Part 1 of a Series Written by Cindy Marie Jenkins
I decided that I would take advantage of this wonderful forum to expose more Working Women in Theatre. The first Tuesday of each month, I will bring you the insights and talents of our colleagues. Our first Interview is with Cricket Strother Myers, a woman who I met when I was a CalArts groupie and who has taken huge leaps in her career in the short five years that I have known her. Success story is putting it mildly.
Take a look at her bio, for one thing: Cricket is a Freelance Sound designer, based in Los Angeles. She is the Resident Sound Designer for the Celebration Theater in West Hollywood, and the Resident Assistant Sound Designer at the Mark Taper Forum. Cricket won a Los Angeles Drama Critic Circle Award and was nominated for a Robby Award for her Sound Design of Floyd Collins, at West Coast Ensemble. In 2006, she was nominated for an LA Weekly Award for her Sound Design of Iphigenia (A Rave Fable). She was a finalist for the 2005 TCG/NEA Career Development Grant, and in 2003 won the USITT Young Designers Clear-Com Award for Sound design. Cricket got her MFA in Sound Design from California Institute of the Arts, in 2003. Cricket was named a “Young Designer to Watch” in Live Design Magazine’s April Issue, and was also recognized as “An Artist To Watch” by LA Stage Magazine in September.
CMJ: Please tell us a little history of your career as a Sound Designer.
CSM: I started in theater in High School but didn’t start working with sound until 2000. I am proud to say that since then I have worked in houses with only 25 seats and in houses with 3000. I have assisted on a Broadway show, and will have my first Off-Broadway design soon, but Los Angeles has become my home and my life, and it’s the work I do here that I am the most proud of. Many theaters here feel like a home away from home now, Celebration, the Taper and the Colony to name a few.
CMJ: Was there anything specific that drew you to sound design? When did you decide that was your career path?
CSM: Actually, Jon Gottlieb drew me to sound design. I knew I loved theater, and had done a little of everything, and then I met Jon. Jon helped me find my place in theater, and taught me the skills I needed to excel. Really, it wasn’t til grad school that I finally knew that sound was my career.
CMJ: Which production do you view as your greatest artistic success?
CSM: That’s a tough one. I feel that way about several productions. Each for different reasons. My two productions with the Furious theater company stand out in my mind. They are a group of people that challenge the way I think and push the boundaries of my design. My work becomes an integral part of the production, not just something laid on top of it. I am truly excited about Dark Play with Boston Court, because it’s so unlike anything I have ever done before and is challenging me in so many ways, and yet, after just two days of tech, I am really proud of what the show and my design are becoming. Again, my design changes the shape and mood of the theater and the production.
CMJ: On which production did you learn the most about design?
CSM: Well, I have to say I am still learning. Every production I do teaches me something new about me, and my skills and my art. Sound design has some many facets. Sideshow at the Colony (assisting Drew Dalzell) taught me so much about the technical things. How speakers work and which mics are better in certain applications. I did a production of the Maids at LMU, where I really got to play with the idea of the subconscious and how I can affect the mood and tension in a room. Halloween Horror Nights has taught me so much about Show Control, And almost every show hones my people skills!
CMJ: Who are your heroes in the theater world?
CSM: Well, there’s the pioneers of sound design, John Leonard and Jack Mann. There’s other designers I have worked with and have helped me, such as Mark Bennett, John Gromada, Drew Dalzell, and my mentor Jon Gottlieb… Mark and John Gromada were instrumental in the successful petitioning for a Tony for Sound Design.
CMJ: If you could choose anyone to work with, who would you choose?
CSM: I don’t know that there’s any one group or person that I really want to work with. I love working with teams that challenge me and excite me. I want to keep working with those kinds of people!
CMJ: What is your favorite:
CSM: Play - well, there’s Toad of Toad Hall, which is the first play I ever worked on, as a freshman in high school. I fell madly in love with the theater because of that experience. As an adult, Susan Lori-Park’s plays excite me, and A Fugard’s plays make me think.
Book - I will be a dork here, and say “The Listening Book” by W.A. Mathieu. It really changed the way I listened to the world, and therefore changed how I experience the world.
Costume - Two of my friends and I went as the 3 Furies one year to a CalArts party.
Animal - Rabbit
Movie - The Illusionist. It was stunningly beautiful and Phillip Glass did the soundtrack
Color - Purple.
CMJ: How many productions do you actively design over the course of one month?
CSM: I try to keep to opening only 2 in a month, but have been known to open as many as 4. Of course even if I am not in tech, I am often reading and thinking about a couple more. I will only open 2 shows in Oct, but I have two in November that I am reading and talking with directors about.
CMJ: How do you approach a play that you’re going to design?
CSM: Well, I start with reading the script and sitting down with the director. I get his/her first impressions about the story, the people and the environment. I also note the “needs” of the script. Practical things, like a phone ringing or a doorbell. I read the script again then, and make notes in the script about mood and environment. I spend the next few weeks thinking about the scope of the show, and what my design needs to accomplish. I like to meet with the other designers too, to talk about their impressions. I rarely start building cues until I have seen a rehearsal or run thru. I really don’t start solidifying what the show really is in my head until I have seen it. That’s when I really start hearing it in my head, and know what it’s going to become. Then it’s the challenge of taking what I hear in my head, and making it come to life. Which is sometimes rather tricky!
CMJ: Tell me the job description for a Sound Designer.
CSM: Wikipedia says Sound Design is “The manipulation of audio elements to achieve a desired effect.” Which I kinda like. My job is to support the action and mood of the production, without distracting from the play. Sometimes that means a lot of sound, sometimes that means knowing when to stay silent and let the words speak for themselves. Sometimes it’s both. I have to understand the gear well enough to know what to use in which situation, but a design is so much more for me.
Trying, Directed by Cameron Watson, The Colony Theater, 2007
The Los Angeles Times, by K. Kathleen Foley
“Watson’s faultless staging is augmented by sound technical elements — Victoria Profitt’s handsome and cozy set, Cricket Myers’ subtle sound and Jared A. Sayeg’s virtuosic lighting design, which perfectly evokes the separate seasons of Biddle’s final year. ”
Backstage West, by Madeleine Shaner
“Cameron Watson’s sure direction shows a loving hand; everything good is enhanced by Victoria Profitt’s superlative loft-office design, Jared Sayeg’s lighting, and Cricket Myers’ sound design. ”
Show Magazine by Melinda Schupmann
“Director Cameron Watson’s understanding of these characters makes the performance riveting, humorous, and completely without artifice. It is hard to imagine a better team to bring this impressive play to life. Skilled as always, Victoria Profitt’s beautifully articulated set creates a perfect backdrop for the garage office of Judge Biddle. Jared Sayeg’s lighting and Cricket Myers’ sound designs compliment Profitt’s work.”
Reviewplays.com by Cynthia Citron
“Moreover, they are blessed with a remarkably fine set designed by Victoria Profitt. The other designers are equally adept: A. Jeffrey Schoenberg on costumes, Jared Sayeg on lighting, and Cricket Myers on sound. ”
Walkin’ Thru the Fire, Directed by Che’ Rae Adams, The Hayworth Theater, 2007
The Los Angeles Times, David Nichols
“The production is clearly a labor of love, with glossy contributions by J. Kent Inasy (lighting) and Cricket S. Myers (sound), and it carries an engaging authority that trumps some self-indulgent patches.”Backstage West, Neal Weaver
“The elegantly sparse set by Sara Ryung Clement, lighting design by J. Kent Inasy, and sound design by Cricket S. Myers combine to produce rich theatrical imagery.”
Impending Rupture of the Belly, Directed by Damaso Rodriguez, The Furious Theater Company, 2007
Backstage West, Les Spindle
“The milieu is spellbinding: the unnerving noises of honking horns and barking dogs emanating from Cricket S. Myers’ fine soundtrack, the congested landscape of skeletal homes in Dan Jenkins’ inspired scenic design, and the unnerving mood shifts in Christie Wright’s fabulous lighting design.”LA Times, Calender Live, F. Kathleen Foley
“Dan Jenkins’ appropriately totalitarian scenic design resembles cinder blocks, set off by metaphoric splashes of red. Christie Wright’s minatory lighting and Cricket S. Myers’ strident sound complete the striking picture of a Pasadena neigh-borhood as a suburban war zone.”LA Weekly, Steven Mikulan
“Scenic designer Dan Jenkins’ waffle-board cutouts of city buildings, Cricket Myers’ thunderous sound design and Christie Wright’s ominous lighting all combine to create a diorama of dread.”Variety, Terry Morgan
“No one is credited for the choice of music that roars between each scene, but the use of such bands as Fear and Morphine to create a jarring, dissonant vibe is bluntly effective.”
Beautiful Thing, Directed by Michael Matthews, The Celebration Theater, 2007
Variety, Bob Verini
“An array of nonstop sound effects assembled by Cricket S. Myers helps to evoke London’s Thamesmead, one of those housing developments in cities worldwide whose very silhouette exudes hopelessness. ”
The Bacchae, Directed by Michael Matthews, The Celebration Theater, 2007
Backstage West
“The sound design (Cricket Myers), which features the music of Ryan Poulson, is almost a character unto itself. Myers creates the sort of aural background that demands to be noticed but never distracts from the central work. “The Los Angeles Times, Calander Live
“Upon entering the venue, which set designer Kurt Boetcher covers with graffiti and foliage, audiences may wonder if they’ve stumbled into a rave. That is the intent, from the first metallic slash over the sound system to the last flash-lighted incantation….Marjorie Baer’s costumes, Tim Swiss’ lighting, Cricket Myers’ sound and Ryan Poulson’s original music are all lean and evocative.”
Orestes Remembered: The Fury Project, Directed by Kathrine Noon, Ghost Road Theater Company, 2007
LA Weekly
“Maureen Weiss’ fold-out ramshackle-house set comes packed with metaphors, Cricket Myers’ sound design rumbles and explodes with both latent menace and shock. ”
Iphigenia Crash Lands Falls on a Neon Shell that was Once Her Heart, Directed by Matthew McCray, Son of Semele, 2006 ***Nominated for an LA WEEKLY THEATER AWARD 2006 Sound Design and Production Design
LA Weekly
“John Eckert’s lighting design and Cricket S. Myers’ sound design underscore the building menace, and Ryan Poulson’s original music also deserves kudos.”