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Walker and two locally produced kids' series, Wishbone (on PBS 1995-1998) and Barney & Friends (on PBS since 1992), were for many years just about the only national television credits besides commercials that Dallas actors could list in their bios. Until 2006, that is, and the arrival of ongoing on-location shoots for three TV series: the drama Prison Break, now in its second season on Fox; NBC's critically acclaimed freshman drama Friday Night Lights, which casts in Dallas and shoots in Austin; and Lifetime's new cable-cum-webisode mystery Inspector Mom.
As more Dallas actors have begun to pick up work on the TV shows, theater directors trying to cast plays and musicals with top talent have had to adjust to the competition. Last May, WaterTower Theatre director James Paul Lemons wanted to hire Dallas actor Derek Phillips for a lead in the baseball-themed play Take Me Out. But Phillips had just snagged the recurring role of Billy Riggins, alcoholic older brother of one of the five main high school football jocks on Friday Night Lights. Lemons had to fly an actor in from New York for the part.
"Whenever casting comes around, we now have to be very conscious of actors who have commitments to television," Lemons says. "And if we cast them, we have to make arrangements in case those commitments make them unavailable at a moment's notice."
That's what happened at Contemporary Theatre of Dallas this fall. Four days before the opening of The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, actress Stacey Oristano, cast in one of the musical's leads, had to drop out after landing a recurring part as a stripper on Lights. That threw CTD into a temporary tizzy, but the shake-up did provide a job for rising musical theater actress Jennifer Green, who stepped into Whorehouse on short notice.
The employment of so many Dallas actors on the TV shows, all of which have large casts, has caused a ripple of role-swaps at several theaters. Mark Nutter co-stars as Mitchell Street, father of the now-paraplegic high school quarterback played by Scott Porter on Lights, so he couldn't reprise his starring role in CTD's summer revival of James McLure's Lone Star. Ashley Wood got the role instead. Liz Mikel worked briefly on Prison Break (her part was edited out) and had hoped to appear again as the Ghost of Christmas Present in Dallas Theater Center's A Christmas Carol, a show she's been part of for 15 years. But when Mikel's role as Corinna Williams, mother of Friday Night Lights' star player "Smash" (played by Gaius Charles), was expanded to a full 22-show run, she had to give up the Ghost, handing it over to M. Denise Lee. That left WaterTower in a lurch since director Lemons had counted on Lee to be one of five lead singers in the musical revue Happy Holi-divas. Who ended up in that one? Stacey Oristano.
Jody Rudman was cast on Lifetime's Inspector Mom, which also features Dallas actresses Ouida White, Stephanie Young and Allison Tolman. But Rudman reluctantly had to skip auditions for Prison Break and Friday Night Lights because of commitments to play a small part in Classical Acting Company's Death of a Salesman and to star in Stage West's As Bees in Honey Drown. "It is the theater that is keeping me from doing TV stuff," says Rudman. "But it's terrific having the TV shows here. I keep hearing that local actors haven't had this much TV work in a long, long time."
The boom time for actors will keep more of them around, says Dallas talent agent Regan Adair, who also acts and directs on local stages. "All of us are thrilled to have these opportunities within reach. It's strengthened actors' faith in the future of Dallas theater."
Even if theater casting is now more difficult, it's "a small price to pay to keep [good actors] in the area," says CTD's managing director Tom Sime. "The alternative would be losing them to Los Angeles altogether."
Cloud Tectonics. Kitchen Dog Theater produced a near-perfect staging of José Rivera's dreamy play about the meaning of love and its power to change the perception of time. Marisa Gonzalez, J.R. Ramirez and Marco Rodriguez worked up combustible energy in the sexiest, most emotionally raw performances of the year.