Stephen Waldschmidt
American actor
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stephen Waldschmidt is an actor, playwright, theatre director, scenic designer and graphic designer originally from Cleveland, Ohio, United States.
Stephen Waldschmidt | |
|---|---|
| Born | |
| Nationality | Canadian of American origin |
| Genre | Comedy |
| Notable works | Hockey Dad |
Theatre career
Stephen Waldschmidt is an actor, playwright, theatre director, scenic designer, graphic designer, and stay-at-home dad originally from Cleveland, Ohio, United States.[1] He is known for portraying Jesus in the Canadian Badlands Passion Play in Drumheller,[2] a part that he has played five times.[3] He also performed as Greville in the premiere of A Bright Particular Star.[4] As a scenic designer, he designed the set for a 2007 performance of The Quarrel[5] and a revolving set for a 2009 performance of Lettice and Lovage.[6] As a playwright, he wrote Hockey Dad: A Play in 3 Periods with James Popoff.[7] He is one of Burnt Thicket Theatre's artistic associates.[1]
She Has a Name
In 2010, Waldschmidt attended a presentation by Andrew Kooman in Strathmore about human trafficking.[1] The location of Kooman's presentation was Waldschmidt's home church.[8] Kooman mentioned She Has a Name, a play that he had written about human trafficking, and Waldschmidt soon asked Kooman for permission to read the script.[1] Waldschmidt felt drawn to address the issue of human trafficking even before discovering She Has a Name[2] and had gotten involved with some fair trade initiatives. Waldschmidt attested to his feet sweating after having first read the script[8] and said that it was one of only two scripts that he had ever read that he could not put down before finishing.[9] Nonetheless, he initially backed off from the play because of the immensity and ugliness of the issue. Eventually, however, he and Kooman worked together on the script,[1] expanding it to a full-length play with an extra hour's worth of material by the end of 2010,[10] resulting in a play that can be performed in ninety minutes[11] but may last up to two hours.[12] Kooman and Waldschmidt were moved to continue working on the play because of worldwide human trafficking statistics; namely, that 800000 people are trafficked across international borders each year, that there are 10 million children forced to work in the sex industry, that 1 million of these are child prostitutes, and that sex traffickers have an average annual income of $280000 per victim.[13] Waldschmidt directed the premiere of She Has a Name,[14] a performance for which he also served as scenic designer.[15] He was also the director for the 2012 tour of She Has a Name.[16]