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GTG Announces the Cast for Shaw's Caesar and Cleopatra

Gingold Theatrical Group
Announces the Cast for the Mainstage Production of
Shaw's Caesar and Cleopatra
Adapted & Directed by David Staller

Brenda Braxton, Rajesh Bose, Robert Cuccioli, Dan Domingues, Claybourne Elder, Jonathan Hadley, and Teresa Avia Lim
Will Star in This New Adaptation of Shaw’s Beloved Comedy

Limited Off-Broadway Engagement Begins Tuesday September 3rd at Theatre Row

Opening Night Set for Sunday September 24th

Tickets on Sale August 1st!



Gingold Theatrical Group (David Staller, Artistic Director) is proud to announce the cast for a rare revival of Shaw’s beloved almost historical comedy Caesar and Cleopatra, which will begin a limited Off-Broadway engagement on Tuesday September 3rd at Theatre Row (410 West 42nd Street, between 9th and 10th Avenues) and continue through October 12th only. Opening Night is set for Sunday September 24th.

Artistic Director David Staller directs a cast that will feature Brenda Braxton (Broadway: Chicago, Smokey Joe's Café - Tony Award nomination, Jelly's Last Jam, Cats, Legs Diamond) as Ftatateeta, Rajesh Bose (Henry VI, The Seagull – NAATCO, Pygmalion - Bedlam) as Pothinus, Robert Cuccioli (Broadway: Jekyll & Hyde - Tony Award nomination, Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark, Les Miserables) as Caesar, Dan Domingues (Wild Goose Dreams - Public Theater; The Undertaking - The Civilians; To The Bone - Cherry Lane; The Jammer, The Cherry Orchard - Atlantic Theater) as Apolldorus, Claybourne Elder (Broadway - Torch Song, Sunday in the Park with George, Bonnie & Clyde; Benny & Joon - Paper Mill; Allegro – CSC; One Arm- New Group;Giant, Road Show - Public Theater) as Rufio, Jonathan Hadley (Broadway: Jersey Boys; Finian's Rainbow - Irish Rep; A Class Act – MTC; The Bodyguard The Musical, Into the Woods - National Tours; Widowers' Houses – GTG/TACT, Rothschild & Sons - York Theatre) as Britannus, and Teresa Avia Lim (Junk - Lincoln Center Theater; The Moors - Playwrights Realm; The Taming of the Shrew - Public Theater/Delacorte, Awake and Sing! - NAATCO) as Cleopatra. The design team will include Brian Prather, scenic design; Tracy Christensen, costumes; Jamie Roderick, lighting; and Frederick Kennedy, sound.

One of Shaw’s most famous and least known plays, this remarkable comedy of epic proportions hasn’t been given a full NYC production in over 40 years! As an early attempt to craft a theatrical relationship that evolved into the Eliza/Higgins partnership of Shaw’sPygmalion, this highly entertaining play from 1898 boldly addresses women’s rights, sexual roles, empowering the disenfranchised, having the courage to define the self in the face of social and societal rigid expectations, being an active and contributive member of the community, and even the dangers of Imperialist Colonization. Shaw reminds us that we’re all immigrants seeking to make our way in the world!

Inspired by the artistry and activism of George Bernard Shaw, the Gingold Theatrical Group creates theatre and theatre-related programs that promote Shaw’s humanitarian ideals including universal human rights, the freedom of thought and speech, and the equality of all living beings. Programs include full Off-Broadway productions as part of the Shaw New York annual festival, the Project Shaw monthly reading series, outreach and education programs, as well as the cultivation of new plays through GTG’s Speakers’ Corner writers’ group. All of GTG’s programming is designed to inspire lively discussion and peaceful activism with issues related to human rights, the freedom of speech, and individual liberty. This was the purpose behind all of Shaw’s work and why GTG chose him as the guide toward helping create a more tolerant and inclusive world through the exploration of the Arts.

Founded in 2006 by David Staller, GTG has carved a permanent niche for the work of George Bernard Shaw within the social and cultural life of New York City, and, through the Project Shaw reading series made history in 2009 as the first company ever to present performances of every one of Shaw's 65 plays (including full-length works, one-acts and sketches). GTG brings together performers, critics, students, academics and the general public with the opportunity to explore and perform Shaw’s work and to create new work based on the values that Shaw championed. Through performances, symposiums, educational programs, new play development, and outreach, GTG encourages all people to rejoice in the possibilities of the future.

Gingold Theatrical Group's Project Shaw made history in 2009 as the first company ever to present performances of every one of Shaw's 65 plays (including full-length works, one-acts and sketches). Since 2013, they also present works by writers who share Shaw’s activist socio-political views embracing human rights and free speech, including work by Chekhov, Ibsen, Elizabeth Robins, Rachel Crothers, Pinero, Wilde, Barrie, and Harley Granville-Barker. The 14th season of Project Shaw will continue with continue with Scintillating Shaw Symposium with an international panel on September 23, Shaw’s Arms and the Manon October 28th, followed by The Play’s The Thing by Ferenc Molnar on November 18th, ending the season with I’ll Leave It To You by Noel Coward on December 16th.[*] All the plays in this series will be presented in a concert-reading format at the Leonard Nimoy Thalia Theater at Symphony Space, 2537 Broadway at 95th Street. Tickets are $35 and are available by phone 212/864-5400 or online at symphonyspace.org. Special reserved VIP seating available for $50 by contacting the Gingold office 212/355-7823 or email info@gingoldgroup.org. Symphony Space’s Leonard Nimoy Thalia Theatre space is completely accessible.

Last season’s Off-Broadway engagement of Shaw’s Heartbreak House caused Terry Teachout in the The Wall Street Journal to declare, “Mr. Staller has taken on Heartbreak House, one of Shaw’s most challenging plays, with altogether extraordinary results. Every gesture lands with the utmost potency, and the climactic convulsion that is the play’s final scene sweeps away the bubbly comedy and leaves you, as Shaw intended, in shock. Mr. Staller has given us a uniquely satisfying production of this great but hard-to-stage play. This is one of the finest Shaw stagings of the past decade. Do not miss it.” In his year end recap, Mr. Teachout named Heartbreak House Best Classical Production of the year: “David Staller’s conceptual staging of George Bernard Shaw’s Heartbreak House, produced off Broadway by the Gingold Theatrical Group, was the best thing Mr. Staller has given us to date—which is saying something.”

Performances for Caesar & Cleopatra will be Tuesday through Thursday evenings at 7:30pm, Friday & Saturday evenings at 8pm, and matinees Saturday 2pm & Sunday at 3pm, with one special 2pm matinee Wednesday October 9th. All performances will take place at Theater Row (410 West 42nd Street between 9th and Dyer Avenues). The performance will run 2 hours 30 minutes, including intermission.

Tickets for Caesar & Cleopatra, which will go on sale August 1st, will be $69 (including theater restoration fee) and can be purchased online at Telecharge.com, by phone at 212-239-6200 or in person at the Theatre Row Box Office.

For more information about Caesar & Cleopatra or any of the programs at Gingold Theatrical Group, call 212/355-7823, email info@gingoldgroup.org, or visit www.gingoldgroup.org online.

[*] All titles are subject to change.


Monday 07.22.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

Fringe Deaths by Rider McDowell Will Begin Performances June 28th at St. Luke's Theatre

Fringe Deaths,
The New Play with Music,
Written & Directed by
Playwright/Journalist Rider McDowell,
Will Begin an Open-Ended Off-Broadway Engagement
Friday June 28th
at St. Luke's Theatre
 
Starring Tiffan Borelli as Barbara Payton, Alec Hynes as Alfalfa, Neil Vincent Smith as George Reeves, and Scott Zimmerman as Jack Ruby, with Jerry Shulman, Jenny Strassburg, Sean-Michael Wilkinson, and Sandy York
 
Opening Night Is Set for July 26th

Tickets On Sale Now!

McDowell Wiser Company today announced that Fringe Deaths, the new ‘noir’ play with music chronicling the tragic deaths of four American celebrities written and directed by playwright/journalist Rider McDowell, will begin an open-ended Off-Broadway engagement starting Friday June 28th at St. Luke's Theatre (308 West 46th Street, between 8th and 9th Avenues in the heart of the Broadway Theatre District). Opening Night is set for Friday July 26th. The performance will run 90 minutes.

Fringe Deaths chronicles the last tragic hours in the lives of four American celebrities: George ‘Superman’ Reeves, Jack Ruby, Barbara Payton, and Carl ‘Alfalfa’ Switzer. Fringe Deaths will star Tiffan Borelli as Payton, Alec Hynes as Switzer, Neil Vincent Smithas Reeves, and Scott Zimmerman as Ruby, with Jerry Shulman, Jenny Strassburg, Sean-Michael Wilkinson, and Sandy York.

This fact-based script written by a former investigative reporter reveals the startling circumstances behind the deaths of TV icons George Reeves and Carl Switzer, starlet Barbara Payton, and political assassin Jack Ruby. Suicide? Murder? Misadventure? Learn the grim poignant secrets of these fringe deaths. For the first time, Fringe Deaths reveals the actual last moments, what really happened, to these tragic personalities. McDowell’s tireless investigation of each one’s untimely end, forms the back drop of Off-Broadway’s strangest but most compelling play in decades.  Did Reeves, hero to millions of kids, kill himself or was he murdered? Who killed beloved “Little Rascals” star Carl Switzer and why? What caused beautiful starlet Barbara Payton’s slide towards a seedy and early death?

Rider McDowell is the author of four plays and director of several others. He is a former investigative reporter and bestselling novelist (Wimbledon, The Mercy Man, Forest Hills). As a journalist, he has been an investigative reporter for Premiere Magazine, California Magazine, Paris Match, Der Spiegel, Express Newspapers UK, and The San Francisco Chronicle. He was the recipient of a screenwriting grant from the National Endowment for Arts. Fringe Deaths marks his Off-Broadway debut. McDowell's childhood fascination with each of the principal characters in Fringe Deaths, an interest that extends to today, motivated him to use his investigative reporting skills to investigate how each really died. And the answers are stunning and revealed for the first time in Fringe Deaths.  McDowell lives in northern California with his wife and three sons.

Fringe Deaths will feature scenic design by Ariel Leigh Cohen, costume design by Joe Kassner, lighting design by Maarten Cornelis, and sound design by Bob Franco, with musical direction by William Linster.

Performances will be Friday evenings at 8pm, Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2pm, and Monday evenings at 7pm. To purchase tickets, which are $39.50 to $59.50 for all performances (with Premium Seats at $99 also available), visit Telecharge.com or phone 212/239-6200. Tickets are also available for purchase in person at St. Luke’s Theatre Box Office (308 West 46th Street), 2pm - 6pm daily.

For additional information, please visit FringeDeaths.com.  Follow Fringe Deaths on Facebook,  Instagram,  and Twitter.

Monday 06.17.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

TNC presents the World Premiere of Barabbas by Will T.F. Carter, Directed by Eduardo Machado

Theater for the New City 
presents 
The World Premiere of 
Barabbas
by Will T.F. Carter,
Directed by Eduardo Machado

 
Limited Off Broadway Engagement Begins June 20th

Theater for the New City (Crystal Field, Executive Artistic Director), the Pulitzer Prize winning community cultural center that produces over thirty premieres of new American plays each year, is pleased to announce the world premiere of Will T.F. Carter’s new playBarabbas, directed by Eduardo Machado.

Barabbas will begin previews Thursday June 20th at 8 PM, with Opening Night set for June 27th at Theater for the New City (155 First Avenue, between 9th and 10th Streets). This limited Off-Broadway engagement continues through July 14th only.

The cast features Gypsi Aponte, Mateo d’Amato, Nikki Valdez, and Anwar Wolf. The creative team for Barabbas includes Mark Marcante (scenic design), Alex Bartenieff (lighting design), Kat Anick-Jenkins (costume design), and David Margolin Lawson (sound design). Daniel Benhamu will serve as Fight Choreographer.

Barabbas is based on the literary figure, of the same name, mentioned in the New Testament of the Bible in which he is a “notorious prisoner” who was chosen by the crowd, over Jesus Christ, to be released in a customary pardon before the feast of Passover. This play adapts this classic parable to the stage set in a 2021 Lima, Peru prison cell in which BARA, a bright young lawyer who has been accepting bribes, is thrown into prison with another political criminal and whistleblower, Jesús. In this five character play Bara and Jesús debate morality and nationalism while subjected to “mother Peru’s” harsh prison conditions. The play eerily mirrors political criminality happening all over the world drawing parallels to corruption in Latin America and the United States.

“Not since Richard Nelson’s Principia Scriptoriae have I seen a play written by an American that has a neutral and yet passionate view of Latin American politics. Mr. Will has found an objective center to the Latin American male psyche,” said Mr. Macado.

Will T.F. Carter is a writer and translator from Portland, Maine. He’s a graduate of the Eugene Lang creative writing program in New York City and his work has appeared in the Ezra Journal of Translation, The Laurel Review, and Eleven-and-a-half. The short film, Zapatos, which he co-wrote and produced, was an official selection for the HBO Latino Film Festival and the San Francisco Latino Film Festival. Barabbas is his first work for the stage. 

Eduardo Machado has directed many plays among them Artfuckers by Michael Domitrovich at Theater for the New City and Daryl Roth Theater, Sixty Minutes in Negroland written & performed by Margo Jefferson at the Culture Project, Beautiful Senoritas at The Inner City Cultural Center in Los Angeles and In the Land of Giants by Roger Durling and All Eyes and Ears by Rogelio Martinez for INTAR on Theatre Row; he also directed Mr. Martinez’s They Still Mambo In Havana at the Flea Theatre. He has directed his own work at Theater for the New City among them, Rosario and The Gypsies, Paula, Crocodile Eyes, and Related Retreats. Mr. Machado wrote and directed the film Exiles in New York, which played at the AFI Film Festival, South by South West, Santa Barbara Film Festival and Latin American International Film Festival in Havana Cuba. He is the author of over forty plays including The Floating Island Plays, Once Removed, Stevie Wants to Play the Blues, A Burning Beach, Crocodile Eyes, Havana Is Waiting, and The Cook. They have been produced at many major regional theaters, as well as in Europe and Off-Broadway, including among others The Actors Theater of Louisville, The Mark Taper Forum, Seattle Repertory Theatre, the Goodman Theatre, Hartford Stage, The Long Wharf Theater, The Williamstown Theater Festival, The Cherry Lane Theater, INTAR, Theater for the New City, America Place Theater. His plays have been produced in Europe and South America. Mr. Machado was the head of playwriting at Columbia University and at the Goldberg Department of Dramatic Writing at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts.  His plays are published by Theatre Communications Group and Samuel French. Tastes Like Cuba: An Exile’s Hunger for Home, a food memoir by Eduardo Machado and Michael Domitrovich, was released by Gotham Press in 2007. Upcoming: the world premiere of Celia and Fidelfrom February 28 - April 12, 2020 at Arena Stage.  T.V. Credits include: "Hung," Executive Story Editor, HBO; "Magic City," Executive Story Editor, Starz; "Havana Quartet," Starz; "Troicana," pilot, Amazon; and more.

Gypsi Aponte decided to move to NYC after a career in the United States Air Force to pursue a career in the fashion industry. However, after picking up a camera to document his work and capture models in his clothing, Aponte moved on to photography and then to filmmaking where he found his current love of being in front of the camera. 

Producer Mateo d’Amato, professional actor, co-starring in television shows such as: “Jessica Jones” on Netflix, lead actor in three independent feature films, and various Off and Off-Off Broadway plays; recipient of two downtown New York City theatre awards for best actor, as well as recognition as best ensemble actor at the London Eye International Film Festival. His performances in Eduardo Machado’s Mariquitas at Theater for the New City led to his interest in becoming a first time producer for Barabbas, teaming up with director Machado. 

Anwar Wolf was born in Manhattan, New York to parents from the Dominican Republic. He is fluent is in English and Spanish. You can see him on TV shows like “High maintenance” season 2 on HBO where he plays Eric, two independent films, one which won an audience award and TV commercials. Anwar has been training in New York for the past few years at HB Studios, The Sedgwick Russell Acting studio and most recently has been with his acting coach Anthony Abeson.

Nikki Valdez is originally from Texas where she received her BFA from the University of Texas in Austin. She has been working and training in New York for the past few years and is very excited to be making her Off-Broadway debut in Barrabas. nikkivaldez.com

Barabbas will be presented at Theater for the New City (155 First Avenue, between 9thand 10th Streets) from June 20th through July 14th. Performances will be Thursday through Saturday evenings at 8pm, with matinees Sundays at 3pm. Opening night is set for June 27th.

Tickets are $18, and may be purchased by calling 212-254-1109 or online atwww.theaterforthenewcity.net.

Monday 06.17.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

NAATCO Kicks Off Their 29th Season with Gordon Dahlquist's [Veil Widow Conspiracy]

2019 Drama Desk Nominee
NAATCO,
The National Asian American Theatre Company,
Kicks Off Their 29th Season with the 
World Premiere of
Gordon Dahlquist's
[Veil Widow Conspiracy]
 
Directed by Aneesha Kudtarkar
 
Featuring Edward Chin-Lyn, Kimiye Corwin, Bruce McKenzie, David Shih, James Seol, Karoline Xu, and Aaron Yoo
 
Limited Off-Broadway Engagement Begins June 8th
 

The OBIE Award-winning NAATCO, National Asian American Theatre Company, kicks off their 29th season with the World Premiere of Gordon Dahlquist's[Veil Widow Conspiracy]. Aneesha Kudtarkar directs a cast that will include Edward Chin-Lyn, Kimiye Corwin, Bruce McKenzie, David Shih, James Seol, Karoline Xu, and Aaron Yoo. This Off-Broadway limited engagement at Next Door at New York Theatre Workshop (79 East 4th Street) will begin June 8th with Opening Night set for June 15th (7pm).  Performances continue through July 6th only.

NAATCO was just nominated for a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival of a Play, as well as Outstanding Costume Design for a Play for last season’s acclaimed production ofHenry VI: Shakespeare's Trilogy in Two Parts. Additionally, NAATCO founder and Artistic Producing Director Mia Katigbak will receive a Special Drama Desk Award: “the backbone of the Off-Broadway scene, we acclaim her for her performances this season inHenry VI: Shakespeare's Trilogy in Two Parts, The Trial of the Catonsville Nine, Peace for Mary Frances and Recent Alien Abductions. This award also recognizes her vital presence as the artistic director of NAATCO and her sustained excellence as a performer and mentor.”

 [VEIL WIDOW CONSPIRACY] is built around nested versions of a story from 1922 Xinjiang in Western China: a political murder mystery dramatized in a 2010 big budget Hollywood film, then amended via DVD extra interviews with the cast and crew, in censorship negotiations with the Chinese government, and finally by two lovers in a futuristic, dystopian Brooklyn, without the means to watch the film, one describing it to the other by memory in the dark.  [VWC] explores the slippery tension around what we call the truth, knowing reality and fiction each have an angle, and no metaphor comes without an agenda. 

Gordon Dahlquist is an acclaimed playwright and best selling novelist. His first novel,The Glass Books of the Dream Eaters, was a New York Times bestseller and has been published in 30 countries. His other novels include The Dark Volume, The Chemickal Marriage and his most recent, The Different Girl. His next play, Red Chariot, will have its world premiere at Undermain Theatre in Dallas in September. His plays have been performed in New York, Los Angeles, Dallas, Minneapolis, and Portland. His plays includeTomorrow Come Today (2015 James Tait Black Drama Prize, Edinburgh; Undermain Theatre, Dallas), Stella (Radio play: The Organist/WKCR), Tea Party (Bay Area Playwrights Festival, San Francisco), Messalina (Evidence Room, Los Angeles; Garland Award; SPF, New York), Babylon is Everywhere: A Court Masque [text] (CINE, Schaeberle Theatre; Theatre Magazine), Delirium Palace (Evidence Room, Los Angeles; Garland Award; published in Breaking Ground), The Secret Machine (Walker Space),Vortex Du Plaisir (Ohio Theatre; WKCR), and Island of Dogs (4th Street Theatre). He has been a member of New Dramatists, and is a New York Theatre Workshop Usual Suspect.

Aneesha Kudtarkar is a New York-based theatre director. She is currently completing her final year of study in the MFA Directing program at the Yale School of Drama. While at Yale, she has directed Locusts, Trouble in Mind, Perfectly Timed Photos Taken Before a Disaster, and The Winter’s Tale. Her other credits include The Purple Flower, The Quonsets (Yale Cabaret); Mud, Charlotte’s Web (The Hangar Theatre); and Gruesome Playground Injuries (Studio @ 620). She holds a BFA in Theatre Studies from Southern Methodist University, where she received the Garland Wright Award for Excellence in Directing. Aneesha is a proud alumna of the Drama League Director's Project. 

Edward Chin-Lyn is making his NAATCO debut. Small Mouth Sounds National Tour (Long Wharf, A.C.T., Broad Stage; dir. Rachel Chavkin), True West (Curious Frog), The Brig (The Living Theatre), Reconstruction (International Wow). Film: Set It up (Netflix). TV: "Manifest", "Elementary", "Jessica Jones", "Person of Interest", "Limitless", "The Mysteries of Laura", "Feed the Beast." edwardchinlyn.com

Kimiye Corwin’s New York theater credits include: The Changeling (Red Bull Theater),Fruiting Bodies (Ma-Yi Theater), Martyrs (La Mama), Wasted: An Historical Burlesque(Ars Nova), Gaslit (Virago), Fire Throws (Ripe Time), Kate’s Chink-O-Rama (Joe’s Pub). Regional: Sense and Sensibility (Guthrie), Hedda Gabler (Studio Theatre), A Christmas Carol (McCarter), Love’s Labour’s Lost (Actors Theater of Louisville), Midsummer Night’s Dream (Syracuse Stage), Now Circa Then (TheatreWorks Palo Alto), Snow Falling on Cedars (Hartford Stage), Twelfth Night, Hamlet (Shakespeare Festival St. Louis). TV/Film: “The Blacklist,” “The Family,” “The Following,” “The Michael J. Fox Show,” “One Life to Live,” Five Dances (film by Alan Brown). Kimiye trained as a dancer at Juilliard and danced with the Jose Limon Dance Company for five years before expanding her career with acting. She also enjoys working as a teacher, choreographer and movement consultant for theater. Training: BFA Juilliard, MFA Brown/Trinity. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband and two daughters. www.kimiyecorwin.com.

Bruce McKenzie Broadway: The Farnsworth Invention. Selected Off-Broadway: Stanley in Ivo van Hove’s production of A Streetcar Named Desire (NY Theatre Workshop). 10 Out of 12 (Soho Rep); Big Love, Glory of the World (BAM Harvey), Weisses Rauschen(Ruhrfestspiele Recklingshausen; Theatre Freiburg).  Some favorite Regional Theatre:Three Sisters (Yale Rep); Polaroid Stories, Stage Manager in Our Town, title role inHamlet (Actors Theatre of Louisville); Angelo in Measure For Measure, Iago in Othello(California Shakespeare Theatre); Krapp’s Last Tape (Dallas Theatre Center);   Other leading roles at La Jolla Playhouse, Berkeley Rep, Long Wharf Theatre, Huntington Theatre, Magic Theatre, Wilma Theatre, others.  Film: Your Name Here; Miss This at Your Peril; Blood Sand and Gold.  Television: “Breaking Bad,” “House,” “The Unit.”

James Seol’s Off-Broadway credits include: Henry VI (NAATCO); American Morning (Prospect Theater Company; KPOP (Lucille Lortel Nomination; Ars Nova/Ma-Yi/Woodshed Collective); Small Mouth Sounds (Ars Nova). Broadway: A Naked Girl on the Appian Way (Roundabout Theatre Company). Regional: Vietgone and The Orphan of Zhao (American Conservatory Theatre); The Four Immigrants and Tokyo Fish Story (TheatreWorks Silicon Valley); Thoroughly Modern Millie (Goodspeed Musicals and Paper Mill Playhouse); Zombie: the American (Woolly Mammoth); Hamlet (Hartford Stage); Timon of Athens (Shakespeare Theatre Company). TV: Living with Yourself (Netflix). Juilliard, University of Virginia

David Shih previously appeared with NAATCO in Henry VI, Awake and Sing!, and A Dream Play. Off-Broadway: KPOP (Ars Nova/Ma-Yi/Woodshed), Somebody's Daughter(Second Stage), The World of Extreme Happiness (MTC), Bike America (Ma-Yi), Dojoji(Pan Asian), Crane Story (Playwrights Realm). Regional: Tiger Style! (La Jolla), The King and I (Maltz Jupiter). TV/Film: “Billions,” “City on a Hill,” “The Hunt,” “The Path,” “Blindspot,” “Elementary,” “Madam Secretary,” “The Blacklist,” “Unforgettable,” “Blue Bloods,” “Law & Order: SVU,” Mr. Sushi, Eighth Grade, The Amazing Spider-Man 2,Saving Face. Performs with Only Make Believe for kids in hospitals and care facilities.

Karoline Xu’s Off-Broadway credits include Tom Stoppard's The Hard Problem (LCT). Select credits: You Across From Me (Humana Festival), Angels in America, Six, A Christmas Carol, Maggie and Winnie (Actors Theatre of Louisville); Hamlet, A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Santa Cruz Shakespeare); A Language to Hear Myself (American Repertory); Hitting Bedrock (La MaMa); Ready Made Cabaret (Judson Church). BA: Harvard College. karolinexu.com

Aaron Yoo’s career began Off-Broadway appearing at The Vineyard, Ma-Yi, The Flea and LAByrinth.  He is grateful to be returning to NAATCO.  Aaron has starred in over 20 films including Disturbia, 21, Killing Gunther, Money Monster, Rocket Science, Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist, Friday the 13th, Someone Else, Everything Before Us, The Wackness, and Kid Cannabis. TV credits include "Goliath," "Hawaii Five-O," "The Tomorrow People," "StartUp," "The Blacklist," "Mysteries of Laura," "The Closer" and "ER."

[VEIL WIDOW CONSPIRACY] will have scenic design by Yu-Hsuan Chen, costume design by Mariko Ohigashi, and lighting design by Reza Behjat. Peter Kim is Associate Producer for NAATCO.

Under the leadership of Founding Artistic Producing Director Mia Katigbak and co-founder Richard Eng, NAATCO was founded in 1989 to assert the presence and significance of Asian American theatre in the United States, demonstrating its vital contributions to the fabric of American culture by offering European and American classics as written with all Asian American casts; adaptations of these classics by Asian American playwrights; and new plays - preferably world premieres - written by non-Asian Americans, not for or about Asian Americans, but realized by all-Asian American casts. NAATCO puts into service its total commitment to Asian American theatre artists to more accurately represent onstage the multi- and inter-cultural dynamics of our society. By doing so, they demonstrate a rich tapestry of cultural difference bound by the American experience. The enrichment accrues to each different culture as well as to America as a whole. NAATCO was the recipient of the Obies’ Ross Wetzsteon Award, the Lucille Lortel Award from the League of Professional Theatre Women for their work “highlighting the multi- and intercultural dynamics of our society” and the Rosetta LeNoire Award from Actors' Equity Association in recognition of its contribution toward increasing diversity and non-traditional casting in American theatre. For more information, visit www.naatco.org.

Next Door at NYTW provides a home for companies and artists who are producing their own work. This initiative provides each project with subsidized resources and space for development and performance in the Fourth Street Theatre. As part of an ongoing effort to expand support for artists at every stage of their careers, this series served nearly 100 additional artists in the first year alone.

Performances for [Veil Widow Conspiracy] will be Monday through Saturday evenings at 7pm, with matinees Saturday at 3pm.  No performance Monday, June 10th and no matinees on June 8th and 15th; added performance on Sunday June 9th at 7pm. 

Ticket prices are $35 (General Admission) or $45 (Reserved Seat).  Tickets can be purchased by phone at 212-460-5475, online at NYTW.org, or in-person at the NYTW Box Office (79 east 4th Street).

For more information about [Veil Widow Conspiracy] or any of NAATCO’s programs, visit www.naatco.org

Source: https://us4.campaign-archive.com/?u=2ef47c...
Monday 05.06.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

JO SULLIVAN LOESSER DEAD AT 91

JO SULLIVAN LOESSER,
MUSICAL THEATER LEGEND AND "KEEPER OF THE FLAME" OF FRANK LOESSER CANON,
DEAD AT 91

JO SULLIVAN LOESSER passed away Sunday April 28th at her New York City home from heart failure. She is survived by her daughter, Emily Loesser Stephenson, son-in-law Don Stephenson, long-time companion Jaquin Fink, step-children John and Susan Loesser, and four grandchildren; Hallie, Fiona, Frank, and Beau. She was predeceased by her daughter Hannah Loesser, who passed away in 2007.
 
When Jo Sullivan, born and raised in Mounds City, Illinois, stepped onto the stage of the Imperial Theatre opening night of Frank Loesser’s legendary musical, The Most Happy Fella, she would realize a life-long dream of Broadway stardom.

Jo’s professional life began as an Arthur Godfrey Talent Scout Show “loser,” singing the “Italian Street Song” from Naughty Marietta, but finding herself eclipsed by two harmonica players called The Polka Dots. She persevered, and after being seen singing in a small Manhattan nightclub, was picked to understudy the lead role of Laurey near the end of the original Broadway run ofOklahoma!, then found herself back in the same theatre in the chorus of the ill-fated Sleepy Hollow.  Another chorus job that year landed her in the Mike Todd musical, As the Girls Go, which starred Bobby Clark and boasted a superior Jimmy McHugh score.
 
Her first big break came when she was chosen to create the role of Polly Peachum in a concert version of The Threepenny Opera, with Leonard Bernstein conducting and Lotte Lenya starring, which in turn, led to the classic Off-Broadway production. “The Bilbao Song” (“The Bid-A-Wee in Soho”) was added for Jo and the great Lotte Lenya herself coached her in what to do with it.  The Threepenny Opera eventually became an Off-Broadway landmark event. It ran 2,611 performances, but by 1956, Jo had left the show. She studied at The Actor’s Studio, and after auditioning  “a hundred times” was given the leading role, Rosabella the waitress, in The Most Happy Fella. Jo’s performance was nominated for a Tony Award, but she found a greater gift that year. She met and eventually married Frank Loesser. Before and after The Most Happy Fella, she appeared in the City Center revivals of Carousel, Wonderful Town with Nancy Walker, Die Fleidermaus and Showboat, after which she retired to raise a family.
 
Seventeen years after the death of Frank Loesser in 1969, she returned to performing, appearing at The Ballroom nightclub in 1977. Jo continued to be a New York nightclub favorite, headlining at such prestigious Manhattan spots as The Russian Tea Room, The Ballroom, and Michael’s Pub, where she starred in 1991 in a 20th anniversary salute to the Broadway musical, Follies, written by her old friend, Stephen Sondheim. 
 
In 1989, she fulfilled yet another dream when she introduced her daughter, Emily, to the New York stage, co-starring with her in the show, Together Again For The First Time, at the Kaufman Theatre. After that, they performed numerous times in concerts and theaters, including tours of Together Againand her late husband’s first musical, Where’s Charley? She and Emily added bonus tracks to Ben Bagley’s Painted Smiles CD of Frank Loesser Revisited, featuring several Loesser songs from their production Together Again. For DRG records, Jo recorded Loesser By Loesser, a compilation of both familiar and obscure Loesser tunes, performed by Jo and her family.
 
Above all else, Ms. Loesser was always instrumental in preserving and furthering her husband’s great musical legacy. It was Jo who suggested using a two piano arrangement of the score for The Most Happy Fella to Goodspeed Opera House, which led to an enormously successful production for Goodspeed in 1991 and a subsequent move to Broadway in 1992. She served as Artistic Associate for that revival as well as the fully orchestrated New York City Opera presentation earlier that same year. It was permanently added to the New York City Opera repertory.
In 1992, Jo was instrumental in getting Guys and Dolls revived on Broadway, which became a smash hit, won the Tony Award for Best Revival and became the longest running revival in Broadway history.
 
She also worked with DRG records to release An Evening of Frank Loesser, a collection of never –before-heard “demo” recordings that Loesser himself made for Guys and Dolls, The Most Happy Fella, and How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, which incidentally, also had enormous hit revivals on Broadway in 1995 (starring Matthew Broderick), and later in 2011 (starring Daniel Radcliffe.)
 
For many years, Jo Sullivan Loesser was an active member of Board of Directors of The American Theatre Wing and The Actors Fund.

Funeral services will be private.

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Monday 05.06.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

Cast Announced for Ensemble for the Romantic Century's Off-Broadway Premiere of Hans Christian Andersen: Tales Real & Imagined

Cast Announced for
Ensemble for the Romantic Century's
Off-Broadway Premiere of
Hans Christian Andersen: Tales Real & Imagined
Starring Jimmy Ray Bennett
(The Nuclear Family – IFC, Amazon's Hand of God)


 Performances Begin April 13th
 

Ensemble for the Romantic Century (Eve Wolf, Executive Artistic Director) continues the 2018 - ‘19 season, ERC’s 18th, with its final offering of the season, Hans Christian Andersen: Tales Real & Imagined by Eve Wolf.  Performances will begin April 13th for a limited run through May 25th, with opening night scheduled for May 5th.  Performances will be at The Duke on 42nd Street (229 West 42nd Street, between 7th and 8th Avenues).

Donald T. Sanders, ERC Director of Theatrical Production, directs Jimmy Ray Bennett in the title role.  Hans Christian Andersen: Tales Real & Imagined also features Countertenors Daniel Moody and Randall Scotting, and puppet artists Craig Marin & Olga Felgemacher,  along with Max Barros and Carlos Avila (on pianos) and percussionist Shiqi Zhong.  Hans Christian Andersen will have scenic & costume design by Vanessa James, lighting design by Beverly Emmons & Sebastian Adamo, sound design by Bill Toles, and puppetry design by Flexitoon.

Mr. Sanders describes Hans Christian Andersen: Tales Real & Imagined as “a fairy tale for grown ups and growing ups.”

Go beyond the magic and into the imagination of the iconic author Hans Christian Andersen, and discover how his complicated personal life inspired countless beloved tales such as “The Little Mermaid,” “The Princess and the Pea,” “The Ugly Duckling.” and more. Ensemble for the Romantic Century presents this world premiere production featuring the timeless classics that have transcended generations, with the music of Benjamin Britten and Henry Purcell and enhanced by the classical puppetry of Flexitoon.

Hans Christian Andersen is known as one of the most prolific authors of fairy tales, having written over 3300, some of which are so infused to our culture it's hard to imagine a world without them. This piece explores beyond just the magic taking a deeper look at the inner life of Andersen and how some of his most memorable tales, transcend age and nationality.

Jimmy Ray Bennett is creator of the Off-Broadway improvised "cult-hit" The Nuclear Family as well as the “Extended Family” for IFC. Theatrically, he has worked with NY City Center, NYTW, New World Stages, The Kennedy Center, LaJolla Playhouse, The McCarter, Prospect Theatre Company, the Ogunquit Playhouse, 45th St. Theatre and most recently at The Arena in Washington DC. Best known as Nathan Brooks on Amazon's “Hand Of God,” the White DL for the Peabody Award winning documentary “DL Hughly: Endangered Species List” and Netflix's upcoming “AJ & The Queen” starring RuPaul. He can also be found in three of the top selling video-games of all time, “Grand Theft Auto V” and “Red Dead Redemption” I and II. A writer and graduate of Florida State University, he has also, at some point, played a cat. @jimmyraybennett

Puppet artists Craig Marin & Olga Felgemacher met in 1979 and founded Flexitoon, one of the world’s most celebrated puppet production companies. They design, build and perform puppets, marionettes and animated objects, as well as create award-winning programming for television, film, internet and theater. Their creations starred on Nickelodeon’s first series, the award-winning "Pinwheel" (prompting Time Magazine to call their Pinwheel Puppets "the best"); They turned the Weekly Reader characters into three dimensional stars with "KIDS-TV" on Showtime, and starred as "DJ Kat" on FOX (which won the Outstanding Kid Show Award from New York State Broadcasters). They developed and performed the popular Juke Box Band on the multi-award winning PBS television series "Shining Time Station" starring George Carlin and Ringo Starr. Flexitoon was awarded the first National Endowment for Children's Educational Television Grant and created and produced "GOIN' UP" for Thirteen/WNET; won the 1996 UNIMA Award for Outstanding Broadcast Puppetry, and have received Official Selection Laurels in several international film festivals including LA Shorts and Kids First. Their many commercials include the Talking Stain for Tide which was voted one of the top Super Bowl commercials of all time. Prior to teaming, Olga Felgemacher, a graduate of Northwestern, was lead performer at the famous Bil Baird Marionette Theater in NYC. She was personally signed by Jim Henson to perform with his Muppets on both “Sesame Street” and the first Muppet Movie. Craig Marin has dedicated his life to the puppet arts and as a child performed on all the local NYC kid TV shows. While in high school, Marin formed the Marko Puppet Theatre and toured colleges throughout the United States with a highly original concept that was just right for the times -- a psychedelic puppet show. The show garnered such an underground reputation, that Marko was asked to perform for the Grateful Dead at Jerry Garcia's birthday party!

The critically acclaimed Ensemble for the Romantic Century, now in its 18th Season, conjures the past with original multimedia productions that fuse chamber music, drama, and history. The subject matters span across centuries, from Tolstoy to Toscanini, from Verne to Van Gogh, all brought to life through the fusion of drama and sound. We believe that one can understand Freud more deeply by listening to the erotic cabaret music of fin de siècle Vienna, that one can appreciate Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata” more profoundly by listening to him speak of his tortured love life and his debilitating deafness. By illuminating the interplay between literature, biography and music we have transformed the concert experience.

ERC was founded by pianist Eve Wolf in 2001 with the intention of creating an engaging and innovative approach to chamber music concerts. ERC’s theatrical concerts interweave letters, memoirs, diaries, poems, and other literature with chamber and vocal music; the music’s historical context is reinforced through its connections with history, politics, philosophy, psychology, and the other arts to create a compelling new performance experience. These unique productions merge dramatic and fully staged scripts with music, recapturing the past with a sense of immediacy that transports, illuminates, and captivates. The scripts, drawn from historical material that includes letters, diaries, memoirs, newspaper articles, poetry, and literature create an intricate counterpoint to the musical program. The subject matters span across centuries, from Tolstoy to Toscanini, from Verne to Van Gogh, all brought to life through the fusion of drama and music. By illuminating the interplay between literature, biography and music ERC has transformed the concert experience. The Romantic Century was about imagination and experimentation. Elevating the human condition through art: that is the spirit we hope to summon.

ERC has created over 40 original theatrical concerts at such institutions as BAM (Brooklyn Academy of Music); Shakespeare & Company in Lenox, MA; The Jewish Museum of New York; the Archivio Fano of Venice, Italy; the Festival de Musique de Chambre Montréal; the Massachusetts International Festival of the Arts/MIFA; the French Institute-Alliance Française/FIAF, New York; the Italian Academy for Advanced Studies at Columbia University; the Italian Cultural Institute of New York; and the City University of New York (CUNY).  ERC’s programs are distinguished by their artistic excellence, breadth of repertoire, and variety of subject matter. In its relatively short history, the Ensemble for the Romantic Century has enriched the music scene with highly innovative productions that are also historically informed, aesthetically exquisite, and emotionally transporting.

Eve Wolf is Founder and Executive Artistic Director of ERC as well as playwright. Recent credits include Van Gogh’s Ear (Pershing Square Signature Center, 2017; New York TimesCritic’s Pick); Anna Akhmatova: The Heart Is Not Made of Stone (BAM, 2016; New York Times Critic’s Pick); and Jules Verne: From the Earth to The Moon (BAM, 2015; also a New York Times Critic’s Pick). Ms. Wolf founded Ensemble for the Romantic Century in 2001 with the mission of creating an innovative and dramatic concert format in which the emotions revealed in memoirs, letters, diaries, and literature are dramatically interwoven with music, thus bringing to life the sensations and passions of a bygone era. For the past sixteen seasons, Ms. Wolf has written scripts for more than twenty-five of ERC’s theatrical concerts and has performed in most of the ensemble’s forty-plus original productions. Some highlights include Ms. Wolf’s scripts for Tchaikovsky: None but the Lonely Heart, which was performed at Shakespeare & Company in Lenox, MA (2013) and at BAM (2014);Van Gogh’s Ear at the Festival de Musique de Chambre de Montréal; Fanny Mendelssohn: Out of Her Brother’s Shadow, commissioned by the Jewish Museum of New York; and The Dreyfus Affair and Peggy Guggenheim Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors. In 2009, she performed before a sold-out audience at the Sale Apollinee of the Teatro La Fenice in Venice in the Italian production of her script, Toscanini: Nel mio cuore troppo di assoluto.

Donald T. Sanders has been Director of Theatrical Production for ERC since 2005. In 2011, he directed Seduction, Smoke and Music at the Tuscan Sun Festival starring Jeremy Irons and Sinéad Cusack. Other ERC productions include Toscanini: Nel mio cuore troppo di assoluto at Venice’s Teatro La Fenice, Sale Apolline, and Van Gogh’s Ear at New York’s Florence Gould Hall and the Festival de Musique de Chambre Montréal. He has directed productions at the New York Shakespeare Festival/Public Theater as well as the off-Broadway plays of Arnold Weinstein, Eric Bentley, Kenneth Koch and William Russo. Sanders is a graduate of the Yale School of Drama. He is the Executive Artistic Director of the Massachusetts International Festival of the Arts (MIFA), presenting such artists as Mikhail Baryshnikov, Vanessa Redgrave, England’s Out of Joint and Complicite companies, and France’s Comédie Française.  In 2002, Sanders was made a Chevalier dans L’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres of the Republic of France.

Founded in 1990, The New 42nd Street is an independent nonprofit organization charged with the continuous cultural revival of 42nd Street between 7th and 8th Avenues, building on the foundation of seven historic theaters to make extraordinary performing arts and cultural engagement part of everyone’s life. The New 42nd Street fulfills this purpose by ensuring the ongoing vibrancy of 42nd Street’s historic theaters; supporting performing artists in the creation of their work at the New 42nd Street Studios and The Duke on 42nd Street; creating arts access and education at The New Victory Theater, New York’s premier theater for kids and families; and through the New 42nd Street Youth Corps, its model youth development initiative, which pairs life skills workshops and mentorship with paid employment in the arts for NYC youth. Inspired by the city it serves, The New 42nd Street is committed to the transformational power of the arts. The Duke on 42nd Street is a centrally-located black box theater rental that offers smaller scale productions the unique opportunity to perform on famed 42nd Street. Housed within the NEW 42ND STREET Studios, The Duke on 42nd Street is a fully-staffed facility featuring customizable, state-of-the-art seating in various configurations, and full light, sound and support systems. The venue has hosted such companies as Playwright’s Realm, Red Bull Theater, Primary Stages, Transport Group, Theatre for a New Audience, Lincoln Center Theater LCT3, The Royal Court Theatre, Steppenwolf Theater Company, Armitage Gone! Dance, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Naked Angels, Classical Theater of Harlem and the National Theater of Great Britain.

Tickets, which are now on sale, are $39 to $149 and can be purchased online at Dukeon42.org; by phone at 646-223-3010; or in person at The Duke on 42nd Street at 229 West 42nd Street (Tuesdays-Fridays 4-7 and Saturdays 12-6).

For more information, visit romanticcentury.org.
 

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Monday 04.08.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

INTAR Theatre and Radio Drama Network To Present the World Premiere of Then They Forgot About the Rest

INTAR Theatre and Radio Drama Network
To Present the World Premiere of
Then They Forgot About the Rest,
A New Play by Georgina Escobar,
Directed by David Mendizabal


Featuring Danielle Alonzo, Maki Borden, Mindy Escobar-Leanse, Renata Friedman, Jacqueline Guillén, Gabriel Marin, and Elizabeth Ramos
 
Performances Begin April 13th
Limited Off-Broadway Engagement Through May 12th
Opening Night Set for April 22nd

INTAR (Lou Moreno, Artistic Director/John McCormack, Executive Director) and Radio Drama Network (Melina Brown, President) today announced the cast for the World Premiere of Then They Forgot About the Rest, a new play by Georgina Escobar, directed by David Mendizabal. Performances will begin April 13th for a limited Off-Broadway engagement through May 12th. Opening Night is set for April 22nd.

Then They Forgot About the Rest will star Danielle Alonzo, Maki Borden, Mindy Escobar-Leanse, Renata Friedman, Jacqueline Guillén, Gabriel Marin, and Elizabeth Ramos. Then They Forgot About the Rest will have set design by Christopher & Justin Swader; costume design by Asa Benally; lighting design by Cha See; and sound design by Enrico de Trizio.     

Then They Forgot About the Rest is a southwest femmetasia in which an ad agency, The Rest, struggles to stay afloat in a new competitive media market. As they get ready to accept their new client, Alleviate (or "the forgetting pill"), members of the agency question the moral implications of selling the drug, while a bereaved mother undergoes trial for it. A frontier futura funk piece with elements of noir.  

Georgina Escobar is an artist and writer originally from Juárez, México who employs multiple mediums to create impossible narratives for the stage. Recent works include Sweep (Aurora Theatre, Lincoln Center Directors Lab), B.I. (Milagro, Steppenwolf's "The Mix"), and Penny Pinball Presents the Beacons (INTAR premiere, 50 PP). Escobar’s plays have been seen, nurtured, and developed at and with INTAR, Dixon Place, The Flea, Lincoln Center, The Sol Project, Clubbed Thumb, Exquisite Corpse Company, Milagro, Aurora Theatre, Duke City Rep, Marfa Live Arts, The Magic, The Lensic, and The Movement Theatre Company. She is a Djerassi Residency artist, a MacDowell Colony fellow, a two-year participant at the Fornés Writing Workshop, and writer at the Paula Vogel Bootcamp. She was the finalist for the 2016 National Latino Playwriting Award and received the Kennedy Center's National Theatre for Young Audiences Playwriting Award in 2010.  

David Mendizábal is a director, designer, one of the Producing Artistic Leaders of The Movement Theatre Company, and Associate Artistic Director of The Sol Project. Directing credits include: The Maturation of an Inconvenient, or iNegro (Cherry Lane Mentor Project), And She Would Stand Like This (The Movement), On the Grounds of Belonging (Public Studio), Tell Hector I Miss Him (Atlantic - Drama League Nomination), Locusts Have No King (INTAR), Look Upon Our Lowliness, and Bintou (The Movement). He is a member of the Latinx Theatre Commons, alumnus of The Drama League, LCT Director's Lab, LAByrinth Intensive Ensemble, NALAC Leadership Institute, and artEquity. BFA NYU/Tisch. www.davidmendizabal.com

Danielle Alonzo: writer, actor, content creator. With all the people living in her head, Danielle found her outlet with creating her one woman show, In Your Face which she wrote and performed at The Pit in 2014. In 2015, it returned to a sold out audience. She also created her web series “Bronx’ish,” following her random adventures.  In 2018, she was cast in ABC’s Diversity Showcase, making the top 12 out of 11,000 applicants. Currently, you can find her on HBO’s “High Maintenance” as Marania.

Maki Borden’s most recent theatre credits include Our Lady of 121st Street (dir. Phylicia Rashad, The Signature), Wolf in the River (dir. Adam Rapp), Inanimate (The Flea), and A 24-Decade History of Popular Music dir. Taylor Mac/Niegel Smith (St. Ann's Warehouse), Maki trained at the University of Texas at Austin and with the LAByrinth Theater Company as an Acting Fellow. As a Peruban (Peruvian/Cuban), he is very proud to be working at INTAR.

Mindy Escobar-Leanse is an alumna of The American Academy of Dramatic Arts NY and a recurring participant at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre Center's National Puppetry Conference. Credits: A Ribbon About a Bomb (Governor's Island), The Unbearable Likeness of Jo, Semity, and Jones (Dixon Place), Ash Tree (Regional: Duke City Repertory Theatre), Species: Human (The Bushwick Starr Reading Series). Puppetry: Puppet Titus Andronicus (Theatre Row), The Last Rat of Theresiendstadt (Tour: NYC/Poland), Little Red Fish (Theatre Row), Soldier's Tale (Bushwick Starr), The Very Hungry Caterpillar (Theatre Row), Dinosaur Train Live (Tour: Jim Henson/PBS). www.mindyleanse.com

Renata Friedman’s credits include: New York: Roundabout Theatre Company, Page 73, Colt Coeur, Clubbed Thumb Winterworks, New Victory Theater, Aquila Theatre. Regional: Over 25 productions including Yale Rep, Berkeley Rep, Seattle Rep, Milwaukee Rep, Humana Festival, Roundhouse, Barrington Stage Company, TheatreWorks, Actors Theatre of Louisville, ACT (Seattle), Intiman Theatre. New work development at Manhattan Theatre Club, New York Theatre Workshop, Bushwick Starr, LCT3, Playwrights Horizons, New Dramatists, etc. TV: FBI, New Amsterdam, Alternatino. Film: Protégé.www.renatafriedman.com.

Jacqueline Guillén is an actor based in NYC originally from Matamoros, Mexico. She received her BFA in Acting from Texas State University and studied in Stratford upon Avon with the Royal Shakespeare Company. Some of her NYC Credits include Play/Date (3LD), Lilia (Rising Circle), Satyricoño(INTAR), Judgment of Fools (InViolet Theater), Trees in their Youth (Columbia Stages), Miss Julie, Asian Equities (Brave New World); readings for Roundabout Theatre, The Lark, INTAR, Urban Stages, The Civilians, Westport Country Playhouse, New York Theatre Workshop, and Playwrights Horizons. She lends her voice to KCRW's radio novella Celestial Blood/Sangre Celestial. TV Credits include "The Good Cop,” "Bull," "Orange is the New Black," and "Search Party." Jacqueline is a member of INTAR’s Unit52, Saudade Theatre, and InViolet Theatre, and an alumnus of The 24 Hour Plays.

Gabriel Marin has appeared in over sixty productions regionally with American Conservatory Theater, Kansas City Rep, Ensemble Theatre Company, San Francisco Playhouse, San Jose Rep, Kitchen Theatre Company, Merrimack Rep, TheatreWorks, Marin Theatre Company, Aurora Theatre Company, Magic Theatre, Center REP, among others.  He has performed on NBC, CBS, PBS and the BBC. gabriel-marin.com

Elizabeth Ramos is making her INTAR debut. Off-Broadway credits include: The Surgeon and Her Daughters (Cherry Lane Theatre, Dir. Adrienne Campbell-Holt); The Idea of Me (Cherry Lane Theatre, Dir. Jose Zayas); A Month in the Country (Classic Stage Company, Dir. Erica Schmidt). Regional credits include: Tiny Beautiful Things (Long Wharf Theatre, Dir. Ken Rus Schmoll) Miss Bennett: Christmas at Pemberley (Pioneer Theater Company, Dir. Julie Kramer): The Bridge of San Luis Rey (Two River Theatre, Dir. Ken Rus Schmoll); Title IX (O'Neill Theatre Center, Dir. Daniella Topol); Fade (TheaterWorks, Dir. Jerry Ruiz); Training: Actors Theatre of Louisville Apprenticeship and BFA from CSU Fullerton. 

INTAR, one of the United States' longest running theatres producing Latino/Latina voices in English since 1966, works to:
            • Nurture the professional development of Latino/a theater artists;
            • Produce bold, innovative, artistically significant plays that reflect diverse perspectives;
            • Make accessible the diversity inherent in America's cultural heritage through an integrated program of workshops, productions of works-in-progress, and mainstage productions. INTAR brings to the public vital and energetic voices of emerging and accomplished Latino/a theater professionals, giving expression to the diversity and depth of today's Latino-American community.

INTAR is an organization committed to the development of “theater arts without borders.” Over the past four decades, INTAR has produced classics, Latino/a adaptations of classics, cabarets, and 70 world premieres of plays written by Latino-Americans and Latina-Americans, including Oscar nominee Jose Rivera and Pulitzer Prize recipient Nilo Cruz.

INTAR, one of the United States’ longest running Latino/a theaters producing in English, works to nurture the professional development of Latino/a theater artists; produce bold, innovative, artistically significant plays that reflect diverse perspectives; and, make accessible the diversity inherent in America’s cultural heritage. INTAR has commissioned, developed, and produced works by more than 175 Latino/a writers, composers, and choreographers. It has assisted hundreds of Latino/a playwrights, directors, and actors in obtaining their first professional theater credits, union memberships, and reviews in English-language media. “There’s scarcely a Latino artist in America who hasn’t been supported or trained or produced by INTAR” declared the The New York Times.

The Radio Drama Network (Melina Brown, President) was founded by legendary audio drama director and producer, Himan Brown, to support art forms that use the spoken word to enrich our culture.  Himan was a champion of all storytellers, from the tradition of the earliest stranger who wandered from town to town with tales of the latest news, to Academy Award winning writers that contributed to his thousands of radio dramas, to the writers silenced by the Red Scare who were just trying to feed their families.  Himan strove to keep writers writing and actors acting, telling tales that spun out of the grandest oral traditions of history, often addressing important social issues. Himan was the son of immigrants who became an actor, a director/producer and a gifted orator early in his life.  His medium was the new frontier of radio.  He began his career reading Yiddish stories over the airwaves from hotel bathrooms fashioned into audio studios, and quickly moved from packaging and starring in shows such as the Rise of the Goldbergs to creating his own shows.  During the height of radio, he created hundreds of radio series such as Inner Sanction, Little Italy, Grand Central Station, Dick Tracy, The Shadow, Bulldog Drummond, and The Thin Man.  Following television’s rise, he resurrected audio drama on the airwaves with CBS Radio Mystery Theater and Adventure Theater. Himan Brown lamented the dearth of dramatic and interesting programming on today’s airwaves, and he continued to create shows and series well into his 90s. Himan created The Radio Drama Network as a family foundation to continue his philanthropic work.  He was a husband, father, grandfather and great-grandfather who doted on his great-grandchildren.  Himan Brown died three weeks shy of 100 years old in 2010.

Performances will be at INTAR's Theatre, 500 West 52nd Street at Tenth Avenue, on the 4th floor. Tickets are only $35, and may be purchased atINTARtheatre.org or by calling 212/352-3101 or toll free, 866/811-4111.

For more information on Then They Forgot About the Rest and all the programs at INTAR, visit INTAR on the web at www.intartheatre.org

Source: https://mailchi.mp/davidgersten.com/intar-...
Monday 04.08.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

Isabelle Fuhrman, Ismenia Mendes, and AnnaSophia Robb To Star in RED BULL THEATER’s All-Female MAC BETH

Isabelle Fuhrman,
Ismenia Mendes, and
AnnaSophia Robb

To Star in

RED BULL THEATER’s

All-Female
MAC BETH

Adapted & Directed by Erica Schmidt

Sharlene Cruz, Sophie Kelly-Hedrick,
Lily Santiago, and Ayana Workman

Complete the Cast

Tickets Now On Sale

Red Bull Theater (Jesse Berger, Artistic Director | Jim Bredeson, Managing Director) today announced the cast for the second of its two upcoming Off-Broadway productions at the Lucille Lortel Theatre  (121 Christopher Street between Bleecker & Hudson Streets). Tickets are now on sale.

Isabelle Fuhrman (Orphan, The Hunger Games, All The Fine Boys), Ismenia Mendes(CSC’s The Liar,  Cressida in NYSF's Troilus & Cressida), AnnaSophia Robb (“The Carrie Diaries,” “The Act,”  “Mercy Street,” Down A Dark Hall),  Sharlene Cruz (Den of Thieves at Harlem Rep), Sophie Kelly-Hedrick (Off-Broadway debut), Lily Santiago(New York Shakespeare Festival’s Othello), and Ayana Workman (The Price of Thomas Scott - Mint, Juliet in NYSF's Romeo & Juliet) will star in MAC BETH, adapted and directed by Erica Schmidt from Shakespeare.

In Schmidt’s production seven girls meet up to do a play in an empty lot outside the city on an autumn afternoon. School uniform tartan transforms in this American urban wasteland. The girls are witches, ghosts, and kings. Using only Shakespeare’s text, they hurl headlong into the unchecked passions of Macbeth as the line between real life and blood fantasy quickly blurs. Through prophecies and smartphones, unexpected resonances emerge from Shakespeare’s dark nightmare of ambition gone awry.

This production will play a limited Off-Broadway engagement May 7th through June 2nd only, with Opening Night set for May 19th. It will follow the company’s production of The White Devil.

Erica Schmidt’s numerous credits include Richard II with Robert Sean Leonard; All the Fine Boys (The New Group, wrote and directed); Turgenev’s A Month in the Country with Peter Dinklage and Taylor Schilling (CSC); Taking Care of Baby (MTC); Trust (The Play Company, Callaway Award nomination); As You Like It (Public Theater/NYSF); Debbie Does Dallas (wrote and directed Off-Broadway).

Mac Beth will have set design by Catherine Cornell, costume design by Jessica Pabst, lighting design by Jeff Croiter, and sound design by Erin Bednarz. This adaptation was given its premiere by Seattle Repertory Theater. The running time is 90 minutes with no intermission.

Red Bull Theater, hailed as as “the city’s gutsiest classical theater” by Time Out New York, brings rarely seen classic plays to dynamic new life for contemporary audiences, uniting a respect for tradition with a modern sensibility. Named for the rowdy Jacobean playhouse that illegally performed plays in England during the years of Puritan rule, Red Bull Theater is New York City’s home for dynamic performances of great plays that stand the test of time. With the Jacobean plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries as its cornerstone, the company also produces new works that are in conversation with the classics. A home for artists, scholars and students, Red Bull Theater delights and engages the intellect and imagination of audiences, and strives to make its work accessible, diverse, and welcoming to all. Red Bull Theater believes in the power of great classic stories and plays of heightened language to deepen our understanding of the human condition, in the special ability of live theater to create unique, collective experiences, and the timeless capacity of classical theater to illuminate the events of our times. Variety agreed, hailing our work as: “Proof that classical theater can still be surprising after hundreds of years.”

Since its debut in 2003 with a production of Shakespeare’s Pericles starring Daniel Breaker followed by the breakout hit production of The Revenger’s Tragedy, Red Bull Theater has served adventurous theatergoers with Off-Broadway productions, Revelation Readings, and the annual Short New Play Festival. The company also offers outreach programs including Shakespeare in Schools bringing professional actors and teaching artists into public school classrooms; Bull Sessions, free post-play discussions with top scholars; and Master Classes in classical acting led by veteran theater professionals.

Acclaimed as “a dynamic producer of classic plays” by The New York Times and “the most exciting classical theater in New York” by Time Out NY, Red Bull Theater has produced 17 Off-Broadway productions including the recent runaway hit The Government Inspector starring Michael Urie, and over 150 Revelation Readings of rarely seen classics, serving a community of more than 5,000 artists and providing quality artistic programming to an audience of over 65,000. The company’s unique programming has received ongoing critical acclaim, and has been recognized with Lortel, Drama Desk, Drama League, Callaway, Off Broadway Alliance, and OBIE nominations and Awards.

The productions are made possible through special arrangement with THE LUCILLE LORTEL THEATRE FOUNDATION, created in 1998. Lucille Lortel granted the historic theatre bearing her name to the Foundation to continue her legacy of promoting excellent work long into the future without the economic burdens normally associated with theatre space. The Foundation therefore makes the Lortel Theatre available to not-for-profit organizations at a subsidized cost. The Lucille Lortel Theatre has hosted dozens of theatre companies and is also made available to community groups for meetings and other events. For the calendar of all upcoming activities, a history of the theatre, and more, please visit www.lortel.org.

Subscriptions, offering a ticket to both The White Devil and Mac Beth, are available for only $128-150. Single tickets to both productions are available now for $75-$115. For tickets and more information about any of Red Bull Theater's productions and programs, visit Redbulltheater.com.

Monday 02.25.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

RED BULL THEATER announces cast for THE WHITE DEVIL: Jenny Bacon Robert Cuccioli Daniel Oreskes Socorro Santiago Derek Smith T. Ryder Smith and more

RED BULL THEATER

Announces Casting for John Webster’s

THE WHITE DEVIL

Directed by Louisa Proske

Featuring Amara James Aja, Jenny Bacon, Lisa Birnbaum, Robert Cuccioli, Edward O’Blenis, Daniel Oreskes, Cherie Corinne Rice, Socorro Santiago, Tommy Schrider, Derek Smith, and T. Ryder Smith

Performances Begin March 19th at the Lucille Lortel Theatre

Tickets Now On Sale

Red Bull Theater (Jesse Berger, Artistic Director | Jim Bredeson, Managing Director) today announced the cast for the first of its two upcoming Off-Broadway productions at the Lucille Lortel Theatre.

Amara James Aja (Off-Broadway debut! Twelfth Night, Hamlet, Macbeth - The Old Globe); Jenny Bacon (Heartless - Signature Theatre; In The Wake - The Public Theatre;A Streetcar Named Desire, Most Fabulous Story Ever Told, More Stately Mansions), Lisa Birnbaum (Off-Bway: F#%king Up Everything, I’m Getting My Act Together…, Abe Lincoln’s Big Gay Dance Party, Lizzie Borden), Robert Cuccioli (Bway: Jekyll & Hyde - Tony Award nomination, Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark, Les Miserables), Edward O’Blenis (Off-Bway: Coriolanus, Spring Awakening, Hamlet), Daniel Oreskes (Bway:Oslo, The Miracle Worker, Billy Elliot, Cymbeline, Aida, Electra, The Song of Jacob Zulu;Off-Bway: Hir, The Devils, Henry V, Quills, Othello), Cherie Corinne Rice (Off-Bway: The Lark, Ensemble Studio Theater; Regional: Shakespeare Festival St. Louis, Berkeley Rep, Trinity Rep), Socorro Santiago (Bway: The Bacchae; Off-Bway: L'illusion - NYTW;The Promise - EST;  “Mozart in the Jungle”), Tommy Schrider (Bway: War Horse; Off-Bway: Macbeth -TFANA; Close Ties - EST; Acts of Mercy - Rattlestick; She Stoops to Conquer - Irish Rep; “The Americans”); Derek Smith (Bway: The Green Bird -Tony nomination, Timon of Athens, The Lion King; Off-Broadway: Sylvia, The Green Bird - Obie Award, King John - Derwent Award; 'Tis Pity She’s a Whore, The Witch of Edmonton - Callaway Award), and T. Ryder Smith (Broadway: Oslo, War Horse, Equus; Off Bway:Summer and Smoke - CSC/Transport Group; She Stoops to Comedy - Playwrights Horizons) will star in Louisa Proske’s new production of John Webster’s The White Devil.

Performances will begin March 19th at the Lucille Lortel Theatre (121 Christopher Street between Bleecker & Hudson Streets). Opening Night is set for March 31st. The limited Off-Broadway engagement will continue through April 14th.  

The White Devil will have set design by Kate Noll, costume design by Beth Goldenberg, lighting design by JiYoun Chang, sound design by Chad Raines, and video design by Yana Birÿkova.

"With this thrilling cast featuring some of New York’s finest actors under the brilliant direction of Louisa Proske, I know we’re all in for a rare treat with Webster’s provocative and shockingly timely play.” Berger continued, “and we’re reconfiguring the Lucille Lortel Theater seating arrangement into a three quarter thrust to create a wonderfully intimate experience for it. I can’t wait to share this experience with New York’s finest theater audiences!”

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Louisa Proske will direct John Webster’s The White Devil—a play that was was first performed at the original Red Bull theatre in the early months of 1612—is being given its first NY production in over fifty years (It was last revived in 1965 at the Circle in the Square starring Frank Langella).

"Webster is a playwright for our time. Writing about a society on its slide towards civil war, he described the corrosion of institutions by greed and hypocrisy and the lack of any future for young people with an urgency that makes the roller-coaster plot of The White Devilseem as if snatched from current headlines. Its deeper concerns –  corruption, rampant voyeurism, and systemic misogyny – speak directly to our present experience, though in the poetic, visceral, juicy language of 1612 rather than the truncated twitter lingo of 2019. In spite of his dark subject matter, Webster’s gallows humor and satirical gift keeps his audience engaged and laughing. Our production will interpret his White Devil as a poignantly contemporary dystopia, a deep dive into the dizzying maze of political power. Using live video to mirror Webster’s world of seductive images, perversion, surveillance and violence, it traces an explosive love affair and the story of an extraordinary woman in a world of deceit, objectification, and fake news,” said Louisa Proske.

Louisa Proske is the recipient of a 2018 Princess Grace Award and was chosen as the Musical America New Artist of the Month for May 2018. She is co-artistic director of Heartbeat Opera, a company that grows vivid theatrical worlds through revelatory adaptations, radical rearrangements, and ingenious design. Theatre productions include peerless (nominated for a Berkshire Theatre Award for Outstanding Direction), Gaslight, This, Engagements (all Barrington Stage Company), One Day When We Were Young(Assembly, Edinburgh), Pinkalicious the Musical (Hangar Theatre), The Winstons(Juilliard School of Drama), ‘Tis Pity She’s A Whore (The Tank), Cymbeline and As You Like It at Yale School of Drama.

-------

Following the The White Devil will be Mac Beth adapted and directed by Erica Schmidt from Shakespeare, playing its limited Off-Broadway engagement May 7th through June 2nd only, with Opening Night set for May 19th. 

-------

Red Bull Theater, hailed as as “the city’s gutsiest classical theater” by Time Out New York, brings rarely seen classic plays to dynamic new life for contemporary audiences, uniting a respect for tradition with a modern sensibility. Named for the rowdy Jacobean playhouse that illegally performed plays in England during the years of Puritan rule, Red Bull Theater is New York City’s home for dynamic performances of great plays that stand the test of time. With the Jacobean plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries as its cornerstone, the company also produces new works that are in conversation with the classics. A home for artists, scholars and students, Red Bull Theater delights and engages the intellect and imagination of audiences, and strives to make its work accessible, diverse, and welcoming to all. Red Bull Theater believes in the power of great classic stories and plays of heightened language to deepen our understanding of the human condition, in the special ability of live theater to create unique, collective experiences, and the timeless capacity of classical theater to illuminate the events of our times. Variety agreed, hailing our work as: “Proof that classical theater can still be surprising after hundreds of years.”

Since its debut in 2003 with a production of Shakespeare’s Pericles starring Daniel Breaker followed by the breakout hit production of The Revenger’s Tragedy, Red Bull Theater has served adventurous theatergoers with Off-Broadway productions, Revelation Readings, and the annual Short New Play Festival. The company also offers outreach programs including Shakespeare in Schools bringing professional actors and teaching artists into public school classrooms; Bull Sessions, free post-play discussions with top scholars; and Master Classes in classical acting led by veteran theater professionals.

Acclaimed as “a dynamic producer of classic plays” by The New York Times and “the most exciting classical theater in New York” by Time Out NY, Red Bull Theater has produced 17 Off-Broadway productions including the recent runaway hit The Government Inspectorstarring Michael Urie, and over 150 Revelation Readings of rarely seen classics, serving a community of more than 5,000 artists and providing quality artistic programming to an audience of over 65,000. The company’s unique programming has received ongoing critical acclaim, and has been recognized with Lortel, Drama Desk, Drama League, Callaway, Off Broadway Alliance, and OBIE nominations and Awards.

The productions are made possible through special arrangement with THE LUCILLE LORTEL THEATRE FOUNDATION, created in 1998. Lucille Lortel granted the historic theatre bearing her name to the Foundation to continue her legacy of promoting excellent work long into the future without the economic burdens normally associated with theatre space. The Foundation therefore makes the Lortel Theatre available to not-for-profit organizations at a subsidized cost. The Lucille Lortel Theatre has hosted dozens of theatre companies and is also made available to community groups for meetings and other events. For the calendar of all upcoming activities, a history of the theatre, and more, please visit www.lortel.org.

Subscriptions, offering a ticket to both The White Devil and Mac Beth, are available for only $128-150. Single tickets to both productions are available now for $75-$115.

For tickets and more information about any of Red Bull Theater's productions and programs, visit Redbulltheater.com.

Tuesday 02.19.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

Mark Jacoby (Ragtime, Show Boat) to lead the World Premiere of VILNA by Ira Fuchs, directed by Joseph Discher, opening Off-Broadway March 20th

If God Created Monsters He Also Created Heroes

The World Premiere of
VILNA,
A New Play by Ira Fuchs, 
Will Begin Its Limited Off-Broadway Engagement
Monday, March 11th
at the Theatre at St. Clement's


Featuring Mark Jacoby (Ragtime, Show Boat - Tony Award Nomination)
With Sophia Blum, Brian Cade, Paul Cooper, Sean Hudock, Nathan Kaufman, Tom Morin, Seamus Mulcahy, James Michael Reilly, Patrick Toon, and Carey Van Driest

Directed by Joseph Discher
 
Opening Night is Set for Wednesday March 20th 
 
 
TICKETS NOW ON SALE!


Vilna, a new play by Ira Fuchs directed by Joseph Discher, will begin its limited Off-Broadway World Premiere engagement at the Theatre at St. Clement's (423 West 46th Street, between Ninth & Tenth Avenues) on Monday March 11th.  Opening Night is set for Wednesday March 20th (7pm). This limited Off-Broadway engagement will continue through Sunday April 14th only.

Mark Jacoby, best known for his roles on Broadway including Gaylord Ravenal in Show Boat (Tony Award nomination) and Father in Ragtime, among others, will be joined by Sophia Blum, Brian Cade, Paul Cooper, Sean Hudock, Nathan Kaufman, Tom Morin, Seamus Mulcahy, James Michael Reilly, Patrick Toon, and Carey Van Driest.

Vilna will have scenic design by Brittany Vasta, costume design by Devon Painter, lighting design by Harry Feiner, and sound design by Jane Shaw. Rick Sordelet will serve as Fight Director.

Vilna, inspired by a news report of the discovery of the escape tunnel at the site of the Vilna ghetto, tells the heroic story of Motke Zeidel and Yudi Farber from the ages of 11 through 28, actual people who come of age in the remarkable city of Vilna during its degradation in the years before World War II and its destruction during the war. As the home they knew collapses, going from vibrant metropolis to stifling ghetto and ultimately the Ponar killing pits, they face painful moral choices to save others while putting their own lives at risk. Vilna contains an important message for today in light of the rise of political polarization, hate crimes, xenophobia and wealth inequality, the same issues seen in Nazi Germany.

“Because we are three generations removed from the Holocaust, the world’s collective memory of it is fading away. This emboldens people and institutions to promulgate Anti-Semitic lies and tropes and engage in violent hate crimes. Anti-Semitic lies, misinformation and hatred-mongering will never disappear. They serve a useful purpose as a politically exploitative tool of demagoguery to manipulate public sentiment; a tried and proven tool for capturing attention and consolidating power, effective at every level of political organization. Furthermore, the current autocratic rulers of Sovereign states that collaborated with the Nazis are taking advantage of the historical distance from the Holocaust to revise the historical record of their country’s complicity and memorialize Nazi collaborators as heroes. The question is, when does this Anti-Semitic activity, historical revisionism and world-wide enthusiasm for Neo-Nazi ideals become sufficiently amplified in frequency and volume to cause the alarm that we are on the verge of another anti-Semitic calamity of world-wide proportions?” said Mr. Fuchs.

Playwright Ira Fuchs is a lifelong resident of New York City. He graduated with a BA in English from Queens College of CUNY in 1974. While in college he started writing plays that were staged at the original Playwrights Horizons, founded by Bob Moss in a YWCA on Eighth Avenue. After graduating he spent 45 years as an entrepreneur working with computer technology from mainframes to microcomputers. He has consulted and worked for companies such for AT&T and Microsoft. He is the author and publisher of two books on Microsoft’s SharePoint platform. In 2016 he returned to writing plays and enrolled in a six week play writing workshop at Hollins University where Bob Moss is a faculty member.  One assignment was to write a full length play, in three days, based on a news article published that day. In The New York Times was a story about the discovery of an escape tunnel in the Ponar death pits outside of Vilnius.

Director Joseph Discher's  Off-Broadway credits include The Violin starring Robert LuPone (world premiere) and Ben Butler (NYC premiere) at 59E59. Regional: Ben Butlerat Barrington Stage Company, Majestic Theater, and New Jersey Repertory Company (world premiere); Shakespeare Theatre of NJ: A Child’s Christmas in Wales, The Diary of Anne Frank, Wittenberg, Our Town, Henry IV: Part One, To Kill a Mockingbird, Arms and the Man, The Grapes of Wrath, The Tempest, Amadeus, Galileo, Of Mice and Men, The Fantasticks, Twelfth Night, Scapin, Much Ado About Nothing, The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged); Florida Studio Theatre: One Man Two Guvnors; Theatreworks: The Weir, Red, and As You Like It; Shakespeare Festival of St. Louis: Julius Caesar. (www.joedischer.com)

Sophia Blum is a proud Jew originally from Rhode Island who now lives in Brooklyn. Off-Broadway: Public Enemy (Pearl Theater). Regional: The Bungler, Shakespeare LIVE!(Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey); Antony and Cleopatra (Orlando Shakespeare Theater); King Lear, CSC2’s Romeo and Juliet (Commonwealth Shakespeare Theater);Breaking Legs (Ocean State Theater Company). Look for her this summer in the film, 17 Brides starring Chadwick Boseman.

Brian Cade is a New York based actor and a proud member of AEA and SAG-AFTRA. New York credits include Julius Caesar, The Tempest, The Constant Couple and The Imaginary Invalid. Regional credits include The Liar, Black Coffee, Misalliance, Alls Well That Ends Well, Richard III, Bobby Gould in Hell, A Midsummer Night’s Dream and The Balcony. TV credits include “Quantico,” “Gotham,” “Bull,” “Nightcap!,” “Billions,” and “House of Cards.”

Paul Cooper is New York based actor originally from St. Louis, MO. Regional: Shakespeare Theatre of DC: Hamlet (Laertes); Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey: Buried Child; The Guthrie: Concrete Orange; The Berkshire Theatre Festival: Design for Living;Arena Stage: The Play About the Baby (The Edward Albee Festival); St. Louis Actor’s Studio: Good, King Lear, Blood Brothers (The Labute New Theatre Festival); The Black Repertory of St. Louis: Julius Caesar; Stray Dog Theatre: Psycho Beach Party. TV: “The Gifted” (Fox). Training: MFA Yale School of Drama.

Sean Hudock is an actor, producer and writer based in Brooklyn. Theatre includes She Calls Me Firefly (SoHo Playhouse), Sex with Strangers (Cleveland Play House), nine seasons with the Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey including The Diary of Anne Frank, The Lion in Winter, Comedy of Errors, Twelfth Night, Romeo & Juliet; Alabama Shakespeare Festival, LA Theatre Works, Arena Stage. Film/TV:  Private Romeo, “Alternatino with Arturo Castro” (Comedy Central), The Chaperone (Masterpiece). His play Hans & Sophie, inspired by a student-led Nazi resistance movement, is currently in development around the country. @SeanHudock

Mark Jacoby’s Broadway appearances include leading roles in Elf, Sweeney Todd, Man of La Mancha, Ragtime, Show Boat (Tony, Outer Critics, and Joseph Jefferson nominations), The Phantom of the Opera, Grand Hotel, and Sweet Charity (Theatre World Award). Also in New York: Critical Darling for New Group, Sitting Pretty for Hypothetical Theatre, Enter the Guardsman for Vineyard Theatre (Drama Desk nomination). Elsewhere: Five Presidents (Milwaukee Repertory Theatre/Bay Street Theatre), Sleuth(Maltz/Jupiter Theatre), Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner (Asolo), The Play’s the Thing(Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, directed by Joe Discher), Life x 3 (Repertory Theatre of St. Louis), Fiddler on the Roof (Walnut Street Theatre/Barrymore Award), The Visit(Goodman and Signature Theatres/Helen Hayes Nomination), and Nine (Joseph Jefferson Award). Recent on-camera appearances include TV’s “The Blacklist,” “Madam Secretary,” and “The Good Fight;” and on the big screen, The Post.

Nathan Kaufman’s regional theatre credits regional theatre credits include Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, Florida Studio Theatre, Human Race Theatre Company, Texas Shakespeare Festival, Shadow Lawn Stage, New Century Theatre, Bohemian Archaeology. Film: One Fall, Gym Rats, Potatoes for Pado, Liozna. TV: "The View," "What Would You Do?" (ABC); "Secrets Of America’s Favorite Places" (Discovery Family). Co-Creator of the Broadway musical, Gettin' The Band Back Together.  Nathan is the host of web series "Unique New York With Nathan Kaufman."  BFA: Purchase College Conservatory of Theatre Arts and Film.  www.unywnk.com  www.nathankaufman.com  

Tom Morin’s Off-Broadway/New York credits include Measure for Measure (NY Classical Theatre); The Rivals (Pearl Theatre Company); Twelfth Night, A Christmas Carol (Titan Theatre Company). Regional: Peter and the Starcatcher (Walnut Street Theatre); The Liar, The Cripple of Inishmaan (Centenary Stage Company); tours of The Winter’s Tale, Marriage of Figaro (Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey); Twelfth Night, Macbeth (Great River Shakespeare Festival); The Front Page, Guys and Dolls (Monomoy Theatre). Co-founder of Polish Your Passion. Education: MFA in Acting, Ohio University; BA in Theatre & Political Science, College of the Holy Cross. @tom_pypnyc, www.tom-morin.com. 

Seamus Mulcahy appeared Off-Broadway in Our Town directed by David Cromer. Recently performed as the title role in Charley’s Aunt directed by Joe Discher at The Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey. Other credits The Revisionist with Deanna Dunagan (The Wallis Annenberg Center), Angels in America: Millennium Approaches and Perestroika  (Kansas City Repertory, directed by David Cromer), the world premiere of Above the Fold with Taraji P. Henson (Pasadena Playhouse), The Winter's Tale, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Tovarich, The Alchemist, Shakespeare in Love, A Child’s Christmas in Wales, and King Lear at Shakespeare Theater of NJ; Rabbit Hole (La Mirada Playhouse), Master Harold… and the boys (Delaware Theatre Company), Romeo and Juliet (Yale Repertory Theater),  The Diary of Anne Frank (Paper Mill Playhouse) and The Seagull, Antony and Cleopatra, Henry VI, and  A Thought in Three Parts (Yale School of Drama). TV/Film credits: “Elementary,” One Fall, and Killing Lincoln. Seamus started Davy Game Productions, which produced Shakespaws, a DVD of dogs performing Shakespeare. MFA, The Yale School of Drama. 

James Michael Reilly’s Off-Broadway credits include The Comedy of Errors (Aquila Theatre Company). Tour: West Side Story (Europe). Regional: Treasure Island – A Musical Adventure (Fulton Theatre); Oliver!  (Pioneer Theatre); A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, Inherit the Wind (Geva Theatre); A Christmas Carol, Glengarry Glen Ross, and others (Denver Center); Holmes and Watson (world premiere, Arizona Theatre Company); The Servant of Two Masters, The Bungler, The Taming of the Shrew,and many others (Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey). Red Dead Redemption 2, “Madam Secretary,” “Unforgettable,” “Blacklist,” “Elementary,” “Person of Interest,” “Law and Order.”

Patrick Toon has performed regionally and in New York; favorite roles include Orgon inTartuffe, Mr. Dussel in The Diary of Anne Frank, and Richard Hannay in The 39 Steps.

Carey Van Driest is co-creative director of Mania Studio, Inc. (@maniastudioinc). New York theatre: Much Ado About Nothing, The International, Othello, The Winter’s Tale, The Importance of Being Earnest. Regional highlights: Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, City Theatre, Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival, Denver Center Theatre, Alabama Shakespeare Festival. Film: Yes, God, Yes (with Natalia Dyer), Scratch, Open House. TV: “New Amsterdam,” “Blindspot,” “The Blacklist,” “Madame Secretary,” “Deception,” “Nashville,” “Bull,” and “Homeland.” Her extensive voiceover work for international documentaries, national commercials, animation and radio can be heard atwww.careyvandriest.com.

The remarkable city of Vilna was a highly evolved center of civilization where Jews lived since the tenth century. In the 18th century Vilna was the center of Jewish learning in Europe. Napoleon called it the “Jerusalem of the North.” Vilna was distinguished as a highly evolved center of economic, cultural, educational, and charitable activity. Vilna was the antithesis of the stereotypical shtetl enclaves of Eastern Europe. During the 19th century innovative Jewish industrialists and merchants manufacturing and trading contemporary products such as ready-made clothing and gloves, beer, tobacco, and sugar plants as well as mills, printers and tanneries. The civil infrastructure of the city was second to none in the world: it was the railroad transit hub for merchandise traveling between Russia and Germany. It had a telegraph system in 1838, a telephone network by 1886, a municipal sewage system in 1899, an electric power-generating station and wiring grid in place by 1901. By the late 1800s Vilna had dozens of synagogues, libraries, schools, theaters, museums, medical facilities, scientific institutions, newspapers, periodicals, journals and book publishing houses. The YIVO Institute, an organization that preserves, studies, and teaches the cultural history of Jewish life throughout Eastern Europe, Germany, and Russia, was founded in Vilna in 1925. Renowned scientists, teachers, writers, sculptors, and musicians made their homes there. Yiddish was the common language. At the beginning of the 20th century, Vilna had hundreds of Jewish educational institutions in which 13,000 children studied. Vilna was renamed Wilno in 1921 when Poland was reconstituted, at which time the Jewish community fell into decline. The Nazis completely eradicated the Vilna Jews between 1941 and 1944, and the city was renamed Vilnius after World War II when it became part of Lithuania.

Performances are Monday, Wednesday through Saturday evenings at 7pm, with matinees Wednesday & Saturday afternoons at 2pm & Sunday afternoon at 3pm. 

Tickets are $39.50 - $69.50, with premium seats available for $99.50.  They may be purchased online at Telecharge.com, by phone at 212/239-6200, or in person at the St. Clement’s box office (423 West 46th Street, between Ninth & Tenth Avenues) one hour prior to show time.

For more information, visit vilna-the-play.org.                                     
 

Thursday 02.14.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

Keen Company Announces the Cast for SURELY GOODNESS AND MERCY


Drama Desk and Obie Award-Winning

Keen Company

Announces the Cast for the NY Premiere of

SURELY GOODNESS AND MERCY

by Chisa Hutchinson

Directed by Jessi D. Hill

Sarita Covington, Jay Mazyck, Brenda Pressley, Courtney Thomas and Cezar Williams Will Star

Limited Engagement Begins February 26th

Today Keen Artistic Director Jonathan Silverstein announced the cast for the New York premiere of  Surely Goodness and Mercy, a truly Keen story about an exceptional boy living a troubled life in Newark, NJ who does a good deed for an often unnoticed person.   Sarita Covington, Jay Mazyck, Brenda Pressley, Courtney Thomas, and Cezar Williams will star under Jessi D. Hill’s direction. The design team includes Lee Savage (scenic), Nicole Wee (costumes), Devorah Kengmana (lighting), and Sadah Espii Proctor (sound).

Sarita Covington is a multi-disciplinary artist/activist from Harlem with over ten years’ experience acting in theater, TV and film including Shakespeare the Remix (Capital Rep);Lulu (Mark Lamos, director), Miss Julie, The Clean House (Bill Rauch, director), all at Yale Rep; The Whale Play (Shana Cooper, director), Forgiveness (Tribeca Performing Arts Center). Her play Things Went Horribly Wrong will be produced this spring in Rochester, NY. She is a co-founder of ACRE (Artists Co-creating Real Equity), a multiracial grassroots organizing group of artists committed racial equity in the arts. She holds an MFA from the Yale School of Drama.

Jay Mazyck is 19 and from Brooklyn NY. He received his training at Rutgers University. This will be his Off-Broadway debut after having participated in many high school & college shows and readings. He is an alumnus of LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts.

Brenda Pressley’s Broadway credits include The Lyons, The American Plan, Cats, Dreamgirls and The Moony Shapiro Songbook. Off-Broadway Brenda starred in Almost Home, The First Breeze of Summer, Seven Guitars, Fran’s Bed, Marvin's Room, And The World Goes ‘Round (Outer Critics Circle Award) and Blues In The Night. Regional theatre appearances include Skeleton Crew, Flyin' West, Intimate Apparel, Black Odyssey, Trouble in Mind, The Old Settler (Barrymore Award), Blues for an Alabama Sky and A Raisin in the Sun. In film, Ms Pressley has appeared in Third Street Blackout, Detachment, 16 Blocks, Cradle Will Rock and It Could Happen to You. On television, Brenda has guest starred on such shows as “The Path,” “The Good Wife,” “Elementary,” “The Mysteries of Laura,” “Body of Proof,” “Law and Order,” “Law and Order - SVU,” “Harambee,” “Lifestories,” and “Brewster Place” (with Oprah Winfrey).

Courtney Thomas is returning to the stage after producing and co-hosting her SF-based web-series/podcast, “Next Big Thing with Courtney & Dara” (@nbttheshow). Credits include Emotional Creature (Off-Broadway), The Mountaintop and Book Club Play(Regional). She holds an MFA from American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco, and a BFA from Howard University. @itsoliviadope

Cezar Williams’s credits include James and Annie written by Tony Award-winner Warren Leight (Side Man) at the Actor’s Studio, Ensemble Theatre of Cincinnati (dir: D. Lynn Meyers) and the Williamstown Theatre Festival (dir: Jack Hofsiss), Sec. 310 Row D Seats 5&6, also by Leight, directed by Fred Berner (“Law & Order,” “Chicago PD,” “Chicago Fire”), Thunder (dir: Greg Allen), Ascension (The National Black Theatre Festival, directed by Petronia Paley) and Yanagai! Yanagai! at LA Mama. TV appearances include “Bull,” “Shades of Blue,” “Law and Order,” “The Enemy Within,” “Search Party,” “NYC 22,” “Blue Bloods.” and “What Would You Do?” He can be seen on demand and on Netflix in the movies Bad Hurt and Hudson Tribes. Cezar is a graduate of NYU.

Performances for this limited Off-Broadway engagement of Surely Goodness and Mercy will begin Tuesday February 26th and continue through Saturday April 13th only, with opening night set for Wednesday March 13th. Additional matinee on Wednesday April 10th at 2pm.

Surely Goodness and Mercy has spent the last year charming audiences across the country: “Notably absent from Hutchinson's frank and sobering story: cynicism” – Chicago Reader; “(Surely Goodness and Mercy has) a soul-stirring quality, touching audiences with its sincerity” – Daily Utah Chronicle; “it's impossible not to like it” - The Salt Lake Tribune. Now, Keen is honored to bring this big-hearted new play to New York for the first time.

“It has been a true pleasure working with both Chisa and director Jessi Hill as they assembled this terrific and talented group of collaborators. Chisa and Jessi are truly Keen artists who create work with openness and generosity. I so look forward to watching the team bring Chisa's beautiful play to life,” said Silverstein.

Set in an under-funded public school in Newark, Surely Goodness and Mercy by rising playwright Chisa Hutchinson, tells the story of a bible-toting boy with a photographic memory who befriends the cantankerous old lunch lady. Against all odds, Tino and Bernadette help each other through the mess of growing up and growing old.

“When I met with Jonathan and he told me about the kind of work that Keen likes to do -- stuff that's an uplift, but for like grown-ass realists who know that happy endings are hard-won and rare! I felt so honored and encouraged that they saw my play fitting into that mission. And New York is a city full of grown-ass realists so I'm very ready to bring Surely Goodness and Mercy here with Keen,” said Chisa.

Chisa Hutchinson is a New York-based playwright who has happily presented her plays, which include Dirt Rich, She Like Girls, This Is Not the Play, Sex on Sunday, Tunde’s Trumpet, The Subject, Somebody’s Daughter, Alondra Was Here, Surely Goodness and Mercy, From the Author of, Amerikin and Dead & Breathing at such venues as the Lark Theater, SummerStage, Atlantic Theater Company, Rattlestick Theater, the New Jersey Performing Arts Center, the Contemporary American Theater Festival, the National Black Theatre, Salt Lake Acting Company, Writers’ Theatre of New Jersey, Delaware REP, Second Stage Theater and Arch 468 in London. She has been a Dramatists Guild Fellow, a Lark Fellow, a Resident at Second Stage Theater, a Humanitas Fellow, a New York NeoFuturist, and a staff writer for the Blue Man Group. She's also won a GLAAD Award, a Lilly Award, a New York Innovative Theatre Award, the Paul Green Award, a Helen Merrill Award, the Lanford Wilson Award, and has been a finalist for the highly coveted PoNY Fellowship. Lately, Chisa's been venturing into film and is presently working mercenary-style on two screenplays, one for A&E/Lifetime and the another spearheaded by Simon Cowell for Sony, and entering pre-production for two indie film projects. And while she’s flexing new muscles, she figured she may as well accept a commission from Audible to write radio play. She'll never give up live theater, though, no matter how little it pays, so in addition to being a Fellow at Primary Stages and a proud fifth-year member of New Dramatists, Chisa is currently gearing up for two NYC theater productions and settling down to write a revenge play about white folks who call the police on black folks commissioned by South Coast Rep. BA, Vassar College; MFA, NYU Tisch School of the Arts. To learn more visit chisahutchinson.com.

Director Jessi D. Hill’s latest credits include Melissa Li and Kit Yan’s Interstate (NYMF), Renata Hinrichs’ Random Acts (The Barrow Group), Larissa FastHorse’s Vanishing Point(HERE Arts Center), Cusi Cram’s The Helpers (59E59), Nicole Pandolfo’s Brick City(Premiere Stages), and others. Recent New York credits include new work at New York Theatre Workshop, The Public Theater/Joe’s Pub, Labyrinth, The Women’s Project, P73, The New Group, Ensemble Studio Theatre, New Dramatists, The Lark, The Playwrights Realm, New Georges, and others. She has been a guest director/teacher in training programs at Yale, Juilliard, Eugene O'Neill Theatre Center/NTI, Powerhouse/NY Stage & Film, NYU/Tisch, Playwrights Horizons and others. Jessi is a recipient of the Denham Fellowship from the Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation. She served as Associate Artistic Director of terraNOVA Collective from 2009-2015 where she co-created the Groundbreakers Playwrights Group and Groundworks new works program. She is also currently the Literary Team Director at Rattlestick Playwrights Theater. Her work has been seen internationally in Edinburgh, London, New Zealand, Berlin and Hamburg. MFA: Yale School of Drama. Current projects: www.jessidhill.com.

Keen Company creates theater that provokes identification, reflection, and emotional connection. In intimate productions of plays and musicals, we tell wholehearted stories about people striving to do their best and the decisive moments that change us. Keen has been honored with eleven Drama Desk nominations, two Drama Desk Awards, two Drama League nominations, and two Obie Awards.

All performances will be at Theatre Row (410 West 42nd Street, between 9th and 10th Avenues) and will be Tuesday through Thursday evenings at 7pm; Fridays at 8pm; Saturdays at 2pm & 8pm; and Sunday matinees at 3pm. There will be two special student matinees: Wednesday March 20 and Wednesday March 27th.

Tickets for Surely Goodness and Mercy will be $65; premium tickets will be $80; EXCEPT: all Tuesday shows will be only $25 for all seats! (All ticket prices include theater restoration fees.)  Tickets are on sale NOW! Tickets may be purchased at the Theatre Row Box Office (410 West 42nd Street, between 9th and 10th Avenues), online at Telecharge.com, or by phone at 212-239-6200.

For more information about Surely Goodness and Mercy or any of Keen’s programs, visit www.keencompany.org

Friday 02.01.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

Mint Theater Presents the First of Three American Premieres under the banner: “MEET MISS BAKER,” introducing the work of Elizabeth Baker

Mint Theater Company
Presents The First of Three American Premieres Under the Banner:
“MEET MISS BAKER” 
Introducing the Work of Elizabeth Baker (1876-1962)
 
Kicking Off in January with the American Premiere of
THE PRICE OF THOMAS SCOTT
Directed by Jonathan Bank
 
Followed by A Series of Readings & Talks - Culminating with 
Two Simultaneous American Premieres in Two Theaters In Summer 2020
 

Mint Artistic Director Jonathan Bank today announced “Meet Miss Baker,” Mint’s latest effort in its ongoing commitment to create new life for neglected women playwrights. From Pulitzer-Prize winning plays by Zona Gale and Susan Glaspell, to forgotten works by Rachel Crothers, Cicely Hamilton, Githa Sowerby, Hazel Ellis, Maurine Dallas Watkins, Lillian Hellman, Rose Franken and Dawn Powell, Mint has long been a champion of neglected plays by women. Up next is English playwright Elizabeth Baker, who will receive three productions, each getting their American premiere, over the next two years.

Meet Miss Baker will follow in the pattern of the Mint’s internationally lauded “Deevy Project,” which demonstrated the impact that even a small organization can have with big ambitions and persistent effort. Teresa Deevy had all but slipped from memory, even in her native Ireland —  until the Mint came to her rescue with a four-production, two-publication effort to resurrect her work and reputation, leading to international attention. In September 2017 The Irish Times extolled the Mint’s efforts in a feature story under the headline: “The New York Theatre That’s Kept Teresa Deevy’s Flame Alive.”
 
Meet Miss Baker will illuminate the insight, complexity, and range of Elizabeth Baker’s body of work, introducing new audiences to the adventurous life and expansive work of this rule-breaking typist-turned-playwright. Startling her contemporaries with her rapid rise from “obscure stenographer making five dollars a week” to “one of the most widely discussed playwrights in London” (The Christian Science Monitor), Baker created a theatrical sensation in 1909 with her drama Chains — “a remarkable play,” The Timesdeclared, “—all the more remarkable if, as we believe, it is the first its author has written.”
 
Meet Miss Baker will begin with The Price of Thomas Scott, about a businessman who hesitates to sell his shop for conversion into a dance hall, because he considers dancing immoral. Baker’s comic-drama poses probing questions about prejudice, principles, pretense and progress. The Price of Thomas Scott has had only one production (at the Gaiety Theatre in Manchester, 1913). The Guardian praised Baker’s “very considerable merits as a dramatist,” and her “careful realism…a minute study of the surface detail of life, leaving the audience to draw what conclusions they liked from what was before them.” The Era agreed, describing the play as a “delightful piece of realistic drama…There is much interest and food for thought in the picture of Thomas Scott.”
 
Mint will follow Thomas Scott with overlapping productions of two Baker plays at twotheaters within Theater Row in the summer of 2020. This Theatre Row twin bill will include Baker’s surprising comedy Partnership, about an ambitious professional woman who receives a tempting business proposition, and Baker’s claim to fame, Chains. In between and continuing beyond, Mint will present readings of many of her other plays. Publication of Elizabeth Baker Reclaimed will coincide with the Baker twin bill in 2020.
 
Elizabeth Baker grew up in a strict, religious household “and as a young girl, she never read plays nor was she taken to see them,” according to a 1927 feature in This Week in London.
 
“She first started going to the theatre during Granville Baker’s tenancy at the Court [1905] and was so much inspired by the productions there that she attempted to write a play herself. ‘I was absolutely ignorant about the theatre, but I think I had a feeling for dramatic pictures. I sent my first attempt, a one-act play, to Lena Ashwell’s company, and Mr. Knoblock wrote to me about it and praised it, and suggested that I should try and write a long play. This I did, and Chains was the result.’”
 
The Play Actors, an independent stage society, presented Chains for a single performance on April 18, 1909—making Baker literally an overnight success. The Globe joined The Times in calling Chains “a remarkable play. It is the first effort of one who, we understand, is a typewriter, without any experience of the theatre, and yet this tragi-comedy of humble suburban life, with its keen sense of drama, its clever character drawings and its feeling for the stage, is a work which many a tried writer would be very glad to own as author.”
 
Although Baker produced varied and original work throughout the 1910s and ‘20s at such innovative independent theaters as Annie Horniman’s Gaiety Theatre in Manchester and Barry Jackson’s Birmingham Repertory Theatre, she struggled to attract commercial audiences after her initial success. Even during the height of critical acclaim for Chains,Baker’s reception — and place in the British theatrical canon — may have been negatively affected by class, age, and gender biases. Although Baker was thirty-two-years old when the Play Actors premiered Chains, many reviews referred to her in such terms as “a young girl,” “a girl stenographer of little literary training,” “a girl clerk,” and a “girl-novice.” Other critics assumed that, despite Baker’s relative inexperience writing for the stage, she merely possessed the “trick of observation” in transcribing her lower-middle-class roots. The Graphic assumed a “simple sincerity which once again proves that on the stage, above all places, honesty is the best policy,” while downplaying Baker’s creative imagination, skill, and craftsmanship.  
 
Furthermore, derogatory coverage of Baker’s appearance, and her unwillingness to perform to Cinderella-like expectations of class mobility and feminine glamour, may have hindered her professional advancement in the West End theater. When Baker appeared to tumultuous applause at the opening night of Chains at the Court Theatre, The Sun’s critic reported:
 
At the end of the play, the audience insisted upon seeing its author and in answer to repeated calls, stepped upon the stage a little, shrinking, timid woman, very pale of face and with distended, fear-filled eyes. She wore an ill-fitting, tasteless gown, obviously homemade, and in herself was the prototype of all she had written about in her play—drudgery, the daily struggle with poverty, and the monotony of a life ugly and colorless. To the credit of the audience, it could be said they cheered her to the end.
 
For The Price of Thomas Scott Mr. Bank directs a cast that features Donald Corren, Andrew Fallaize, Emma Geer, Josh Goulding, Mitchell Greenberg, Nick LaMedica, Jay Russell, Tracy Sallows, Mark Kenneth Smaltz, Ayana Workman, and Arielle Yoder beginning performances January 24th and continuing through March 23rd at Theatre Row (410 West 42nd Street). Opening Night is set for February 20th.
 
The Price of Thomas Scott will have scenic design by Vicki R. Davis; costume design by Hunter Kazcorowski; lighting design by Christian DeAngelis; sound design by Jane Shaw; and prop design by Chris Fields.  Casting is by Stephanie Klapper, CSA.
 
Performances of The Price of Thomas Scott will be Tuesday through Saturday evenings at 7:30pm with matinees Saturday & Sunday at 2pm. No performance on Tuesday February 5th, with Special Added Matinees at 2pm on February 6th, 13th and March 20th.  All performances will take place at Theater Row (410 West 42nd Street, between 9th and Dyer Avenues). Tickets for The Price of Thomas Scott will be $65.00 (including $2.25 theater restoration fee) and can be purchased online at Telecharge.com, by phone at 212-239-6200 or in person at the Theatre Row Box Office. 
 
"Thank heaven for the unwavering commitment of Jonathan Bank, the theatrical archaeologist whose Mint Theater Company unearths long-forgotten plays and imbues them with new life,” declared The New York Times in response to a recent Mint production.
 
For more information, including photos and videos of Mint productions, visit minttheater.org.

Tuesday 01.01.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

Gingold Theatrical Group’s PROJECT SHAW Announces the 2019 Season: Art as Activism: A Theatrical Survival Guide

Gingold Theatrical Group’s PROJECT SHAW
Announces
The 2019 Season:
Art as Activism: A Theatrical Survival Guide

 

Kicking Off January 14th with Shaw’s Misalliance,

Directed by Stephen Brown-Fried,

Starring Kate Abbruzzese, Christian Conn, Andrew Fallaize, David Garrison, Jennifer Lim, Zachary Piser, Maryann Plunkett, Tony Roach, and Jay O. Sanders
 

Concert Performances
Monday Evenings at 7pm
At Symphony Space’s Leonard Nimoy Thalia Theatre


Gingold Theatrical Group (David Staller, Artistic Director) is proud to announce the 14th Season of Project Shaw, a special series of evenings of plays that embrace human rights and free speech. All of GTG’s programming, inspired by the works of George Bernard Shaw, are designed to provoke peaceful discussion and activism. This series is presented monthly at Symphony Space’s Leonard Nimoy Thalia Theatre (2537 Broadway at 95th Street).
 
“Though it hardly seems possible, we're now joyously preparing to launch into our 14th year of this unique series!  We incorporated Gingold Theatrical Group in 2006 as a response to our concerns about basic human rights and free speech under the Bush administration (which now seems like the good old days) and our mission has never seemed more vitally important. GTG was initially founded to produce Project Shaw, but is now just one part of the company, which produces full productions, hosts new play development labs, and facilitates three inner-city educational programs,” said Mr. Staller.

The 14th season will begin January 14th with Shaw’s Misalliance directed by Stephen Brown-Fried, followed by Shaw Songs@The Players on February 11 (PLEASE NOTE: This event will take place at The Players, 16 Gramercy Park So), then On Approval by Frederick Lonsdale (April 15th), Shaw’s Man and Superman on May 20th, Shaw’s The Philanderer on June 24th, The Stepmother by Githa Sowerby on July 22nd,Scintillating Shaw Symposium with an international panel on September 23, aShaw’sArms and the Man on October 28th, followed by The Play’s The Thing by Ferenc Molnar on November 18th and the season will end with I’ll Leave It To You by Noel Coward on December 16th.[*]

Kicking off the season of “Art as Activism” will be Shaw’s sparkling comedy Misalliancedirected by Stephen Brown-Fried, Stephen Brown-Fried, GTG’s Associate Director, and featuring Kate Abbruzzese, Christian Conn, Andrew Fallaize, David Garrison, Jennifer Lim, Zachary Piser, Maryann Plunkett, Tony Roach, and Jay O. Sanders
 
In Misalliance, the high-flying comedy, Shaw examines a variety of mating combinations. The social and the political collide with the romantic and the practical; the aristocrats take on the middle classes and vice versa, and-to top it all off there’s a glamorous lady aviatrix and a tipsy gun-toting socialist loose on the grounds! This is one of Shaw’s most beloved of plays.
 
All the plays in this series (except Shaw Songs@The Players) will be presented in a concert-reading format at the Leonard Nimoy Thalia Theater at Symphony Space, 2537 Broadway at 95th Street. Tickets are $40 and are available by calling 212-864-5400 or online at www.symphonyspace.org.  Special reserved VIP seating available for $55 by contacting the Gingold office 212-355-7823 or info@gingoldgroup.org.  Symphony Space’s Leonard Nimoy Thalia Theatre space is completely accessible. Infra-red hearing devices are also available.
 
On February 11th, Project Shaw will present a special evening, Shaw Songs@The Players, a special treat, an evening of music that Shaw enjoyed, including popular music of his time, works by Gilbert and Sullivan, and more! For this very special event we’ll be returning to the original home of Project Shaw, the beautiful Players Club at 16 Gramercy Park South.  Cast and ticket information will be announced shortly.
 
Now celebrating its 14th year, Gingold Theatrical Group's Project Shaw made history in December 2009 as the first company ever to present performances of every one of Shaw's 65 plays (including full-length works, one-acts and sketches). They are now also including plays by writers who share Shaw’s activist socio-political views embracing human rights and free speech, including work by Chekhov, Ibsen, Elizabeth Robins, Rachel Crothers, Pinero, Wilde, Barrie, and Harley Granville-Barker. GTG’s other programs include its new play development and educational programs. For those interested in lively off-site discourses, each Project Shaw event is followed by a talk-back with cast members. GTG’s David Staller and Stephen Brown-Fried are also hosting a monthly Shaw Club discussion group.  Always lively, they meet the Monday evening after every Project Shaw event at 520 8th Avenue.  For reservations, which are required, call 212-355-7823 or emailinfo@gingoldgroup.org.
 
GTG recently completed a highly acclaimed Off-Broadway engagement of Shaw’sHeartbreak House. Terry Teachout in the The Wall Street Journal declared, “Mr. Staller has taken on Heartbreak House, one of Shaw’s most challenging plays, with altogether extraordinary results. Every gesture lands with the utmost potency, and the climactic convulsion that is the play’s final scene sweeps away the bubbly comedy and leaves you, as Shaw intended, in shock. Mr. Staller has given us a uniquely satisfying production of this great but hard-to-stage play. This is one of the finest Shaw stagings of the past decade. Do not miss it.”
 
For more information about Project Shaw and all the programs at Gingold Theatrical Group, call 212-355-7823, email info@gingoldgroup.org, or visit gingoldgroup.org
 

Tuesday 01.01.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

ERC Announces the Off-Broadway Premiere of MAESTRO Starring John Noble (Denethor in Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings Trilogy)

Ensemble for the Romantic Century
Announces 
the Off-Broadway Premiere of
 MAESTRO
Starring John Noble
(Denethor in Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings Trilogy)
 
Performances Begin January 3rd
 
Tickets Now On Sale!

Ensemble for the Romantic Century (Eve Wolf, Executive Artistic Director) is proud to announce that the 2018 - ‘19 season, ERC’s 18th, will continue January 3rd with Maestro by Eve Wolf. Opening Night is set for January 14th.  This limited Off-Broadway engagement runs through February 9th only. Performances will be at The Duke on 42nd Street (229 West 42nd Street, between 7th and 8th Avenues).

Donald T. Sanders, ERC Director of Theatrical Production, will direct John Noble in the title role. Maestro will also feature Mari Lee and Henry Wang on violins, Matthew Cohen on viola, Ari Evan on cello, Zhenni Li on piano, and Maximilian Morel on trumpet.

“Love & Justice & Music. The baton of a great musician breaks thru the sickness and savagery of the modern world. In Maestro by Eve Wolf, our new production about the legendary conductor Arturo Toscanini, audiences can see, hear and feel thru the power of his real words and beautiful music how this passionately defiant man worked to defeat Fascism,” said Mr. Sanders.

MAESTRO brings to life the story of legendary conductor Arturo Toscanini and his brave opposition to Fascism. His refusal to perform in Italy and Germany, and his trips to Palestine to conduct an orchestra made up of Jewish refugees made headlines around the world. Drawing on his passionate letters to his lover, the young Italian pianist Ada Mainardi, along with music by his contemporaries, this moving theatrical experience shows us that even during one of the darkest chapters in human history, an artist’s voice can be heard. 

John Noble is an esteemed voice, television, film, and stage actor who is best recognized for his work as Dr. Walter Bishop on JJ Abrams’ cult favorite, “Fringe.”  John reunited with Fringe co-creators Alex Kurtzman and Bob Orci, for the first two seasons of “Sleepy Hollow,” followed by a season on “Elementary” for CBS as Sherlock Holmes’s father.   He has also hosted "Dark Matters" for The Science Channel and broke out internationally inThe Lord of the Rings trilogy as Denethor in The Two Towers and Return of the King. John is extremely proud of his thespian roots, having spent the first half of his career acting and directing in the theatre. Highlights include serving ten years as the Artistic Director of the Stage Company of South Australia, directing a production of David Williamson’s Sons of Cain that transferred to London’s West End, and acting in an award-winning production of Rob George’s Errol Flynn’s Great Big Adventure Book for Boys at the Edinburgh Festival in Scotland. In addition, John has garnered great critical acclaim for his performances in New York in the Off-Broadway productions Substance of Fire andPosterity and has lent his voice to such games as “Batman Arkham Knight,” “LA Noire,” “Superman: Unbound,” “Transformers Prime,” and “The Last Airbender.” Most recently, John has appeared in “Salvation,” “DC’s Legends of Tomorrow,” “The Librarians,” “The Blacklist,” “Silencio,” and more episodes of “Elementary.”

The critically acclaimed Ensemble for the Romantic Century, now in its 18th Season, conjures the past with original multimedia productions that fuse chamber music, drama, and history. The subject matters span across centuries, from Tolstoy to Toscanini, from Verne to Van Gogh, all brought to life through the fusion of drama and sound. We believe that one can understand Freud more deeply by listening to the erotic cabaret music of fin de siècle Vienna, that one can appreciate Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata” more profoundly by listening to him speak of his tortured love life and his debilitating deafness. By illuminating the interplay between literature, biography and music we have transformed the concert experience.

ERC was founded by pianist Eve Wolf in 2001 with the intention of creating an engaging and innovative approach to chamber music concerts. ERC’s theatrical concerts interweave letters, memoirs, diaries, poems, and other literature with chamber and vocal music; the music’s historical context is reinforced through its connections with history, politics, philosophy, psychology, and the other arts to create a compelling new performance experience. These unique productions merge dramatic and fully staged scripts with music, recapturing the past with a sense of immediacy that transports, illuminates, and captivates. The scripts, drawn from historical material that includes letters, diaries, memoirs, newspaper articles, poetry, and literature create an intricate counterpoint to the musical program. The subject matters span across centuries, from Tolstoy to Toscanini, from Verne to Van Gogh, all brought to life through the fusion of drama and music. By illuminating the interplay between literature, biography and music ERC has transformed the concert experience. The Romantic Century was about imagination and experimentation. Elevating the human condition through art: that is the spirit we hope to summon.

ERC has created over 40 original theatrical concerts at such institutions as BAM (Brooklyn Academy of Music); Shakespeare & Company in Lenox, MA; The Jewish Museum of New York; the Archivio Fano of Venice, Italy; the Festival de Musique de Chambre Montréal; the Massachusetts International Festival of the Arts/MIFA; the French Institute-Alliance Française/FIAF, New York; the Italian Academy for Advanced Studies at Columbia University; the Italian Cultural Institute of New York; and the City University of New York (CUNY).  ERC’s programs are distinguished by their artistic excellence, breadth of repertoire, and variety of subject matter. In its relatively short history, the Ensemble for the Romantic Century has enriched the music scene with highly innovative productions that are also historically informed, aesthetically exquisite, and emotionally transporting.

Next up will be HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN: Tales Real & Imagined – Hans Christian Andersen is known as one of the most prolific authors of fairy tales, having written over 3300, some of which are so infused to our culture it's hard to imagine a world without them. This piece explores beyond just the magic taking a deeper look at the inner life of Andersen and how some of his most memorable tales, transcend age and nationality. Performances will begin April 13th for a limited run through June 1st, with opening night scheduled for April 28th, also at The Duke on 42nd Street.

Eve Wolf is Founder and Executive Artistic Director of ERC as well as playwright. Recent credits include Van Gogh’s Ear (Pershing Square Signature Center, 2017; New York TimesCritic’s Pick); Anna Akhmatova: The Heart Is Not Made of Stone (BAM, 2016; New York Times Critic’s Pick); and Jules Verne: From the Earth to The Moon (BAM, 2015; also aNew York Times Critic’s Pick). Ms. Wolf founded Ensemble for the Romantic Century in 2001 with the mission of creating an innovative and dramatic concert format in which the emotions revealed in memoirs, letters, diaries, and literature are dramatically interwoven with music, thus bringing to life the sensations and passions of a bygone era. For the past sixteen seasons, Ms. Wolf has written scripts for more than twenty-five of ERC’s theatrical concerts and has performed in most of the ensemble’s forty-plus original productions. Some highlights include Ms. Wolf’s scripts for Tchaikovsky: None but the Lonely Heart, which was performed at Shakespeare & Company in Lenox, MA (2013) and at BAM (2014); Van Gogh’s Ear at the Festival de Musique de Chambre de Montréal; Fanny Mendelssohn: Out of her Brother’s Shadow commissioned by the Jewish Museum of New York; and The Dreyfus Affair and Peggy Guggenheim Stripped Bare by her Bachelors. In 2009, she performed before a sold-out audience at the Sale Apollinee of the Teatro La Fenice in Venice in the Italian production of her script, Toscanini: Nel mio cuore troppo di assoluto.

Donald T. Sanders has been Director of Theatrical Production for ERC since 2005. In 2011, he directed Seduction, Smoke and Music at the Tuscan Sun Festival starring Jeremy Irons and Sinéad Cusack. Other ERC productions include Toscanini: Nel mio cuore troppo di assoluto at Venice’s Teatro La Fenice, Sale Apolline, and Van Gogh’s Ear at New York’s Florence Gould Hall and the Festival de Musique de Chambre Montréal. He has directed productions at the New York Shakespeare Festival/Public Theater as well as the off-Broadway plays of Arnold Weinstein, Eric Bentley, Kenneth Koch and William Russo. Sanders is a graduate of the Yale School of Drama. He is the Executive Artistic Director of The Massachusetts International Festival of the Arts (MIFA), presenting such artists as Mikhail Baryshnikov, Vanessa Redgrave, England’s Out of Joint and Complicite companies, and France’s Comédie Française.  In 2002, Sanders was made a Chevalier dans L’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres of the Republic of France.

Founded in 1990, The New 42nd Street is an independent nonprofit organization charged with the continuous cultural revival of 42nd Street between 7th and 8th Avenues, building on the foundation of seven historic theaters to make extraordinary performing arts and cultural engagement part of everyone’s life. The New 42nd Street fulfills this purpose by ensuring the ongoing vibrancy of 42nd Street’s historic theaters; supporting performing artists in the creation of their work at the New 42nd Street Studios and The Duke on 42nd Street; creating arts access and education at The New Victory Theater, New York’s premier theater for kids and families; and through the New 42nd Street Youth Corps, its model youth development initiative, which pairs life skills workshops and mentorship with paid employment in the arts for NYC youth. Inspired by the city it serves, The New 42nd Street is committed to the transformational power of the arts. The Duke on 42nd Street is a centrally-located black box theater rental that offers smaller scale productions the unique opportunity to perform on famed 42nd Street. Housed within the NEW 42ND STREET Studios, The Duke on 42nd Street is a fully-staffed facility featuring customizable, state-of-the-art seating in various configurations, and full light, sound and support systems. The venue has hosted such companies as Playwright’s Realm, Red Bull Theater, Primary Stages, Transport Group, Theatre for a New Audience, Lincoln Center Theater LCT3, The Royal Court Theatre, Steppenwolf Theater Company, Armitage Gone! Dance, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Naked Angels, Classical Theater of Harlem and the National Theater of Great Britain.

Tickets, which are now on sale, are $39 to $149. Tickets for both MAESTRO and HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN: Tales Real & Imagined can be purchased online at Dukeon42.org; by phone at 646-223-3010; or in person at The Duke on 42nd Street at 229 West 42nd Street (Tuesdays-Fridays 4-7 and Saturdays 12-6).

For more information, visit romanticcentury.org.

Tuesday 01.01.19
Posted by David Gersten
 

Full Cast & Creative Team of Ruben & Clay’s Christmas Show Announced

Full Cast & Creative Team of
Ruben & Clay’s First Annual Christmas Carol Family Fun Pageant Spectacular Reunion Show
Announced

Performances for this New, Limited Engagement Holiday Show Begin Friday, December 7th at Broadway’s Imperial Theatre
 
Tickets on Sale NOW

A PORTION OF THE PROCEEDS WILL BENEFIT THE NATIONAL INCLUSION PROJECT

When RUBEN STUDDARD and CLAY AIKEN join forces for Ruben & Clay’s First Annual Christmas Carol Family Fun Pageant Spectacular Reunion Show (aka “Ruben & Clay’s Christmas Show”), the monumental, one-of-a-kind Holiday spectacular Broadway show, they will be joined on stage by Farah Alvin, Ken Arpino, Julian Diaz-Granados, La’Nette Wallace, and Khaila Wilcoxon it was announced today.

Written by Ken Arpino and Jesse Joyce, Ruben & Clay’s Christmas Show will be directed by Jonathan Tessero, with musical staging by Lisa Shriver and music direction by Ben Cohn.  The design team includes Rob Bissinger (scenic), Paul Miller (lighting), James Brown III (costume), Bruce Landon Yauger (sound), andJason Lee Courson (projection design).

Audiences will see Ruben and Clay journey through a fusion of holiday music and entertainment featuring lighthearted comedy, astounding versatility and, as always, Ruben and Clay’s magnetic stage presence. “American Idol’s” fan favorite odd couple will give fans the reunion they have been asking for when the duo takes to the stage for this limited engagement holiday event. The extravaganza marks the first time Ruben and Clay have performed together on a national stage since their dramatic finale in 2003.  In true holiday spirit, the duo also aims to give back with a portion of the proceeds benefiting theNational Inclusion Project, one of the leading voices for the inclusion of children with disabilities.
 
Ruben and Clay are thrilled to reunite on Broadway 15 years after captivating audiences during their historic run on the second season of Fox's “American Idol.”  Both plucked from the relative obscurity of their hometowns in the South, the unlikely pair quickly became audience favorites instrumental in helping propel “Idol” to the top of the Nielsen ratings, nearly tripling the viewership of the previous season, and securing it’s place as one of the most consequential TV series in American history. Over 38 million viewers tuned in to hear the results of more than 124 million votes cast during their finale making it the most watched “Idol” episode in history and the highest rated regularly scheduled, live, non-sporting television episode of the 21st century. Combined they have recorded twelve albums, sold more than eight million albums worldwide, toured the country 14 times, won four Billboard Music Awards, an American Music Award, and have been nominated for two Grammys.

Clay Aiken returns to Broadway ten years after his critically lauded debut in Monty Python's Spamalot.  On the heels of Idol, he became the first artist in history to have his first single debut at #1 on Billboard's Hot 100 chart. His subsequent album, “Measure of A Man,” also debuted at #1 with the highest first week sales by a debut artist. His 2004 holiday release, “Merry Christmas with Love,” set a record for the fastest selling holiday album of the SoundScan era and remains tied for the highest charting debut of a holiday album in Billboard history. He served 9 years as a UNICEF Ambassador and in 2003, he co-founded, with Diane Bubel, what is now the National Inclusion Project to advocate and increase opportunities for children with disabilities to be included in extracurricular activities (such as summer camps and after-school programs) with their non-disabled peers. Additional TV appearances include: “30 Rock,” “The Office,” “Scrubs,” “Days of Our Lives,” and “Law & Order: SVU.” Additional 2nd place finishes include: “’The Celebrity Apprentice” in 2012 and the NC 2nd District US House race in 2014. Beyond all of his successes (and near successes) his proudest accomplishment remains his son, Parker.

Ruben Studdard makes his Broadway debut following his critically acclaimed album and national tour, Ruben Sings Luther - a musical celebration of Luther Vandross that Variety Magazine said "elicited tears and cheers" and "left you breathless." His 2003 platinum-selling debut album, “Soulful,” debuted at number one on Billboard's Hot 100 chart and garnered him his first Grammy nomination for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance. His follow-up album, “I Need an Angel,” became the fastest and biggest selling gospel album of 2004 and made him one of only two men in history to have a solo gospel album chart in the top 20 of Billboard's Hot 200. In addition to his extensive recording career, he has found success in television and on stage, including his performance as Fats Waller in the 2008 national tour of Ain't Misbehavin' which garnered Ruben his second Grammy nomination. This followed a national tour with Robin Givens in the comedy-drama, I Need a Hug. Additional screen credits include: 8 Simple Rules, Life On A Stick, Scooby Do 2: Monsters Unleashed, and NBC's “The Biggest Loser.” The 2003 Teen Choice Award winner for Choice TV Variety Star continues to live up to the name given to him by R&B legend Gladys Knight: America's “Velvet Teddy Bear.”

Farah Alvin’s Broadway credits include It Shoulda Been You, Nine, The Look of Love, Saturday Night Fever, Grease!, A Christmas Carol. Off-Broadway credits: Window Treatment, Goldstein, The Last Smoker in America (cast album), The Marvelous Wonderettes (Drama Desk Nomination, cast album), I Love You Because (cast album) and more. Lots of regional including Paper Mill Playhouse, Goodspeed Opera House, Signature Theatre (Helen Hayes Award), Cape Playhouse, Geva Theater and Alabama Shakespeare.

Ken Arpino is the Executive Director of Wolfbane Productions, a nonprofit theatre company in Appomattox VA, and co-owner of Pals of Dorothy, an independent production company focused on creating, sharing and delivering original LGBT content. National tour credits include Mamma Mia!, Legally Blonde: the Musical! and Hairspray. Boston area native; Emerson College graduate. Check out his hit viral web series "The Queens Project" on YouTube.

Julian Diaz-Granados. National Tour credits include Junie B. Jones (Herb, TheaterWorks USA). Regional: Dog Meets God (Matt), Cabaret (Cliff), 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee (Chip), Holland America Line. OCU Grad.

La’Nette Wallace has performed Off-Broadway, regionally and internationally. She would like to thank her family and friends for their continued love and support. A special thank you to her mother, Robin T. Wallace who always told her to fallow her dreams. I'll always sing your song Mommy! "See you later alligator!" "Not for a while crocodile!" 

Khaila Wilcoxon is a recent graduate with a BFA from the University of Wisconsin - Stevens Point, and just made her big move to the greatest city in the world.

Jesse Joyce (Writer) is an Emmy nominated/WGA Award-winning writer. Jesse has written for numerous network TV and Comedy Central shows and specials, currently for “Jimmy Kimmel Live” for which he received a 2018 Writers Guild Award nomination.   Prior to joining Kimmel, Jesse was a long time staff writer for “@midnight” on Comedy Central.  Jesse helped Dave Attell write and produce “Comedy Underground with Dave Attell,” and is one of the longest standing writers for the Comedy Central “Roast” franchise. Starting out as as half of the writing partnership with the late, great Greg Giraldo for the Roasts of David Hasselhoff, Joan Rivers, Larry the Cable Guy, Bob Saget and Flavor Flav, Jesse’s roast joke talents have continually been asked back for Roasts of Trump, Charlie Sheen, Roseanne, James Franco, Justin Bieber, Rob Lowe and Bruce Willis. In 2016 Jesse was nominated for a Primetime Emmy and won a Writers’ Guild Award for his work on “Triumph’s Election Specials” starring Triumph the Insult Comic Dog.  Jesse has been a long time writer for Seth McFarlane, including the 85th Annual Academy Awards.  In 2018 he wrote for the Academy Awards a second time as well as the Tony Awards.

Jonathan Tessero (Director) is a Creative Producer and Director whose executive production company, Side Effects Include, develops live music specials for television and touring. His Creative Direction for CBS' coverage of Super Bowl XLVII earned the network an Emmy Nomination for Outstanding Art Direction/Studio Design; his reboot of Essence Fest achieved a record setting increase and total attendance of nearly 500,000 attendees; and his symphonic pops presentations have been performed by orchestras around the world with a recent live orchestra-to-film production selling out two performances at London's Royal Albert hall as part of a six-week arena tour of Europe. He has directed on Broadway, for film and television, as well as served as creative producer/director of large scale installations for clients such as Harrah's - Caesars Entertainment, Coca-Cola, Chase, The National WWII Museum, Ford, and Time Inc. He has built the creative departments for two major production and rental companies as well as authored their business plans, loan documents, and business development efforts. He regularly serves as a creative and business consultant to several start-ups and advertising/media agencies.  Jonathan Tessero plays fine Yamaha Grand Pianos at home, in the studio, and everywhere else someone will let him touch one. 

Lisa Shriver (Musical staging) Broadway: Jesus Christ Superstar, The Farnsworth Invention, The Story of My Life, Ring of Fire.  Off Broadway:  Into the Woods (Fiasco Theatre Co, Lortel nomination for Outstanding Choreography), Fetch Clay Make Man (NY Theatre Workshop). Regional:  Caesar and Cleopatra, The Tempest (both w/Christopher Plummer).  Film: A Beautiful Mind, Hysterical Blindness, A Christmas Carol w/Jim Carrey.  Associate Choreographer: The Polar Express, Mixed Nuts w/Steve Martin, Center Stage. TV:  “A Very Murray Christmas” w/Bill Murray (Director: Sofia Coppola), “Broad City,” “The Detour.”  Other:  Phish’s NYE concert at Madison Square Garden; Busch Gardens, Disney Cruise Line.  Special thanks to her agent, Max Grossman; and, especially, Brian and Viola.

Ben Cohn (Music Director/Arranger) is currently the music director for Dear Evan Hansen on Broadway. He is also Clay Aiken's music director. Most recently, he was the assistant conductor and pianist for Wicked.  Other Broadway credits include: The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, The Woman in White, In My Life, and Wonderful Town.  He has also served on the music departments during the developmental stages of many shows including The Book of Mormon, 9 To 5, Finding Neverland, and Anastasia. Ben is the music director and arranger for several artists including Stephanie J. Block, for several theme park live shows including Busch Gardens and Disney World, and for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS. Ben also works as a songwriter and composer and has several published choral pieces. 

National Inclusion Project (NIP) operates on three simple core beliefs: Every child can participate, every child can make a friend, and every child can succeed. NIP is the product of a special friendship between a college student, a mother, and her 13-year-old son: Clay Aiken was pursuing a degree in special education from UNC-Charlotte when he met Mike. Mike was 13 years old and had been diagnosed with autism. As part of his education, Clay was working with a variety of people with disabilities; but he and Mike quickly developed a unique bond. The friendship soon extended to include Mike's mother, Diane Bubel, as well. Clay and Diane soon discovered they shared more than just a connection to Mike; they shared a vision. Clay and Diane had often witnessed children with disabilities being turned away or excluded from activities and programs open to other children.  They believed that as a society we could do better. They believed that every program and organization could include all children—and everyone would benefit from that. Clay and Diane made it their mission to bring this to fruition. In July 2003, the National Inclusion Project was born. With their three core beliefs in mind, NIP made it its mission to see that children with and without disabilities can laugh, learn, and play together! Working with community organizations and recreational programs, NIP provides the training, tools, and support they need so that children with disabilities can participate in all of their activities and programs. NIP has established itself as one of the leading voices for the inclusion of children with disabilities by partnering with some of the country’s largest youth organizations and most prestigious educational institutions.  NIP has developed cutting-edge inclusion models, trained hundreds of industry leaders, and facilitated inclusive opportunities for thousands of children across the nation. For more information or to learn how you can help, visit inclusionproject.org.

Ruben & Clay’s First Annual Christmas Carol Family Fun Pageant Spectacular Reunion Show is produced by Jeffrey Chrzczon, Side Effects Include, and Josh Pultz/Amplified Entertainment.

The show begins performances on Broadway Friday, December 7th, with Opening Night set for December 11th, at the prestigious Imperial Theatre (249 West 45th Street) and continues its limited engagement through December 30, 2018.  

Tickets, from only $39, are available online at Telecharge.com, by phone at 212-239-6200, and in person at the Imperial Box Office.

For more information, please visit rubenandclay.com. 

Source: https://mailchi.mp/davidgersten/full-cast-...
Wednesday 11.28.18
Posted by David Gersten
 

Ruben Studdard & Clay Aiken reunite to bring new, limited engagement Christmas Show to Broadway

 RUBEN & CLAY’S FIRST ANNUAL CHRISTMAS CAROL FAMILY FUN PAGEANT SPECTACULAR REUNION SHOW 
 
THIS IS THE FIRST TIME THE “AMERICAN IDOL” FAN FAVORITES WILL TAKE TO THE STAGE TOGETHER SINCE 2003
 
PERFORMANCES BEGIN FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7th AT BROADWAY’S IMPERIAL THEATRE
 
AS ANNOUNCED TODAY ON “THE VIEW”
 
Tickets on Sale NOW at Telecharge.com

A PORTION OF THE PROCEEDS FROM THE SALE OF TICKETS SUPPORT THE 
NATIONAL INCLUSION PROJECT



 

RUBEN STUDDARD and CLAY AIKEN join forces for a monumental, one-of-a-kind Holiday spectacular Broadway show.  Meghan McCain took to “The View” today to make the exclusive announcement of the limited run show which had the audience and viewers thrilled and feeling the holiday spirit!  A family affair, the spectacular will see Ruben and Clay journey through a fusion of holiday music and entertainment featuring lighthearted comedy, astounding versatility and, as always, Ruben and Clay’s magnetic stage presence. “American Idol’s” fan favorite odd couple will give fans the reunion they have been asking for when the duo takes to the stage for this limited engagement holiday event. The extravaganza marks the first time Ruben and Clay have performed together on a national stage since their dramatic finale in 2003.  In true holiday spirit, the duo also aims to give back with tickets benefiting the National Inclusion Project, the leading voice for the inclusion of children with disabilities. Featuring everyone’s favorite Christmas songs, performed by two of America’s most beloved music icons, sprinkled with hilarious scenes and sketches and a live band, there is something for the entire family.
 
Ruben & Clay’s First Annual Christmas Carol Family Fun Pageant Spectacular Reunion Show (aka “Ruben & Clay’s Christmas Show”) is produced by Jeffrey Chrzczon, Side Effects Include, and Josh Pultz/Amplified Entertainment. The show begins performances on Broadway Friday, December 7th, with Opening Night set for December 11th, at the prestigious Imperial Theatre (249 West 45th Street) and continues its limited engagement through December 30, 2018.  Tickets are now available online at Telecharge.com and by phone at 212-239-6200.

For more information, please visit rubenandclay.com. 
 
Of the reunion, Ruben exclaims “Christmas is about family, friends and fun. Clay and I can't wait to bring all those things together on Broadway this December!"  Clay adds, “There are really only two things that could get me back in stage after taking a break for over five years: my buddy, Ruben, and Christmas! It's been 15 years since he beat me on Idol, and it’s taken an entire decade and a half for me to lick my wounds. But the holidays are about togetherness, so now that he is older and I am wiser, I can think of no better way to celebrate 15 years of friendship than by spending this holiday season together on Broadway.”
 
Ruben Studdard, the second “American Idol” winner, won the contest over runner-up Clay by only 134,000 votes out of the 24 million cast in the 2003 finale. In addition to numerous Grammy, American Music, BET and Soul Train Award nominations, he has won three Billboard Music Awards, the Image Award for Outstanding New Artist, and a Teen Choice Award. As an actor, he has appeared on TV in “8 Simple Rules,” “Life on a Stick,” “All of Us,” and “Eve,” as well as in the film Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed.  Studdard headlined the revival tour of Ain't Misbehavin' and was part of the Grammy Award-nominated cast recording. His latest tour and recording, “Ruben Sings Luther,” a tribute to Luther Vandross, adds his own passion on top of Luther’s brilliant songs. “It was a thrilling experience selecting the songs from his different albums and putting my own interpretation on them. My heart and soul is in every note I sing as I honor one of the greatest vocalists we’ve ever had.”
 
Clay Aiken’s first single made him the first artist in history to have his first release debut at #1 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart. He’s won the American Music Award and Billboard Music Award; his memoir Learning to Sing: Hearing the Music in Your Life was a New York Times Best Seller; and his run on Broadway in Monty Python's Spamalot was a critical and box office success. In 2003 he started the charitable foundation National Inclusion Project, which is recognized nationwide as the leading voice in the social inclusion of children with disabilities. He served for nine years as UNICEF Ambassador for education and child protection and has worked closely with organizations to curb discrimination against LGBT youth. His 2014 campaign for Congress in North Carolina served to bring attention to policy issues important to him as well as shine a national spotlight on the deleterious effects of money in the political system and the indifference of elected officials to the needs of the underserved.
 
National Inclusion Project (NIP) operates on three simple core beliefs: Every child can participate, every child can make a friend, and every child can succeed. NIP is the product of a special friendship between a college student, a mother, and her 13-year-old son: Clay Aiken was pursuing a degree in special education from UNC-Charlotte when he met Mike. Mike was 13 years old and had been diagnosed with autism. As part of his education, Clay was working with a variety of people with disabilities; but he and Mike quickly developed a unique bond. The friendship soon extended to include Mike's mother, Diane Bubel, as well. Clay and Diane soon discovered they shared more than just a connection to Mike; they shared a vision. Clay and Diane had often witnessed children with disabilities being turned away or excluded from activities and programs open to other children.  They believed that as a society we could do better. They believed that every program and organization could include all children—and everyone would benefit from that. Clay and Diane made it their mission to bring this to fruition. In July 2003, the National Inclusion Project was born. With their three core beliefs in mind, NIP made it its mission to see that children with and without disabilities can laugh, learn, and play together! Working with community organizations and recreational programs, NIP provides the training, tools, and support they need so that children with disabilities can participate in all of their activities and programs. NIP has established itself as one of the leading voices for the inclusion of children with disabilities by partnering with some of the country’s largest youth organizations and most prestigious educational institutions.  NIP has developed cutting-edge inclusion models, trained hundreds of industry leaders, and facilitated inclusive opportunities for thousands of children across the nation. For more information or to learn how you can help, visit inclusionproject.org
 

Source: https://mailchi.mp/davidgersten/ruben-stud...
Thursday 10.18.18
Posted by David Gersten
 

Whitney Bashor and Marc delaCruz Star in the First New York Revival of Adam Gwon’s Ordinary Days | Playbill

The Keen Company presents the first New York revival of Adam Gwon’s Ordinary Days, which began performances October 2 Off-Broadway.

Directed by Keen Artistic Director Jonathan Silverstein, opening night is scheduled for October 17. Performances will continue through November 7.

The cast features Whitney Bashor (The Bridges of Madison County), Marc delaCruz (If/Then), Sarah Lynn Marion (2013 Jimmy Awards winner), and Kyle Sherman (Pete the Cat). The musical looks at how one person is capable of influencing complete strangers.

Ordinary Days includes new orchestrations created for Keen by Tony winner Bruce Coughlin (The Light in the Piazza) with musical direction by John Bell, scenic design by Steven Kemp, costume design by Jennifer Paar, lighting design by Anshuman Bhatia, and sound design by Alex Hawthorn.

For more information, visit keencompany.org.

Source: http://www.playbill.com/article/whitney-ba...
Monday 10.08.18
Posted by David Gersten
 

RED BULL THEATER Announces the Complete 2018-’19 Season

RED BULL THEATER
Announces the Complete
2018-’19 Season


New Season of Revelation Readings at the Lucille Lortel Theatre Begins November 12th with The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd Starring Matthew Amendt, Tina Benko, Emily Swallow, James Udom, and Olivier Award Winner Chukwudi Iwuji

Followed by the NY premiere of The Book of Will, NY Premiere of Edith Wharton’s The Shadow of A Doubt, Schiller’s Don Carlos, Aphra Behn’s Sir Patient Fancy, NY Premiere of A Most Dangerous Woman by Cathy Tempelsman, NY Premiere of Shrew! by Amy Freed

World Premiere of the Red Bull Commission of The Alchemist by Jeffrey Hatcher, Directed by Jesse Berger -
The Team That Brought You Last Season’s Acclaimed Hit The Government Inspector

Starring Kate Burton, Lea DeLaria, Stephen DeRosa, Marin Ireland, Dakin Matthews, Patrick Page, Reg Rogers, Jay O. Sanders, and many more…


Off-Broadway Productions of John Webster’s THE WHITE DEVIL and Erica Schmidt’s MAC BETH - Coming This Spring!

 

Red Bull Theater (Jesse Berger, Artistic Director | Jim Bredeson, Managing Director) today announced the new season of its OBIE Award-winning Revelation Reading Series, the unique opportunity to hear rarely-produced classic plays, and brand new plays in conversation with the classics, performed by the finest actors in New York.

“The combination of classic material, extraordinary artists and their visionary perspectives are going to make for a delightful and dramatically incendiary 2018-’19 season at Red Bull Theater. I’m particularly pleased to announce more diverse contemporary voices joining our conversation with the classics than ever before. Where else can you hear Shakespeare, George Eliot, Ben Jonson, and Aphra Behn in thrilling theatrical dialogue with contemporary writers and directors like May Adrales, Vivienne Benesch, Amy Freed, Lauren Gunderson, Jeffrey Hatcher, Mike Poulton, and Cathy Tempelsman?  With five premieres in the mix (including the first-ever NYC performance of a recently discovered Edith Wharton play), our Revelation Reading series is really hopping with new and neglected voices. And we have two Off-Broadway productions lined up for the spring, as we make a full-throttled return to our work with the Jacobean plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries: Louisa Proske’s thrilling new production of Webster’s The White Devil, and Erica Schmidt’s timely and powerful adaptation of Shakespeare’s Macbeth,” said Mr. Berger.

This year’s slate of readings is sure to delight audiences all season long. Revelation Readings will take place on Monday evenings (7:30PM) at the Lucille Lortel Theatre (121 Christopher Street), and will include:

  • Monday November 12: The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd, directed by Louisa Proske, with Matthew Amendt, Tina Benko, Emily Swallow, James Udom and Olivier Award Winner Chukwudi Iwuji. Proske is a recipient of 2018 Princess Grace Award.

  • Monday December 10: The Book of Will by Lauren Gunderson, directed by Davis McCallum, featuring Marco Barricelli, Jennifer LeBlanc, Triney Sandoval, and more. New York Premiere.

  • Monday January 28: The Shadow of a Doubt by Edith Wharton, directed by Adrienne Campbell-Holt, featuring Emily Brown, Kate Burton, Marin Ireland, and Jay O. Sanders. New York Premiere.

  • Monday February 25: Friedrich Schiller’s  Don Carlos, a new version by Mike Poulton (Wolf Hall Parts One & Two, Fortune's Fool), directed by Jesse Berger, with Patrick Page (Hadestown, Saint Joan, Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark).

  • Monday March 25: Sir Patient Fancy by Aphra Behn, directed by Leigh Silverman, starring Lea DeLaria (two-time Screen Actors Guild Award winner for “Orange is the New Black”).

  • Monday April 15: A Most Dangerous Woman by Cathy Tempelsman, directed by Pamela Berlin (Steel Magnolias). With Nick Choksi, Stephen DeRosa, Ben Mehl, Rachel Pickup, and Derek Smith. New York Premiere.

  • Monday May 13: Shrew! by Amy Freed, with Dakin Matthews, Danny Scheie and more, directed by Doug Hughes (Tony Award winner for Doubt). New York Premiere.

  • Monday June 24: The Alchemist by Jeffrey Hatcher adapted from Ben Jonson, directed by Jesse Berger, featuring Reg Rogers. World Premiere of a Red Bull Theater commission from the same team that created last season’s acclaimed hit The Government Inspector.

  • Monday July 15: 9th Annual Short New Play Festival, directed by May Adrales and Vivienne Benesch.


The 2018-’19 season will kick off with the one night only all-star benefit performance ofNoël Coward’s Tonight at 8:30 on Monday October 15th (7:30 PM) at Leonard Nimoy Thalia at Symphony Space (2537 Broadway, at 95th Street). Rosemary Harris, who received Tony Award nominations for Coward’s Hay Fever and the world premiere of his Waiting in the Wings, leads an all-star cast that features Nick Choksi, Joanna Gleason, Judy Kuhn, Mark Linn-Baker, Talene Monahon, Brad Oscar, Chris Sarandon, Jeanine Serralles, Mary Testa, Raphael Nash Thompson, Michael Urie, and more to be announced.

Tonight at 8:30 features the brilliant wit of Noël Coward in three delightful bites, served up by a cast of New York’s most delectable actors. After complimentary sparkling spirits, the evening unfolds: Red Peppers, described by Coward as “a vaudeville sketch sandwiched in between two parodies of music hall songs;” Shadow Play: A Musical Fantasy, a surreal love story between a married couple and their younger selves; and Ways and Means, a madcap comedy about a young couple on the make. These are three gems from a cycle of ten one-acts, originally written for Coward himself to perform with the legendary Gertrude Lawrence, after audiences couldn’t get enough of them in Private Lives.

Red Bull’s first mainstage production of the season will be John Webster’s The White Devil,directed by Louisa Proske, which will have its first NY production in over fifty years; it was last seen in 1965 at the Circle in the Square starring Frank Langella. Performances will begin March 19th, with opening night set for March 31st.  The limited run will continue through April 14th. The play was first performed at the original Red Bull theatre in North London in the early months of 1612. Morality is torn to shreds as a passionate affair unleashes a murderous revenge plot in this Jacobean thriller—as terrifying as it is entertaining. Cast and design team will be announced shortly.

MAC BETH, adapted and directed by Erica Schmidt, will be the second mainstage production, playing a limited Off-Broadway engagement May 7th through June 2nd only, with Opening Night set for May 19th. In Schmidt’s powerful, contemporary production, seven young women gather after school to retell the story of Macbeth using Shakespeare’s original text. Running time is 90 minutes with no intermission. Erica Schmidt’s numerous credits include Richard II with Robert Sean Leonard; All the Fine Boys (The New Group, wrote and directed); Turgenev’s A Month in the Country with Peter Dinklage and Taylor Schilling (CSC); Taking Care of Baby (MTC); Trust (The Play Company, Callaway Award nomination); As You Like It (Public Theater/NYSF); Debbie Does Dallas (wrote and directed Off-Broadway).  Cast and design team will be announced shortly.

Red Bull Theater, hailed as as “the city’s gutsiest classical theater” by Time Out New York, brings rarely seen classic plays to dynamic new life for contemporary audiences, uniting a respect for tradition with a modern sensibility. Named for the rowdy Jacobean playhouse that illegally performed plays in England during the years of Puritan rule, Red Bull Theater is New York City’s home for dynamic performances of great plays that stand the test of time. With the Jacobean plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries as its cornerstone, the company also produces new works that are in conversation with the classics. A home for artists, scholars and students, Red Bull Theater delights and engages the intellect and imagination of audiences, and strives to make its work accessible, diverse, and welcoming to all. Red Bull Theater believes in the power of great classic stories and plays of heightened language to deepen our understanding of the human condition, in the special ability of live theater to create unique, collective experiences, and the timeless capacity of classical theater to illuminate the events of our times. Variety agreed, hailing our work as: “Proof that classical theater can still be surprising after hundreds of years.”

Since its debut in 2003 with a production of Shakespeare’s Pericles starring Daniel Breaker, Red Bull Theater has served adventurous theatergoers with Off-Broadway productions, Revelation Readings, and the annual Short New Play Festival. The company also offers outreach programs including Shakespeare in Schools bringing professional actors and teaching artists into public school classrooms; Bull Sessions, free post-play discussions with top scholars; and Master Classes in classical acting led by veteran theater professionals.

Acclaimed as “a dynamic producer of classic plays” by The New York Times and “the most exciting classical theater in New York” by Time Out NY, Red Bull Theater has produced 17 Off-Broadway productions and over 150 Revelation Readings of rarely seen classics, serving a community of more than 5,000 artists and providing quality artistic programming to an audience of over 65,000. The company’s unique programming has received ongoing critical acclaim, and has been recognized with Lortel, Drama Desk, Drama League, Callaway, Off Broadway Alliance, and OBIE nominations and Awards.

For tickets and more information about any of Red Bull Theater's productions and programs, visit www.redbulltheater.com.

Wednesday 09.12.18
Posted by David Gersten
 

Angelica Page to Star in BECAUSE I COULD NOT STOP: An Encounter with Emily Dickinson

Ensemble for the Romantic Century
Announces the Cast for
BECAUSE I COULD NOT STOP:
An Encounter with Emily Dickinson

 
Angelica Page to Star as Emily Dickinson
 
2018-‘19 Season Three Play Season to Also Include the Off-Broadway Premieres of
MAESTRO and HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN: Tales Real & Imagined
 

Performances Begin September 15th
 
Tickets Now On Sale!

Ensemble for the Romantic Century (Eve Wolf, Executive Artistic Director) is proud to announce that Angelica Page would star in the title role BECAUSE I COULD NOT STOP: An Encounter with Emily Dickinson.

Kicking off the 2018 - ‘19 season, ERC’s 18th, BECAUSE I COULD NOT STOP: An Encounter with Emily Dickinson is written by James Melo and directed by Donald T. Sanders. Performances will begin September 15th with Opening Night set for September 27th.  This limited Off-Broadway engagement runs through October 21st only. Performances will be in The Romulus Linney Courtyard Theatre at The Pershing Square Signature Center (480 West 42nd Street between Dyer and 10th Avenues). 

Live chamber music will be performed by Victoria Lewis (violin), Mélanie Clapiès (violin), Chieh-Fan Yiu (viola), Ari Evan (cello), joined by ERC Co-Artistic Director Max Barros on piano and soprano Kristina Bachrach. 

BECAUSE I COULD NOT STOP: An Encounter with Emily Dickinson will have scenic and costume design by Vanessa James, lighting design by Beverly Emmons, and projection design by David Bengali. ERC's 2018-'19 Season is cast by Geoff Josselson, CSA.

Emily Dickinson was a woman ahead of her time.  While she produced some of the most haunting and visionary poetry in the American cannon, she refused to be confined by the expectations of a 19th century woman.   Using her own words, ERC's BECAUSE I COULD NOT STOP explores the inner life of an artist whose intellectual curiosity and emotional intensity are only rivaled by her fierce defiance of literary and social authority.   "This is my letter to the world that never wrote back to me."  -Emily Dickinson

A native New Yorker who lives in Los Angeles, Angelica Page most recently starred on Broadway in Gore Vidal’s The Best Man (Tony nomination for Best Revival) and inTurning Page, a new self penned solo play about her mother, the legendary late actress Geraldine Page.  Other theater: As Sylvia Plath in Edge (Outer Critics Circle nomination for Best Solo Performance & New Times Award for Best Actress), Sideman (Tony Award for Best Play, Helen Hayes Award for Best Actress), August: Osage County (Tony Award for Best Play, Helen Hayes Award Nomination for Best Actress), Anna Christie (Tony Award for Best Revival).

Kristina Bachrach (Soprano) has made debuts at Carnegie Hall and St. Patrick’s Cathedral recently and performed over fifty recitals across the United States. Ms. Bachrach has fulfilled many prestigious artist residencies, including the Marlboro Music Festival, Tanglewood, Yellow Barn, and the Banff Centre. On the operatic stage, Ms. Bachrach has appeared as Susanna in Le nozze di Figaro, Musetta in La Bohème, La Princesse inL'enfant et les sortilèges, and Clorinda in La Cenerentola with such companies as Gotham Chamber Opera, Opera Philadelphia, Opera Naples, and Nashville Opera. She created the role of Lucinda in the world premiere of Dark Sisters by Nico Muhly. She is the grand prize winner of the American Prize in Vocal Performance and the inaugural Ziering Conlon International Art Song Competition for Recovered Voices.

Victoria Lewis (Violinist) Victoria Wolf Lewis is a New York-based orchestra and chamber musician who has performed with many orchestras in the United States and abroad including New York City Opera, Des Moines Metro Opera, Tel Aviv Soloists, and is currently a violinist with the Sarasota Opera Orchestra. Ms. Lewis has served as the concertmaster of LoftOpera and is currently the concertmaster of Bare Opera in New York City. Past solo appearances include Vivaldi’s Winter with Orquestra De Camara Galega in Santiago de Compostella in Spain, as well as performances at the Sale Apollinee of Teatro la Fenice in Venice. Ms. Lewis has performed with the Ensemble for Romantic Music in their April 2016 production of Anna Akhmatova: The Heart Is Not Made of Stone at BAM Fisher Theater, of which the NY Times wrote: “But the real stars are the musicians […] playing rapturous accounts of Prokofiev, Rachmaninoff and Shostakovich”.  Ms. Lewis received the Rapaport Fellowship and the Dolan Prize while an undergraduate at Columbia University. At the Cleveland Institute of Music, where she received her Master’s degree, Ms. Lewis was selected for the Advanced Piano Trio Program directed by Sharon Robinson and served at the concertmaster of the opera orchestra. Ms. Lewis has also performed at the Medocino Music Festival as part of the Emerging Artists series, Keshet Eilon Violin Mastercourse, Bowdoin International Music Festival, and Banff String and Winds Masterclass. Principle teachers include Laurie Smukler, Joan Kwuon, and Garrett Fischbach. Ms. Lewis plays on a Leandro Bisiach from 1890.

Mélanie Clapiès (Violinist) Born in Paris, Mélanie Clapiès studied at the Conservatoires Nationaux Supérieurs de Musique of Lyon and Paris where she received her B.A. in violin and chamber music respectively. After moving to the U.S., she received her M.M. in 2014 and her A.D. in 2015 from the Yale School of Music where she studied with Syoko Aki. She is currently completing a Doctoral degree at the Manhattan School of Music where she studies with Mark Steinberg while pursuing an active performing career. The album “Pierrots Lunaires” that she recorded with cellist Yan Levionnois grew out of her interest in exploring unusual repertoire and her commitment to throwing new light on fascinating, but forgotten pieces. The CD contains 20th and 21st century duos for violin and cello and was released by Fondamenta in 2014 and is distributed by Sony in the US. She is the co-founder of the chamber music festival “En attendant…” in Semur en Brionnais, France. A Zonta Club laureate, she received the Broadus Erle Prize, the Yale School of Music Alumni Association Prize, and the Philip Francis Nelson Prize. She was the winner of the Woolsey Concerto Competition in 2015 at Yale.

Chieh-Fan Yiu (Viola) Triple-prized winner of the Lionel Tertis Competition, including Yuri Bashmet’s President Of The Jury Prize, Taiwanese-born Canadian Chieh-Fan Yiu has established himself as one of the most exciting young violists on the international stage today. His engagements as a soloist have included Aspen Festival Orchestra, Art Symphony Orchestra of New York, New York Classical Players, Vancouver Academy of Music Symphony, Vancouver Metropolitan Orchestra, Stony Brook Symphony, and UBC Chamber Orchestra. As a recipient of the coveted Jerome L. Greene Fellowship, Mr. Yiu completed his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from The Juilliard School, followed by Doctorate of Music degree from Stony Brook University, having been under the tutelage of mentors like Toby Appel, Heidi Castleman, Hsin-Yun Huang, Kim Kashkashian, as well as the great Emerson Quartet.  Artist-in-residence in New Asia Chamber Music Society as well as PhiloSonia concert series in New York City, Mr. Yiu's chamber music has taken him around the world in festivals such as Sounds of Lyons, Music@Menlo, Moritzburg, Verbier, Aspen, and Sarasota Music Festivals. Mr. Yiu is also a founding member of the Ben Feng Music Festival in Taiwan, a chamber music series currently in its third season that has been recently hailed as “a classical music gem” by Liberty Times. He has collaborated with such esteemed artists as Thomas Bergen, Colin Carr, David Cohen, Nicholas Cords, Pedro R. Díaz, Alan Kay, Tessa Lark, Frank Morelli, Paul Neubauer, Sasha Sitkovetsky, Josu De Solaun, Carol Wincenc, as well as the Volta Piano Trio and the Emerson Quartet, in venues including Alice Tully, Avery Fisher/David Geffen, and Carnegie Hall. Media coverage of Mr. Yiu’s performances and interviews include Music@Menlo Live, medici.tv broadcast from Switzerland, and BBC News in the UK. Mr. Yiu’s live recording of Nataliya Medvedovskaya’s Fantasy for Viola and Piano can be heard on WQXR Radio and ArkivMusic.

Ari Evan (Cellist) is a recent Masters graduate of the Juilliard School, where he studied with Timothy Eddy. His studies were made possible by Juilliard’s generous J. Victor Monke Scholarship and the Irene Diamond Graduate Fellowship. As a member of the Bordone Quartet, Ari performed recitals at WQXR's Greene Space, Alice Tully Hall, and the Harvard Club of New York. A versatile chamber musician, Ari has also performed with Atar Arad, Colin Carr, Ara Gregorian, Hsin-Yun Huang, and Ani Kavafian, and Itzhak Perlman. Festivals attended include Ravinia's Steans Music Institute, the Olympic Music Festival, IMS’ Prussia Cove, the Perlman Music Program Chamber Music Workshop, East Carolina University’s Four Seasons festival, Kneisel Hall, and the Sarasota Music Festival.  In the Fall of 2018, Ari will begin his two-year residence at Carnegie Hall as an Ensemble Connect Fellow.

Max Barros (Piano) has won wide acclaim as one of South America's foremost pianists. Born in California and raised in Brazil, Mr. Barros was presented with the "Soloist of the Year" Award (1985) by the São Paulo Music Critics Association for his performance of Brahms’ Piano Concerto in D minor with the São Paulo Symphony Orchestra. A dedicated champion of Brazilian music, Mr. Barros has premiered and recorded several works by the nation's foremost composers, including the North American premiere of Ronaldo Miranda’s Concertino for Piano and Strings. He recorded Amaral Vieira's Piano Quintetwith the Ensemble Capriccio and has recorded for Naxos the complete piano concertos by Camargo Guarnieri with conductor Thomas Conlin and the Warsaw Philharmonic, which won the “Discovery Award” from the Diapason magazine in France. Mr. Barros has toured South America with the Virtuosi di Praga and has been a guest artist with the American String Quartet, Enso String Quartet, Quartetto di Venezia, Biava String Quartet, Esher String Quartet, and the St. Luke's Chamber Ensemble. He is well known for his stylistic and historically informed interpretations, and his extensive research into the performance practice of early keyboard instruments has allowed him to bring fresh insights to his performances on the modern piano. Together with Stephanie Chase he recorded the complete trios of Boccherini and Stephen Storace on period instruments. In 2008 Mr. Barros made his debut at the Caramoor Festival performing Guarnieri's Concertino for piano and orchestra with the St. Luke's Orchestra under Michael Barrett. He has recently recorded Guarnieri’s complete Ponteios for Naxos and is in the process of recording the composer’s complete solo piano music in six volumes. The first volume of the series was chosen “CD of the Week” by the KDFC Classical Music Station in San Francisco. For the past fifteen seasons, Mr. Barros has been the co-artistic director of the Ensemble for the Romantic Century, an organization that creates unique productions merging dramatic and fully staged scripts with music. His most recent performances with ERC were Jules Verne: From the Earth to the Moon and Akhmatova: The Heart is not Made of Stone (BAM, 2015 and 2016), both of which were critic’s pick for The New York Times, where Mr. Barros was praised for his “rapturous” performance of Rachmaninoff’s music. For his performance inThe Sorrows of Young Werther (Symphony Space, 2015), Opera Today remarked, “Mr. Barros… made the piano drip with beauty and elegance, with an incomparable grace in his legato.” Mr. Barros can be heard on ERC’s DVD “The Young Arthur Rubinstein.” Max Barros is a Steinway artist.

James Melo has written extensively for scholarly journals and music magazines in Brazil, Uruguay, the United States, and Austria, and has been invited to participate as a panel discussant in conferences in Indiana, New York, and Canada. He has written program notes for several concerts at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center, and for over 70 recordings on the Chesky, Naxos, Paulus, and Musikus labels, among others. He is the New York correspondent for the magazine Sinfónica in Uruguay, reviewer of music iconography for the journal Music in Art, and a Senior Supervising Editor at RILM (Répertoire International de Littérature Musicale) at CUNY. In March 2005, he chaired a session in the conference Music and Intellectual History, organized by the Barry Brook Center for Music Research and Documentation (CUNY), and presented a paper on the history of musicological research in Brazil. He received a grant from the Paul Sacher Stiftung in Basel, Switzerland, where he conducted research on the manuscripts of Anton Webern. Mr. Melo is the program annotator for the recording of the complete piano music of Villa-Lobos and Camargo Guarnieri on Naxos. In 2006 and 2007 he collaborated with the Montréal Chamber Music Festival as musicologist and program notes writer. In March 2008, he chaired a session on music iconography in Brazil and Portugal in the conference Music, Body, and Stage: The Iconography of Music Theater and Opera at CUNY Graduate Center. He was the scriptwriter for Seduction, Smoke and Music, performed at The Tuscan Sun Festival in Cortona in the summer of 2011, with Jeremy Irons as Chopin and Sinéad Cusack as George Sand. He has written scripts for ERC on subjects including Oscar Wilde, Emily Dickinson, Nietzsche, Dracula, Schubert, Satie, Werther, Proust, and Rimbaud, among others. Mr. Melo is the director of the “ERC Seminar Series” at the CUNY Graduate Center, the program annotator for the National Philharmonic in Strathmore, MD, and is on the piano and musicianship faculty at the Diller-Quaile School of Music in New York City.

Donald T. Sanders is ERC Director of Theatrical Production. Recent ERC productions directed include: Tchaikovsky: None but the Lonely Heart, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein starring Robert Fairchild, Van Gogh’s Ear, Pershing Square Signature Center (New York Times Critics Pick); The Dreyfus Affair; Anna Akhmatova, The Heart is Not Made of Stone (NY Times Critics Pick), Jules Verne, From the Earth to the Moon (NY Times Critics Pick), all at BAM Fisher Theatre; Seduction, Smoke and Music starring Jeremy Irons and Sinéad Cusack with Irina Dvorovenko and Maxim Beloserkovsky at the Tuscan Sun Festival; Toscanini: Nel Mio Cuore Troppo di Assoluto at Venice’s Teatro La Fenice Sale Apollinee. Other productions. For the New York Shakespeare Festival/Public Theater: The American Pig, an Anti-Imperialist Vaudeville; Naked Lunch by William S. Burroughs; 33 Scenes on the Possibility of Human Happiness and Thomas Cole, a Waking Dream (both with scores by Henry Threadgill); Edith Wharton's Old New York. Off-Broadway: The Party by Arnold Weinstein; The Red Robins and The New Diana by Kenneth Koch;Aesop's Fables and The Shepherds' Christmas by Jon Swan & William Russo; The Seven Deadly Sins by Brecht/Weill. For New York Art Theatre Institute: The Torrents of Spring; The Basil & Josephine Stories and site specific events at New York City's Port Authority, Historic Houses (Mostly Wolfgang), Museums and places of historic interest. Graduate of the Yale School of Drama, The University of Pennsylvania (President of the Penn Players) and The University of Bristol, England. Recipient of grants from the NEA, NYSCA and DCA. In 2002 he was made a Chevalier of Arts and Letters of the Republic of France, and is currently also Executive Artistic Director of The Massachusetts International Festival of the Arts (MIFA), where he is reopening the historic Victory Theatre in Holyoke, MA.

Next up will be Maestro, with performances from January 3rd to February 9th, with opening night set for January 14th at The Duke on 42nd Street (229 West 42nd Street, between 7th and 8th Avenues).

The third and final show of the season will be Hans Christian Andersen – Tales Real & Imagined. Performances will begin April 13th for a limited run through June 1st, with opening night scheduled for April 28th, also at The Duke on 42nd Street.

The critically acclaimed Ensemble for the Romantic Century, now in its 18th Season, conjures the past with original multimedia productions that fuse chamber music, drama, and history. The subject matters span across centuries, from Tolstoy to Toscanini, from Verne to Van Gogh, all brought to life through the fusion of drama and sound. We believe that one can understand Freud more deeply by listening to the erotic cabaret music of fin de siècle Vienna, that one can appreciate Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata” more profoundly by listening to him speak of his tortured love life and his debilitating deafness. By illuminating the interplay between literature, biography and music we have transformed the concert experience.

ERC was founded by pianist Eve Wolf in 2001 with the intention of creating an engaging and innovative approach to chamber music concerts. ERC’s theatrical concerts interweave letters, memoirs, diaries, poems, and other literature with chamber and vocal music; the music’s historical context is reinforced through its connections with history, politics, philosophy, psychology, and the other arts to create a compelling new performance experience. These unique productions merge dramatic and fully staged scripts with music, recapturing the past with a sense of immediacy that transports, illuminates, and captivates. The scripts, drawn from historical material that includes letters, diaries, memoirs, newspaper articles, poetry, and literature create an intricate counterpoint to the musical program. The subject matters span across centuries, from Tolstoy to Toscanini, from Verne to Van Gogh, all brought to life through the fusion of drama and music. By illuminating the interplay between literature, biography and music ERC has transformed the concert experience. The Romantic Century was about imagination and experimentation. Elevating the human condition through art: that is the spirit we hope to summon.

ERC has created over 40 original theatrical concerts at such institutions as Brooklyn Academy of Music; Shakespeare & Company in Lenox, MA; The Jewish Museum of New York; the Archivio Fano of Venice, Italy; the Festival de Musique de Chambre Montréal; the Massachusetts International Festival of the Arts/MIFA; the French Institute-Alliance Française/FIAF, New York; the Italian Academy for Advanced Studies at Columbia University; the Italian Cultural Institute of New York; and the City University of New York (CUNY).  ERC’s programs are distinguished by their artistic excellence, breadth of repertoire, and variety of subject matter. In its relatively short history, the Ensemble for the Romantic Century has enriched the music scene with highly innovative productions that are also historically informed, aesthetically exquisite, and emotionally transporting.

The three-play season also includes:

  • Maestro brings to life the story of conductor Arturo Toscanini who bravely opposed Fascism in Italy and America. Through his trips to Palestine to conduct an orchestra made up of Jewish refugees, Toscanini clashes with Mussolini and Hitler showing the world that artists can raise their voices against totalitarianism. A moving theatrical experience drawing from his passionate personal letters along with music of his contemporaries, audiences enter into the mind of a Maestro. 

  • Hans Christian Andersen – Tales Real & Imagined – Hans Christian Andersen is known as one of the most prolific authors of fairy tales, having written over 3300, some of which are so infused to our culture it's hard to imagine a world without them. This piece explores beyond just the magic taking a deeper look at the inner life of Andersen and how some of his most memorable tales, transcend age and nationality.

Eve Wolf is Founder and Executive Artistic Director of ERC as well as playwright. Recent credits include Van Gogh’s Ear (Pershing Square Signature Center, 2017; New York TimesCritic’s Pick); Anna Akhmatova: The Heart Is Not Made of Stone (BAM, 2016; New York Times Critic’s Pick); and Jules Verne: From the Earth to The Moon (BAM, 2015; also aNew York Times Critic’s Pick). Ms. Wolf founded Ensemble for the Romantic Century in 2001 with the mission of creating an innovative and dramatic concert format in which the emotions revealed in memoirs, letters, diaries, and literature are dramatically interwoven with music, thus bringing to life the sensations and passions of a bygone era. For the past sixteen seasons, Ms. Wolf has written scripts for more than twenty-five of ERC’s theatrical concerts and has performed in most of the ensemble’s forty-plus original productions. Some highlights include Ms. Wolf’s scripts for Tchaikovsky: None but the Lonely Heart,which was performed at Shakespeare & Company in Lenox, MA (2013) and at BAM (2014);Van Gogh’s Ear at the Festival de Musique de Chambre de Montréal; Fanny Mendelssohn: Out of her Brother’s Shadow commissioned by the Jewish Museum of New York; and The Dreyfus Affair and Peggy Guggenheim Stripped Bare by her Bachelors. In 2009, she performed before a sold-out audience at the Sale Apollinee of the Teatro La Fenice in Venice in the Italian production of her script, Toscanini: Nel mio cuore troppo di assoluto.

The Pershing Square Signature Center, the permanent home of Signature Theatre, is a three-theatre facility on West 42nd Street designed by Frank Gehry Architects to host Signature's three distinct playwrights' residencies and foster a cultural community. The Center is a major contribution to New York City's cultural landscape and provides a venue for cultural organizations that supports and encourages collaboration among the artists throughout the space. In addition to its three intimate theatres, the Center features a studio theatre, rehearsal studio, a bookstore, and the Signature Café + Bar, open to the public from noon-midnight Tuesdays - Sundays. For more information on renting the Center please visit www.signaturetheatre.org/rentals.

Season subscriptions, from $149 offering tickets for all three shows, are now available for purchase at romanticcentury.org.

Individual tickets which are now on sale as well, are $39 to $149. Tickets for BECAUSE I COULD NOT STOP: An Encounter with Emily Dickinson can be purchased online at TicketCentral.com; by phone at 212-279-4200; or in person at 416 West 42nd Street (12 noon to 8pm daily).

Tickets for Maestro and Hans Christian Andersen: Tales Real & Imagined can be purchased online at Dukeon42.org; by phone at 646-223-3010; or in person at 229 West 42nd Street (Tuesdays-Fridays 4-7 and Saturdays 12-6).

For more information, visit romanticcentury.org.

Wednesday 09.12.18
Posted by David Gersten
 

RED BULL THEATER Kicks Off the 2018-’19 Season with An All-Star Benefit Reading of Noël Coward’s Tonight at 8:30

RED BULL THEATER

Kicks Off the 2018-’19 Season

with

An All-Star Benefit Reading of

Noël Coward’s Tonight at 8:30

Starring Rosemary Harris, Nick Choksi, Joanna Gleason, Judy Kuhn, Mark Linn-Baker, Talene Monahon, Brad Oscar, Chris Sarandon, Jeanine Serralles, Mary Testa, Raphael Nash Thompson, Michael Urie, and more

 

One Night Only: Monday October 15th

At Leonard Nimoy Thalia at Peter Norton Symphony Space

Red Bull Theater (Jesse Berger, Artistic Director | Jim Bredeson, Managing Director) today announced that the 2018-’19 season will kick off with the one-night-only all-star benefit performance of Noël Coward’s Tonight at 8:30 on Monday October 15th (7:30 PM) at Leonard Nimoy Thalia at Peter Norton Symphony Space (2537 Broadway at 95th Street). Tony Award winner Rosemary Harris, who received Tony Award nominations for Coward’s Hay Fever and the world premiere of his Waiting in the Wings, leads an all-star cast that features Tony Award winner Joanna Gleason, Tony Award winner Judy Kuhn, Tony Award winner Brad Oscar, Academy Award nominee Chris Sarandon, three-time Tony Award nominee Mary Testa, Obie Award winner Michael Urie, as well as Nick Choksi, Talene Monahon, Jeanine Serralles, Mark Linn-Baker, Raphael Nash Thompson, and more to be announced. Tonight at 8:30 will be directed by Jesse Berger with music direction by Greg Pliska.

The brilliant wit of Noël Coward in three delightful bites, served up by over twenty of New York’s most beloved actors. After complimentary sparkling spirits, the evening unfolds:Red Peppers, described by Coward as “a vaudeville sketch sandwiched in between two parodies of music hall songs;” Shadow Play: A Musical Fantasy, a surreal love story between a married couple and their younger selves; and Ways and Means, a madcap comedy about a young couple on the make. These are three gems from a cycle of ten one-acts, originally written for Coward himself to perform with the legendary Gertrude Lawrence, after audiences couldn’t get enough of them in Private Lives.

“I couldn’t be more excited to launch our 15th season with three rarely seen Noël Coward delights performed by a truly extraordinary cast. The wit and charm and music of these short plays will make for a unique, celebratory evening. This will be Red Bull’s first time presenting the wonderful work of Noël Coward, and he fits right in with our history of producing Restoration Comedies and their later incarnations through great playwrights like Sheridan, Orton, and Ludlam. I’m also pleased that this evening is an opportunity to celebrate our relationship with the Noël Coward Foundation, who have generously sponsored the last three years of our annual Short New Play Festival,” said Mr. Berger.

In the introduction to a published edition of the plays, Coward wrote "A short play, having a great advantage over a long one in that it can sustain a mood without technical creaking or over padding, deserves a better fate, and if, by careful writing, acting and producing I can do a little towards reinstating it in its rightful pride, I shall have achieved one of my more sentimental ambitions."

The performance of Tonight at 8:30​ will begin at 8:30 PM, of course. But the evening will begin at 7:30 PM with complimentary sparkling spirits and light bites in Bar Thalia with the cast and special guests. Bubbly will continue to flow throughout the evening, during the breaks between the short plays. Tickets for this benefit event will be $150-$300 (including a tax-deductible donation).

Red Bull Theater, hailed as “the city’s gutsiest classical theater” by Time Out New York, brings rarely seen classic plays to dynamic new life for contemporary audiences, uniting a respect for tradition with a modern sensibility. Named for the rowdy Jacobean playhouse that illegally performed plays in England during the years of Puritan rule, Red Bull Theater is New York City’s home for dynamic performances of great plays that stand the test of time. With the Jacobean plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries as its cornerstone, the company also produces new works that are in conversation with the classics. A home for artists, scholars and students, Red Bull Theater delights and engages the intellect and imagination of audiences, and strives to make its work accessible, diverse, and welcoming to all. Red Bull Theater believes in the power of great classic stories and plays of heightened language to deepen our understanding of the human condition, in the special ability of live theater to create unique, collective experiences, and the timeless capacity of classical theater to illuminate the events of our times. Variety agreed, hailing our work as: “Proof that classical theater can still be surprising after hundreds of years.”

Since its debut in 2003 with a production of Shakespeare’s Pericles starring Daniel Breaker, Red Bull Theater has served adventurous theatergoers with Off-Broadway Productions, Revelation Readings, and the annual Short New Play Festival. The company also offers outreach programs including Shakespeare in Schools bringing professional actors and teaching artists into public school classrooms; Bull Sessions, free post-play discussions with top scholars; and Master Classes in classical acting led by veteran theater professionals.

Acclaimed as “a dynamic producer of classic plays” by The New York Times and “the most exciting classical theater in New York” by Time Out NY, Red Bull Theater has produced 17 Off-Broadway productions and over 150 Revelation Readings of rarely seen classics, serving a community of more than 5,000 artists and providing quality artistic programming to an audience of over 65,000. The company’s unique programming has received ongoing critical acclaim, and has been recognized with Lortel, Drama Desk, Drama League, Callaway, Off Broadway Alliance, and OBIE nominations and Awards.

For tickets and more information about any of Red Bull Theater's productions and programs, visit www.redbulltheater.com.

Wednesday 09.12.18
Posted by David Gersten
 
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