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Community Spotlight: Corey Ragan

By Ginny Butsch posted 06-07-2016 08:57

  

 

One of the main goals for our Theatre Education Community is to help theatre students and professionals from all over connect and identify with each other in order to build resources and support the theatre education field. We shine a spotlight on a different member every other week by conducting a simple interview.

 

Our latest Spotlight Member is Corey Ragan, a Thespian Alum and the Troupe Director of Troupe 3323 at Groveport Madison High School in Groveport, Ohio. Corey is just wrapping up his first year teaching theatre and has relied on the collective wisdom of the Community for general advice and support as well as contributed his own ideas and recommendations.

 

Ginny: Why do you believe theatre is important?

               

Corey: Theatre has always been incredibly important. I have made some of my best friends and even met my fiancée in high school theatre. Theatre is a place for an eclectic group of people to form a family, have fun, and create beautiful works of art. This year is my first year of teaching and I directed Godspell (2012 Revised Edition) for our spring musical. I chose the show because of the beautiful community that is formed during the show. I had no idea the impact the show would have on my students. We have a small, but mighty, company and the first rehearsal during which we staged the Crucifixion was unforgettable. By the end of the song, every student had broken down in tears because of the raw emotion that they were exhibiting onstage. We ended rehearsal early and spent two hours sharing why the show was affecting them so strongly. Students shared what the community in the show and the friendships they were forging with each other meant and why they were important. The things they shared blew me away. My students shared stories that no person should have to experience and told us that the relationships being developed were what was helping them survive. Giving students a safe space to express themselves and support one another is what theatre is all about and why it is so important.


Ginny: What inspired you to become a teacher?

               

Corey: Over the course of my educational career, I was fortunate enough to have some of the most incredible educators I have ever met, particularly my theatre teachers. In high school, theatre was a way that I really discovered who I was and what I was passionate about. From my first show, I became OBSESSED! My theatre teachers in high school went to great lengths to provide us with the best experiences possible and I knew that I wanted to provide the same to my own students someday. If I had to pick one specific event that inspired me to become a teacher, I would say that the moment I took my first bow onstage at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival as a senior in high school, I knew that I wanted to bring a group of students back to the festival someday.


Ginny: What is your favorite musical (or play)? What makes it so special?

 

Corey: Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf is my favorite play of all time. The poisonous George and Martha dynamic is a relationship that I have been so fascinated by since the first time that I saw the show. There is just so much that happens in the show, I truly get something different from it on every read, which is one of the things that makes it so special. Having been introduced to the show in high school, it influenced the way that I have read plays my entire life. It has always pushed me to read between the lines and delve into deep character analysis. I truly believe that it is a masterpiece.


Ginny: What is your proudest accomplishment?

 

Corey: As a first year teacher, one of my proudest accomplishments would, without a doubt, be surviving my first year. I came in facing many challenges, but I took them on headfirst and they helped make me a better educator and director. Producing a four show season and developing multiple new classes for our curriculum was something I never expected to do in my first year. But, this year, my proudest moment by far would be watching my students perform the one act 13 Ways to Screw Up Your College Interview at the Ohio State Thespian Conference. I have never been so proud of a group of students and they worked so incredibly hard to make it happen!

 

Ginny: If you could live anywhere in the world, where would you go and why?

               

Corey: This is an extremely cliché answer, but I would love to live in New York City. The wide range of cultural opportunities available in the city are absolutely incredible. To have that much theatre at your fingertips would also be an incredible opportunity.  I would love to be able to go to The Drama Book Shop whenever I want.  Plus, it is a city where truly anything can happen and you could have any number of adventures.

 

Ginny: Tell us about the best day of your life.

 

Corey: By far the best day of my life so far would be the day that I proposed to my fiancée. Taking the ring from Columbus, Ohio to NYC on a Megabus was one of the most stressful things I’ve ever done, but it was so worth it to be able to propose on a billboard in the middle of Times Square!

Corey has accomplished so much his first year and is clearly building strong relationships within his theatre department. We’re excited to see where the future will take him! If you enjoyed Corey’s interview as much as I did, add him as a contact in the Community!

 

Do you know someone who deserves a moment in the Spotlight? Tell me their name and why at gbutsch@schooltheatre.org. Want to read more Community Spotlights? You can find them here.

 

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