Scott Geier (Boy) burst on the scene in 1999, appearing with a then-unknown Maggie Gyllenhaal in the CBS miniseries, Shake Rattle and Roll. He then spent several years in New York, trying to "find himself" (his father's quotes) while earning a living as a private investigator. In 2003, Scott returned to acting when he cast himself in the lead role in his own short film. He most recently appeared with the Austin Children's Theater in The History of Art in Forty Minutes or Less.
Maggie Wilhite (Girl) is ecstatic to be making her Austin stage debut with The Coda Project. While living in New York, she involved herself in various projects, directing and performing in original showcases and screenplay competitions for Agony Productions. She starred in Argyle Films' Lock Down, winner of the Pioneer Short Film Slam in August of 2005. Since relocating to Austin, Maggie has dabbled in performance art, dancing in the first annual Earth Day Extrava-Greenza in the Umlauf Sculpture Garden and performing the title role in The Jumper in the Age of Transformation by local folk choreographer, Daniel Llanes. Maggie earned a B.F.A. in musical theatre from Sam Houston State University, where her credits included Trust, Fiddler on the Roof, A Chorus Line, The Heidi Chronicles (director), The Last Night of Ballyhoo, Baby with the Bath Water, and The Sound of Music. Maggie also attended Anne Reinking's Broadway Theatre Project in 2001. Many thanks to family and friends, old and new.
Zac Crofford (Man) moved to Austin in 2002 after wrestling a theatre degree from Case Western Reserve University in the icy northern wastes of Cleveland, Ohio. He has worked with a number of excellent groups, including the Great Lakes Theatre Festival, Cleveland Shakespeare Festival, Tulsa Theatre Company, and here in Austin, the Vortex Theatre, Iron Belly Muses, and of course, Coda. Long story short, Zac is thrilled to be given a hand in the maturation of Coda as a company and Austin theatre as a community—all the while getting to play with a bunch of cool kids.
Lisa Scheps (Woman) was most recently seen as Mrs. Pascal in Coda's The House of Yes. She is Artistic Director of play! Theatre Group and was born and raised in Houston where she trained at the Alley Theatre and Studio 7. At 18 she moved to New York where she worked as an Actor, Stage Manager, and Director and is proud to have created the role of the Camel's Ass in the Broadway production of Oh, Brother! In the late eighties she brought her talents to the business world and began directing and producing for Business Theatre and in 1994 she co-founded Concentrix Corp.
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