“That you are here – that life exists,
and identity;
That the powerful play goes on, and you will contribute a verse.” – Walt
WhitmanBy Barry McNamara
Nearly a quarter-century ago, Jeff Day
enrolled at Monmouth College. After just a year, he left, and his time
on campus looked like it would barely amount to a footnote, much less “a
verse.”
“I was ill-prepared for the
responsibility,” he admitted.
Three years in the U.S. Army serving at
Schofield Barracks in Hawaii helped pave the way for his return to
Monmouth College in 1989. Although Day said that “squandered
opportunities” were still a part of his second try at college, he found
a calling in the world of theater, and there’s been little stopping him
since.
“If not for Doc (Jim) De Young, I’m not
entirely certain where I would be today,” said Day, who is currently
just down the road from Monmouth in Macomb, where he recently completed
an MFA directing program at Western Illinois University.
“He graciously cast me as Demetrius in
his production of Shakespeare’s ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream,’ and that
experience served, unbeknownst to me at the time, as the catalyst for my
relationship with theater.”
Day used the term “bittersweet” to
describe his Monmouth College experiences, and the “sweet” definitely
came from his time with theater. As he recently told De Young: “It’s
cliché to suggest that someone ‘changed’ another person’s life, but in
this case I think it is true. Thank you for the gift you gave. Thank you
for helping me to find an outlet that accepts – and even rewards – some
of the ‘paths less traveled’ that I’ve found myself on from time to
time. I will never forget you or stop being thankful for what you gave
me.”
The “sweet” also referred to what it
meant to Day to be a college student.
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Day (kneeling) performs during his MC student days in the Crimson Masque production "Noises Off."
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“I felt so privileged to be at
Monmouth, learning alongside accomplished students from such a
distinguished faculty. I recall feeling for the first time in my life a
sense that I had something to say.”
The “bitter,” he said, was that “I
failed to take advantage of the academic opportunities offered to me
and, worse, I failed to fully utilize my own gifts and talents in a
responsible way … So many doors were open while I attended Monmouth; too
frequently I failed to enter them. I wish I had done more to honor the
expectations of a faculty that made such a genuine and concerted effort
to foster my development not only as a student but as a well-rounded
citizen of the world.”
“Jeff’s success today is just another
of those little stories that can be told to back up the strange ways in
which a Monmouth liberal arts education can finally take hold,” said De
Young. “Jeff was a lot of things, but prime example of an exemplary
student was not one of them. But here he is now on a track that would
have been hard to imagine on the day of his graduation.”
That track will take Day to Lubbock,
Texas, in early August to start work on his Ph.D. at Texas
Tech University.
“I was thrilled to learn that I
received a very generous graduate assistantship, plus won one of the
department’s annual scholarships,” said Day. “The program is unique in
that it does not set up an opposition between text and performance,
theory and practice. That was very important to me – I don’t want to
feel that I’m studying theater in a petri dish. It combines a practical
and academic course of study in which we function as both theater
practitioners and scholars.”
Doctoral candidates have to choose two
tracks in which to specialize, and Day will study
“Theory/History/Criticism” as one of his tracks and “Arts
Administration” as the other.
“I anticipate taking between four and
five years to complete the degree,” said Day. Eventually, he hopes to
“either start my own theater company and put to test the various ideas
and theories I’ve been studying or find a small liberal arts college and
share what I’ve learned with the next generation of theater students.”
Future students attending one of his
classes might hear something like this as Day’s initial lecture: “I do
believe that it is wholly necessary for an artist to have
a relationship with his or her craft. Our craft feeds and thrives on
passion, is nurtured by constant and thoughtful reflection, basks in
our active attention, and ultimately is prohibited from yielding
anything more substantial than we have dutifully invested.”
Those investments have been adding up
for Day since his role as Demetrius. As a Monmouth student, that
includes the production of a play he wrote, titled “Sitting Bull.”
“It was remarkable primarily only in
its deficiencies,” he recalled. “Worse, I made the grievous error of
attempting to direct my own work, an experiment that isn’t frequently
advised and I can say now I understand why.”
He was working with many performers who
did not have much stage experience, but he credits the process for
making him more aware of the fact that some actors simply need an
opportunity.
“It is not lost on me, when I look back
over the various casting decisions I’ve made while working on my MFA,
that I have frequently cast the unknown actor, the actor who simply
needed a chance,” he said. “Perhaps in some way I have been
subconsciously attempting to duplicate what Doc De Young did for me – to
recruit fellow lost souls into this wonderful community of theater where
oftentimes the wounds and shortcomings that were our savage albatross
suddenly become eager kindling that spur creative expression and,
subsequently, a long-desired actualization.”
Following graduation from Monmouth in
1994, Day moved to California and eventually enrolled in a theater
conservatory that he credits for teaching him several skills, including
those of a stage manager. In 1999, he helped co-found the Shady
Shakespeare Theatre Company (www.shadyshakes.org).
He has also directed an original script at the Edinburgh International
Fringe Festival and, in 2003, he began working for the Carnegie
Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching as it opened a new facility
overlooking Stanford University.
“My time at the Carnegie Foundation
served as the primary impetus for seeking first my MFA degree, and now
the Ph.D.,” he explained.
Day also found the time to pursue other
interests and is a self-described “avid rock climber … I fell in love
with California’s great natural wilderness and as a result developed a
love of camping, hiking, deep country backpacking, cycling, etc.”
Day has spent part of the summer biking
the back roads of western Illinois, and he found himself back on the
Monmouth campus not too long ago.
“I was struck by the power of my
emotions as I walked the campus,” said Day. “I squandered so much
opportunity, yet still walked away with such an abundance of
possibility. I was pretty lost and out of control back then, but over
time I’ve finally found ways to connect with the world and to be more
involved with it.”
When asked to summarize what Monmouth
College has meant to his life, Day responded, “In a word, opportunity
– the opportunity to learn, explore, participate, question, discover,
grow, unite, progress, and ultimately, the opportunity to succeed.”
And the opportunity to, as Whitman
says, “contribute a verse” to the powerful play called life.