Dallas Life

100 Dallas Creatives: No. 63 Fresh Perspective Kelsey Leigh Ervi

Mixmaster presents "100 Creatives," in which we feature cultural entrepreneurs of Dallas in random order. Know an artistic mind who deserves a little bit of blog love? Email lauren.smart@dallasobserver.com with the whos and whys. When Kelsey Leigh Ervi graduated from Baylor University, moving to Dallas would've been an obvious choice...
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Mixmaster presents “100 Creatives,” in which we feature cultural entrepreneurs of Dallas in random order. Know an artistic mind who deserves a little bit of blog love? Email lauren.smart@dallasobserver.com with the whos and whys.

When Kelsey Leigh Ervi graduated from Baylor University, moving to Dallas would’ve been an obvious choice. Quite a few alumni of the theater department land in Dallas, fine tune their mechanics and fly away to a bigger city. And local theaters are happy to be used as a launching pad for the careers of these aspiring actors, comedians, director. But moving to Dallas was a redirection for Ervi, but one she says gave her a home base she plans to keep for quite some time.

Just a few years into her career, she’s made her professional directing debut at WaterTower Theatre, where she also has a day job as the Assistant to the Producing Artistic Director. More important, she’s found a community. She’s adding a fresh perspective to the theater scene here and proving that young people can get jobs -and good ones! – in the theater.

How did you land in Dallas?
After graduation I flailed a little bit. I applied to grad school for acting, didn’t pan out. I went to New York very briefly and knew immediately that it was not for me, I felt like a tourist there. Then, I did an internship for six weeks with Shakespeare Dallas, which is where I met Rene Moreno and built a good working relationship with him. Went back to Waco, was there for a few months. Basically it was that six month period that happens after graduation that was like what were these four years? What was I spending all of that money on?

 Then, I got a call from Shakespeare Dallas to AD a show in May, so I moved up in February to look for a job.

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Moreno offered me an assistant director position at August:Osage County later that year. And that’s what has been nice about Shakespeare Dallas, a lot of people get their start there and then they stick out their neck for their people.

If you were going to explain directing to someone, what do you do?
Cast well *laughs*. I’ve heard some people say it’s 90% of the job. But then I think it’s having a vision and seeing it to fruitiion. You have to take all these eclectic artists down a winding road, which might be a broad way to look at it.

What is it like to be an assistant director? (Is it like being a director’s bitch?)
I’m a really good AD, and I don’t mean to say that to blow smoke up my butt, but I adapt well to people which makes me a good assistant to Terry, I just adapt well to different situations. Every director I work with is different. With Rene, he knows exactly what he wants and I’m on board with it. With him, it’s almost more of a mentorship, which is wonderful. Conversely when I was working on Tom Sawyer with Emily Scott Banks, it really felt collaborative and maybe that’s how that show is, because it’s ensemble based and for her, it was more asking me for suggestions and staying on our feet. I think every director’s different.

What’s different here?

I think for me, it’s community driven here. New York is just bigger. Here, there’s enough work to go around for everyone. There are very few people I know here who are not working, from the Dallas Theater Center, to smaller companies, to guerrilla theater. People here are doing work. There is an artistic buzz here that makes it hard for me to leave and good work. The fact that it’s happening is great. I don’t love everything but people are taking risks. Now I tell all of my friends who are about to graduate who are thinking New York or LA, I say You’re missing something, come to Dallas.

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You’re growing up artistically in Dallas, is there enough work to sustain you? Or now that you’re already directing at professional theaters will you have to seek greener pastures to find fulfillment?
For me, two things are really important: identity and building an artistic home. I feel like I’ve found that home at WaterTower when it comes to my routine and the relationships and work it’s provided me. I think you can continue to grow, whether it’s working at other theaters or working with new people and creating work I want to do for myself. I foresee myself being here for a while. But I have other aspirations as well. I’d like to go back to school and teach someday. There will be an eventual point maybe in 3 years, maybe in 10 years, and I’ll have to go back to school and train. And then I’ll have the experience to back it up.

100 Creatives:
100. Theater Mastermind Matt Posey
99. Comedy Queen Amanda Austin
98. Deep Ellum Enterpriser Brandon Castillo
97. Humanitarian Artist Willie Baronet
96. Funny Man Paul Varghese
95. Painting Provocateur Art Peña
94. Magic Man Trigg Watson
93. Enigmatic Musician George Quartz
92. Artistic Luminary Joshua King
91. Inventive Director Rene Moreno
90. Color Mavens Marianne Newsom and Sunny Sliger
89. Literary Lion Thea Temple
88. Movie Maestro Eric Steele
87. Storytelling Dynamo Nicole Stewart
86. Collaborative Artist Ryder Richards
85. Party Planning Print maker Raymond Butler
84. Avant-gardist Publisher Javier Valadez
83. Movie Nerd James Wallace
82. Artistic Tastemakers Elissa & Erin Stafford
81. Pioneering Arts Advocates Mark Lowry & Michael Warner
80. Imaginative Director Jeremy Bartel
79. Behind-the-Scenes Teacher Rachel Hull
78. Kaleidoscopic Artist Taylor “Effin” Cleveland
77. Filmmaker & Environmentalist Michael Cain
76. Music Activist Salim Nourallah
75. Underground Entrepreneur Daniel Yanez
74. Original Talent Celia Eberle
73. Comic Artist Aaron Aryanpur
72. Classical Thespian Raphael Parry
71. Dance Captain Valerie Shelton Tabor
70. Underground Culture Mainstay Karen X. Minzer
69. Effervescent Gallerist Brandy Michele Adams
68. Birthday Party Enthusiast Paige Chenault
67. Community Architect Monica Diodati
66. Intrepid Publisher Will Evans
65. Writerly Wit Noa Gavin
64. Maverick Artist Roberto Munguia

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