First Name
Angela
Middle Name
Michelle Farr
Last Name
Schiller, PhD
City
Country
State or Province
Job Title
Dramaturg
Biography
Dr. Schiller is an Emmy Award–winning director (2021), and a multiple award-winning dramaturg, educator, and scholar. As a dramaturg, she has worked on numerous productions, including the West Coast premiere of Confederates by Dominique Morisseau under the direction of Nataki Garett at the Tony Award–winning Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Additionally, she works as a dramaturg in residence with the Atlanta-based Working Title Playwrights (WTP), the leading new play development organization in the Southeast. As a director, her production of Dreamgirls was nominated for six (San Francisco) Theatre Bay Area Awards including Outstanding Direction of a Musical and Outstanding Production of a Musical (2013), and her production of In the Red and Brown Water won an Outstanding Director Award (2016) from the Kennedy Center College Theater Festival. Her televised production of The Georgia High School Musical Theatre Awards won an Emmy Award (2021) for Outstanding Special Coverage Event.
As a scholar, Dr. Schiller has presented her research on the intersections of race and performance at Performance Studies International (PSi), the American Society for Theatre Research (ASTR), Association of Theatre in Higher Education (ATHE), and the International Society for the Oral Literatures of Africa (ISOLA). Her most recent published book projects are The Methuen Drama Book of Trans Plays (Bloomsbury, 2021), nominated for a national Lambda Literary Award, and Troubling Traditions: Canonicity, Theatre, and Performance in the U.S. (Routledge, 2022), recipient of the Association of Theatre in Higher Education (ATHE) national award for Outstanding Edited Volume (2024), as well as an essay featured in the international journal Modern Drama entitled “Touching Back While Black: Self-Defense and the Politics of Black U.S. Citizenship in Paul Green’s In Abraham’s Bosom” (2023). She served as a historical fashion consultant for the national touring exhibit Clothes Story and was featured in the promo video which aired during the Super Bowl on TBS to over 13 million viewers (2024). Recently, Dr. Schiller gave the opening night talk for the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s concert version of the musical Ragtime, entitled “Let Them Hear You: Ragtime and the Politics of Race on Stage” at Tanglewood (2023), and followed that up with a talk on Josephine Baker entitled “Black Voices in Cabaret” (2024). She is presently serving as the co chair of the American Society for Theatre Research’s (ASTR) annual conference in Seattle (2024). Currently, she has been commissioned to coedit upcoming volumes two and three of The Methuen Drama Book of Trans Plays (Bloomsbury, 2025, 2026).
As a scholar, Dr. Schiller has presented her research on the intersections of race and performance at Performance Studies International (PSi), the American Society for Theatre Research (ASTR), Association of Theatre in Higher Education (ATHE), and the International Society for the Oral Literatures of Africa (ISOLA). Her most recent published book projects are The Methuen Drama Book of Trans Plays (Bloomsbury, 2021), nominated for a national Lambda Literary Award, and Troubling Traditions: Canonicity, Theatre, and Performance in the U.S. (Routledge, 2022), recipient of the Association of Theatre in Higher Education (ATHE) national award for Outstanding Edited Volume (2024), as well as an essay featured in the international journal Modern Drama entitled “Touching Back While Black: Self-Defense and the Politics of Black U.S. Citizenship in Paul Green’s In Abraham’s Bosom” (2023). She served as a historical fashion consultant for the national touring exhibit Clothes Story and was featured in the promo video which aired during the Super Bowl on TBS to over 13 million viewers (2024). Recently, Dr. Schiller gave the opening night talk for the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s concert version of the musical Ragtime, entitled “Let Them Hear You: Ragtime and the Politics of Race on Stage” at Tanglewood (2023), and followed that up with a talk on Josephine Baker entitled “Black Voices in Cabaret” (2024). She is presently serving as the co chair of the American Society for Theatre Research’s (ASTR) annual conference in Seattle (2024). Currently, she has been commissioned to coedit upcoming volumes two and three of The Methuen Drama Book of Trans Plays (Bloomsbury, 2025, 2026).
Language(s) spoken
English (primary), German (intermediate)
Interested in freelance opportunities
Yes