Carolyn Wrayโ€™s office, located at the Truckee Meadows Community Collegeโ€™s 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 sheโ€™s worked out of the space.

In the 15 years that Wray has taught theater at TMCC, sheโ€™s 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 Theaterโ€™s executive director Julie Robertson and actress Hayley McCaw, who is performing in Brรผkaโ€™s Theatreโ€™s latest play, The Homecoming.

As Wray described what she does, it was clear that the nest-like comfort of her office is no accident.

โ€œI 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. โ€œWe create a comfortable environment, where people can work and learn.โ€

This year, Wrayโ€™s 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.

โ€œThis program is really taking off, and I think it will be popular,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s 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. Sheโ€™s hard at work on a production of the play Working, a musical adaptation of oral historian Studs Terkelโ€™s classic book on jobs and what they mean to the people who do them.

Wray admitted that theater isnโ€™t 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 doesnโ€™t help that aspiring actors and directors are too often discouraged by family and friends.

โ€œItโ€™s very tough,โ€ she said. โ€œStatistically, itโ€™s 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 itโ€™s 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. Sheโ€™s noticed that many of her students were shy people as well.

โ€œI think theater really does attract a lot of shy, super-sensitive people, and often theyโ€™re the best at what they do,โ€ she said. โ€œThey observe a lot. They feel that they can be accepted portraying someone elseโ€”the audience isnโ€™t judging you, theyโ€™re judging your character.โ€

TMCCโ€™s productions often include casts of up to 50 people. Wray said that since TMCCโ€™s 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 TMCCโ€™s main campus will be converted into a classroom after this semester, and the school will have to find a new stage. Wray said sheโ€™s not worried. She hopes to move nearer to the South Virginia Street campus, a site thatโ€™s accessible to more of the community.

โ€œThis is a very good time for theater,” she said. “Thereโ€™s a lot of interest, a lot of energy, a lot going on. Itโ€™s just exciting to watch.”

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