Joanna Corey

Youth Theater Educator - Music & Drama at Muncie Civic Theatre

Joanna Corey is an experienced marketing and education professional currently serving as the Director of University Marketing and Promotion at Ball State University since February 2024. With a strong background in theater education, Joanna has been a Youth Theater Educator for Muncie Civic Theatre since February 2016. Prior roles include Account Strategist at Ball State University and various marketing positions at Woof Boom Radio, including Marketing Consultant and Traffic Director. Joanna's career in broadcasting began at Backyard Broadcasting, where responsibilities included Corporate Traffic Director and Traffic Manager. Joanna holds a Bachelor of Arts in Telecommunications Sales from Ball State University and a Master of Science in Human Resource Management from Thomas Edison State University.

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Muncie, United States

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Muncie Civic Theatre

Muncie Civic Theatre enriches our whole community through theatre performance, education, and outreach. While driving along Main Street in downtown Muncie, Indiana, it is hard to miss Muncie Civic Theatre’s marquee and historic red brick building. The bright lights invite all who pass to come be a part of the magic of live theatre. This is the heart of Muncie Civic. Founded in 1931 and housed since 1965 in the Boyce Block building, Muncie Civic is one of the oldest civic theatres in the state and is located in one of the oldest theaters in the country. Built in 1880, the commercial, office, and residential building, known to locals as the Boyce Block, has served a number of purposes over the years. The Italianate building was once described as the finest, handsomest, and most conveniently arranged commercial building in Muncie. It was the site of the negotiations and signing of the contract for the Ball Brothers to move their glass-making facilities from upstate New York to Muncie during the gas boom in the late nineteenth century. In the early twentieth century, the Block’s two westernmost bays were transformed into an elaborate Vaudeville house with an iconic proscenium arch. The Star Theatre, which operated until the late 1920s, hosted nationally known acts such as W.C. Fields, the Marx brothers, Red Skelton, and many others. In 1965, the building took on a new life and a new mission when the Muncie Civic Theatre Association, originally created in 1931 by William H. Ball, took over the space and began using it not only to entertain, but also to involve community members in live theatre and to enrich their lives. In the fifty years since, generations of families have shared the stage together, building family ties and creating lifelong memories.


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