What people are saying.

  • RUBY ARTS FUND AWARDEE

    Nigel Semaj has been awarded a Ruby Arts Fund Award To support An Enemy To the People, a new tesearch-driven adaptation of Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People, integrating physical theatre and public health research data to explore democracy, civic responsibility, and social justice.

    Now in its 12th year, the Rubys Artist Grant program will provide a total of $255,000 in direct funding to 15 artists in Baltimore city and county who are working on innovative projects in literary, media, performing, and visual arts. Plus, one previous Rubys awardee (or “alumni artist”) has been awarded a $25,000 grant for a new project, and two artists will receive material grants.

    According to the Foundation’s press release, “This year’s recipients exemplify the program’s values of experimentation, risk taking, and creative innovation. Selected projects range from explorations of identity, sustainability, personal resilience, and intergenerational perspectives to public archives, pirate radio and public health.”

  • THE BAD ORACLE REVIEW OF VOYAGES CHAPTER SEVEN

    I could tell, in experiencing Voyages: Chapter 7: Submerged! In the Company of Fish on Thursday evening (one night, only, unfortunately, sorry, pals), a collaboration between the National Aquarium and Submersive Productions, that I was being nudged to ponder some sort of artistic gate-crash into the Realm of Science. But “art” and “science” as human impulses are more similar than they are disparate. Both are rooted in the urge to observe, to recreate inner and outer worlds in an attempt to create meaning, to control our unrelenting fear, and the very real danger, of terribly confusing unknowns. As I walked through an aquarium peppered with people cosplaying the very creatures swimming around us, I was more taken with the metawork, the emphasis on the artificiality of zoos, and the terrifying collective awareness that everyone (and everything) around you is totally consumed with the minutiae of billons of individual lives just as intense as your own. Also, I like puns.

  • SNF AGORA INAUGURAL ARTIST IN RESIDENCE

    The Stavros Niarchos Foundation Agora Institute at Johns Hopkins University welcomes Nigel Semaj as the inaugural Artist in Residence at the SNF Agora Institute. In this role, they will explore how performance and embodiment can create space for civic dialogue, collective memory, and political imagination, bringing creative practice into the heart of democratic inquiry. Their work complements the institute’s mission to expand the forms and methods through which civic engagement can take shape.ere

  • THE BAD ORACLE REVIEW of SALTY

    But for me, it is the otherworldly, potent performance of Nigel Semaj that’s the take away, and when I tell you it is astonishingly good, you will believe me. Semaj plays a fox that drips, swishes, and oozes all over. If Bowie and Silver are this piece’s beating heart, the fox is the metaphysical one, the wild, brutal and untamed truth that nature may empathize at times, but she doesn’t have to care, and she is more than justified in her anger at us. Semaj pulls off a level of connection with the audience that made me hold my breath; it’s like they literally read our minds. Their command of the space is unparalleled, and their ultimate moment made me gasp out loud, it is that singular. I have seen a lot of theater, but I can’t think offhand of a performance that got me like this one, Semaj is almost spooky — delicious, specific, cruel, and knowing.

  • THE BAD ORACLE REVIEW OF SALTY

    "If I’m making this seem kinda dark, well it is, but it’s my favorite kind: darkly goofy. Penguins are hella awkward on land (once they’re in the water, they make way more sense) and the actors have their movement vocabulary (thanks to Movement Director Nigel Semaj and Costume Designer Liz Dunlap) down to an artform, with hilarious results."

  • DC ARTS REVIEW OF SLIME

    "If you’re somehow sitting in the audience without a speck of ongoing guilt about the state of our environment, you’re probably a cardboard seat-filler. But if not, you’ll certainly be affected by the profound nature metaphors and the flow of ecology commentary in this piece. Thanks to the laid-back script by U.K. Playwright Bryony Lavery and the skilled touch of Director Nigel Semaj, the message is not an overwhelming one. The young performers and the audience both seem to take relief in the fluffier moments that add an air of lightness to the thick undercurrent of Slime."

  • BALTIMORE THEATER ARTS REVIEW OF SALTY

    "Outside of all this business, and acting as a sort of fulcrum, is Nigel Semaj in the role of Fox. Fox is... a fox, neither bird nor human. Semaj is the only member of the ensemble who plays just the one role, and nearly all of their scenes are solo. These monologues, punctuating the narrative arc of the play from time to time, consist of solitary longings and murderous confessions from a character who refuses to be shut out of the family photo album. Semaj's dangerous loner vibe is even sweet at times, singling out one audience member for friendship, and others for playing with Fauna's beach ball, just before Fox deflates it in spite."

  • NYC THEATER REVIEW OF BLOODSHOT

    "See it if: you're interested in "Staged horror". Do not see it if: you're not into sci fi or speculative fiction. i very much enjoyed this ambitious show. rough around the edges, but that roughness only enhances the dystopian noir vibes. actors are enchanting with wonderful stage presence. i found the moments of horror to be very effective. live band on stage was RAD af. some very clever staging. see and have fun!"

  • STUDENT REVEIW IN PA NEWSPAPER

    "THIS WAS A COURSE ENVIRONMENT THAT I HAD NOT EXPERIENCED BEFORE AS WORKING WITH THE PROFESSOR, NIGEL, FELT MORE LIKE WORKING WITH A MENTOR AND CREATIVE DIRECTOR FOR A PRODUCTION THAN A PROFESSOR FOR A CLASS.”"