Logan Salas grew up in Douglassville, Pennsylvania as an unusual kid. He found himself isolated often, finding refuge in books. All throughout elementary, middle, and high school, Salas would read voraciously. A love of storytelling that would blossom into something else when he heard a community theater was doing the play Bang, Bang, You’re Dead by William Mastrosimone. Since then he has wanted to be a part of any and every story he could. No matter the size of the part, Salas is happy as long as the story makes an impact.
At UNCSA Salas has had the privilege to have been in a variety of parts. He was able to play Von Strack, a member of Emperor Joseph II court, in the memory play Amadeus by Peter Shaffer (dir. Quin Gordon); the Quartermaster, Regimental Secretary, and Farmer’s Son in Tony Kushner’s translation of Mother Courage and Her Children by Bertolt Brecht (dir. Carl Forsman); the troubled black sheep Rene in Octavio Solis’s magical realism play Lydia (dir. Quin Gordon), and Mason, the idiot with a heart of gold, in the coming of age story John Proctor Is The Villain by Kimberly Belflower (dir. Mya Brown).