Sarah G. Harris

Sarah G. Harris (she/her) is a stage manager, producer, and tech enthusiast with eleven years of professional experience stage managing in New York City and around the country. She has worked on Broadway, Off-Broadway, national tours, regional theatre, immersive experiences, corporate events, award shows, developmental workshops, and staged readings for new musicals and plays.

Sarah is the Stage Manager of the hit original Broadway musical, Maybe Happy Ending, which won six Tony Awards including Best Musical, Best Original Score, Best Book of a Musical, Best Direction of a Musical, Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical, and Best Scenic Design of a Musical. Sarah is proud to be a part of the Maybe Happy Ending team since the beginning of its US journey with two-time Tony Award winning director, Michael Arden, and longtime friend, collaborator, and Production Stage Manager, Justin Scribner.

Her previous credits as a Broadway Stage Manager include The Heart of Rock & Roll, the Tony Award winning revival of Parade (starring Ben Platt and Micaela Diamond, directed by Michael Arden), and A Christmas Carol (starring Jefferson Mays, directed by Michael Arden). She was also a Sub Stage Manager for The Wiz, POTUS, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, Come From Away, Once On This Island, and two national tours of Hamilton. Sarah also served as an Assistant Stage Manager for the Tony Award winning productions of Come From Away and Once On This Island.

Between shows, Sarah works on special events such as Skittles: The Broadway Musical, Target’s Immersive Holiday Spectacular, Goalkeepers with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, The Webby Awards, and Paramount’s Upfront.

Sarah is an active member of Actors’ Equity Association, Open Stage Project, and the Broadway Green Alliance. She is grateful to have this opportunity to teach and mentor the graduate students of Columbia University’s MFA Stage Management program.

News

The Heart of Rock and Roll, a new musical coming to Broadway in March, features the stage management expertise of two Columbia University faculty members.