Bruce
Miller – Artistic Director
Bruce is Founding Artistic Director of Theatre IV and Artistic Director of Barksdale Theatre.
He co-produced the world premieres of Rules
of the Lake by Irene Ziegler, Four Part
Harmony by Marcus Fisk and Douglas Minerd, War Story by Bo Wilson and Songs
from Bedlam by Douglas Jones. Other producing
credits include James Joyce’s The Dead,
Proof, How I Learned to Drive, Beehive, Of Mice
and Men, My Children! My Africa!, and Quilters.
In the final two decades of the Phoebe Awards,
Bruce’s productions earned Best Play or
Best Musical of the Year 20 times.
His
work as a director has been seen around the country
at prominent theatres including the Kennedy Center
and the Paper Mill Playhouse. Richmond directing
credits include Barksdale’s productions
of The Lark, Anything Goes, Annie Get Your
Gun, The Crucible and The Little Foxes,
and Theatre IV’s productions of Having
Our Say, Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune,
and Do Lord Remember Me.
Bruce has received six Phoebe Awards as Best Director
of the Year. For TV and radio, he directed The
Ugly Duckling released nationally by PBS,
and a production of folk stories broadcast internationally
over Radio Free Europe.
His Barksdale acting credits include Red Hot
and Cole and Diamond Studs (Phoebe
Award, Best Supporting Actor). Other credits include Arnold in The Boys Next Door, Berenger
in Rhinoceros, Clov in Endgame, Tom
in The Glass Menagerie, and Yank in The
Hasty Heart.
Bruce is co-author of Hugs and Kisses, the child
sexual abuse prevention play that will soon begin
the 25th year of its record-breaking run. His
play Buffalo Soldier was selected by the Pentagon
as a morale booster after 9/11, becoming the first
professional play in history to be performed within
the Pentagon’s walls.
He served as a site reporter for three years with
the National Endowment for the Arts, and as a
professional theatre panelist with the Lila Wallace—Reader’s
Digest Fund in New York City. He is an alumnus
of the University of Richmond, and is privileged
to credit three teachers as mentors: Jack Welsh,
and the late Marion Waymack
and Bernard Schutte. He also thanks those who
taught by example: Pete and Nancy Kilgore, Muriel
McAuley, Buddy and Betty Callahan, and Lou and
Fran Rubin.
In the spring of 1999, STYLE Weekly honored Bruce
and Phil Whiteway by selecting them as two of
the “100 Most Influential Richmonders of
the Century.” Bruce’s greatest blessings
will always be his wife (artist and designer Terrie
Powers Miller) and their two wonderful children.
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Phil
Whiteway – Managing Director
Phil co-founded Theatre IV in 1975, and continues
to serve as Managing Director. He was named to
the same position at Barksdale Theatre in 2001.
His allegiance to Barksdale began in 1977, when
he originated the role of Moss Hart in the world
premiere of Red Hot and Cole.
Phil moved to Virginia from his New Jersey home
to earn a B.S. from the University of Richmond’s
School of Business Administration. When professors
on the other side of the lake learned that he
could sing and dance, he was courted by the theatre
program, and wound up adding a B.A. in Theatre
to his business resume.
In 1995, Phil was appointed by the University
to the Committee of 50 to advise development efforts
associated with the University’s capital
campaign to construct the Modlin Fine Arts Center.
After graduation, Phil entered the Navy flight
program in Pensacola, Florida and was commissioned
as an Ensign. Following his military service,
he returned to Richmond and starred in numerous
shows at Swift Creek Mill Playhouse and the Haymarket
Dinner Theatre. For television, he appeared opposite
Fritz Weavein Ironclads, Mary Tyler Moore
in Lincoln, and Richard Chamberlain in Dream West.
Phil is a graduate of Leadership Metro Richmond,
and currently serves on their Board of Directors.
He has served as a Trustee of his church and the
Broad Street Association. He is active with the
Richmond Chamber of Commerce, and has participated
in annual Chamber leadership visits to many of
our nation’s major cities.
Phil was a founding member of the Board of Directors
of the Richmond Arts Consortium. He has served/serves
on the Governance Board of Partners in the Arts
(central Virginia’s arts-in-education cooperative)
and grant review panels for the Virginia Commission
for the Arts.
Phil serves as Secretary/Treasurer of the Board
of Directors of Virginians for the Arts, the statewide
nonprofit organization that manages arts advocacy
efforts across the Commonwealth. He was named
Outstanding Young Citizen by the Richmond Jaycees
in 1990, and received the Community Builders Award
from the Central Virginia Lodge of Masons. In
1999, STYLE Weekly selected Phil as one of their
100 Most Influential Richmonders of the Century.
Phil is thankful for the love, support and patience
he receives from his wife (actress and realtor
Donna Holmes Whiteway) and their four terrific
children.
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