From the limelight to backstage

Matthew Masten ’09 began his career performing on the stage, but these days he can be found giving directions backstage or behind the camera.

By Oliver Fischer ’19

An executive producer working both on Broadway and in film, Matthew Masten ’09 recognized early on that while he loves acting, his true calling is producing shows. 

Matthew Masten ’09 during his early days in the theater.
Despite suffering from stage fright, Masten found success as an actor from a young age. Be-fore Elon, he spent much of his free time doing community theater productions. As a child, he worked for Matthews Playhouse in Matthews, North Carolina. “I got the theater bug then and I’ve had it ever since,” Masten says. He remembers auditioning for a production of “Annie” and telling the director that if he was cast as Daddy Warbucks, he would shave his head. “I got the part and shaved my head,” he says. “I wore a knit cap every day to high school.”

When Masten arrived at Elon, his musical theater work was no longer limited by the amount of free time he had. “I was living and breathing musical theater,” he says. Elon’s musical theatre program solidified his love for theater and provided him with the necessary environment to flourish. The classes he took allowed him to experience the process of putting together a show from scratch and prepared him for a career in production. 

But he didn’t just perform on stage. During his first year on campus, and as part of a global studies assignment, he launched Elon Cares, now an annual concert that aims to raise money for the Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS organization and increase awareness for AIDS among his peers. “That was the first time I really produced or directed anything,” Masten says. The success of that event made him realize he had potential for a career behind the scenes. “It’s what I do now and I love it even more than acting,” he adds.

Matthew Masten ’09 & British transsexual icon April Ashley
Masten is currently working with award-winning playwright Michael Wynne to create a play about British transsexual icon April Ashley. He is also working on a musical with a Grammy-nominated folk rock band. He has produced Broadway and off-Broadway shows including Bill Condon’s acclaimed revival of “Side Show,” “Of Mice and Men” starring James Franco and Chris O’Dowd, and Gore Vidal’s “The Best Man,” which earned him a Tony Award nomination in 2012. He also served as an executive producer for the 2018 film adaptation of Anton Che-khov’s classic “The Seagull,” directed by Michael Mayer and starring Annette Bening, Saoirse Ronan and Elisabeth Moss. 

Despite some commonalities, Masten says working in film is very different from working in theater. During a play, you can be in a rehearsal studio and run the show from beginning to end. In a film, you record short scenes that are later put together into a story by the director and editor. When a Broadway show closes, that usually marks the end of a play. But a movie can still be watched on Netflix, Amazon Prime or other streaming services. “The performances live on in that sense,” Masten says.

While being a producer is stressful, he loves producing shows because he gets to do a little bit of everything. “Casting, raising money, working with advertising, working with the choreogra-pher. I get to do it all,” he says. “The idea that I can help create something new that will live on as part of the theatrical canon is the number one thing to me that justifies all of the hard work.”