Carolyn Wrayโs office, located at the Truckee Meadows Community Collegeโs Reno Town Mall campus, is the kind of place that makes visitors want to linger for a while.
The walls are covered with colorful posters, masks, costumes and props. On shelves above her desk hang small, dollhouse-like models of set designs, testimony to the years that sheโs worked out of the space.
In the 15 years that Wray has taught theater at TMCC, sheโs become a fixture in the local theater scene. Her name is an oft-cited inspiration among local actors. Some of her former students include Gothic North Theaterโs executive director Julie Robertson and actress Hayley McCaw, who is performing in Brรผkaโs Theatreโs latest play, The Homecoming.
As Wray described what she does, it was clear that the nest-like comfort of her office is no accident.
โI think TMCC is here to nurture actors, to act as a feeder school and push people out there and on to stage in productions around the community,โ she said. โWe create a comfortable environment, where people can work and learn.โ
This year, Wrayโs department is poised to inspire and instruct more theater professionals than ever before. Last year, TMCC created a new associates degree program in theater arts. The college hired another full-time instructor, Paul Aberasturi, and added a new array of classes.
โThis program is really taking off, and I think it will be popular,โ she said. โItโs the only two-year degree of its kind in the state. It will allow people to get credit for studying an avocation they love.โ
Along with teaching a full load, Wray produces a full-blown stage production each semester. Sheโs hard at work on a production of the play Working, a musical adaptation of oral historian Studs Terkelโs classic book on jobs and what they mean to the people who do them.
Wray admitted that theater isnโt the easiest vocation in the world. Only a select few will have a successful career, and for those who want to support themselves on stage, moving to a larger market is almost mandatory. It doesnโt help that aspiring actors and directors are too often discouraged by family and friends.
โItโs very tough,โ she said. โStatistically, itโs very difficult to succeed. You need to have determination, drive, the ability to look at rejection as a business thing.โ
Nevertheless, Wray said, if itโs something you feel the need to do, you have to go for it.
Wray was a shy 13-year-old when she first discovered the allure of the stage. She said theater was her salvation during her adolescence. Sheโs noticed that many of her students were shy people as well.
โI think theater really does attract a lot of shy, super-sensitive people, and often theyโre the best at what they do,โ she said. โThey observe a lot. They feel that they can be accepted portraying someone elseโthe audience isnโt judging you, theyโre judging your character.โ
TMCCโs productions often include casts of up to 50 people. Wray said that since TMCCโs student population is so diverse, she has the opportunity to cast shows age-appropriately. Actors have also been recruited from TMCC high school and local elementary schools.
The performance space in Redfield Auditorium at TMCCโs main campus will be converted into a classroom after this semester, and the school will have to find a new stage. Wray said sheโs not worried. She hopes to move nearer to the South Virginia Street campus, a site thatโs accessible to more of the community.
โThis is a very good time for theater,” she said. “Thereโs a lot of interest, a lot of energy, a lot going on. Itโs just exciting to watch.”
