Arts & Entertainment
Theatre UAB Presents Student-Led Production βThe Way You Made Me,β April 10-11
The pre-recorded show will be available for free on Vimeo.

April 6, 2021
By Shannon Thomason
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Theatre UAB will present βThe Way You Made Me,β a completely student-led production, free on Vimeo on April 10-11.
Theatre UAB is the performance company of the University of Alabama at Birmingham College of Arts and Sciencesβ Department of Theatre.
Find out what's happening in Birminghamfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
βThe Way You Made Meβ by Lindsay Partain is a story of unpacking and drawing the connections between our family, our lovers and ourselves. The one-woman show is pre-recorded and is not performed live before the public. Theatre UABβs production is directed by junior Bailey Dumlao, a theater performance major. It will be released to the Theatre UAB Vimeo page to view starting at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, April 10, and available through the weekend.
Dumlao says he admires the frank humanity the playwright provides and her exploration of the ways we are shaped by everyone around us. Though the show is delivered as a monologue, he cast two actresses, to create a common identity with Imogen. βBy building on one anotherβs experiences and perspectives, Imogen cuts deeper and hits harder carrying the life stories of both of these incredible women,β he said.
Even in a COVID-19 environment β where the small cast and crew take up the entire Odess Theatre for social distancing and only one actor is unmasked at a time β βwe are still able to create something beautiful and intimate,β Dumlao said. βCarefully choreographed to keep everyone safe, but expertly crafted to tell this story.β
Dumlao, UABβs 2021 Beinecke Scholarship nominee, hopes to pursue graduate school in interdisciplinary theater studies. As a student director, Dumlao says he loves to bring opportunities for others to experiment, and having a creative team full of experienced and first-time artists is invaluable. βEveryone shines,β he said.
βThe challenge to create my own work drives the shows I choose, like this one, that tell stories I feel we donβt hear often enough,β Dumlao said. βIncluding BIPOC performers and queer stories fleshes out the canon and hopefully shows someone else that they can do this too.β
Imogen is played by Farryn Owens and McKenna Shaw; the movement ensemble is Raiya Goodman and Matthew J. Kelly. Stage manager is RβKaisa Mitchell, and assistant stage manager is Katie Pulmano. Lighting designers are Ian Black and Kirk Kirkpatrick, with costume design by Briana Hernandez and choreography by Rachel-Marie Strazza.
Partain is a queer playwright based in Portland, Oregon, and member of the Dramatists Guild. She holds her Bachelor of Arts degree in theater from Pacific University and was co-founder and vice president of the online literary magazine Cascadia Rising Review (January 2017-December 2020). Her work has appeared at the Mid-America Theatre Conference, the Midwest Dramatist Conference, Stage Left Theatre, Vanguard Arts Collective, Take Ten Festival, Artistsβ Exchange, John DeSotelle Studio, Five & Dime Drama Collective, Bonita Center for the Arts, Alternative Theatre, Atlantic Acting School, The Tank, Whisper Skin Theatre, and more, and has been produced across England, in Dubai and in Japan. Her work is published in βThe Best New 10-Minute Plays of 2021,β βThe Best New Menβs Monologues of 2021β and βThe Best New Womenβs Monologues of 2021,β Applause anthologies, βThe Best Menβs Monologues of 2021β (Smith and Kraus), and βSiren Songsβ (Next Stage Press). Her body of work is available on New Play Exchange.
This press release was produced by the University of Alabama at Birmingham. The views expressed here are the authorβs own.