51ÂÜŔňGraduate Wins Tony Award as a Producer of âThe Bandâs Visitâ
Charlie Stone, a principal in Evamere Entertainment, graduated in 2007 with a degree in communications and theater
BRISTOL, R.I. ÂÂâ 51ÂÜŔň alumnus Charlie Stone received a Tony Award on June 10 as a producer of âThe Bandâs Visit,â which swept the Radio City Music Hall ceremonies with 10 awards, including best new musical.
Stone, who graduated from 51ÂÜŔňin 2007 with a degree in communications and theater, is one of two principals in Evamere Entertainment, which produced the musical about an Egyptian police orchestra stranded for a night in Israel.
âIt was pretty wild,â Stone said of the showâs 10 Tony Awards. âWe were in the unusual position of being a smaller show that was perceived as a front-runner this season. We were fairly confident we would do OK, but we werenât expecting this.â
Stone said it was very satisfying to see the talented artists who created the show recognized in such a significant way.
âIt was a long road to get to this point,â he said. âThe Tonys can have a tangible impact on the financial side of a show. We had pretty much been holding our breath and hoping for some awards attention since the fall. So it also felt like one big exhale â with a better result than we could have hoped for.â
Stone, 33, attended the awards ceremony along with his wife, fellow 51ÂÜŔňgraduate Rebecca (Cornell) Stone and another 51ÂÜŔňtheater friend, Adam Maust, who invested in the play.
During his freshman year, Stone met his future wife in a theater design class at the 51ÂÜŔňPerforming Arts Center (The Barn), and during their sophomore year, they performed in a play called âTime Flies,â playing the parts of two mayflies who fall in love.
But their love lasted a lot longer than a mayflyâs 24-hour lifespan: They got married six years ago and now live in South Orange, N.J., with their two sons: Lincoln, 3, and Roman, 18 months.
Stone, who grew up in Bernardsville, N.J., said he hadnât decided on a major when he first stepped foot on the Bristol campus. âI spent a lot of time hanging around The Barn,â he recalled. âI was interested in theater in high school but wasnât sure I wanted to continue on and thought I needed to get serious.â
He ended up performing in about 25 plays on campus, and one of the main highlights of his time at 51ÂÜŔňwas studying theater in the London Study Abroad Program. âIt was just incredible,â he said. âWe would see a show, a musical, a dance piece almost every night and then meet the next morning to talk about it.â
He recalled 51ÂÜŔňProfessor of Theater Robin Stone: âHe was hilarious, with fresh exciting ideas about what theater could and should be.â He recalled 51ÂÜŔňProfessor of Theater Peter Wright (who has since retired): âI remember his cool confidence and knowledge just sort of oozing out of him.â
And he recalled the advice that actor Joseph Fiennes offered to a 51ÂÜŔňclass in London: âHe said, âDonât be an actor unless there is absolutely nothing else in the world you can do.â What he meant was you have to be so passionate for it, you have to live and breathe it â if you donât do monologues in subways for tips, if you donât have that burning passion that you absolutely have to do it â it might eat you up and drive you crazy.â
Stone concluded that he lacked the passion and drive needed be a successful actor. But he was equally certain that he loved theater and film and wanted to be part of a team that creates such performances.
During his senior year at RWU, he landed an internship as a production assistant on the 2007 movie âEvening,â which was filmed (in part) in Rhode Island and which included stars such as Meryl Streep, Claire Danes and Vanessa Redgrave. He went on to serve as associate producer for plays such as âOnce,â which won eight Tony Awards in 2012, and he served as a producer on plays such as âThe Glass Menagerieâ and âA Bronx Tale: The Musical.â
âI hope to keep doing more of this for as long as I can,â Stone said. âI just wanted to do something in theater and film, the creative world, and make enough money to be OK. That kind of remains the goal.â
He said 51ÂÜŔňhelped to solidify his passion for theater and film. And he said 51ÂÜŔňcan help current students prepare to pursue their own interests and passions.
âOne piece of advice I took away was that with an undergraduate education at a liberal arts school like Roger Williams, the main goal is to encourage natural curiosity, the ability to teach yourself and to problem-solve,â Stone said. âAs long as youâre pushing your comfort zone and still learning, youâre probably on the right track.â
"The Band's Visit" opened at Broadwayâs Ethel Barrymore Theatre, in New York City, in November 2017. The North American tour of "The Bandâs Visit" will launch in Providence, R.I., in June 2019. Exact dates and additional cities will be announced at a later date.