Skip Mercier


G.W. Mercier is an American costume, puppet, and set designer. He has designed for over 370 productions of theater, musical theater, opera, dance, film, and television. He is best known for his set and costume designs for Juan Darien: A Carnival Mass in which he received a Tony Award Nomination for Scenery and two Drama Desk Nominations for Scenic Design and Costume Designin 1997. He is a member of the faculty at the University of Washington School of Drama, where he teaches scenic design and costume design to both graduate students and undergraduates.

Life

In 1980, Mercier graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of California Berkeley with a BA in Dramatic Art and in 1983 received his MFA at the Yale School of Drama where he was named the Oenslager Scholar.
Starting in 1983, he became a Resident Designer for the O'Neill National Playwrights Conference until 2004 and has been the O'Neill National Theater Institute's design instructor for over 20 years. He is also a Resident Designer for the Vineyard Theater in New York City and Geva Theatre Center in Rochester. He currently works at the University of Washington School of Drama in Seattle as a senior design lecturer.
At the Vineyard Theater, he has received three Drama Desk Nominations for Bed and Sofa by Polly Pen and Laurence Klavan, Dream True by Tina Landau and Ricky Ian Gordon, and Head of Passes by Tarell McCraney. He also received the AUDELCO award for Outstanding Set Design and was regionally honored with the "Bay Area Critics Award" at Berkeley Repertory Theater for Head of Passes.
His first Broadway production was Juan Darien: A Carnival Mass by Julie Taymor and Elliot Goldenthalat at the Vivian Beaumont where he received a Tony Award Nomination for Scenery and two additional Drama Desk Nominations for Scenic Design and Costume Design.
He has also designed sets for Old Hats by Bill Irwin and David Shiner, directed by Tina Landau, where he was nominated for the 2013 Henry Hewes Design Award. He has been nominated for the Henry Awards for Outstanding Scenic Award of Denver Theater Center's Measure for Measure directed by Kent Thompson in 2006, awarded the "Bay Area Critics Award" for Best Set Design of William Saroyan's The Time of Your Life directed by Tina Landau, and has also received a 2001 Jefferson Award Nomination for Best Set Design of Steppenwolf Theatre Company's Ballad of Little Jo directed by Tina Landau
He was the production designer for feature films Southie directed by John Shea and Fool's Fire directed by Julie Taymor, art director of the Amazon children's short Didi Lightful, and assistant art director for the film Big Blonde directed by Kirk Browning.
He lives in both Seattle, Washington and Rowayton, Connecticut with his family while continuing to create, collaborate, and educate others about his work as a theatrical designer.

Works (selected)