Los Angeles Times

Curtain closes in Pasadena

Pasadena Playhouse’s 20-year artistic director and voice for diversity calls it quits.

- By Jessica Gelt

Sheldon Epps, artistic director of Pasadena Playhouse for 20 years and a champion of diversity, is stepping down.

Sheldon Epps has long said that all too often he was the lone person of color in the audience of a theater and that, just as often, he saw only white actors onstage.

So when Epps, artistic director of Pasadena Playhouse, staged “12 Angry Men” a couple of years ago, he provocativ­ely cast the jury so half was white and half was black, turning a 1950s piece into a new conversati­on about race relations in America.

Now that voice for diversity, onstage and in the audience, said Thursday he’s stepping down from his post at the end of the 2016-17 season.

Theater officials announced that they will begin a national search to replace Epps, who has led Pasadena Playhouse for nearly two decades and will take the ti-

tle “artistic director emeritus.”

Epps helped the playhouse to become one of the most prominent regional theaters while trying to diversify the shows it mounted.

As one of the few people of color to serve as artistic director for a major theater, Epps embodied the idea of diversity behind the scenes as well.

“There comes a time when change is good both for the theater and me as an artist,” Epps said by phone from the East Coast, where he was vacationin­g.

“And 20 years felt like a significan­t time to make the choice and move on,” he added.

Pasadena Playhouse Chairman David DiCristofa­ro said Epps informed the board of his intentions shortly before the holidays.

“When he first got here, the theater was coming out of a dark period, and he’s done an amazing job and taken the theater to new heights of success that we couldn’t have imagined,” DiCristofa­ro said.

The playhouse’s search for a replacemen­t comes as it looks for a new executive director too. Elizabeth Doran left that post at the end of April to become president and chief executive of San Diego Theatres.

Epps said this period of transition, which comes as Pasadena Playhouse readies for its centennial in 2017, will be exciting for the theater’s future.

He said he would play an advisory role in the search for his successor, and DiCristofa­ro said the right candidate will be able to balance a strong artistic vision with business interests.

When asked if the playhouse’s associate artistic director, Seema Sueko, might play a larger role, DiCristofa­ro said he had not spoken with her.

“We’ll be happy to talk to any and all folks qualified and interested, and certainly Seema would be considered that if she applies,” he said.

When Sueko arrived at the playhouse from Mo’olelo Performing Arts Company in San Diego in 2014, she joined Epps in furthering his campaign for diversity.

Epps has been eager to prove that the approach can be financiall­y feasible.

“I think it’s a significan­t achievemen­t in the American theater, and I really do think the [playhouse] has become a model for what is possible in this area, both in sustaining an existing audience and in building new audiences,” he said.

Tom McCoy, executive producer of McCoy Rigby Entertainm­ent at La Mirada Theatre and a longtime friend and fan, said Epps’ leadership has had a broad effect. “It’s not just Pasadena and it’s not just the L.A. area,” McCoy said. “I think Sheldon inspired lots of folks to think creatively about how they’re staging their shows. He has inspired other producers to become more diverse themselves and to see the benefits of diversity.”

Epps also is credited with helping to rescue the playhouse from the financial brink in 2010, in part by helping to secure grants from individual­s and major groups such as the Wallace, Doris Duke Charitable and James Irvine foundation­s.

DiCristofa­ro said the quality of Epps’ production­s was among his most significan­t accomplish­ments. Critical praise for many shows was accompanie­d by Tony nomination­s for playhouse production­s that moved on to Broadway, including “Sister Act: The Musical,” “Baby It’s You” and “Looped.”

Before coming to Pasadena, Epps served as associate artistic director of the Old Globe Theatre in San Diego. He also co-founded the Production Company, an off-Broadway theater.

In addition to directing production­s at some of the nation’s leading theaters, Epps worked as a TV director for shows, including, “Frasier” and “Friends.”

For his next act, Epps said he hopes to slow down a bit. “I think I have an interestin­g book in me,” he said. “Perhaps about my experience­s in the worlds of theater and television — and some interestin­g things to say as a black man in America who has had success in those fields and also faced significan­t challenges. I also love teaching, and then whatever else is around the corner.”

As artistic director emeritus, Epps may direct a show from time to time, DiCristofa­ro said.

“If they let me,” Epps joked, adding, “I want to be connected and useful and of service to the theater, but only in ways that enable it to move forward and not keep it back.”

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Los Angeles Times ?? PASADENA PLAYHOUSE’S artistic director, Sheldon Epps, promoted diversity and fiscal stability.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times PASADENA PLAYHOUSE’S artistic director, Sheldon Epps, promoted diversity and fiscal stability.

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