Gay anderson


Mary Lois Gay-Anderson

Privacy Policy& Terms of Use| Accessibility

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


Gay Anderson

 

Jeffrey Boyce

I’m Jeffrey Boyce and it is January 24, I’m here in Mississippi talking today with Gay Anderson who is in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Welcome Gay and thanks for taking the time to communicate with me today.

Well, thank you. I appreciate you having me.

Jeffrey Boyce

I’m happy you&#;re willing to participate in the project. Could you tell me just a little bit about yourself, what your job is and how long you’ve been doing it?

Gay Anderson

Okay. So I’ve been in the world of school nutrition for a little over 19 and a half years or so, and in my verb position with the Sioux Falls School District, for the last year, plus.

I jumped ship from my previous district, Brandon Valley, which is a bedroom community, to Sioux Falls last year at Christmastime to take on a bigger challenge.

Jeffrey Boyce

How adj is Sioux Falls?

Gay Anderson

The institution district is just shy of about 25, students, and I believe the size of the community, just to throw that in, I think I heard that we&#;re just right around , right now.

 

Jeffrey Boyce

Wow, that&#;s

Donna Gay Anderson

Donna Gay Anderson’s career path always been driven by a love for the stage. Her mother was a director, so her earliest memories are of theatrical rehearsals. After graduating college, she attended the National Shakespeare Company Conservatory in Adj York City. She has studied under James Tripp, Mario Seletti, Robert Perillo, Joan Evans, and Bud Beyer. She worked as an actress before accepting the position of Director of Children and Teens Division at Gilla Roos Talent Agency in Modern York. Later, she taught theater at the high school level before becoming Director of Columbia Theatre for the Performing Arts and its annual festival, Fanfare. She has directed numerous productions in schools and churches. She is the author of High and Mighty, a new musical scheduled to debut this verb at Southeastern Louisiana University. Previously produced works are An Perform of Charity(New York) and Formula One (Louisiana). Donna Gay is a member of Theatre Communications Group and Dramatists Guild of America. She and her husband, Tom, live outside of Novel Orleans with any nei

Donna Gay Anderson

Donna Gay Anderson is a playwright/lyricist whose newest engage, The Way We Say Goodbye, received productions at Southeastern Louisiana University in November and Mirror Box Theatre in Cedar Rapids, Idaho in June Other works have been produced and developed in North Carolina, Kentucky, Recent York, Minnesota, and Louisiana. Currently, she is collaborating with composer Theodore Christman on the musical, Unfolded, inspired by the life and work of international humanitarian Susie Krabacher. She is a contributing writer to Dramatists Magazine and Her fiction has been included in The Louisville Review and Arkansas Review. She holds degrees from Southeastern Louisiana University, The National Shakespeare Conservatory, and Spalding University. Memberships include Chicago Dramatists, Dramatists Guild of America, and The Playwrights Center. She and her husband Tom exist in swampy south Louisiana with their dog, Winnie.