Occupation: Director of public relations and
education for Cinnabar Theater.
Family: She and husband Clark Miller have two
children: son Eben is 18 and daughter Ivy is
15. Sheri is 45.
How did you come to
Cinnabar? "I'd been
working at Actors' Theater for several years
as associate artistic director and PR person.
When my husband was laid off, I needed full-time
work. At first I thought I would be a free-lance
publicist for NBTG (North Bay Theatre Group),
but Elly [Cinnabar Artistic Director Elly Lichenstein]
called then and said, 'What would it take to
get you to work for us full time?'
"I've been here
close to three months now. It's a good fit,
temperamentally and artistically. I feel like
I've known Elly forever. We're both old school
theater people, we treasure the culture of
theater."
This autumn, Miller
will be directing a workshop production of "Renaissance" at Sonoma
County Rep in Sebastopol, and will direct at
Cinnabar as well. That show hasn't been decided
yet, but it may be a children's show, a new,
musical version of "The Tailor of Gloucester," with
music by Janis Wilson and book by Marcy Telles.
"I'm excited about
Cinnabar's education program. I can't believe
how many students are there, and we want to
grow. We could offer twice as many classes
and fill them, but we don't have the room.
If anybody out there has space, let us know!"
Background: Miller grew
up in Santa Rosa. "I've
done theater since I was 5. I always knew that's
what I wanted to do. I began with acting, and
by the time got into the JC I'd started directing.
When I went to San Diego State, I majored in
theater and was the only person in the history
of the school to take a double major in acting
and directing. I have degrees in both. I went
to Seattle after graduating and pursued acting
up there, then quit theater for 10 years, although
I did commercials, while the kids were little."
Who has inspired you? "My
dad, my mom, my husband, all the standard people.
My kids inspire me.
"Theatrically,
Joan Lee LaSalle, who's no longer living. She
ran the drama department at SRJC. And my sixth
grade teacher, Hubert Knauff. He's pushing
90, and I'm still friends with him. He was
an amazing teacher. Everyone who ever had him
as a teacher has never forgotten him.
"Acting: As a kid singers and dancers like
Judy Garland and Fred Astaire. As a grown-up
actor, Emma Thompson, I think she's wonderful.
Maggie Smith. Renée Zellwegger."
Advice to others? "When
I would drop my children and my two great-nieces
at school, I would say, 'Be powerful -- but
be kind.' When we said 'be powerful' we'd all
go 'rrrrr' (Miller makes a tiger-like growl)
and when we said 'be kind' we'd go 'aaaah'
(she lays her head gently on her hands).
"And -- always
tell the truth."
A turning point in your
life: "Getting
married was one. Having children. Moving back
to Santa Rosa after we had enough of the rain
in Seattle. Going through a major depression:
it changed everything. I was so much stronger,
I felt like the phoe-nix. I kept having the image
of the phoenix being burned to ashes, then rising
up and recreating itself."
Your goals: "My
goals are very Cinnabar-oriented. To fill every
seat at the theater next season.
"To create or present
a clear public image of Cinnabar. Part of the
reason I was hired was to give the public a
clear understanding of Cinnabar. Up until now,
there have been a lot of different labels:
Quicksilver Two, Petaluma Sings!, Cinnabar
Opera Theater, and when you talk to people,
they don't realize they're all Cinnabar.
"Personal goals,
it's just the same stuff everybody has: lose
weight, take care of my health, landscape the
yard."
Hobbies: "I love
gardening. I studied post-graduate interior
design, and I like decorating and do all that
stuff. I like using my hands. And I'm a sign
language interpreter."
Favorite books: "I
like old books, Greek literature. I love The
Aenid. I spent one summer reading the classics:
War and Peace, Madame Bovary, The Red and The
Black, Portrait of a Lady. I read the entire
Divine Comedy. I loved it all."
Personal philosophy: "I
believe in being honest with yourself and with
others. Be grateful, apologize swiftly and
sincerely, work hard and, above all else, love
your kids. There's a saying in our house: 'When
you've got kids, you've got to love them.'"
Greatest accomplishment: "That
I haven't wrecked my kids. They're amazing.
I think babies are born perfect and if you
just don't wreck them, they'll be fine."
What is most important
to you? "My husband
and my children."
If you could change
one thing in the world, what would it be? "I
think I would give everybody the ability to
be truly empathetic, because that would take
care of everything. Then there would be no
more killing, rape, hunger, war. If you could
really relate to everybody else's pain, all
that other stuff would go away.
"Interestingly,
I think that is one of the primary purposes
of the arts in general and theater in particular.
Theater teaches, it encourages empathy. Whether
you're doing it or watching it, you're relating
to other people's lives."
How would you describe
yourself? "I'm a
workaday actor, a devoted mother and a grateful
wife."
What's the craziest
thing you've ever done? "Marrying
a man I didn't know very well, someone I'd known
for only six months. It turned out well, though.
We've been married almost 26 years. He was my
leading man, in 'Can-Can' of all things. He was
sitting in the audience watching me audition
for the play, and he thought, 'I wonder if I'm
going to marry that girl?'"
Seventh
Annual Great Petaluma Chili Cook-Off a great
Success! 
On May 2, 2004, The Seventh
Annual Great Petaluma Chili Cook-Off took flight
at the Sonoma-Marin Fairgrounds in Petaluma.
The annual event, which has grown by leaps and
bounds each year, boasted over 1,000 attendees,
40+ volunteers, 75 entertainers and 5 vendors.
The Cook-Off is Cinnabar Theater’s
largest annual fundraiser, and directly benefits
the Cinnabar Young Repertory program. CYR serves
Sonoma County Youth year-round with classes and
camps in Drama and Musical Theater for children
ages 4-18. In order to best serve these young
artists, scholarships are made available so that
no child is left out of the fun. Hence, the Great
Petaluma Chili Cook-Off. This year the event
netted the 30 year-old Cinnabar Theater over
$16,000 for their scholarship program. Laura
Sunday, the "Chili Empress" (right),
is shown presenting the check to Jan Klebe.
Entertainment was provided by a
gloriously mixed bag of entertainers:
The Sofa Kings, FIERCE Dance Company, Wondertainment,
Yoko’s Fiddle Kids,
Salsa Dancing with Anne-Laure Crowley and Stefan
Jarshel.
Generous
Sponsors of this year’s Cook-Off:
Waste
Management, Press Democrat Celebrate Community,
97.7 The River, Aquafina, Pepsi Bottling Group,
Sierra Nevada Brewery, Lagunitas Brewery, North
Bay Bohemian, Yardbirds, Brodie’s Tire
and Brake, Sonoma County Farmers and Ranchers
for the Arts, The Rotary Club of Petaluma Valley,
Exchange Bank
Next year is the 8th annual and
it will take place on Sunday, May 1, 2005.
The official website for Cook-off is: http://www.greatchilicookoff.com