鈥淚t鈥檚 a very delicate, tender play that just moved me deeply when I first read it,鈥� Tony-winning director Rebecca Taichman says of her latest project. 鈥淚t got me in the heart. I felt it was an important piece of writing for this moment in our world, in our time. I just felt I had to do it.鈥�

Taichman is talking about the new and timely play she is directing, Lindsey Ferrentino鈥檚 This Flat Earth, which tells of two students鈥� reactions to a shooting at their school and begins performances March 16 at Off-Broadway鈥檚 Playwrights Horizons. Taichman won the 2017 Tony Award for Best Direction of a Play for Paula Vogel鈥檚 Indecent, a play she co-created with Vogel. Earlier this season, she followed that up with the Broadway revival of J.B. Priestley鈥檚 Time and the Conways. A 2000 graduate of Yale School of Drama, Taichman, 47, has directed on and Off-Broadway and at regional theatres across the United States. Here, Taichman speaks about her career, her new play, the way she directs, her Tony Award, and her future plans.
Why she became a director:
鈥淚 started in theatre as an actress. I was a terrible actress. And I realized pretty quickly that for some reason the vocabulary of theatre was my language. I wasn鈥檛 sure for a long time what I was going to do. I just knew it was going to be in theatre. So I was a bad actress for a while, I did some casting, I was a literary intern, I did dramaturgy, I was an archivist on a project. I was trying out all different roles. Eventually I started assisting directors and watching their process, and then started directing my own little pieces, short pieces, and eventually directing larger pieces.
鈥淎nd I found it was clearly what I was best at, first of all, and it was where I felt most alive. I wanted to be in control of the room. When I found my way to [directing] it felt really clear. It combined all the interests I had developed over time. And then I spent about 15 years every day asking myself what else could I possibly do other than direct? Because it鈥檚 a really hard life. I would think that literally every day. Could I be a therapist? But nothing鈥攖here was never anything that felt like it would sate me in the same way. It was a clear decision. I went to grad school after that. And then finding along the way [how to] really have a career as a director. It certainly wasn鈥檛 easy for me.鈥�
Her principles of directing:
鈥淭he most important [principle] to me is to trust the story and to follow the story. By that I mean, truly every choice I make is led by: what is the story I鈥檓 telling? And the hope in there is, of course, that I鈥檓 telling a story that I believe will move people or open them, will spark meaningful dialogue, will create empathy in unique ways. When you鈥檙e really a vessel for telling a story, the story is in the driver鈥檚 seat. For example, if I鈥檓 in a design meeting and a designer says, 鈥極h this will be cool, nobody鈥檚 ever done this before,鈥� that鈥檚 not an interesting goal. But if it鈥檚, 鈥楬ere鈥檚 how we can release this moment in the story in a deeply moving, provocative way,鈥� that charges me up.
鈥淚t鈥檚 part of why I find staging bows utterly baffling, because there鈥檚 no story anymore. I鈥檝e learned how to do it over the years, but I lose my trail of bread crumbs, which is really what I鈥檓 following. Also, I often really long to鈥攁nd it鈥檚 not always easy to鈥攖rust an emotional logic over an intellectual one.鈥�
An actor in her rehearsal room鈥攁n example of how she directs:
鈥淚t depends what the play is like, but usually there鈥檚 a good, deep table work that we do, a full week usually, really mining the text and getting everybody on the same page: what the moment-to-moment story is, what the point of view is, cracking it open. Then what I like to do, always, is set up the space. I call it the first pass, which is where I ask the actors to completely trust their instincts. I don鈥檛 tell them what to do at all. Usually they teach me something I didn鈥檛 know before. There鈥檚 something about what their instincts are and from there we start shaping. It鈥檚 quite an iterative process. By that I mean a lot of repetition with slight adjustment.鈥�
A mistake she made that she learned from:
鈥淚 used to tech a show in gruesome detail, excruciating detail. Let鈥檚 say you鈥檙e at a theatre and you have a week of tech. I would spend the entire tech process meticulously teching the show once through. Partly because I do think very visually, and I was extremely rigid about that. But then what would happen was on the dress rehearsal night, it would be all put together for the first time and it was always a total disaster. First of all, it had been five days since anybody had touched the beginning of the play and also I didn鈥檛 realize all the mistakes I was making in slow motion, in minutiae. It was Michael Kahn who finally sat me down鈥擨 worked at [his] Shakespeare Theatre [in Washington, D.C.] many times鈥攁nd he said to me, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e driving the theatre insane, because you鈥檙e waiting so long to run the show.鈥� He just said to me, 鈥橸ou have to run it sooner.鈥� Now I do that. Sort of like a rough sketch and then see it, see that your big choices are the right ones even before you kind of go in and detail everything.鈥�
Read: 5 FEMALE DIRECTORS ON WHY ON WHY THE THEATRE INDUSTRY STRUGGLES WITH GENDER EQUALITY
A decision she made that paid off:
鈥淭he story of making Indecent for me is very profound and very meaningful and has taught me a lot. I started thinking about the story that was at the heart of Indecent 20 years ago. As a student, I happened on all the materials about the play The God of Vengeance and its obscenity trial and I tried to make a piece then. It was called The People vs. The God of Vengeance. It was clearly a meaningful story but not well enough told. As a writer, I was trying to figure out how to do it myself and I couldn鈥檛 figure out how to contain the complexity of it. I pursued, I never let go of, the longing to tell that story.鈥�
The God of Vengeance from 1907, by the Polish-Jewish writer Sholem Asch, told of a Jewish brothel owner and his family and featured a lesbian relationship between his 17-year-old daughter and a prostitute. When it was presented on Broadway in 1923, it was closed and its producer and 12 cast members were indicted and convicted of giving an immoral performance.
鈥淲hen finally I found Paula Vogel, who had an equal passion for The God of Vengeance, it felt like a miracle. It was like finding another Trekkie in the world. It was an extraordinary experience watching that story that I had lived with for so long and cared so much about it not being forgotten, watching that come to life and then be shared. This is what playwrights must experience a lot. But as a director, it鈥檚 more rare. You鈥檙e usually interpreting somebody else鈥檚 material. And, of course, I was with Indecent as well, but it was a story that I cared about on the cellular level, my DNA. It was a series of decisions over a super-long span of time, and it has taught me that following my deepest passions is probably the most meaningful thing I can do. Finding stories that I think are truly, truly important ones to tell, and figuring out ways to tell them.鈥�
The Tony Award:
鈥淵ou could probably see if you watched it that I was quite shocked. I didn鈥檛 expect that to happen and when it did it felt like this enormous gift, an acknowledgment of an incredible amount of work among a huge family of people for a very long time. It felt extraordinary鈥攁 community of my peers as theatre makers supporting what I was doing meant more than I could have imagined it would. It was very moving and very shocking, and disorienting for a while too.鈥�
This Flat Earth:
鈥淚t鈥檚 about two kids who have been through a school shooting. It鈥檚 on the eve of their return to school. We happen to be talking on the day that Parkland [Florida] students are returning to school. At its heart it鈥檚 really about this young girl who鈥檚 struggling to understand why this happened at her school. She鈥檚 a very, very smart 13-year-old and she just can鈥檛 settle with any answer or evasion that鈥檚 given to her and she keeps trying, struggling to understand why the adults don鈥檛 fix it. It felt like it could potentially spark a very meaningful dialogue. Who knew that it would intersect in such a synchronistic way with the moment that we鈥檙e having right now?鈥�
The future:
鈥淲hat I said about Indecent holds very true. I鈥檓 more and more trying to focus on these larger projects that I care a tremendous amount about and that I鈥檓 part of the inception of. It鈥檚 not the only thing, it鈥檚 just that I鈥檓 doing more of that. Conceiving pieces, finding the right partners, bringing [the work] to life is very thrilling, and meaningful in a profound way. I am excited to do more musicals鈥擨 love doing pieces with music. It feels like they fire on all cylinders in an exciting way. It could be that one day I鈥檇 want to run a theatre. I don鈥檛 know. Right now I鈥檓 more thinking about what are the stories that I deeply, deeply want to tell.鈥�
Read: STAGE DIRECTIONS: LOBBY HERO鈥橲 TRIP CULLMAN REVEALS EXACTLY WHAT HAPPENS IN HIS REHEARSAL ROOM