Inclusive casting brings all abilities on stage for âPlay Therapyâ
PJ Kohnert, 28, and Jack Kohut, 17, donât go to CU 51´ŤĂ˝, and they arenât theaterĚýstudents, who usually take center-stage in campus productions. But Kohnert and Kohut will be playing key parts in this weekâs premiere of âPlay Therapy,â a new play running from Nov. 7â10.
Kohnert has Down syndrome and Kohut experiences intellectual challenges. Theyâre also both actors in CenterStageâs Tapestry Theatreâan all-abilities theaterĚýcompany that casts actors with special needs in lead roles.
Ěý If you go
Who: Open to the public
When: Nov. 7â10
Where:Ěý
Cost:ĚýFree
Their unique abilities make them perfect fits for their parts in âPlay Therapy.â The story follows a non-verbal child named Evyn who finds new meaning and ways of communicating through play therapyâa method of therapy that incorporates structured play. Kohut will play Evyn while Kohnert will play a waiter named Sam.
Oliver Gerland, an associate professor of theater,Ěýstarted writing the play a year ago. He didnât initially have specific actors in mind, but he already knew the impact of inclusive casting.
âIâve found that creating theater with people whose minds work differently than typical and who come into the room with a different set of talents and qualities is extremely exciting,â he said.
Itâs not hard to find examples of typically abled actors playing characters with disabilities. Gerland points to Tom Hanksâ Oscar-winning role in âForrest Gump.â
While these portrayals can be critical and commercial successes, Gerland thinks they miss certain perspectives and lack authenticity. Inclusive casting aims for more balanced casting of underrepresented groups, including actors with disabilities, actors of color and actors of all sexualities and gender identities.
âWhen youâre making theater, you make it with the people who are in the room and with everything that they bring,â said Gerland. âYou donât really think about what they donât have, you build the story around what the person is.â

PJ Kohnert (vest) rehearses with Play Therapy castmates (Photo credits: Patrick Wine/CU 51´ŤĂ˝)
Kohnert is a natural. He started acting with CenterStageâs Tapestry Theatre five years ago at the recommendation of his music therapist and his resume already includes roles in âBye Bye Birdie,â âItâs a Wonderful Lifeâ and âFiddler on the Roof.â He joked about his dadâs influence on his on-stage career.
âMy dad told me I belong there,â Kohnert said. âBecause I can be such a ham.â
Gerland has worked with Kohnert and others with different ability levels before. Heâs taught acting classes for CenterStage's Tapestry Theatre and, for more than 10 years, disability studies classes at CU 51´ŤĂ˝. His wife is a special education attorney and his daughter, Nora, was born with intellectual disabilities.
Throughout his career, Gerland has seen how gratifying and fun theaterĚýcan be when people with disabilities are included and respected.
âPlay Therapyâ rehearsals have featured a lot of name games and other exercises to help all the actors get to know each other.
âItâs different, because of the new people in the group,â Kohnert said of his new cast. âThis group here at CU is fantastic, itâs amazing.â
Heâs also been impressed with âPlay Therapyâ director Cecilia Pang, an associate professor of theater.
âSheâs the most honorable director Iâve ever worked with,â said Kohnert. âHer personality is amazing.â
Well before the playâs debut, Kohnert and Kohut already left an impression on their CU 51´ŤĂ˝ castmates. If they werenât already, Gerland says his students are now believers in the inclusive casting approach.
âThe students love this work. They think itâs so important and theyâre very excited by it,â said Gerland. âIâm so delighted to see the lights go on in their eyes as they understand this as a possibility and a practice.â
Gerland is grateful for the existing work of CenterStageâs Tapestry Theatre and other local groups to get people with disabilities onto the stage. He hopes âPlay Therapyâ will help bring the conversation to CU 51´ŤĂ˝ and beyond.
âThe more that we can see people with disabilities on stage, the more that it becomes normalized and less stigmatized,â said Gerland. âIt is a way of demonstrating the wonderful variation and variety that is being human.â
Ěý