
Jack Welch is the managing director and chief editor of Baker’s Plays, the country’s third largest publisher of plays. Previously, he was the associate manager at North Shore Music Theatre. He is one of the founders of the Boston Resident Theatre Association, and is also a founding member of American Premiere Stage and StageSource. He has been a panelist for the Massachusetts Council on the Arts and Humanities, and served as chair of the Professional Theatre Division of the New England Theatre Conference. Welch has written two musicals–Sheboppin’, which played at Boston’s Wilbur Theatre, and Aaron Slick–and is currently at work on a third, 100% Lucille.
You have recently been named the recipient of StageSource’s Theatre Hero Award. What does the award signify?
My assumption is that there are a number of people who try to get things done, who act as glue for the theater community–the quiet people. A mixture of actors, producers, and theater managers made nominations [of individuals devoted to serving the region’s theater community]. I nominated a whole bunch of people, myself. I think they pulled my name out of a hat.
You’re too modest. In what ways have you been involved in the Boston-area theater scene over the years?
Helping to initiate StageSource [an alliance of theater artists and producers promoting professional non-profit theater in New England] is a highlight. Prior to that, I was chairman of New England Theatre Conference. They held non-equity auditions; I initiated their equity auditions, which generated the need for StageSource and promoted professional growth in the theater community.
Who are your theater heroes?
That’s a good question. At this point in time, Kate Snodgrass [artistic director of Boston Playwrights’ Theatre]. I think what she’s done with the Boston Theatre Marathon is fantastic.
How did you become involved in the world of publishing plays and selling scripts to the public?
It was a high school kind of thing where I got selected as best actor in a state competition. When you’re “different” in a small town in New Hampshire, it makes you analyze what people see in you. I decided to get into theater. I went to Emerson College, where I majored in theater and speech. From Emerson, I floated a bit, and worked as a clerk for a few years. After I auditioned for a small non-equity company, Theatre-by-the-Sea, they jobbed me in as an actor. At the same time, North Shore Music Theatre was looking for an assistant, and that happened as well. At North Shore I did everything for eight years; I was immersed in theater. I worked at the concession stand, I was the box office manager, the house manager–it was the greatest learning experience I ever had. When the editorial position came up at Baker’s Plays, I was hired. When the managing director retired, corporate headquarters asked if I would take the position. I said I would if I could stay on as editor because I like reading scripts.