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Alumna Kelundra Smith Named Managing Editor of American Theatre

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Alumna Kelundra Smith (A.B. Theatre, 2011) has been named Managing Editor of American Theatre. Founded in 1984, American Theatre is the preeminent magazine for and about professional theatre in the U.S., covering national, regional, and global trends, artists, productions, and companies with a mix of news, features, interviews, critical and personal essays, and investigative reporting. More from their website:

NEW YORK CITY and ATLANTA: American Theatre magazine, published by Theatre Communications Group (TCG), has hired Kelundra Smith to be its next managing editor. A frequent contributor to the magazine, Smith is an Atlanta–based journalist, playwright, and storyteller whose articles have appeared in The New York TimesAndscapeFood & WineGarden & GunThe Bitter SouthernerAtlanta magazine, and elsewhere.

“I’m so proud and heartened to welcome Kelundra Smith to our team,” said Rob Weinert-Kendt, editor-in-chief of American Theatre, in a statement. “There’s a reason she’s been such a frequent contributor to our pages over the years, covering not only theatre in her region but also training her focus on trends in the entire U.S. theatre field. Her knowledge, taste, and acuity as a writer and thought leader make her a natural editor, and she’ll be an ideal partner in envisioning and executing the magazine’s return to print after three years online only.”

Said Smith in a statement, “I am excited to join TCG as the new managing editor of American Theatre magazine. I have been reading American Theatre since high school, so I know how vital this magazine is to encouraging the next generation of theatre artists and patrons. I can’t wait to imagine new ways of storytelling and to widen our coverage as we bring back the print issues.”

Smith initially got into theatre because, as she put it in a statement, “that’s where teachers put the kids who talk too much in class.” As a playwright, she has a passion for Southern narratives rooted in the African diaspora. Her long-term goals, she said, are to land on The New York Times bestseller list, travel the world, open a late-night dessert restaurant, as well as have her plays adapted for television.

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