News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Victory Gardens Artistic Director Dennis Zacek Announces Retirement

By: Jul. 15, 2010
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

Artistic Director Dennis Za?ek today announces plans for his retirement from Victory Gardens, after 34 years at its artistic helm. Za?ek will continue his tenure through spring 2011,
as the board conducts a national search for his successor. He will remain with the company as Artistic Director Emeritus and plans to remain active as an actor, director and board member.

In the past season alone, Victory Gardens, under Za?ek's artistic leadership, has celebrated major accomplishments and milestones. Victory Gardens broke its box office record last summer with the smash hit Blackbird, directed by Za?ek and starring William Petersen (who received his Equity card at Victory Gardens) and Mattie Hawkinson. This season, from its first IGNITION festival, Victory Gardens produced two world premieres-The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity by Kristoffer Diaz and Year Zero by Michael Golamco; both productions went on to New York and The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity was named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. On March 1, the newly completed studio theater was named the Richard Christiansen Theater with a tribute
to the beloved and former Tribune Arts Critic Richard Christiansen. On Broadway, Red by Victory
Gardens Playwright ensemble member John Logan, won six 2010 Tony Awards, including Best
Play.

"We have much to celebrate at VG. After 34 years with Victory Gardens, I look forward to my
continued involvement with the theater in a new capacity," says Za?ek. "Even John Wayne
knew when to get off the horse and on to the buckboard."

"How do you replace an icon? It is a daunting task," comments Board President Jeffrey Rappin.
"Dennis has been the driving force behind Victory Gardens practically since its inception. With all
the wonderful moments that he has brought to Victory Gardens, and to Chicago theater as a
whole, he will be sorely missed. This will be a watershed event for Victory Gardens, but the good
news is that Dennis will continue to be involved with VG and the board, as a director and maybe
even an actor again."

Chicago Tribune chief critic emeritus Richard Christiansen says, "In Dennis Za?ek, you will find
the past, present and future of the Chicago theater community. He was instrumental in forming
the creation of the Off Loop movement. He has been and is an enduring force in carrying
forward the vast, rich resident theater bounty we enjoy today. And his leadership, at
Victory Gardens in particular and in the theater community at large, from the very start
to the present embodies the visionary spirit that inspires and continues to inform the
work of theater artists in Chicago."

William Peterson comments, "For almost forty years Dennis Za?ek has been at the center of
Chicago Theatre. His encouragement, influence and development of Chicago
playwrights, actors, directors and designers has been an immense gift to our city. He was my
mentor. Without him, I would very likely not have become an actor. Because of him, I
have certainly become a better man."

Kevin Anderson adds, "Dennis has been in my corner from the very start of my career, even
before I finished acting school. Later at Victory Gardens he, along with Sandy Shinner, gave me
my first role in a play as a professional Equity actor. He has since shown interest in me not only
as an actor and artist, but also loving concern for me in developing as a whole man and human
being. He's a good friend, nurturing mentor, man of his word, and wise man of very high ideals
and integrity."

Dennis Za?ek began working with the company in 1977 and has directed more than 250
productions in his career. As the artistic leader of the company, he established a playwrights
ensemble of 14 members. Across the ensemble, virtually every major accolade has been
bestowed on its members, including the Tony Award, Emmy Award and the Pulitzer Prize. The
accomplishments of the theater and its ensemble led to receiving the Tony Award for Outstanding
Regional Theatre in 2001, and local and national media have recognized Victory Gardens as one
of the most important playwriting theaters in the country. These accolades propelled the
company, under Za?ek's leadership, to renovate the historic Biograph Theater, a new state of the
art facility which includes the Za?ek McVay Theater, the Richard Christiansen Theater, a
rehearsal room, and administrative offices.

Dennis Za?ek recently accepted the Actors' Equity Association's (AEA) Spirit of Diversity Award,
which is given to institutions that "have made non-traditional casting a way of life." He also
received the 2005 Jeff Award for Outstanding Achievement in Chicago Equity Theatre and the
2004 Artistic Leadership Award from the League of Chicago Theatres. Za?ek and Marcelle
McVay, his wife and former VG Managing Director, received the 1999 Rosetta LeNoire Award
from Actors' Equity and the 1998 Sidney R. Yates Arts Advocacy Award from the Illinois Arts
Alliance Foundation.

Most recently Za?ek directed the world premiere of James Sherman's Jacob and Jack; the
Chicago premiere of Blackbird by David Harrower; the world premiere of Jeffrey Sweet's Class
Dismissed; James Sherman's Relatively Close; the Midwest premiere of A Park in Our House by
Nilo Cruz; the world premieres of Cynical Weathers by Douglas Post; Denmark by Charles Smith,
the inaugural production at Victory Gardens' new home at the Biograph; Symmetry by David
Field; The Family Gold by Annie Reiner; Affluenza! and The Old Man's Friend by James
Sherman; Unspoken Prayers by Claudia Allen; and The Action Against Sol Schumann and
Flyovers by Jeffrey Sweet.

Additional projects include Marisha Chamberlain's Scheherazade (National Winner of the
FDG/CBS competition), John Olive's Clara's Play (production and direction award, Academy of
Theater Artists and Friends), and James Sherman's Mr. 80% (direction award, Academy of
Theater Artists and Friends). He directed Arthur Cantor's production of James Sherman's Beau
Jest at the Lambs Theater in New York, where it holds the record as the longest-running show in
the history of the theater. Other New York credits include Lonnie Carter's The Sovereign State of
Boogedy Boogedy, presented by Woody King's New Federal Theater, and Charles Smith's Jelly
Belly, which was produced by the New Federal Theater. Mr. Za?ek is a professor emeritus of
Loyola University and was included in 2005 in Utne Magazine's first-ever list of "Artists Who Will
Shake the World."

About Victory Gardens Theater
Under the leadership of Artistic Director Dennis Za?ek and Executive Director Jan Kallish,
Victory Gardens Theater is home to the bold voices of world premiere theater. The company
features the work of its own 14-member Playwrights Ensemble, as well as that of exciting
playwrights who are changing theater in the U.S. and abroad. Since its founding in 1974, the
company has produced more world premieres than any other Chicago theater, a commitment
recognized nationally when Victory Gardens received the 2001 Tony Award for Outstanding
Regional Theatre. The company's dedication to developing, supporting and producing new work
makes Victory Gardens an American Center for New Plays.

In 2006, Victory Gardens completed an $11.8 million renovation of Chicago's famed Biograph
Theater, one of the city's most celebrated historic landmarks. Renamed Victory Gardens
Biograph Theater, this beautiful new space is home to two theaters which expand the company's
artistic flexibility, and provides very different audience experiences. The Za?ek McVay Theater is
a state-of-the-art 299 seat space. The new Richard Christiansen Theater is an intimate 109 seat
space, named in honor of the Chicago Tribune chief critic emeritus and longtime champion of
Chicago's live theater scene. This theater was dedicated with a moving tribute in March 2010
which included the launch of Victory Gardens $1 Million Campaign for Growth. Visit
www.victorygardens.org/campaignforgrowth for more information.

Victory Gardens Theater receives major funding from John T. and Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation, Alphawood Foundation, Chicago Community Trust, Shubert Foundation, Polk
Bros. Foundation, Allstate Insurance Company, Motorola Foundation, REAM Foundation,
and Crown Family Philanthropies. Additional funding is provided by: National Endowment for
the Arts, Illinois Arts Council (IAC), a State Agency, CityArts Program 4 Grant from the City
of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs, Lloyd A. Fry Foundation, Charles and M.R.
Shapiro Foundation, and by 3Arts, Harry S. Black and Allon Fuller Fund, Charles H. and
Bertha L. Boothroyd Foundation, Elizabeth Cheney Foundation, John R. Halligan Fund,
Illinois Tool Works (ITW), James S. Kemper Foundation, Irving Harris Foundation and
Wrightwood Neighbors Association.

For complete information, visit www.victorygardens.org.



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.






Videos