Warner
Crocker is in his 11th season as Artistic Director for
Wayside Theatre in Middletown, VA, where he has directed
many of the theatres productions including Hank Williams: Lost
Highway, A Closer Walk With Patsy Cline, Blithe Spirit, The
Christmas Schooner, Ten Little Indians, I Love You, You’re
Perfect, Now Change, Miracle on 34th Street, The Human Comedy,
The Importance of Being Earnest, Laughter on the 23rd Floor,
Kiss Me Kate, Barefoot in the Park, On Golden Pond, Foxfire,
Art, Dracula, The Matchmaker, Steel Magnolias, Talley's Folly,
The
Woman
in Black, Measure for Measure, The Last Night of Ballyhoo,
Tintypes, Stonewall Jackson's House, Yes, Virginia There Is A
Santa Claus and La Bęte among others. Last season he authored
the original play Robert E. Lee and John Brown: Lighting the
Fuse and directed the world premiere production at Wayside
Theatre. He as also authored Wayside Theatre’s adaptations of
Dracula and with Steve Przybylski the musicals A Miracle on 34th
Street and A Christmas Carol. During his first six seasons he
has succeeded in expanding Wayside Theatre’s season so that
now the theatre offers professional quality entertainment year
round and he has overseen the growth of an Education program
that now serves over 12,000 children regionally with tours,
acting classes and other programs.
Prior
to joining Wayside he served as Artistic Director of Chicago's
New Tuners Theatre and Facility Manager for the Theatre Building
where he directed numerous readings and workshop productions of
new musicals in development. He has directed over 100
productions including among others the award winning Chicago
premiere of The Kentucky Cycle, Passion, La Bęte, Pentecost,
Noises Off, Edward II, Ironhand, Good, Ballad of the Sad Café
(Joseph Jefferson Citation for Best Production), Two Gentlemen
of Verona, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Romeo and Juliet and an
original two part adaptation of The Three Musketeers. He has
directed for the Musical Theatres of Omsk and Yekaterinburg in
Russia, Absolute Theatre Company, Zebra Crossing Theatre,
Chicago Dramatists, Prologue Theatre, New Tuners Theatre,
Buffalo Theatre Ensemble, Pegasus Players and the Cincinnati
Shakespeare Festival. In 1981 he founded the Absolute Theatre
Company in Chicago and served as its Artistic Director for 8
years.
For
New Tuners he directed the world premieres of Trask and Fenn,
Hans Brinker, Fat Tuesday and numerous staged readings. He first
worked for New Tuners in 1990 when he directed a Russian
production of New Tuners' world premiere musical, Charlie's
Oasis Museum & Bar for the Musical Theatre of Omsk.
Following that successful international collaboration he was
commissioned by the Musical Theatre of Omsk to adapt, write and
direct a new musical adaptation of The Three Musketeers which
had its world premiere on Christmas Day, 1992. He returned to
Russia the following year to again direct The Three Musketeers,
this time for the Musical Theatre of Yekaterinburg as the
opening entry in the 1993 Pan-Russian Musical Theatre Festival,
the first American authored and directed piece to ever have that
honor. The Three Musketeers is still currently featured in the
repertories of both the Musical Theatres of Omsk and
Yekaterinburg. In 1998 he again adapted The Three Musketeers,
this time for the Cincinnati Shakespeare Festival where this new
version had its world premiere in June of 1998.
He
was the founder of Plan B Productions which produced the award
winning Midwest premiere of David Edgar's Pentecost at the
Theatre Building under his direction. He currently sits on the
Advisory Board for the Cincinnati Shakespeare Festival and the
National Conservatory of Dramatic Arts. He has been a past Board
member for Virginians for the Arts and the League of Chicago
Theatres. In addition to his professional duties, Mr. Crocker
has served as a guest professor and director for Columbia
College, James Madison University and the University of
Illinois-Chicago and Roosevelt University. He is the recipient
of five Joseph Jefferson Citations, one each for lighting and
set design and three for directing. He has also received an
After Dark award for his direction of The Kentucky Cycle, which
also received the same award for Best Production, along with his
production of Pentecost.