From ICA to National Tours: Emmy Chan’s Journey in Les Misérables

When Emmy Chan first stepped through the doors of the Illinois Conservatory for the Arts, she was a bright-eyed student with a passion for storytelling and a spark that lit up every stage she touched. Today, she’s bringing that same spark to audiences across the country as Little Cosette / Young Éponine in the national tour of Les Misérables.

Emmy joined ICA’s pre-professional training programs with an eagerness to grow and a deep love for musical theater. Through IMPACT: Musical Theater and masterclasses with Broadway professionals, she received the rigorous, personalized mentorship that helped her sharpen her technique—and believe in herself.

“ICA taught me how to be brave, how to take risks, and how to work hard,” Emmy says. “The faculty believed in me—and that changed everything.”

While Emmy’s talent was undeniable, it was her work ethic, openness to feedback, and hunger to learn that set her apart. She credits ICA’s unique blend of professional-level training and emotional support with helping her grow as both a performer and a person.

Now, as she travels the country in one of Broadway’s most iconic musicals, Emmy’s journey is a testament to what’s possible when students are given access, opportunity, and belief.

Want to support students like Emmy?
Give to ICA’s Spotlight Campaign

What to Expect from IMPACT 2025: Elite Training for Young Artists

This July, ICA will welcome students from across the region for IMPACT 2025, a pair of intensive summer programs in musical theater and dance designed for passionate young performers ages 12–18.

Students will train with Broadway and industry professionals in small group settings that emphasize individual growth, industry readiness, and community. Programs include:

IMPACT: Musical Theater

  • Voice, acting, and audition coaching with faculty from Wicked, Newsies, and SIX

  • Personalized feedback sessions and professional headshots

  • Agent/parent Q&A and mock auditions with real casting professionals

IMPACT: Dance (NEW for 2025)

  • Training in ballet, jazz, modern, hip-hop, and musical theatre dance

  • Mock auditions with cruise line casting directors and dance company reps

  • Faculty from companies like Hubbard Street Dance, The Joffrey Ballet, and Deeply Rooted Dance Theater

“It’s not just about talent—it’s about growth, professionalism, and confidence. This program launched me.”
– Isabella, past IMPACT student

Dates: July 28 – August 1, 2025
Spots are filling fast.
Register for IMPACT

Broadway Stars Shine in Naperville

What if a future Broadway star lives right next door?

The western suburbs could the training ground for the next generation of musicians, artists, and performers. That’s the dream Dylan Ladd, cofounder of the Illinois Conservatory for the Arts, has been working toward. To help with the creating such an academy, he’s bringing some of Broadway’s top names to Naperville for a benefit concert that will give students a taste of just what’s possible. “Our mission is all about bringing a high level of arts training to the community,” he says. “We figured that for this event, we want to showcase who we are as an organization and try to bring the biggest and best to perform for us. It’s really a testament to the musical theater community that they travel here to support children and their passion to do the same thing they’ve done as a career.”

The third annual A Night of Broadway gala will take place February 21 at Wentz Concert Hall in Naperville, bringing together several Tony winners and a 20-piece orchestra to perform selections from musical theater. Those in the all-star lineup include: J. Harrison Ghee, winner of the Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical for Some Like it Hot; Miles Frost, winner of the 2022 Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical for his role as Michael Jackson in MJ the Musical; Amber Iman, a 2024 Tony nominee for Lempicka; Aisha Jackson, who’s played Anna in Frozen and is currently starring in The Notebook on Broadway: and Karen Mason, a native of Arlington Heights who originated the role of Tanya in Mamma Mia! The orchestra will be led by Valerie Gebert, a veteran musical director who has a long list of Broadway credits, most recently The Who’s Tommy.

“It’s a tremendous opportunity to see these performers with a 20-piece orchestra,” Ladd says. “We’re putting together a show with the stylings of musical theater, all under a Broadway conductor leading the orchestra. It really ties a lot of what we believe in together in a really unique way.”

It’s rewarding for the gala’s headliners as well.

“This is an exciting thing that Dylan has put together,” says Mason, who has spent a career performing on stages in New York and all over the world. “Who doesn’t want to help kids find their way in the arts? I’m very proud to be asked to be a part of something like this.”

Such support from Broadway veterans is critical for those looking to make a living in the arts, which often doesn’t follow a typical career path.

“A career in any of the arts can be scary for some, especially when they don’t understand what that career can look like,” Ladd says. “What we try to do, at the very least, is showcase people who are successful in this industry. Yes, it is possible to make a living, and we can learn from their stories and their experiences on how they’ve done it, and they will be there as mentors for students as they continue to grow.”

Ladd cofounded the Illinois Conservancy for the Arts in 2020 as a nonprofit educational institution to provide instruction for adolescents and teens. It currently offers year-round classes in music, dance, and theater in addition to weeklong intensive seminars. This fall it aims to start a pilot program for a grade-6-to-12 day school that combines academics with arts training.

“That’s the ultimate goal, to create an arts-focused school curriculum at our own facility in the area,” Ladd says. While the current focus is primarily on musical theater education, Ladd hopes to continue to expand that into additional artistic areas as well as classes for adults.

“It’s an exciting time for us, that’s for sure,” Ladd says. “A career in the arts isn’t necessarily easy, but it’s incredibly rewarding. This is an event that shows our students and the community just what can be achieved.”

By Naperville Magazine

Broadway performers to be part of conservatory fundraiser

Five Broadway stars will perform in concert with a 20-piece orchestra as part of a Feb. 21 fundraiser for the Illinois Conservatory for the Arts in Naperville.

The gala scheduled for 5 p.m. at Wentz Concert Hall in downtown Naperville will include the live concert, an open bar, plated dinner, free valet parking, silent and live auctions, and an afterparty, a news release said. It is black-tie optional.

Tickets for the dinner and concert are $250. Concert-only tickets range from $50 to $100.

The show will feature Myles Frost, the 2022 Tony Award winner for “MJ the Musical” and the youngest male solo Tony Award winner in history, event organizers said.

Other performers are J. Harrison Ghee, the 2023 Tony Award winner for “Some Like it Hot,” Amber Iman, the 2024 Tony nominee for “Lempicka,” Karen Mason, a longtime Broadway performer and Arlington Heights native, and Aisha Jackson, the first Black actress to portray Anna in “Frozen.”

Among the items available in the silent auction are vacations, wine tastings, sports packages and jewelry.

Stories that Need to be Told

By Maya Meschi

As we advance into the 21st century, the push for diversity and inclusion in the performing arts industry has increased significantly. Numerous thriving performers, directors, and casting directors voice and continue to voice stories crucial to our cultural development. Among them is Patrick Maravilla, a casting director who has cast groundbreaking productions such as The Life of Pi, A Wonderful World, and Chicago. Maravilla has been an essential player in shaping and pivoting our view of diversity in theater. He is genuinely transforming the future of the performing arts industry and life. Maravilla remarked, “Storytelling allows us to access the roots of who we are, and we continue to tell those stories to keep them alive.” 

A Hunger to Make a Difference:

Maravilla started his performing arts occupation by participating in and auditioning for theater in California. However, as Maravilla became increasingly exposed to the industry, he realized he “…had never seen another brown person behind the table.” Shortly after the pandemic, Maravilla discovered he no longer wanted to pursue acting. Regardless, he still wanted to have a career in the performing arts; more specifically, he desired to make a difference in the field. Eventually, this drove him to seek casting as a profession. “I wanted to be a voice for people who look like me.” 

Life of Pi:

Maravilla’s aspiration for diversity goes beyond race; he casts shows to give people of various backgrounds the opportunity to have a voice in the industry. From Real Women Have Curves to The Life of Pi, Maravilla has pushed for refreshing interpretations of well-known works. A representation of how Maravilla supplied a play with a renewed point of view is through The Life of Pi. Similar to most professional productions, Life of Pi debuted in the West End. During the duration of Life of Pi’s premiere, the character Pi, who was originally portrayed as a male, was incapable of attending and performing a particular performance. The understudy, who traditionally played Ronnie, covered the performance of Pi that evening. Leaving the audience, cast, and crew in complete astonishment and marvel, Maravilla stated: “When she went on, we weren’t expecting it, and we were like, ‘Yeah! This works.'” Shortly after Hiran Abeysekera parted from the Broadway cast, “We were like, this is a no-brainer; Uma would be a fabulous actor to illustrate her view of Pi, which allowed a different take on what the show is and what it means, as well as the social standings of Pi as a woman.” The most remarkable and fascinating component of Maravilla’s casting is that it allows a woman of the 21st century to convey her story, especially in a narrative in which the theme is about survival.

Chicago the Musical:

Chicago the Musical is one of the rarest musical phenomenons; it has remained one of the longest-running productions on Broadway and has reached numerous fans. Among these countless successes, Chicago has had multiple interpretations; therefore, “casting can be tricky because everyone has an idea about what it should be.” However, with this, you have the ability to “uphold the integrity of the show while still pushing it into the 21st century.” Classical shows like Chicago allow people to stay true to the theme of the production while still granting space for new, relevant messages. Ultimately, the gift of casting gives opportunities to people of various backgrounds. People like Maravilla have genuinely transformed theater and given individuals equal chances. With Maravilla’s help, Chicago the Musical had Jinx Monsoon become the first-ever drag queen to play Mama Morton. Currently, Mama Morton is portrayed as the first Asian Mama Morton in Chicago’s 27-year run. 

A New Light for Inclusion and Diversity in the 21st Century:

Inclusion can be taught, learned, and experienced in various ways in the 21st century. It is essential to familiarize ourselves with the past so we can positively influence the future, and Maravilla is currently doing that. He is bringing a trailblazer from history to contemporary audiences in A Wonderful World. A Wonderful World is a captivating, delightful, and outstanding piece of art that takes you through Louie Armstrong’s life, told through his four wives. It is set to open on Broadway in the fall. While it is uplifting to know that numerous people like Maravilla exist, it is also refreshing to know everyone can push for even more diversity and inclusion. It all begins with you and your first efforts toward making a difference. As Maravilla has conveyed: 

“I hope people continue to push, have the conversation, and fight for diversity. Theater should be a reflection of society, which is the whole reason why theater was created. We are doing a disservice by not reflecting on the stage. We should be able to have little kids come in the show and see themselves on the stage, which, up until two months ago, if my little sister would watch a show, she wouldn’t see someone like her in the group. However, now, she can, and it’s stuff like that that I hope we keep pushing towards.” 

 

Meet Broadway’s Samantha Pauly

By Joshua Sanchez

How can being in a pre-broadway production bring you as far as performing on the Tony’s? It seems unreal, doesn’t it? Well that’s what happened to Samantha Pauly. Samantha Pauly played the role of K-Howard in the Pre-Broadway production of Six the Musical. She was the original K-Howard on Broadway, playing the role for three years. Although Covid-19 delayed her broadway debut, it never stopped her from following her dreams.

During Samantha’s career, she has performed in many different musicals, movies and plays. Right before Six, she got cast in the national tour of Bat Out of Hell, but soon canceled from getting the role of K-Howard. Samantha’s dreams were finally coming true with the news of Six making it on Broadway. Unfortunately, as soon as they were about to open in New York City, Six closed due to the pandemic. During the pandemic, most if not all grew bored after only a few days of staying home, which foreshadowed creative tasks and hobbies to work on during these hard times. For example, Samantha used social media to create YouTube videos everyday to not only entertain herself, but to relieve herself from stress due to the pandemic.

“I knew that I was going to be really bored and I wanted to do something to self-entertain myself and eventually the videos blew off sort of creating this schedule for my everyday life,” Samantha expressed. Not only did these energetic, positive videos keep her on her feet, but it brought a smile to the faces of millions.
As Broadway was opening up to a fresh start, so did all Six of the queens and the roles they played. After Covid, Six the Musical could finally start running in New York. Unfortunately, Samantha and the others had to relearn most, if not the entire show. This also allowed her to gain a deeper perspective of “All You Wanna Do.” This hit song contains many different emotions, love, sadness, and most of all shows how vulnerable Samantha is while singing the song. Coming back from Covid-19, Samantha explains the struggles she had while learning “All You Wanna Do” all over again due to the struggles from her time of reflection over her past experiences through the 18 months of quarantine.

“I had so much free time that I had the chance to get back into therapy regularly which was helpful in general.We’ve all been away for 18 months and we’ve all gone through so much, we were all different people. Because of that, the numbers (in Six the Musical) will be different as well as a whole new version of myself and the other queens,” Samantha stated. As shown by her amazing performance as K-Howard, she created one of the most iconic queens on Broadway, causing a deeper understanding of what the role meant to her.

Samantha Pauly never gave up. She stayed hopeful throughout the pandemic, not even knowing if Six would ever open again. Even if Samantha was stuck at home, she took her career to a whole new level by doing different activities on social media platforms to continue what she loved to do the most. Perform.

Overall, everyone’s career will be different. The path you take is the path you will go. There will be different opportunities that people can take. If the opportunity doesn’t come now, it will come later. Samantha never stopped following her dreams even in the pandemic, and so can you. If you stop following your dreams you are practically throwing away everything that you love. Take Samantha as inspiration, never give up.

Broadway can be a stepping stone to something bigger. Never give up.

Triple Threat: One Man’s Artistic Journey Through Creative Responsibility

By Maya Meschi

James T. Lane is a dancer, singer, and actor currently starring in the off-Broadway play Triple Threat.  The one-person performance takes the audience through James T Lane’s life. Lane has experienced all aspects of the performing arts, from performing in Tony-nominated shows to reaching an all-time low after an injury led to addiction. Lane’s life experiences brought him to the point he describes as creative responsibility. In other words, he encourages the importance of finding multiple ways to pursue bigger creative endeavors. He is an actual ‘Triple Threat.’

From an early age, Lane was passionate about theater. “Dance was my first language as a child. Through dance, I could express myself. I found my emotions were easy to translate through dance.” With the love of dance, Lane attended Girard Academic Music Program. One year, the school had to cancel its musical. Lane made lemons into lemonade by creating his first musical, A Killer Review. Lane hung flyers around the school to motivate students to participate in his production and taught his performers different acting methods/techniques. With drive and determination, Lane was accepted into the prestigious colleges of Carnegie Mellon and Penn. State. After years of performing in primary school, Lane found it difficult not being allowed to perform during his first year of college. Lane left college to tour in Fame, allowing him to travel around Europe. Lane’s eyes were opened as he explored new and exciting cultures. “It was terrific seeing buildings older than my country. You do not have that record or realization until you have gone.” Sadly, the experience was short-lived.  Lane injured his Achilles tendon, creating a downward spiral into addiction.

Being separated from the dance was incredibly hard for Lane. Lane said, “The arts have always been a mirror into my soul.” With the help of rehab and family, he eventually found his footing and embarked on a wondrous journey. Lane made his Broadway debut in the revival of A Chorus Line.  Continuing his Broadway success, Lane performed in The Scottsboro Boys. Under the guidance of Susan Stroman, he discovered the art of authentic storytelling, particularly bringing African American stories to life in the fight for freedom. While in London for The Scottsboro Boys, Lane met with artistic director David Lan. “He said to me, ‘What do you want to do? I am interested in you.’ And I was like, whoa! Nobody asked me that before. I had spent so much time in other people’s dreams and visions that it was thrilling and shocking. He later asked me, ‘Do you write,’ I was like, no, so he said, ‘If you were to write something, what would you write?’ Then I started writing and felt like that kid who performed mini-musicals on the playground.”

As his career advanced, Lane starred in another Kander and Ebb musical, Chicago. Lane has revisited Chicago multiple times in his career.  Pushing himself as a dancer, he joined King Kong, the Musical. Lane discovered the power of creative responsibility. He wanted to be more than a performer in a production. “It was the final time that I said, I am going to give 110% of me…So I decided in King Kong to have creative responsibility. It is like I need a bigger slice of the pie to feel good.”

Lane recalled his conversation with David Lan and realized each opportunity was a stepping stone to Triple Threat. Triple Threat was born through his artistic journey: taking risks, encountering pitfalls, and growing as an artist. Triple Threat brings awareness to the struggles people face with substance abuse. According to Lane, “Triple Threat took me on a path, for better or for worse, and I found out more of the spirit of who James was, and I fought some tough battles and came through on the other side. It is like an unshakable kind of self-esteem. I know now that I would not change what happened.”

Call My Agent

Our Impact Musical Theater camps aren’t just for children, they benefit their parents too. At our winter camp Senior agent Sam Samuelson of Stewart Talent shared some tips for all stage moms and dads. Samuelson, who began his career as an actor, has been a Chicago agent for 21 years.

  1. “Even if you don’t end up becoming an actor, I think the arts teaches you to be a good human being and how to work without ego.”
  2. “The benefit of having an agent is film and TV is that in those mediums you cannot self-submit. When it comes to theater, you can go direct, so we’re most helpful in the film and TV world. Last year there were 16 TV shows filmed in Chicago, plus seasonal work. In the mid-west there is more regional theater pushed together in a small area.”
  3. “Don’t worry about your son’s voice breaking. If they’re singing a lot, there is less of a dramatic change.”
  4. “With children it’s all about the balance of work and being a kid. If you have an agent you can discuss it with them. We’re always looking for well-rounded kids. The more well-rounded they are the easier it is for them to land parts. You don’t have to say yes to every audition.”
  5. “We try to keep kids in Chicago non-union for as long as possible because it keeps them more competitive. You can do three TV roles before you’d have to join SAG-AFTRA (Screen Actors Guild). You can stay non-union in the theater.”
  6. “Be wary of putting out your children’s performances on the web. For agents, talking to someone about your child is more powerful than showing them something.”

Star Turn

Like many actors Rob McClure may not know what his next big role will be but these days it doesn’t worry him.

“I’m lucky enough to have choices. I’m so used to scrambling, just saying yes to everything,” he said.  “I’m always thinking about tomorrow, but my representation thinks about next year.”

The two-time Tony nominee, who led the cast as Mrs. Doubtfire and has just finished an off-Broadway stint as Seymour in Little Shop of Horrors, stopped by to teach a masterclass in acting for our January Impact Musical Theater Camp.

“I know the value of an arts education because I when I was a kid, I didn’t realize people did this as a profession,” he said. “Whoever gave the grant for me to go to the Paper Mill Playhouse Conservatory in New Jersey, I owe them everything. I was doing Where’s Charlie in high school and was chosen by them as best actor. That got me a scholarship to Papermill where I also got a job in their box office. When the understudy for one of their shows dropped out, I was asked to step in. The play, I’m Not Rappaport, with Ben Vereen and Judd Hirsch, ended up transferring to Broadway with me in it. To think, I started out as the box office kid!”

McClure says that not coming from a family of theater people, he didn’t even see a community theater show until he was 15. He went straight from appearing in a high school production of Anything Goes, to being mesmerized by the horrors of Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.

“I felt I had to be next to the audience to feel that discovery,” he said. “I’m still trying to get people to get that moment. A lot of times I get so caught up in a story you can lose the why. It’s 100 per cent about manipulating the audience.”

McClure says he spent six or seven years unsuccessfully trying out in New York before getting his big break. His ‘aha’ moment came when he realized he’d been wasting his time emulating performers he admired.

“It was only when I auditioned for Avenue Q that I did something unique, used my own instrument,” he said. “We had to present a comedic song. Other people did songs with funny words, but they just weren’t funny. I had a copy of DeLovely, not a comic song, by Cole Porter with me and at the last second decided to perform it as if I were Ernie and Cookie Monster. It gave me my first principal lead, it was the moment I stopped being Anthony Warlow, an Australian musical theater star who was my hero. With Avenue Q I realized who and what I am.

“When I was at school my teachers said it’s about being yourself, but I thought ‘I’m playing a character.’ You have to put yourself through a singular lens. I’m always trying to get the character inside out through my own life experiences.”

One of the first real characters McClure took on was the role of Charlie Chaplin in the musical Chaplin in 2012.

“I was always athletic, and early on I got a reputation as a person who will say yes to anything,” he said. “Even if I don’t know how to do it, I will figure it out. It was the kind of thinking Charlie Chaplin had. He wasn’t born to do the things he did. If I’m cast to do something I can’t do it lights a fire under me to deliver, for example walking the tightrope like I did in Chaplin. It makes me feel that I have to. It’s the best way to learn; trial by fire, sink or swim.”

They say that timing is everything. After highly acclaimed performances in Honeymoon in Vegas and Something Rotten, taking on the lead in a new musical version of Mrs. Doubtfire seemed like a sure-fire hit.

“When Covid hit it was the first night of our previews,” said McClure. “We closed down on the third preview. We tried to reopen but the vaccine mandate made it impossible for families because children couldn’t go. Then there were new surges and variants. It was the worst timing possible.”

Although the show did re-open after the shutdown, it only lasted a month.

“I will always feel Mrs. Doubtfire has unfinished business,” he said. “I saw it land in the hearts of people who needed to see it, for those people who needed it in the moment. I knew what it had to offer.”

The 40-year-old star says the role he’d most like to play, when he’s a little older, is Ebeneezer Scrooge.

“He’s the greatest character I could take on. I love roles where you start out as one character and become another.,” he said. “When I read a role, I try to think about the impact on the audience members, they are the viewer. I try to find moments that will make me gasp.”

When not treading the boards, you might see McClure show up on the big or small screen. He’s just finished filming a role in the final season of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. He’s also committed to educating young actors.

“I try to tell children you should really think of Broadway as a stop on your journey, not a destination,” he said. “Some of my favorite memories are from places like the La Jolla Playhouse in San Diego or the Edinburgh Fringe. It shouldn’t be Broadway or bust; not tied to 40 square blocks. Let your dreams take you where they may.”

The Green Room: Erika Henningsen

A brand-new show based on the life of entrepreneur Joy Mangano will have its world premiere on December 7th. Opening at the New Brunswick Performing Arts Center in New Jersey, Joy the Musical will feature none other than Mean Girls actress Erika Henningsen in the title role. With a cast including several Broadway alums, this definitely looks like the show to watch.

The uplifting true story is about one woman’s triumphant climb from divorce to single motherhood and bankruptcy, to becoming the wildly successful dynamo that all started with the invention of the Miracle Mop. Movie lovers will recall that Jennifer Lawrence played the title role in 2015 earning her an Academy Award nomination and a Golden Globe. Could a Tony be in Erika’s future? Only time will tell.

Erika has a special place in the hearts of Academy of the Arts students. Last July she led a masterclass at our Impact Musical Theater camp and we wish her luck as she brings Joy to theatergoers this winter.

In real life Erika couldn’t be more different to Cady Heron, the character who earned her a Critics Circle nomination when she originated the role in Mean Girls: The Musical on Broadway. Rather than trying to destroy people like the most popular girl in school, Regina George, she loves to build them up by offering master classes around the country.

We asked her how she landed the role and why she loves to teach.

“When I was called back for Mean Girls, I was told they wanted to hear a pop song from Cady, not a song from the show,” she told the enthusiastic class in a Q and A session. “So I thought about what song a girl who was brought up in Africa with parents from the Sixties would pick. Someone sweet, intense and strong so I picked the Rolling Stones Ruby Tuesday and You Don’t Own Me.”

Erika explained that being chosen for a show is like being a puzzle piece.

“All of the Plastics were four inches taller than me, so I looked more vulnerable standing next to them,” she said.

However, today the trend is more like anyone can sing any role.

“Don’t feel bound to certain things because of what you look like,” she said. “There’s more out there for you.”

For Erika, teaching is a labor of love.

“It’s the thing I do in between being an actor and it’s just as much a part of my identity,” she said after class. “It helps me think on my feet and problem solve. It helps me stay alert.”

Erika was impressed not only by the talent in the classroom, but how quickly the students became supportive of one another despite the wide range of age and experience.

“At the end of the day, whether you’re in 12th Grade to college age or first grade to sixth, the basics still apply,” she said. “The incentives may be greater for 12th graders, but sixth graders generally show less fear and they can learn from each other. Everything has to come from joy.”

Erika brings a huge amount of positive energy to the room.

“It’s just about getting them up on their feet,” she explained. She believes the worst thing she could do is to stop a child who is off key or who loses their way in a song.

“If you put ideas in their head they’ll never come back,” she said. “If I only have each one for six minutes, I want to give the most I can out of that experience. If we harp on about what they’re doing wrong or lacking in, they will never build confidence to turn up in class. I always encourage them so they don’t quit before they’ve started.”