A hidden talent takes the stage

By: Kebron Tesfaye, Contributing Writer

Set designer and theatre major Bridget Lindsay started painting sets in high school where she discovered a hidden talent for visual art in the theatre.

“They didn’t have anyone to paint sets, and my director looked at me and was like ‘you look like you could paint some sets, go paint some sets,’” Linsday said. “So I painted some sets and continued to paint sets until now.”

Suddenly placed in a world of set design, Lindsay was willing to try but was also, admittedly, terrified. Prior to participating in the theatre with sets, Lindsay had never focused on art as a passion. For her, theatre was the main goal, but the opportunity to merge color and visual art within the world of acting was refreshing.

After Lindsay painted her first set in high school, her director approached her and asked if she would become the assistant scenic designer for the upcoming shows. For the remaining productions, Lindsay would be the primary set designer. Because her introduction to set design was so brief, she had to teach herself many of the rules.

“It was a lot of pressure because I didn’t have anyone to teach and because I didn’t have any one to teach, I had no one to help me,” Lindsay said. “I had people on my side but I couldn’t get messages across. But I wasn’t looking for the audience to appease me in this.”

Since coming to Towson after high school, Lindsay has been involved in designing and painting sets for the student shows here.

“The difference is professionalism,” Lindsay said. “The difference is having hours that you work set for you instead of setting them yourself.”

Before planning the style and design of a set, Linsday spends a lot of time with the script before pursuing her vision.

“My process is when I take the script, I dissect the themes and the messages, and then I’m able to translate that to a set on stage that I want to use to invoke emotion to the audience–emotion that they’ve never felt before,” Lindsay said.

Scenic design, painting and acting have proven to be part of a path that Lindsay wishes to continue. After graduation, Lindsay hopes to go graduate school with a focus on scenic design, but has a plan to continue with a job if that doesn’t work out.

“I’d be nowhere without my high school director who pushed me into scenic design,” Lindsay said. “He pushed me into it and I’m glad he did. He kept me moving and working throughout all of high school.”

The studio production for Spring 2016, “The Good Person of Szechwan,” will run from March 31-April 9. “The Good Person of Szechwan,” written by Bertolt Brecht, a German theatre practitioner, is a parable set in the Chinese “city of Sichuan.” Towson’s version will be directed by Stephen Nuuns, an associate professor in the department. The play follows the story of a young prostitute who’s struggling to live a “good” life. At the end of the show, it is up to the audience to determine how a person who is good can live a good life in a world that is not “good.”

-Cody Boteler contributed to this article.

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