Renata Taylor-Smith is a recent graduate of the University of Maryland Baltimore County, where she received a B.A. in Theatre Design and Production. Renata is a freelance lighting designer, programmer, and theater electrician. Her recent credits include Lipstick: A Queer Farce (Fells Point Corner Theatre, Lighting Designer), Slime (University of Maryland Baltimore County, Associate Lighting Designer), and Ride the Cyclone (Assistant Lighting Designer). She is currently the Lighting/Electrics Fellow at Berkeley Repertory Theatre as part of their Next Generation Fellowship Program.
"After graduating I knew I wanted to pursue a fellowship because I felt that I still had a lot of growing to do as a designer, and I thought that receiving mentorship from seasoned lighting designers and master electricians would be an invaluable learning experience. I spent my senior year applying to theater apprenticeship and fellowship programs all over the country and was very ecstatic to receive an offer from Berkeley Repertory Theatre. I relocated to the Bay Area in August and have spent the last few weeks working under the mentorship of Berkeley Rep's Lighting Supervisor Fred Geffken and assisting Lighting Designer Mextly Couzin on Mexodus, a live-looping hip hop musical. Through the fellowship I'll have the opportunity to be the assistant lighting designer for the theater’s mainstage shows and work with lighting designers from all over the country.
The training and learning I did at UMBC gave me a strong foundation for the work I am doing at Berkeley Rep. UMBC's theatre department was so important to my growth as an artist and as an individual. It was through UMBC that I discovered my interest in lighting design and had the opportunity to explore different areas of lighting. Taking Adam Mendelson's lighting design courses and assisting him on shows both inside and outside UMBC, working at the scene shop, and having the opportunity to design UMBC productions were all experiences that prepared me for working at a professional regional theatre and taught me to be confident in my voice and my abilities. I am forever grateful for the opportunity to work at Berkeley Repertory Theatre and I would not have been able to get here without the people I met and learning I did at UMBC."