Bates Theater’s production of Everybody sold out every performance at Gannett Theater last week — waitlists at the door, eager audience members finding out they’d gotten seats five minutes before curtain — and the room earned that anticipatory urgency. Associate Professor of Theater Courtney Smith, the scenic and projections designer, built a world that wrapped around you rather than played in front of you. It was immersive and a little disorienting, in exactly the right way.

Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’ 2017 play, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, takes a risky leap of faith in inviting its cast into a game of role swapping. Before each performance, the cast members playing “Somebody” draw lots to decide who faces Death, who becomes Friendship, who becomes Love, and who becomes Stuff (and a few other parts).



Nine different roles, memorized by everyone. One hundred and twenty possible versions of the same night. The performance you witnessed would, in all likelihood, be the only time it happened exactly that way.



Director and Associate Professor of Theater Tim Dugan shaped an ensemble that held that strangeness without flinching. For Adam Joseph (AJ) Matos ’26 of Springfield, N.J., and Samantha Manogue ’26 of Wynnewood, Penn., the play was part of their senior theses, working with a cast that had to be ready for anything. Lighting director Noah Skinner ’26 of Sugar Land, Texas, lit a world that had to feel ancient and urgent at once. There were many big questions on hand, including the nightly guessing game of who would play who? The answer? Everybody.


The cast includes: Mo Al-Jabry ’28, Graham Austin ’28, Aidan Bergeron ’27, Julian Boutin ’28, Jack Fisher ’29, Connor Gerraughty ’26, Josie Kim ’27, Jenny Liu ’29, Emily Maffezzoli ’29, Samantha Manogue ’26, Ruby Marden ’27, AJ Matos ’26, and Patrick Stronski ’27.
Faculty Featured

Timothy J. Dugan Jr.
Associate Professor of Theater

Courtney P. Smith
Associate Professor of Theater



