Thank You, Summer!
Flatwater Shakespeare Company announces with profound
appreciation and regret that Executive Artistic Director Summer Lukasiewicz has
decided to resign this fall. Her impact on Flatwater has been immense in the
years that she has been at the helm, and she will be leaving the company at a
high point in its over twenty years of history.
While we are saddened by Summer’s departure, we also would like to
celebrate her excellence and her accomplishments from the past four seasons. She
has substantially grown the company’s education focus, brought excellence and
stability to its artistic mission, and has served as an outstanding
spokesperson and tireless advocate for FSC.
Building on the work of founding Artistic Director Bob Hall
and previous Executive Artistic Director Becky Boesen, Summer Lukasiewicz has
championed the company and expanded its outreach for theatrical productions and
for education programs. Successful runs of The Tempest, The Two
Gentlemen of Verona, Macbeth, The Complete Works of William
Shakespeare (Abridged), and most recently, Twelfth Night have shown
Summer’s skills managing the artistic program, hiring the best people, and
finding a core audience. In Spring 2020, when Covid-19 changed the world,
Summer scrambled to transform her own staging of Romeo and Juliet, which was
days from its scheduled opening, into an internet-viewable production. Her
innovation with “Short Shakespeare,” shaping the company’s summer productions
to 75-minute performances for maximum accessibility and portability, has helped
bring new audiences to the theater, many of them attending shows in their own
neighborhood parks at no cost. While the parks tour concept originated as
Hall's response to the years-long renovation of the Stables at Wyuka, Summer
has held up the idea of free Shakespeare for all as key part of the FSC plan.
This fall, her creative vision has given rise to a new and experimental series
of shows in the form of Unshaken – a festival of solo, original pieces
inspired by Shakespeare – which will alternate in performance with an
unconventional and fascinating “two-person version” of A Midsummer Night’s
Dream, following Kentucky Shakespeare’s blueprint. Summer’s leadership has
encouraged and demonstrated the innovation that is possible for a Shakespeare
company and the creativity that is needed to meet the challenges of our world.
In addition, the “Little But Fierce” program, free
educational Shakespeare and theater camps for K-9th graders first
established by Boesen, has blossomed under Summer’s enthusiasm and vision. Not
only has the program expanded in Lincoln, but Summer brought “Little But
Fierce” outside of Lincoln and partnered with schools beyond Lancaster County.
Even during the pandemic year, Summer worked hard to keep the mission for
Shakespeare education strong and to provide impactful programs to area kids.
With former Education Director Stephen Buhler, Summer taught an online course
on “Shakespeare: Page, Stage, and Screen” for Osher Lifelong Learning Institute
(OLLI) at UNL, building on our longtime relationship with that program. Under
her leadership, Flatwater was also able to hire a new Education Director,
Ashley Kobza, to keep extending the mission of education for all ages and into
every part of the community. Summer’s championing of the company and her
tireless work with donors, granting organizations, and educational partners
have been a huge part of this company’s expansion and sustainability.
Summer, we have been lucky to have your guidance, vision, inspiration, and dedication, and we wish you well in all of your future endeavors.
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