California Shakespeare Theater has announced the appointment of Rebecca Novick to the post of director of artistic engagement. This new position, part of the organization's senior leadership team, will expand Novick's ongoing work with the Triangle Lab to focus on developing Cal Shakes' involvement with all its constituents—artists, audiences, donors, students, board, and community partners—toward the goal of deepening relationships and integrating Cal Shakes into the lives of everyone the company reaches.
“I am beyond thrilled that Rebecca is taking on this vital new role with the organization,” Cal Shakes Artistic Director Jonathan Moscone said in a press release. “She brings a unique voice to the table as we focus our work over the coming years to connect Cal Shakes more deeply to our communities. As the Triangle Lab has been an extraordinary catalyst for questioning assumptions and methodologies in how we work, the work in Artistic Engagement will help strengthen our relationships with audiences up at the Bruns, partners in the communities, and students who participate in our artistic learning programs.”
Novick is a director and producer based in the San Francisco Bay Area. She has served for two years as the first director of the Triangle Lab—California Shakespeare Theater's research and development wing—which experiments with ways to integrate art more deeply into community life. Novick was brought on in the early stages of the Lab's development and led the process of conceptualizing the program, directing Lab activities, and securing funding for ongoing work.
“As an artist I'm always looking for the opportunity to bring together my twin passions for social justice and theater-making, and this new position gives me the chance to investigate what happens when a theater asks itself how to matter more to its community,” Rebecca Novick said in the release. “As director of the Triangle Lab, I led experiments exploring how to engage artists more deeply in community life; in this expanded role, I am honored to be charged with weaving together how we make theater and how we build community.”
Novick was the founder of Crowded Fire Theater Company and served as its artistic director for 10 years, growing the company from an all-volunteer group to one of San Francisco's most respected small theaters. She has developed and directed new plays for many theaters in the Bay Area and elsewhere, and her directing work has been recognized by the Goldie awards for outstanding local artists, among other awards. Novick has also held a number of arts management and consulting positions, including serving as interim arts program officer for the San Francisco Foundation, project coordinator for the Wallace Foundation Cultural Participation Initiative in the Bay Area, and director of development and strategic initiatives for Theatre Bay Area. She regularly writes and speaks on issues relating to the arts sector; recent publications include contributions to 20under40, the GIA Reader, Howlround, Counting New Beans, and Theatre Bay Area magazine. Rebecca has a bachelor of arts from the University of Michigan in drama and anthropology.
March 5, 2014
If you have Shakespearean news to share, e-mail editorial@shakespeareances.com