Wagon Wheel Alumn Works on Spielberg Drama

July 28, 2016 at 4:25 p.m.

By Staff Report-

After nearly 60 years, Wagon Wheel Theatre alum boast multiple Tony Awards, film credits, starring roles in television and on Broadway, and now one of Wagon Wheel Theatre’s own teams with Steven Spielberg in the 2014 sci-fi drama “Extant.”
Mickey Fisher, writer and executive producer of the show airing this summer on CBS, made his Wagon Wheel Theatre debut in 1995 as Old Joe in “Damn Yankees.”
Now, he’s donated money for this weekend’s children’s production.
That year, the Wagon Wheel held theatrical auditions at Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, where Fisher was finishing up his senior year in the fine arts program.
Former Wagon Wheel Theatre Artistic Director Tom Roland cast Fisher for the summer and over the course of 16 years he made appearances as an actor and director.
“When I was at CCM I would write monologues for audition pieces that other people would use to perform,” said Fisher.  “Watching someone perform a piece that you have written is a unique experience and really altogether different from acting. There’s something really fulfilling about it.”
“Extant” begins its 13-week run in July and stars Halle Berry. While the show plot is shrouded in mystery, Berry’s character is an astronaut returning to Earth, whose experience in space “will change the course of human history,” much different material than Fisher’s days at the Wagon Wheel.
In 2012, The Wagon Wheel Theatre launched the Wagon Wheel Junior program based on the success of the summer theatre workshops. That idea began back in 1996, when Fisher approached then Artistic Director Roy Hine. Fisher said, “I saw that there really wasn’t anything going on like that at the time and I pitched the idea to Roy as a way to make a little bit of extra money, but it was bigger than I expected it to be. The kids were really talented!”
Now, Fisher’s desire is to give back to the theatre which he says gave him so much.
“The Wagon Wheel is such a special place. It gave me my girlfriend of 16 years, I got my first equity card there, my first professional directing job, I got to do the kids program  So many of my closest friends today were made there. Warsaw is a second home. I love the town so much.   It really became half my heart.”
Fisher donated $5,000 to sponsor the upcoming Wagon Wheel Junior show “Princess Whatsername,” taking place at the Wagon Wheel Theatre Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m. The show is directed and staged by Wagon Wheel Theatre Artistic Director Scott Michaels, who worked with Fisher over the course of nearly 20 years.
“We are so happy for Mickey and not surprised in the least. Mickey is incredibly talented and we are just thankful to him for sponsoring this show and the program that really, he started. I would encourage everyone to come out and see how talented these students are and who knows, maybe one of them is the next Mickey Fisher,” Michaels sated.
Princess Whatsername begins in the Misty Forest, where a girl is sleeping all alone. But when she wakes, nothing looks familiar to her.  She can’t remember anything – not where she’s from, how she got here or even her own name. She embarks on a journey to discover her identity and meets several fairy tale characters along the way – Hansel and Gretel, Rumpelstiltskin, Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Snow White and the Seven Dwarves, Cinderella and Rapunzel to name a few. Some are helpful, some are dangerous and some are just plain weird, but all have information to help our young girl eventually realize her true identity as a princess. As with any good fairy tale, there’s also a prince. He’s desperate to find the princess, but he’s always one step behind and inadvertently rescues and wins the hearts of all the wrong princesses. A rocking musical score adds even more fun to new takes on the stories everyone loves.
All tickets are $12.  For more information, visit wagonwheeltheatre.org or call 574-267-8041.[[In-content Ad]]

After nearly 60 years, Wagon Wheel Theatre alum boast multiple Tony Awards, film credits, starring roles in television and on Broadway, and now one of Wagon Wheel Theatre’s own teams with Steven Spielberg in the 2014 sci-fi drama “Extant.”
Mickey Fisher, writer and executive producer of the show airing this summer on CBS, made his Wagon Wheel Theatre debut in 1995 as Old Joe in “Damn Yankees.”
Now, he’s donated money for this weekend’s children’s production.
That year, the Wagon Wheel held theatrical auditions at Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, where Fisher was finishing up his senior year in the fine arts program.
Former Wagon Wheel Theatre Artistic Director Tom Roland cast Fisher for the summer and over the course of 16 years he made appearances as an actor and director.
“When I was at CCM I would write monologues for audition pieces that other people would use to perform,” said Fisher.  “Watching someone perform a piece that you have written is a unique experience and really altogether different from acting. There’s something really fulfilling about it.”
“Extant” begins its 13-week run in July and stars Halle Berry. While the show plot is shrouded in mystery, Berry’s character is an astronaut returning to Earth, whose experience in space “will change the course of human history,” much different material than Fisher’s days at the Wagon Wheel.
In 2012, The Wagon Wheel Theatre launched the Wagon Wheel Junior program based on the success of the summer theatre workshops. That idea began back in 1996, when Fisher approached then Artistic Director Roy Hine. Fisher said, “I saw that there really wasn’t anything going on like that at the time and I pitched the idea to Roy as a way to make a little bit of extra money, but it was bigger than I expected it to be. The kids were really talented!”
Now, Fisher’s desire is to give back to the theatre which he says gave him so much.
“The Wagon Wheel is such a special place. It gave me my girlfriend of 16 years, I got my first equity card there, my first professional directing job, I got to do the kids program  So many of my closest friends today were made there. Warsaw is a second home. I love the town so much.   It really became half my heart.”
Fisher donated $5,000 to sponsor the upcoming Wagon Wheel Junior show “Princess Whatsername,” taking place at the Wagon Wheel Theatre Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m. The show is directed and staged by Wagon Wheel Theatre Artistic Director Scott Michaels, who worked with Fisher over the course of nearly 20 years.
“We are so happy for Mickey and not surprised in the least. Mickey is incredibly talented and we are just thankful to him for sponsoring this show and the program that really, he started. I would encourage everyone to come out and see how talented these students are and who knows, maybe one of them is the next Mickey Fisher,” Michaels sated.
Princess Whatsername begins in the Misty Forest, where a girl is sleeping all alone. But when she wakes, nothing looks familiar to her.  She can’t remember anything – not where she’s from, how she got here or even her own name. She embarks on a journey to discover her identity and meets several fairy tale characters along the way – Hansel and Gretel, Rumpelstiltskin, Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Snow White and the Seven Dwarves, Cinderella and Rapunzel to name a few. Some are helpful, some are dangerous and some are just plain weird, but all have information to help our young girl eventually realize her true identity as a princess. As with any good fairy tale, there’s also a prince. He’s desperate to find the princess, but he’s always one step behind and inadvertently rescues and wins the hearts of all the wrong princesses. A rocking musical score adds even more fun to new takes on the stories everyone loves.
All tickets are $12.  For more information, visit wagonwheeltheatre.org or call 574-267-8041.[[In-content Ad]]
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