ti k it o s Av Juan Person understudy William Gilinsky has an operatic voice, a back- stage role and a hand in finance. SUZANNE CHESSLER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS Wir i l l i a m Gilinsky's parents are follow- ing in his footsteps. Seventeen years ago, he decided to drop out of his teaching career and test his talents in musical theater. Years later, his parents retired to Florida and began leading groups of line dancers. "At the end of their first session, everybody clapped for them, and they told me they understood why I loved my profession and the satisfaction it gives to other people," said Mr. Gilinsky, 43, who is an assistant stage manager and under- study for "Juan Peron" in Evita, which will be at the Fisher Theatre through Oct. 3. "The instantaneous grati- fication that performers get through applause at the end of a show makes the experience complete." Mr. Gilinsky's current responsibilities involve checking props, carpentry and electrical equipment to make sure that all the behind-the-scenes elements are operating at full capaci- ty. He also must remain ready to take on a major role should the regular actor become incapacitated. "This is my 12th year working in various produc- tions of Evita," said Mr. Gilinsky, who also has taken time to be in West Side Story, 42nd Street and other plays. "I have been a performer, stage manager and musician. "The things I like most about Evita are the music and historical aspects, which are loosely based on the life of Eva Peron. The show awakens a lot of sens- es that most musicals don't. It doesn't fall into comedy, and it doesn't fall into tragedy; it has both." Although he has been in the main casts and chorus- es of other Evita companies, this year-long tour has brought him face-to-face with the audience only once. "We were in New Haven, and there was a blizzard," he recalled. "The actor who is playing Peron had gone to pick up his daughter in New York and got caught in traffic. A lot of other peo- ple were missing, too. "He walked in the door about two minutes before we were ready to go on so he sat in the audience and watched me do the role. Since then, he's never gone anywhere when there were severe storm warnings." Because Mr. Gilinsky has been in so many versions of Evita, he has found that each new production can be a bit confusing at the start. William Gilinsky: Twelve years with "Evita." "The first couple of weeks involve trying to put it together and unlearn the idiosyncrasies picked up over the years," he said. "But it's good to see differ- ent approaches." His enjoyment of helping others learn about classical music and musical theater prevented him from mak- ing a clean break from edu- cational jobs at the time he began pursuing stage work. "I was teaching voice at the University of Kansas when I began singing with Kansas City Lyric Opera Company," said Mr. Gilinsky, who went on to perform with other opera groups around the country while retaining his educa- tor's post. As theater became his full-time profession, the for- mer Omaha resident moved to New York, where he returns on days off from tour engagements to audi- tion for upcoming shows. Those visits back to his now-home city allow him to be very active with the Actors Federal Credit Union, which has been a principal interest during the past 10 years. Part of the five-person board of directors, he also has been a loan officer for the organi- zation that serves 14,000 members. "The credit union is one of my biggest causes," he said. "We loan money to actors who normally couldn't get it from banks because of their working only months at a time and then experiencing unem- ployment." This visit to Michigan brings back memories of earlier trips including time spent performing in an Evita chorus at the Birmingham Theatre and working in Grand Rapids, where he had lunch with a former grilfriend and her daughter. Regardless of where he travels, he uses some of his free hours entertaining in the Jewish community. "I call myself a closet philanthropist," he joked. "I usually go to the local syna- gogues and ask if there are MULTI-PURPOSE page 89