The Arsonists | A Dark Comedy for Combustable Times | By Max Frisch | Translated by Alistair Beaton | Directed by Matt Champan | Image: man whose face is hidden behind a newspaper, sitting surrounded by a circle of oil barrels bearing "FLAMMABLE" warning labels.
SEATING

For safety reasons, we cannot accommodate late admission OR re-seating while the performance is in progress.

RUN TIME

This production runs 90-minutes and is presented without intermission.

SPECIAL EFFECTS

This production makes use of water-based haze/smoke effects.

Photography and filming is prohibited by law.The Arsonists is presented in arrangement with Suhrkamp Verlag GmbH.

 

The articles in this program are the opinions of the corresponding authors. 

 

LAND
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

We recognize that Stanford sits on the ancestral land of the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe. This land was and continues to be of great importance to the Ohlone people. Consistent with our values of community and inclusion, we have a responsibility to acknowledge, honor and make visible the university’s relationship to Native peoples.

Our Sponsors

This production was made possible through the generous support of the PIGOTT FUND FOR DRAMA and the MAY ELLEN RITTER PRODUCTION FUND.

ARTISTIC TEAM

Director
Matt Chapman

Scenic Designer
Nina Ball

Props Artisan
Christine Edwards

Assistant Scenic Designers

Bren Kekoa Bartol, Noah Dehli

Costume Designer
Becky Bodurtha

Associate Costume Designer
Ezra Melosh

Lighting Designer
Christian Mejia

Assistant Lighting Designer
Raina Yang

Sound Designer/Composer
Sebastian Hochman

Associate Sound Designer
Audrey Hunter

Sound Design Advisor
James Ard

Intimacy Director
Natalie Greene

Text/Vocal Coach
Stephanie Hunt

Stage Manager
Virginia Tipps

Assistant Stage Managers
Emma Hong, Trini Rogando

TAPS STAFF

Department Chair
Diana Looser

Artistic Director
Amy Freed

Director of Finance & Operations
Eugene Buck

Asst. Director of Finance & Operations
Wenlin He

Student Services Manager
Katie Dooling

Finance & Faculty Affairs Admin
Janet Pineda

Production Manager
Tyler B. Osgood

Technical Director
Beckett Finn

Costume Shop Lead
Heather Miller

Scenic & Technology Lead
Brett Cavanaugh

Head Electrician
Kenny McMullen

Head Cutter/Draper
Emma Vossbrink

Head Carpenter
Zach Zigman

Costume Technicians
Lauren Suiter, Kyo Yohena

Wardrobe Support
Linda Wu

Facilities Manager
Lori Fowler

Director of Marketing & Special Events
Stefanie Okuda

Marketing & Special Events Coordinator
Brendon Martin

Production Photographers
Frank Chen

CAST

Gottlieb Biedermann
Atman Jahagirdar

Joseph Schmitz
Ben Hollingshead

Chorus/US Schmitz/US Chorus Leader
Blue Kennedy

Chorus Leader
Chloe Molins

Chorus/US Doctor
Ganesh Nair

Chorus/Policeman/US Biedermann
Jack Kirkner

Doctor
Jahfari Maddo

Anna
Jasmine Kang

Chorus/Mrs. Knechtling/US Anna
Lauren Thompson

US Eisenring
Lenny Wang

William Eisenring
Lyle Belger

Babette Biedermann
Valeh Amiri

CREW

TAPS 39 Crew
Nadia Chung, Maddie Garfinkel, Ollie Garfinkel, Nala Monet Hamilton, Cathy Zhang

Wardrobe Lead
Leeth Singhage

Laundry Crew
Mikey Mendoza, Yinlin Zhao

STUDENT STAFF

Student Asst. Production Managers
Iamanni Jackson, Alister Sharp

Student Asst. Facilities Manager
Sawyer Williams

Student Asst. Marketing Coordinators
Kendall Johnson, Jasmine Xu

Student Theatrical Technicians
Bren Bartol, Marina Castilla-Liu, Kyan Gandhi, Maya Hausman, Jonathon Howell, Henry Kasulka, Vivi LaFont, Aredhel Martin, Eduardo Moreno Adanez, Noah Murase, Sam O’Neill, Trini Rogando, Jude St John, Kate Stewart, Andi Taylor, Yasmine Toubassy, Raina Yang

Student Costume Shop Administrators
Angelica Alvarado, Charlotte Kearns

Student Costume Technician Lead
Ezra Melosh

Student Costume Technicians
Maddie Garfinkel, Katelyn Kramer, Annika Parmer, Dom Schleider, Leeth Singhage, Sawyer Williams

Costume Loan Out Coordinators
Tiffany Cartanega, Lauren Suiter

Student Costume Loan Out Coordinators
Emily Maremont, Rebecca Spence

Student Props Loan Out Coordinators
Bren Bartol, Lela Hanson, Roberto Ibarra

A Note from the Director

BY MATT CHAPMAN

TAPS lecturer

The play presses us directly, asking: What will we do? And when?

I first learned about this play as a teenager in rural Nebraska. My scrappy high-school theatre club put it on, and I was enthralled. I didn’t know it at the time, but when our director shouted, “Pick a walk!” I was beginning a career in physical theatre. 

I love this play for the story, the characters, and the comedy. I love it, especially, for the ways that it brings its politics forward through metaphor: nestled fully into the actions of characters and the relationships between them.

Stylistically, the play comes out of Epic Theatre and the work of Bertolt Brecht (and of course, the choruses of Ancient Greece). We play with some of that legacy—but I also hear in it echoes of Vaudeville (and thereby Commedia dell’Arte). In this production, we used these forms as touchstones to help us dig out the comedy and the characters.

Max Frisch, a Swiss writer, began writing the play in Europe’s post-war period. It has been called a critique of neutrality—but more importantly, it’s a critique of appeasement.

We’d had the misfortune of having Project 2025 appear in US politics just prior to the 2024 election. By last Winter, big changes were coming to the United States. DEI was out, deportations were beginning, etc., etc. But as these previously-stated intentions started to become realities in our world, we also started to see something else quite frightening: pre-emptive compliance. Companies, institutions, and individuals began offering acquiescence in advance to the anticipated demands of power.

During that period, and as our democracy’s cracks began (further) showing, I came across an old copy of the play among my books. It weaseled its way into my attic and brought along its gasoline barrels. It felt right and timely, so I suggested that we produce it this year. My only fear at the time was that by February 2026, the house would already be burned down.

Is it? I don’t think so—not yet. But I also don’t think this play is a direct metaphor for our time. It doesn’t map onto our world or our problems completely. It does show us a dynamic, though—and that dynamic is most certainly present here and now.

The play presses us directly, asking: What will we do? And when?

About the Artists

MATT CHAPMAN (Director) is a physical theatre artist. He joined TAPS in 2017, teaching Movement, Mask, and Clown. Since 2001, Matt has been co-Artistic Director of Under the Table, a physical comedy trio. He has collaborated with NYC’s Eavesdrop; Durban, SA’s African Dream Circus; Sweden’s Cirkus Cirkor; Denmark’s Filuren and Jomfru Ane Teatret; Blue Lake’s Dell’Arte Company; and Arcata, CA’s Pequeño Teatro DanceTheatre. Matt also plays guitar in the Oakland punk band The Big Forgive.

VALEH AMIRI (Babette Biedermann) is a PhD candidate in Genetics who loves stepping out of her scientific shell and into the lives of real and fictional characters. She is trained in method acting, improv, and clowning. Recent acting credits at Stanford include Theater Lab’s Melancholy (Joan) and Flying Horse Films’ Tony Cries Again (Rebecca).

JAMES ARD (Sound Design Advisor) is a noisemaker specializing in new works and immersive productions. His designs include collaborations with Under the Radar at The Public Theater, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Alley Theatre, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company. Internationally, his work has appeared at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and Sibiu International Theatre Festival in Romania. Local Bay Area collaborators include A.C.T., TheatreWorks Silicon Valley, San Francisco Playhouse, CenterREP, Shotgun Players, Golden Thread, and Shotgun Players.

NINA BALL (Scenic Designer) (she/her) is an award-winning scenic designer, production designer, visual artist, and educator. Her work has been seen at A.C.T., Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Seattle Repertory, St. Louis Rep., Theatreworks, and S.F. Playhouse, among others. Next up The Monsters, a world premiere at Berkeley Rep, and Girls:Chance: Music, a world premiere musical at A.C.T. She teaches Scenic Design here at Stanford. ninaball.com

BREN KEKOA BARTOL (Assistant Scenic Designer) is a junior majoring in TAPS. They are one of the Executive Producers of the Stanford Shakespeare Company (StanShakes), and their work has been seen in the TAPS Developmental series, StanShakes, Asian American Theater Project (AATP), and more.

LYLE BELGER (William Eisenring) is a coterminal student completing her Master’s in Communication, after receiving a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology with minors in TAPS and Spanish. At Stanford, she appeared in TAPS’s Fun Home (Older Alison) and Witch (Elizabeth Sawyer), Theater Lab’s Circle Mirror Transformation (Theresa), and served as lead vocalist for the five-piece student band, Clare’s in Town. Lyle begins her professional acting career in June with CenterREP’s Jagged Little Pill.

NADIA CHUNG (TAPS 39 Crew) is a senior majoring in Political Science and minoring in Dance. She performs with Stanford’s Cardinal Ballet Company and is excited to be involved in the tech side of TAPS.

NOAH DEHLI (Assistant Scenic Designer) is a sophomore studying TAPS and Music. At Stanford, he has performed in Into the Woods (Baker), Witch (Understudy, Fight Captain), and Hunchback (Phoebus), and was involved with Come Again (Director, Set Designer, Intimacy Coordinator) and the second 48 Hour Musical (Set Designer). He is also a member of the Stanford Improvisers. 

OLLIE GARFINKEL (TAPS 39 Crew) is a frosh and future TAPS major. This is his first show through TAPS. Previously at Stanford, he has been involved with many student productions.

MADDIE GARFINKEL (TAPS 39 Crew) is a sophomore double-majoring in Physics and TAPS. Previously at Stanford, she was involved in TAPS’s Fun Home (Small Alison), TAPS’s Grad Rep (Costume Designer), Ram’s Head’s Legally Blonde (Ensemble and Costume Designer), and TAPS’s Three Sisters (U/S Irina). 

NATALIE GREENE (Intimacy Director) is an artist and educator working at the intersections of performance, consent, and community engagement. As a director, choreographer, and intimacy professional, Natalie has worked with A.C.T., Aurora Theater, Cal Shakes, Center Rep, Custom Made, Portland Center Stage, Shotgun Players, and several productions with TAPS. She is the former artistic director of the award-winning devised theater ensemble Mugwumpin, and currently Director of Education and Community Programs at American Conservatory Theater.

NALA MONET HAMILTON (TAPS 39 Crew) is a sophomore, majoring in TAPS. Aiming to grow as a fluent scholar-artist, she plans to explore acting in film and theatre. Nala’s credits include Young Nala in Disney’s The Lion King on Broadway, as well as community productions such as Little Shop of Horrors, Pippin, and Chicago. Last year, she appeared as a principal performer in Fading In with the Stanford Light Opera Company.

SEBASTIAN HOCHMAN (Sound Designer/Composer) is a double-major in Music and TAPS, creating immersive sonic worlds for new work and classics alike. Credits include Huppet, Omelas, and work with Marin Shakespeare Company. He has worked with Daniel Kluger at The Public and DR2, and collaborated with creatives like John R. Lewis, Lauren English, Julius Rea, and Leigh M. Marshall. He is currently developing the original musical Port-Pourri, at Stanford, which will be staged in the Spring.

BEN HOLLINGSHEAD (Joseph Schmitz) is a sophomore double-majoring in TAPS and Economics. Previously at Stanford, he was involved in TAPS’s Fun Home (ASM), and has acted in The Stanford Shakespeare Company’s Henry IV (Prince Hal/Henry V) and NExT’s Hamlet: Prince of Denmark (Laertes). Elsewhere, he was recently in BADA Midsummer in Oxford’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Demetrius) and The Bishop’s School’s Hamlet (Hamlet).

EMMA HONG (Assistant Stage Manager) is a senior majoring in TAPS and Engineering Physics. You may have seen her work playing Winnifred in TAPS’s Witch, Samantha in AATP’s Man of God, and herself in Theaterlab’s Everything Must Go. On campus, she is co-Artistic Director of Asian American Theater Project (AATP) and ex-President of Women in Computer Science (WiCS).

STEPHANIE HUNT (Text/Vocal Coach) teaches Acting and Voice at Stanford. For TAPS, she directed Anton Chekhov’s Three Sisters and has served many productions here as a voice/text coach. A core company member of the theater company Word for Word in San Francisco, Stephanie has acted in fully-staged stories by Upton Sinclair, Angela Carter, Tobias Wolff, Virginia Woolf, Kevin Barry, and Colm Tóibín. Her MFA is from the American Conservatory Theater. stephaniejanehunt.com

ATMAN JAHAGIRDAR (Gottlieb Biedermann) is a senior studying Design and Music. As a comedian, he has opened for Hasan Minhaj, created a live show with actors from Comedy Central and Netflix Is a Joke, and written a season of a comedy show in production. Atman has performed in SF Sketchfest, Eclectic Box SF, and LA’s Lyric Hyperion. At Stanford, he spent four years in Robber Barons Sketch Comedy. The Arsonists is his first play credit.

JASMINE KANG (Anna) is a freshman hoping to major in Mathematics. Previously studying in London, she acted in productions of When the Rain Stops Falling (Elizabeth) and The Good Soldier Svejk (Otto Katz), and tried her hand at translating and directing Lei Yu (Fan Yi). She is excited to be in her first Stanford production and hopes you enjoy the show!

BLUE KENNEDY (Chorus/US Schmitz/US Chorus Leader) (they/them) is a freshman majoring in Mechanical Engineering. This Fall, they acted in Ram’s Head Gaieties (Ensemble), and are currently involved in Ram’s Head Grease (Producer) and Theater Lab’s Pestilence Wow (TD and Assistant Director). They are so excited to be part of The Arsonists as an introduction to TAPS Mainstage and can’t wait to continue being involved.

JACK KIRKNER (Chorus/Policeman/US Biedermann) is very excited to be part of his first main stage Stanford TAPS play. Jack was recently in Gaieties 2025(Drew) and is looking forward to acting in many more productions at Stanford. He hopes you have a ‘fire’ time. 

JAHFARI MADDO (Doctor) (he/they) is a junior double-majoring in Psychology and TAPS. Previously at Stanford, Jahfari has acted as Lorenzo in Melancholy Play, Rode in Three Sisters, and various other roles. They are thrilled to be part of such a pertinent and timely production.

CHRISTIAN MEJIA (Lighting Designer) believes that light can tell stories that go beyond words. His design approach seeks to create environments that invite us to lean into and learn something about our shared humanity. His practice includes live performance, architectural lighting, and immersive entertainment. His work has been seen on stages and in built environments around the world. Christian serves on the Board of Directors at New Conservatory Theatre Center.

MIKEY MENDOZA (Laundry Crew) (He/Him) is a sophomore majoring in Environmental Systems Engineering. He’s been previously involved with TAPS’s Three Sisters (LC), Witch (LC), Fun Home (LC), as well as starred in short films such as Lens, To Love Thyself, Electrons, Audiobook, and productions such as Cesar Valenzuela’s Proportionality.

CHLOE MOLINS (Chorus Leader) is a junior studying International Relations with a minor in Creative Writing. She is also involved in Stanford’s Flying Treehouse Children’s Repertory Theatre Company and Ram’s Head.

GANESH NAIR (Chorus/US Doctor) (he/him) is a freshman planning to double major in Human Biology and Public Policy. This is his first production. 

TRINI ROGANDO (Assistant Stage Manager) is a senior double-majoring in TAPS and Design. Previously, she has been involved as a lighting designer for Ram’s Head’s Gaieties, TAPS’s Graduate Repertory, and StanShakes’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream

LEETH SINGHAGE (Wardrobe Lead) is a multidisciplinary artist from Sri Lanka with international theater and TV credits, currently a senior studying MS&E and TAPS. Previously at Stanford, he acted in The Parentheses of Blood, Three Days, American Migration, No Exit, and Exorcism, and worked wardrobe on TAPS’s Assassins, Witch, and Fun Home. He has also toured with productions to Edinburgh Fringe Festival, United Solo Festival (NYC), and Bharat Rang Mahotsav (India). 

LAUREN THOMPSON (Chorus/Mrs. Knechtling/US Anna) (she/her) is a freshman who is still deciding her major. This is her first show at Stanford, and she is so appreciative to be part of it. Throughout high school, she acted in shows and in physical theater and mime, including Line (Fleming), The Standard of the Man Mime Show (Mrs. Trevers), and Mr. Burns: A Post-Electric Play (Colleen).

LENNY WANG (US Eisenring) is a sophomore majoring in Linguistics and TAPS. At Stanford, Lenny has served as an assistant director for TAPS’s Fall 2025 Developmental Stage Jjim-Jil-Bang and AATP’s Winter 2026 Main Stage Cabaret. Prior to arriving on campus this year, he was a K-pop trainee in Seoul, where he received intensive training in voice, dance, and acting. The Arsonists is unforgettably fun and marks his first acting performance at Stanford.

RAINA YANG (Assistant Lighting Designer) is a sophomore double-majoring in EE and TAPS. Previously at Stanford, she was in involved in TAPS’s jjim-jil-bang (LD), TAPS’s bed (LD), AATP’s Matilda the Musical (LD), Ram’s Head’s Legally Blonde (LD), and Ram’s Head’s Gaieties: Camp Stanford (SM).

CATHY ZHANG (TAPS 39 Crew) (she/her) is a freshman interested in majoring in Psychology and TAPS. She loves watching theatre and learning about all of the different components of a production and how they come together to create a show. She was involved with Gaieties in the Fall (ensemble) and is excited to be a part of The Arsonists (tech) and WiSH One-Act Plays (playwright) this Winter.

YINLIN ZHAO (Laundry Crew) is a sophomore double-majoring in Computer Science and English. He has previously been involved in TAPS’s Fun Home and Three Sisters.