), The Handmaid’s Tale (Boston Lyric Opera), The Agitators and Cyrano (Gloucester Stage), Anna Christie and Barbecue (Lyric Stage), Akeelah and the Bee (Wheelock Family Theatre), The Good Negro, Splendor, and The Brothers Size Trilogy, (Company One). Film credits include Salem’s Lot (Warner Bros. Pictures), Honest Thief (Solution Entertainment Group), Proud Mary (Screen Gems), The Brotherhood (Showtime), and a multitude of indies.
Joye Prince she/her
Joye Prince is a multi-hyphenate theatre artist and educator. In addition to her work with Company One, she is a Cutler Creative Producing Fellow at ArtsEmerson and is pursuing her master’s degree at Emerson College. Joye’s artistic and teaching methodologies are primarily rooted in Viewpoints Technique, Theatre of the Oppressed, and Drama-Based Pedagogy. Her primarily area of research and practice is in devising original theatre with high school aged youth.
Vincent Siders he/him
Vincent Ernest Siders is a stage director, equity actor, producer, educator, and consultant. Currently he is the Director and Lead Instructor for the ‘Ambassadors’, the touring division of Youth Underground at Central Square Theater. Vincent has served as Artistic Director for two theater Companies, both in Boston: New African Company and TYG Productions -home of the Family Beef Feast Festival. Vincent has worked as director and theater educator for a number of theaters and institutions of learning including: Huntington Theater, Central Square Theater, Hibernian Hall Boston, Boston Playwrights Theater, Boston University, Emerson College, New African Company, Dance Theater Complex, Upward Bound and Boston Public Schools. As an actor, Vincent has performed throughout the East Coast. Memorable roles include but not limited to: King Shahrayar in “Arabian Nights” and Uncle Diva in “Mr g” both at Central Square Theater; Joe Bell in “Guided Tour” at Hibernian Hall in Roxbury; Tom in “The Glass Menagerie at Lyric Stage; Friar Francis in “Much Ado About Nothing” with Commonwealth Shakespeare Company; Lucius in “Jesus Hopped the A Train” with Company One; Rooftop in “Our Lady of 121st Street” with SpeakEasy Stage Company; and James in “Monticel” at Boston Playwrights’ Theatre, where he played the role of Thomas Jefferson’s unclaimed son. Dubbed ‘a Boston Treasure’ by The Boston Globe, Vincent has received: two IRNE nominations for Best Direction, two IRNE Awards for Acting, the Elliot Norton Award for Best Actor, and Boston Magazine’s Best of Boston Award for best Actor.
Click here to read Vincent’s Teaching Artist Recipe: Vincent’s Mo’ Better Drama Smoothie
Kayla Tomas she/her
Kayla Tomas is a Boston-based artist, educator, and dramaturg. Currently, she serves as the Educational Programs Coordinator at NEMPAC, a non-profit community music school, as well as the Community Engagement Projects Specialist at ArtsEmerson. She holds a B.A. in Theatre from Florida State University and is a current M.F.A. Candidate in Theatre Education/Applied Theatre at Emerson College. Her research and artistic focus advocates for the curricular nature of theatre in schools and communities and reimagining the ways that theatre can be used as a gateway to connect, inform and spread joy. www.kaylatomas.com
Josh Glenn-Kayden he/him
Josh Glenn-Kayden is a Boston-based director and the Artistic Producer and Casting Director at Company One Theatre. Josh’s work centers around new plays that help us dream our culture forward and imagine ways to create a more just world together. Josh will be directing the world premiere of Shrike by Erin Lerch with Fresh Ink Theatre in January 2022. Recent directing projects include Wild Flowers by Tatiana Isabel Gil (Company One Better Future series), Visionary Futures: Science Fiction Theatre for Social Justice Movements (consisting of new plays by Phaedra Michelle Scott, M Sloth Levine, and Jaymes Sanchez) at UMass Amherst, Baltimore by Kirsten Greenidge (UMass Amherst), workshops of Walden by Amy Berryman and The Interrobangers by M Sloth Levine (UMass Play Lab), Greater Good by Kirsten Greenidge (A.R.T. & Company One world premiere, associate director), the world premiere of This Place/Displaced (Artists’ Theater of Boston, ArtsFuse Best Stage Productions of 2018), the New England premiere of Nicky Silver’s The Lyons (Titanic Theatre), and the world premiere of Laura Neill’s Don’t Give Up the Ship (Fresh Ink Theatre). Josh is also the director and co-producer of The Legion Tapes, a sci-fi podcast written by Erin Lerch. Josh has directed and developed new work for the A.R.T., Company One Theatre, Fresh Ink Theatre, Flat Earth Theatre, Artists’ Theater of Boston, the Museum of Science, UMass Amherst, Hub Theatre, the One Minute Play Festival, and TC Squared Theatre Company, among others. Josh holds a BA in Drama from Tufts University and an MFA in Directing from UMass Amherst. www.joshglennkayden.com