Content Disclosure: Strobe lighting effects will be used during this performance and may be disorienting for some viewers.
Tonight’s program begins with the presentation of three performance pieces, created over the last five days by Bowling Green State University students in collaboration with ensemble members of Elevator Repair Service (ERS), a world-renown and award-winning experimental theatre company, based in New York. Founded in 1991, ERS creates original works with an ongoing ensemble. Each piece presented tonight will last approximately 15 minutes (with a few minutes of transition between each). Following the presentation of these pieces, John Collins, the Founder and Artistic Director or ERS, will talk with Jonathan Chambers, Chair of BGSU’s Department of Theatre and Film, about the company’s creative process and work.
The pieces are original compositions derived from the students’ and ERS ensemble members’ imaginative interpretations of selections from The Brief and Frightening Reign of Phil, a 2005 novella by the American writer George Saunders. Kirkus summarizes the action of the novella as follows:
[The Brief and Frightening Reign of Phil] concerns the tensions between two countries, Inner Horner and Outer Horner. Inner Horner is the smallest country imaginable, so small that only one of its seven inhabitants can fit within its borders at a time. Then it inexplicably gets even smaller, making it impossible for Inner Hornerites to avoid “invading” the boundaries of the surrounding and more prosperous Outer Horner. Because their country is larger and has greater resources, the Outer Hornerites feel that they are favored by God, and that the fate of the Inner Hornerites reflects their innate inferiority. Citizens in this society are some combination of plant and machine; Outer Horner’s president has multiple mustaches and chins (and three legs); and the media are mindlessly inept, parroting what they’re told, distorting what they see. As an Outer Hornerite pursuing a personal agenda against Inner Horner, a bitter citizen named Phil seizes power from the apparently senile president and bends the political apparatus of his country to his will. He imposes an onerous tax on the citizens of Inner Horner whenever they enter Outer Horner (where at least some of their body parts invariably intrude), thus turning victims into criminals. He then convinces his fellow citizens that those criminals are the embodiment of an absolute evil that must be exterminated.
Enjoy the show!
Elevator Repair Service - Ensemble Members in Residence at BGSU
Dee Beasneal
John Collins
Maggie Hoffman
Becky Hermenze
Vin Knight
Gavin Price
BGSU Student Ensemble
Orson Abram
Autumn Baldwin
Daisy Berry
Gabrielle Dunn
Madison Ellis
Mac Horshler
Gabrielle Guyton
Laci Haller
Sophie Hanselman
Mariana Jacoia
Jo Jensen
Chris Jones
Madelynn Ketola
Finleigh Klein
Gavin McQueen
Story Moosa
Jonathon Norden
Mark Peoples
Gavyn Sanchez
Christopher Smith
River Slone
Danielle Tewolde
Elle Warnement
Maeve Watercutter
Ella Wessel
BGSU Department of Theatre and Film – Technical, Design, and Administrative Support
Baxter Chambers
Jim Dachik
Danny Mangan
Matt Sayre
Em Stanley
Jason Walton
BGSU Arts Coordination Committee
Cheryl Bracken
Jonathan Chambers
Theresa Clickner
Karmen Concannon
Stephanie M. Garafolo
Amorak K Huey
Charles Kanwischer
Adam Luebke
Bill Mathis
Kate Bresnan Messa
Ellen Schendel
Sue Sweeney
Special Thanks
Sara Lipinski Chambers and Jolie Sheffer
Special Acknowledgement
The Arts Coordination Group wishes to acknowledge the integral work that the late Jasmine Gordon-Schultz (1976-2025) did for many years in support of the Creative Minds Program. She is missed.
The Edwin H. Simmons Creative Minds Series was established for the purpose of bringing a major figure regarded as an innovator in their respective field to visit campus to interact with students, faculty, and community members. Over a four year period, the series cycles through the Department of Theatre and Film, the College of Musical Arts, the School of Art, and the Creative Writing program.
Please consider making a donation to the Department of Theatre and Film. Your support helps the development of future theatre and film professionals.
The region in which Bowling Green State University and its campuses are situated inhabit the Great Black Swamp and the Lower Great Lakes region.This land is the homeland of the Wyandot, Kickapoo, Miami, Potawatomi, Odawa and multiple other Indigenous tribal nations, present and past, who were forcibly removed to and from the area. We recognize these historical and contemporary ties in our efforts toward decolonizing history and thank the Indigenous individuals and communities who havebeen living and working on this land from time immemorial.
Special Services / Accessibility Services
To our patrons with disabilities, please indicate if you need special services, assistance or appropriate modifications to fully participate in this event by contacting Accessibility Services, access@bgsu.edu, or 419-372-8495, or Theatre and Film. Please notify us prior to the event
Updated: 10/07/2025 01:49PM