Our Style

Lady Macbeth hugs seated Macbeth from behind while holding a silver chalice. Both look down with somber expressions.

Tracey D. Turner (Lady Macbeth) & Will Guffey (Macbeth)
Macbeth, 2022

Steel City Shakespeare Center employs a style of performance known as "Extreme Casting," which utilizes a small cast or even a single performer to convey the story of a much larger cast of characters, even in a single moment. The style is rooted in other theatrical styles, such as puppetry, stand-up comedy, pantomime, poor theater, and certain aspects of Elizabethan theater.

Our performances do not rely on elaborate theatrical effects, such as large sets, sampled sound effects, period costumes, or a conventional lighting design. By stripping away all aspects of theatrical technology, we enable ourselves to rediscover some of the elements with which these plays were written and strengthen the bond between performers and audience.

Without the aid of enhanced production elements or a large company, the performers are responsible for conveying the story through broad physical and vocal choices, while inviting the audience to, "Piece out our imperfections with your thoughts," and, "Into a thousand parts divide one man." With these elements firmly in place, extreme casting can serve to reclaim the theater as popular entertainment for the masses, rather than solely a fixture for the cultural elite, through imaginative, fast-paced, and interactive storytelling.  

Our mission is to engage and inspire communities with Shakespeare and classical works of drama, literature, and folklore.

It is our vision that individuals from diverse backgrounds will share a common creative experience and develop ​a greater sense of empathy in their everyday lives.

2024 Artist
Core

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Jeffrey Chips
Founder & Artistic Director

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Lauren Scheller-Wolf
Education Director & Production Manager

A woman with glasses and chin-length white hair wears a black shirt and holds a blue string puppet made of fabric and paper

Cat Aceto

A woman with brown hair smiles at the camera and wears a red top with white polka dots

Catherine Baird

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Bob Colbert

A woman with long brown hair wears red lipstick and a black top while smiling at the camera

Lexie Hellinger

A woman with curly brown hair holds a ukulele and smiles with closed lips to the camera
A woman with light brown hair with a tinge of pink wears a burnt-orange turtleneck and looks at the camera intently against a gray and tan brick wall

Ella Mizera

Hannah Ruth Moss

A person with short blonde hair and a reddish-blonde beard wearing rectangular glasses and a black button-up stands against a red brick wall while gazing into the camera

Samwise Riley

Remembering

Tracey D. Turner


Tracey first joined the SCSC family in 2017, performing as Old Sinbad in our production of The Seven Voyages of Sinbad. From then on, she remained an ever-present fixture in our company as an actor, director, and educator. As an actor, she also performed as Duke Frederick and Duke Senior in our virtual production of As You Like It, as Scrooge in our virtual A Christmas Carol, A Radio Drama, as Cerimon, Dionyza, Bawd, and others in Pericles, and as Lady Macbeth in Macbeth. As a director, she directed the reading of Martin Luther King Jr.’s Letter From the Birmingham Jail performed on the 50th anniversary of his death, the Pittsburgh premiere of Ginna Hoben’s one-woman comedy The Twelve Dates of Christmas, and the world premiere of Cole Vecchio’s adaptation of Dracula.

Tracey was an incomparable talent, both fierce and vulnerable at once, commanding the stage every moment she inhabited it while always bringing out the best in her scene partners as well as every actor she directed. She had a smile and a laugh that lit up the Earth and a beauty that defied measure. She was a friend to everyone she met, and to know her was to feel the warm embrace of her love long after leaving her presence. She was, to put it simply, joy in human form.

Our hearts go out to her vast circle of friends and loved ones in Pittsburgh and beyond, and especially to her daughter, Moriah, who was the greatest source of pride in her life. We are so extraordinarily blessed to have known Tracey and have her share her time and talents with us. We miss her terribly and will never forget her.

Tracey passed away from neuroendocrine cancer on Thursday, April 13, 2023, surrounded by loved ones.

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