Abraham Lincoln had his cabinet of rivals. Neil Armstrong had mission control. Guthrie Theater artistic director Joe Haj has built a small but potent team of all-stars who are highly sought-after leaders in their respective disciplines. ¶ "If you're a ballplayer and the Yankees call, you go," said production director David Stewart. "And if you're in theater and Joe Haj calls you to come join him at the Guthrie? Hell, yeah, you're coming." ¶ Here is the Haj team, in their own words.
The builder
David Stewart
His role: Production director. Charismatic and charming, he oversees the scene shop, stage management, costumes, etc.
Back story: Age 49. Born in Denver, "the son of a barber and a stay-at-home mom who had an eighth-grade education," he has a BFA in stage management from Webster University. One of the highest-profile African-Americans in his craft, he has led national efforts to diversify the industry's backstage operations.
The spark: "Everybody has that one teacher. I did, too. You have to understand, I was a C student all the way through 11th grade. In junior year, my buddy said, 'Why don't you take stagecraft? It's an easy A.' My teacher, John van Epps, pushed me to be not just a better student, but a better human being. I was growing up to take over my dad's barbershop. But John said I could go to school for this. He opened up my world."
Career: "I actually worked at Children's Theatre for the 1999-2000 season as production stage manager, but that's a funny story. When I first came into the business, someone told me that after 10 years, I was gonna hit a brick wall. And sure enough, I did. I left theater and moved South to become a project manager for an info technology company. Then that business started to go under, so I went back to theater. I worked at the University of Wisconsin for nine years and am a Badger to this day."
Getting to the Guthrie: He was teaching at the University of Texas when the call came. "In Wisconsin, the Packers are owned by the community. In Minnesota, it's the Guthrie." His predecessor, Frank Butler, lasted 18 years. "If I'm here that long, I'm gonna be tired, too. What we've shifted since we got here was this sense of playfulness, this openness."