Most of her friends are guys, because “you know, guys are less drama,” she said.
Her interest in the theatre and acting was sparked when she began attending Junior Jacks summer theatre camp at Stephen F. Austin State University and garnered the leading role in a play her first year.
“It was really fun, and I loved doing that,” she said.
Her performance skills caught the eye of camp director CC Conn, associate professor of theatre at SFA, and of the theatre students who worked with Mae during the camp. As a result, Dr. Rick Jones, professor of theatre and interim director of the School of Theatre, cast Mae, 12, in the role of 7-year-old Josie Kilbride in Marina Carr’s “By the Bog of Cats,” which Jones is directing as part of the SFA School of Theatre’s 2016-17 Mainstage Series.
The Irish play is loosely based on Greek mythology’s Medea legend. It opens with the play’s protagonist and Josie’s mother, Hester Swane, receiving prophecies at dawn that she will die before dusk on the very day her former common-law husband and father to her daughter is to marry a younger and wealthier woman. The play tells the story of that day.
Although Mae doesn’t have the experience or maturity as her college-age counterparts on stage, she is “remarkably intelligent” and she has “a good handle on things,” Jones said, including the violence contained in the play’s storyline.
“This is an adult play, and death is involved in the plot,” he said. “Someone Mae’s age – and as smart as she is – can understand and handle that.”
Jones has made a few rehearsal adjustments as a result of working with a younger cast member.
“Our rehearsals are at night, and we want to get her out in time for bedtime, then the rest of us have another hour-and-a-half in rehearsal,” Jones said. “It’s not a big deal, but it is something we have to work around. We need her to get enough sleep and be able to do her homework. My standard practice is to rehearse on Sunday night, but it’s a weekend, so we rehearse on Sunday afternoon. We’re making those kinds of accommodations.”
Mae describes her character as “very naive.”
“She persists with everything,” she said. “Her mother is basically everything she cares about. She’s made friends with people in the Bog, and she seems to be the only child there.”
Mae is looking forward to attending Junior Jacks again next summer, and she hopes to eventually take drama classes in school. But, for now, her focus is getting ready to perform “on a big stage” in “By the Bog of Cats.”
“I like being in front people; I can talk for hours,” she said. “I love the feeling of being on a stage in front of a ton of people.”
“By the Bog of Cats” will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, Nov. 15 through 19, in W.M. Turner Auditorium in the Griffith Fine Arts Building on the SFA campus. The play is recommended for mature audiences. A content advisory may be viewed at www.theatre.sfasu.edu.
A reception and post-performance interdisciplinary discussion in the Griffith Gallery featuring SFA faculty from theatre, folklore, classical studies and psychology will follow the Thursday night performance.
Single tickets are $15 for adult, $10 for senior and $7.50 for student/youth. For tickets or more information, call the SFA Fine Arts Box Office at (936) 468-6407 or visit www.theatre.sfasu.edu.