7 Days in the Cultural Life of a Broadway Stage Manager

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Culture Diary

When he’s not herding performers at “Once Upon a Mattress,” Cody Renard Richard is bowling, catching up with theater friends and, to his surprise, bumping into Beyoncé.

Cody Renard Richard is shown partially in profile, seated on the subway.
“My entire journey in New York is about trying new things and expanding my reach,” said Cody Renard Richard, left, who has managed nearly 50 TV, opera and stage productions in the city.Credit...Graham Dickie/The New York Times

Sarah Bahr

Published Nov. 18, 2024Updated Nov. 19, 2024, 12:25 a.m. ET

Cody Renard Richard is backstage at the Hudson Theater eight performances a week, wrangling actors and calling cues at “Once Upon a Mattress.”

When he has free time, he crams in as many fashion shows, museum visits, board meetings, teaching gigs and other cultural events as possible.

“My entire journey in New York is about trying new things and expanding my reach,” Richard, 36, who grew up in Waller, Texas, said in a phone conversation on a Monday, the one day of the week he isn’t working on “Mattress.”

Richard has been stage managing since his teenage years, when he was a self-described “troublemaker” before his high school’s theater director, Carrie Wood, encouraged him to channel that energy into a role backstage.

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Richard at the Hudson Theater, the current home of “Once Upon a Mattress.” “Sometimes people wonder if it gets boring working on the same show every night, but I never do,” he said.Credit...Graham Dickie/The New York Times

He’s now managed nearly 50 television, opera and stage productions in New York, including the MTV Video Music Awards, the Broadway productions of “Lempicka” and “Sweeney Todd,” and “Ragtime” at New York City Center earlier this month. He’s next headed to Los Angeles, where he’ll oversee a monthlong “Mattress” run.


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