MHC students and â84 alum âKeep Marchingâ with âSuffsâ
Íűșì±ŹÁÏ students Molly DeLuca â26, Marley Hollen â28 and Abigail Ding â29 got to shadow stage managers for the touring production of the musical âSuffs,â which features alum Tami Dahbura â84.
In January, Íűșì±ŹÁÏ students Molly DeLuca â26, Marley Hollen â28 and Abigail Ding â29 got the opportunity to shadow stage managers on the national tour of the musical âSuffs,â working alongside cast member and Mount Holyoke alum Tami Dahbura â84. âSuffs,â in which Dahbura plays Mollie Hay, centers around the life and times of the leaders of the American womenâs suffrage movement.
The three students, all of whom are film, media and theater majors and stage managers for Mount Holyokeâs upcoming production of â,â were invited by Dahbura to shadow on the show. They each followed a different member of the stage managing team during the tourâs stop in Hartford, Connecticut.
DeLuca, who is a double major in classics, had worked with smaller regional productions in the past but nothing to the scale of a national tour. Her experience in working with Mount Holyokeâs own smaller theater department influenced her experience with the show.
âEspecially with our program, since weâre a smaller program, we donât have a lot of the more high-tech elements that they use on a tour and in regional theaters in general, so being able to see that put into practice was really, really exciting,â she said. âEveryone really seemed like they were happy that we were there to shadow and that they were genuinely invested in us learning things there, which was a great experience.â
Ding found the touring aspect of the Hartford shows especially interesting, as a national tour brings its own intricacies and challenges to the world of theater.
âI didnât know very much about touring productions in particular, and I feel like this experience definitely gave me a lot of insight into that very particular world in the theater industry,â she said. âIt was really cool to get to ask questions and learn about the technical things going on but also the very practical things â the day-to-day life experiences of someone working on a tour.â
Hollen, who is also an English major, echoed Ding and DeLucaâs sentiments about the scale of the production. She also emphasized the importance of getting to experience working on a professional show in such a hands-on, immersive way.
âIâve only ever really worked in pretty small theaters, and seeing all the different roles people were playing in the production, and even just how much space they had backstage for set pieces and props, was really cool because I hadnât seen it before firsthand,â she said.
Dahbura, a professional actress who has been on the âSuffsâ team since July 2025, graduated from Mount Holyoke after majoring in theater and Latin American literature. She discussed the impact her time at the College had on her life and how a liberal arts education prepared her for opportunities like working on âSuffs.â
âAnything in an artistâs life that you can learn about to enrich your own performance â learning critical thinking, learning analysis, any of those other disciplines â definitely contributes to your work as an actor and to understanding, analyzing and creating a character,â she said.
Dahbura said that she admires the strength of the suffragists and appreciates the work they committed their lives to. In a political climate such as todayâs, she understands why the show has had such a positive response from modern audiences.
âThese are things about womenâs history that people donât know. I didnât know this stuff until I started doing the show,â she said. âI think they show us that everything is circular â that things just keep coming back around. With womenâs rights being threatened once again, the final song we sing is âKeep Marchingâ â youâve gotta just keep going.â