麻豆国产

Mason students take a bow at Capital Fringe

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Aadith Iyer walked onto the stage at Theater J in Washington, D.C., and, as he said, 鈥渕y stomach dropped.鈥

鈥淚 was, like, this is huge,鈥 Iyer said. 鈥淚t was very intimidating.鈥

Bella the playwright with award
Bella Panciocco wrote 鈥淭he Road to the End鈥 while a student at Mason.
Photo provided

But, wow, what an opportunity.

Iyer, a junior major at George Mason 麻豆国产, was part of a cast and crew made up entirely of Mason students and graduates that performed 鈥淭he Road to the End鈥 at the recent Capital Fringe festival.

Written by Bella Panciocco, BFA Theater 鈥23, and directed by Megan Gray Lederman, BA Theater, BA 鈥23, and Darren Badley, BA Theater 鈥23, the play got strong reviews from DC Theater Arts and Broadway World and won for best drama at Fringe in an audience vote.

鈥淚t was,鈥 Panciocco said, 鈥渞eally surreal.鈥

It also was a showcase for the opportunities and experiences available to Mason students, as well as a reminder about how a university experience can be enriched by sampling all a campus has to offer.

Mostly, though, it was a payoff for all the hard work.

鈥淚鈥檝e truly seen everyone鈥檚 growth,鈥 said Panciocco, of Oakton, Virginia. 鈥淚t was really beautiful to see because we were all learning together, and isn鈥檛 that what we should be doing? Learning and figuring things out, so when we go into the field we can be that next generation of 鈥榯his is how it should be done.鈥欌

鈥淭he Road to the End鈥 is about a father-and-son road trip to the Grand Canyon, a story that emanated from Panciocco鈥檚 trip with her mother to the Grand Canyon to mourn the loss of her grandfather.

The play originally was produced for the series. , an adjunct professor in the and Panciocco鈥檚 writing mentor, suggested Panciocco submit the play to the Capital Fringe, the annual festival in Washington, which is just 20 miles from Mason鈥檚 Fairfax, Virginia, campus

cast and crew from Fringe play
The cast and crew from 鈥淭he Road to the End.鈥
Photo provided

Brassard, BA Theater 鈥12, had her own play, 鈥淭he Morphine Diaries,鈥 shown at the Fringe in 2011 in a space above a D.C. bar.

So when 鈥淭he Road to the End,鈥 was placed at 240-seat Theater J, she told the cast and crew, 鈥淭his is the real deal. You don鈥檛 know how lucky you are.鈥

Lucky to show their work on a real stage in front of a D.C. audience and mingle at Fringe events with other performers and directors.

鈥淭he thing about Fringe is the exposure. They might be able to make some connections going forward,鈥 Brassard said. 鈥淚 knew they would be in front of an audience, in front of critics. I knew there would be some anxiety, but I knew they were ready.鈥

For Iyer, who is from Lorton, Virginia, and played the lead role of Henry, the experience was another step in a career arc he hopes will result in roles in movies and television.

Iyer said he loves theater because 鈥渋t鈥檚 a different form of acting.鈥

鈥淚t challenges you differently,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 love memorizing lines and having this whole book in your head when you go on stage and have to perform it over and over again in front of a lot of people. That鈥檚 very challenging. I believe any good actor should have theater experience.鈥

The experience was entirely different for Jessica Nguyen, who played Dabria, a hitchhiker. A junior major from Fairfax, Nguyen said being part of something outside her comfort zone made her Mason experience richer and 鈥渉elped me relearn what it鈥檚 like to be a student.鈥

鈥淛ust having something in your portfolio that says I was able to do this, so why would I fear something new later?鈥 Nguyen said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what being a student is about, taking risks. That is what acting is, too. With every rehearsal, I was learning more about myself and what fears I was able to diminish by just saying 鈥榶es.鈥 鈥

鈥淭hey wanted to share the story and be part of this,鈥 Panciocco said. 鈥淎nd I think this paves the way for future opportunities for Mason theater majors.鈥

The rest of the cast and crew:

Sage Munson (BFA theater 鈥23)

Kendall Huheey (BFA theater 鈥23)

Keaton Lazar (BFA theater 鈥25)

Hansin Arvind (BA theater 鈥22)

Bertem Demirtas (BA theater 鈥25)

Michael O. Jarvis (government and international politics 鈥25)

Toni Avonne (BFA theater 鈥22)

Brett Womack (BFA theater, BA mathematics 鈥25)

Samba Pathak (BA theater 鈥23)

Caleb McMurtry (BA theater 鈥24)

Elisabeth Dupuy (BA theater 鈥24)

Sarah Strunk (BA film and video studies 鈥22)

Hannah Griffith (BA theater, BS marketing 鈥25)

Mary Clare Bernier (BA theater 鈥25)

Steven Franco (BFA theater 鈥23)