Matisse Carmack
Jeannie Liautaud Maul
Actor - Singer - Dancer - Dialect Coach
Hey there!
Thanks for stopping by!
My name is Matisse Carmack, and I’m a Boston-based actor and recent graduate of the Sargent Conservatory of Theatre Arts at Webster University in St. Louis.
Click here to get to know me better!
Hot off the press!
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Hot off the press! -
Opera Today:
“…the engaging actor Matisse Carmack embodied the feckless troublemaker with endearingly lithe physicality and knowing declamation.”
Broadway World:
“She’s slight, quick, agile, a joy to watch as she speeds about on her magical errands. She delivers Shakespeare’s closing ‘apology’ to the audience quite masterfully.”
Pop Life STL:
“…Carmack is a kinetic force—quick, agile and mischievous. Her delivery of Puck’s final monologue is masterful.”
Ladue News:
“Matisse Carmack, another OTSL debut, shines in her non-singing role as the mischievous Puck.”
St. Louis Arts Scene:
“…Matisse Carmack invests the spoken role of Puck, Oberon’s fairy of all work, with a sense of gleeful chaos.”
Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, directed by Tim Albery and conducted by Leonard Slatkin.
It was an honor to play Puck, a dream role (pardon the pun), but this experience was made even sweeter by both crossing into the world of opera and working with as renowned a company as Opera Theatre of St. Louis and the artists it curated. With all my text being spoken to rhythm, this opera strengthened my musicality by tenfold and allowed me to expand my artistry across mediums.
Recent Happenings:
Lizzie the Musical, directed by Cade Sturgeon.
A completely and proudly student-accomplished production, the rock musical Lizzie the Musical was an absolute blast. I got to tap into both my Irish and Massachusetts roots and play Bridget Sullivan, the real-life maid of Lizzie Borden, a daughter accused murdering her father and stepmother in Fall River, MA, in 1892.
R&H’s Cinderella, directed by Dax Valdes.
It was such a joy being in the ensemble of this classic tale, and a great sixth and final conservatory show at Webster University. I also had the opportunity to learn the basics of puppeteering, playing the carriage-driving raccoon in its animal form.