Times Colonist

Theatre gives NASA scientists creative outlet

- COURTNEY COLUMBUS

GREENBELT, Maryland — Susan Breon wears two hats — scientist and musician.

By day, she’s a cryogenics engineer at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, where she works on what she calls a “baby step toward a mission to Mars.” By night, she participat­es in Goddard’s Music and Drama Club, often known as MAD. She played keyboard for the club’s spring musical.

“The work here can get very intense,” said Breon, a 30-year NASA veteran.

“We did our thermal vacuum testing a couple of months ago, and it was an around-the-clock, 24/7 operation.”

The club members include scientists, engineers and managers who work for NASA on projects including weather satellites and space telescopes, and they say the club is a creative outlet for them.

“We’ve got more engineers per square foot than any other theatre group around,” said Randy Barth, who directed the club’s latest musical, Weird Romance.

MAD has staged at least one show a year at Goddard since 1970, from Oklahoma! and The Sound of Music to science-fiction fare. Club members say it helps them with their day jobs and shows the public another side of scientists at the sprawling flight centre northeast of Washington, D.C.

Astrophysi­cist Kim Weaver is the club’s president. Doing theatre helps her connect with people who aren’t scientists, she says.

“When I say I’m an astrophysi­cist, I usually get a blank stare. So in order to get people to actually open up and smile at me, I then say I also do theatre, because that’s the part that they think is cool,” Weaver said. “You say you’re a scientist, and I think that scares people. They think they can’t talk to you.”

She was a graduate student intern when she saw a flyer about the club’s auditions for Sweet Charity. Making the show was what led her to take a job at Goddard. “It really helped improve my chances, even in my career,” Weaver said. “I met some more senior astronomer­s who later on down the line were able to help steer me and guide me in my career path.”

Weird Romance combines science and drama. In the first act, The Girl Who Was Plugged In, a corporate mogul creates his own celebrity using a beautiful, artificial body that is controlled by a homeless woman.

The second, Her Pilgrim Soul, was adapted from a Twilight Zone episode.

In it, a projector shows holographi­c images of a woman that were not programmed into it, to the surprise of the scientists involved.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Melanie Pino-Elliott, left, and Katrina Jackson rehearse at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Melanie Pino-Elliott, left, and Katrina Jackson rehearse at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.

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