TH 223 - Acting for the Stage

 

I am currently enrolled as an adult student working to complete my degree in the Interdisciplinary Studies (IDS) program with the integrated academic disciplines of Film and Journalism. I have completed the required 12 hours of IDS coursework as well as 20 hours of Journalism courses and 10 hours of Film courses (with an additional 4 hours of pending Film coursework that will be completed this semester). My current GPA is 3.983 with a total of 108.65 earned credits.

Together with my academic advisor, Dr. Janette E. McDonald, we identified courses for which experiential learning could be applied, with Acting for the Stage (TH 223) being one of them. Below you will find evidence and support material, including personal and professional endorsements from colleagues, that I believe will prove I have amassed enough experience to be granted credit for this class.

 


 

Experience

My professional career as an actor started over 30 years ago. At the age of 14 I was signed to a local talent agency in Columbus, Ohio, and enrolled into their acting class where I first learned the techniques of Meisner’s “emotional recall” and “sense memory.” The first acting class session culminated with a showcase in which my partner and I performed a scene from The Diary of Anne Frank, with me portraying the young Peter and my partner the young Anne Frank, and in turn sparked my lifelong passion for acting.

At the age of 28 I signed with a regional talent agency and began auditioning and landing working in commercials, industrials and independent films, all the while continuing to pursue work on the stage. It was right around this same time I was cast in the lead role of Barney Cashman in Curtain Player’s production of Last of the Red Hot Lovers. And while I was successful in getting roles both theatrically and commercially, I knew that just working wasn’t enough.

In 2004 I started taking classes with Richard Mason of Acting In Columbus, in which the focus was both in preparing for the audition and working a scene with a partner. Recognizing my accomplishments, Richard Mason cast me in his production of Dave Carley’s Test Drive, a three-actor play in which I portrayed seven different roles.

In 2006, having moved to a larger regional talent agency, I earned my Screen Actors Guild ( SAG/AFTRA) card appearing as a featured actor in a national Toyota commercial that ran for over 12 years.

Shortly after, while performing in Women At Play’s production of Hungry Hearts as a 1920’s Argentinian Yiddish theatre promoter, directed by Katherine Burkman, I learned of another instructor, Kevin McClatchy, who was offering acting classes. McClatchy, an accomplished actor of theatre, film and television, who studied with the legendary Wynn Handmann and Greg Zittel, brought a legitimacy and gravitas to his classes that demanded the actor’s full attention and effort. For two years, from 2006 to 2008, I took his class every week, working on monologues, scene work and improvisation, working outside of class at least once a week with a scene partner when needed.

Then in 2008, McClatchy started Carrickmacross Productions, a local theatre company dedicated to producing Irish works. They chose Stones In His Pockets, a two-actor play, in which I shared the stage with Kevin, portraying 8 different roles with varying dialects of Irish, British and Scottish, under the direction of Jimmy Bohr. For my work I was recognized for Best Male Theatre Performance by the Central Ohio critics.

In 2009 I again won Best Male Theatre Performance for my portrayal of Ralph Ian Wantage in Bryony Lavery’s Frozen, produced by Evolution Theatre.

That same year I was asked by Kevin McClatchy to appear in Carrickmacross’s next production of Ronan Noone’s The Blowin of Baille Gall in the role of Stephen, the troubled attempting-to-reform alcoholic construction worker, once again taking on an Irish dialect.

In 2011 I was back on stage at Evolution Theatre for their Adam Rapp festival, performing in Rapp’s one-act Nocturne, a 43-page solo piece about a Son coming to terms with a tragic event that happened in the past, navigating guilt, shame and forgiveness.

Next, in 2012 I auditioned for CATCO, at the time the only Equity theatre in Columbus, for their production of Geoffrey Naufft’s Next Fall, landing the lead role of Adam, initiating my entrance into the Equity Membership Candidate Program (EMC).

Promotional video for Next Fall, CATCO 2012

That same year I would again perform at CATCO in their Equity production of Rajiv Joseph’s Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo, playing the lead role of Musa, an Iraqi translator during Operation Iraqi Freedom. The role was a unique and welcomed challenge as it required working with a language and dialect coach learning Arabic for much of my dialogue and delivering my English lines with an authentic Iraqi accent.

Staged reading performances include CATCO’s Clybourne Park (Karl/Steve) and Death of a Salesman (Biff) at CATCO, The Book of Liz (Brother Nathaniel Brightbee) with Blue Forms Theatre, As You Wish: A Reading of The Princess Bride (Inigo Montoya) for New Players Theatre, and Wild Duck (Hjalmar Ekdel) with Wild Women Writing.

More recent roles include Looped (Danny Miller) at Evolution Theatre under the direction of Jimmy Bohr in 2015, for which I was nominated for Best Actor at the Jebby Awards; partnering back up with director Katherine Burkman and Wild Women Writing in 2018 to perform the solo one-act play Title and Deed by Will Eno; and returning to CATCO in 2019 with director Steven Anderson for the Equity production of Geoffrey Hatcher’s Holmes and Watson (Dr. Watson).

Education and Research

Below is a list of the classes and workshops I have taken:

  • Acting in Columbus (2004-2005). Richard Mason, instructor. Audition techniques, monologues, scene work.

  • McClatchy Act (2006-2008). Kevin McClatchy, instructor. Warm-up techniques, monologues, scene work, improvisation, movement.

  • McClatchy Act - Shakespeare Workshop (2015). Kevin McClatchy, instructor.

  • Audition Intensive (2005). Donna Belajac, instructor.

  • Audition & Career Workshop (2007). Jimmy Bohr, instructor.

  • Improv Workshop (2008). Ralph Scott, instructor.

  • Improv Technique (2003-2004). George Caleodis, instructor.

Over the years of classes and from having worked with various directors, the following is a list of a few of the books on acting which I have read and continue to come back to for new contextual discoveries and inspiration:

  • Brestoff, Richard. The Camera Smart Actor. SK, 1994.

  • Shurtleff, Michael. Audition: Everything an Actor Needs to Know to Get the Part. Walker, 2003.

  • Stanislavsky, Konstantin. An Actor Prepares. Routledge/Theatre Arts Books, 2003.

  • Stanislavsky, Konstantin. Building a Character. Routledge/Theater Arts Books, 2003.

  • Mamet, David. True and False: Heresy and Common Sense for the Author. Vintage Books, 1999.

Including those in which I have performed, the following is a list of plays I have read:

  • August: Osage County, by Tracy Letts

  • The Beauty Queen of Leenane, by Martin McDonagh

  • A Behanding in Spokane, by Martin McDonagh

  • Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo, by Rajiv Joseph

  • The Blowin of Baile Gall, by Ronan Noone

  • The Book of Liz, by Amy Sedaris and David Sedaris

  • Buried Child, by Sam Shepard

  • Clybourne Park, by Bruce Norris

  • The Dark at the Top of the Stairs, by William Inge

  • Death of a Salesman, by Arthur Miller

  • Frozen, by Bryony Lavery

  • Hamlet, by William Shakespeare

  • Holmes and Watson, by Jeffrey Hatcher

  • Intermission, by Will Eno

  • The Last Days of Judas Iscariot, by Stephen Adly Guirgis

  • The Last Liberal, by Dave Carley

  • Last of the Red Hot Lovers, by Neil Simon

  • A Lie of the Mind, by Sam Shepard

  • Looped, by Matthew Lombardo

  • The Mercy Seat, by Neil LaBute

  • Next Fall, by Geoffrey Nauffts

  • Nocturne, by Adam Rapp

  • Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck

  • One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, by Ken Kesey

  • Proof, by David Auburn

  • The Realistic Joneses, by Will Eno

  • Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakepeare

  • The Shape of Things, by Neil LaBute

  • Simpatico, by Sam Shepard

  • Stones In His Pockets, by Marie Jones

  • Test Drive, by Dave Carley

  • Title and Deed, by Will Eno

  • The Treatment, by Eve Ensler

  • True West, by Sam Shepard

  • Wakey, Wakey, by Will Eno

  • Wild Duck, by Henrik Ibsen, adapted by David Auburn

 

 

Awards and Reviews

  • Nominated, Best Actor - Charlie, etc., Stones In His Pockets - Central Ohio Theatre Critics Circle, 2008

  • Winner, Best Actor - Charlie, etc., Stones In His Pockets - Columbus Alive, Best of 2008

  • Winner, Best Production, Ensemble - Stones In His Pockets - Columbus Dispatch, Best of 2008

  • Winner, Best Actor - Ralph Ian Wantage, Frozen - Columbus Alive, Best of 2009

  • Nominated, Best Actor - Son, Nocturne - Central Ohio Theatre Critics Circle

  • Winner, Best Production, Ensemble - Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo - Columbus Dispatch, Best of 2013

  • Nominated, Best Actor - Danny Miller, Looped - The Jebby Awards, 2016

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“Jon Osbeck is mesmerizing, occasionally funny and even thrilling in the solo one-act… Osbeck’s tour de force lifts and deepens the powerful piece.’

-The Columbus Dispatch
Title and Deed - Wild Women Writing

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“(Jon Osbeck), at once convincingly human and even charming but also chilling.”

-The Columbus Dispatch
Frozen - Evolution Theatre

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“Almost entirely through voice and posture and without any costume changes (except two hats), (Osbeck) makes each role clear and colorful.”

-The Columbus Dispatch
Stones In His Pockets - Carrickmacross Productions

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“Osbeck’s interactions with every character are a joy to watch, whether he is delivering wonderfully funny punch lines, or a heated argument.”

-Columbus Underground
Next Fall - CATCO

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“Jon Osbeck is excellent as
Dr. Watson, dogged at doing his duty and pursuing a
three-part mystery after Holmes’ apparent death
three years ago.”

-The Columbus Dispatch
Holmes and Watson - CATCO

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“Jon Osbeck stands out as Musa.”

-The Columbus Alive
Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo - CATCO

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“Osbeck probes beneath Danny’s impatience and anger to reveal touching vulnerability.”

-The Columbus Dispatch
Looped - Evolution Theatre

 

 

Endorsements

Below are endorsements from professionals and colleagues with whom I have worked in the capacity as actor. Please note that some endorsements may also include my work as a film and commercial actor, as well as producer, director and writer. Click on a name to read the endorsement.

Kevin McClatchy
Associate Professor/Head of Acting and Directing
Department of Theatre, Film and Media Arts
The Ohio State University

MARC WISKEMANN
Associate professor of cinema
Chair, Cinema Department
Denison University

STEVEN ANDERSON
Producing Director of CATCO (RETIRED)

Katherine Burkman
Professor Emeritus
The Ohio State University

DAVID HALL
WRITER, DIRECTOR, PRODUCER

DINO TRIPODIS
Producer, Writer, Broadcaster