The Gershwins` Porgy and Bess
Transcription
The Gershwins` Porgy and Bess
Contents 12 15 38 39 40 44 45 SEPTEMBER 2011 Artistic Director’s Welcome The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess program About the A.R.T. A.R.T./MXAT Institute Donors General Information Staff PLUS: 4 6 Backstage Re-imagining an American Classic by Christopher Wallenberg 46 54 60 62 Guide to Local Theater Guide to Cambridge Dining Dining Out: Upstairs on the Square Dining Out: Nubar theatrebill STAFF President/Publisher: Tim Montgomery Art Director: Scott Roberto Associate Art Director: John Herron Gendreau Contributing Writer: Christopher Wallenberg Vice President Publishing: Rita A. Fucillo Vice President Advertising: Jacolyn Ann Firestone Account Executive: Tony Enslow Vice President Operations: Tyler J. Montgomery Business Manager: Melissa J. O’Reilly Information Technology Manager: Mike Hipps Publishing services are provided by Theatrebill, a publication of New Venture Media Group LLC, publisher of Panorama: The Official Guide to Boston, 332 Congress Street, Boston, MA 02210, 617-423-3400. 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THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 3 BACK STAGE Behind the scenes in local and national theater The high-profile, Broadway-bound musical adaptation of The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess is basking in the glory of its triumphant return to the Greater Boston area, but in a bittersweet turn of events, Porgy’s original birthplace, the Colonial Theatre on Boylston Street, went dark earlier this summer for what could be an extended period of time. Porgy premiered at the historic Colonial Theatre in 1935 (September 30, to be exact) prior to its engagement on Broadway. The new revival is testing its wings at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge. Meanwhile, the 1,700-seat Colonial, famous for pre-Broadway tryouts, including the premieres of such landmark musicals as Oklahoma! and La Cage aux Folles, was shut down in early July following a four-week engagement of a revival of West Side Story, and its future is uncertain. Boston’s oldest continuously operating theater, the Colonial is known for its spectacular murals, extensive ornate gold leafing throughout the interior and unbeatable sight lines for a venue of its size. The Colonial’s shuttering comes on the heels of a breakdown in negotiations between Emerson College, which purchased the theater in 2006, and Broadway Across America-Boston, which has been the theater’s longtime presenter of Broadway touring musicals, having leased it for more than a decade. According to a report in The Boston Globe, Emerson told Broadway Across America-Boston in early 2010 that it first wanted to explore the option of leasing the theater to other potential producers. A lease renewal was finally offered by Emerson last November, but Broadway Across America-Boston declined, saying it had waited as long as it could and went ahead with other plans for its 2011–12 season. Instead, the organization will present two touring shows next season at Boston’s Shubert Theatre, as well as The Opera House, which it owns. The Shubert Theatre, which is operated by the Citi Performing Arts Center, has been used mostly by the Boston Lyric Opera, although the Boston premiere of Jersey Boys played there three summers ago. 4 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER Liz Lauren The Colonial Theatre Goes Dark BERNSTEIN IN BOSTON: The Huntington Theatre Company mounts Mary Zimmerman's new adaptation of Leonard Bernstein's classic musical Candide, based on Voltaire's famous satire, at the Boston University Theatre beginning September 10. Next year, Broadway Across America-Boston will present a tours of La Cage aux Folles and The Addams Family at the Shubert. Andrew Tiedemann, Emerson’s vice president for communications, told Playbill.com in July, “Emerson is actively seeking a new tenant. We have enjoyed having Broadway Across America as our tenant…we hope in the future they would consider a lease.” While Emerson hopes that Broadway Across America will return the following season, it is seeking out other presenters and producers in the meantime. According to the Globe and other sources, last year Emerson was in negotiations with longtime Boston theater stalwart Jon B. Platt, who ran the Colonial for more than a decade before selling his company, American Artists/Broadway in Boston, in 1998 to SFX Theatricals (which, after various owners and entities, has morphed into Broadway Across America). But discussions between Platt and Emerson reportedly stalled. Platt, a veteran Broadway producer of shows like the current blockbuster The Book of Mormon, helped to raise the money for a $2 million renovation to the Colonial in the early ’90s. In a statement to the Globe, Platt said, “For Boston to lose The Colonial Theatre as a home for Broadway shows would indeed be a tragic day in the cultural life of our beloved city.” b ackstage (continued) Zimmerman’s new Candide at the Huntington While Porgy and Bess has been generating a lot of buzz in the theater scene of late, there’s another high-profile adaptation of a classic opera-musical hybrid playing on the other side of the Charles River this month. Beginning September 10, Boston’s Huntington Theatre Company kicks off its 30th anniversary season with Mary Zimmerman’s new version of the Leonard Bernstein classic Candide, playing the Boston University Theatre through October 16. A Tony Award winner and MacArthur “Genius” grand recipient, Zimmerman has newly adapted the book for Candide from the classic French satire by Voltaire, using her signature style of close collaboration with her company and creative team. (Zimmerman most famously directed her play, Metamorphoses, on Broadway in 2002.) Her new version of Candide played to packed houses in Chicago and Washington, D.C., last year, and was greeted by mixed to enthusiastic reviews in both cities. While Zimmerman has newly adapted the libretto (originally written by Lillian Hellman, yet rewritten in 1974 by Hugh Wheeler), the immortal Leonard Bernstein score, with lyrics by Richard Wilbur, remains as luscious as ever. The nearly 30 songs include the classics “The Best of All Possible Worlds,” “Oh Happy We,” “Glitter and Be Gay” and “Make Our Garden Grow.” The show recounts the tale of Candide, a sheltered and sunny optimist subscribing to the crackpot philosophy of Dr. Pangloss, who teaches that everything happens for the best in this “best of all possible worlds.” Living on his uncle’s Eden-like estate, Candide falls in love with Cunegonde, the couple’s illicit affair is discovered, and they are thrown out into an often cruel world where increasingly awful misfortune tests their unbounded optimism. Questioning Our Values and Malkovich Come to Town ArtsEmerson’s ambitious slate of performers and artists for its second season at the Paramount Center downtown kicks off with the world premiere of The Foundry Theatre’s How Much Is Enough: Our Values in Question, which grapples with the concept of “value” in people’s lives and how we deter- mine what matters to us. The show runs from September 13–25 at the Center’s Jackie Liebergott Black Box theater. Based in New York, the Foundry touts that it has developed the first “audience performance company” in which the audience shapes the show’s narrative through an interactive question and answer session. The play itself will be built out of questions posed by performers to audience members about the ways they’ve lived their lives, their plans for the future, how they balance priorities and any advice they have for helping create lives of value. The questions are asked as the audience is seated around tables. The answers make up the evening’s performance, which explores how notions of “value” change throughout life. “The experience will change with every performance because the ‘dialogue’ isn’t scripted. Rather, it comes from the hearts and minds of the audience,” said ArtsEmerson executive director Rob Orchard in a press statement. “The atmosphere is relaxed and communal. People will be asked to participate only at a level that suits them. On September 29 and 30, ArtsEmerson presents internationally acclaimed film and theater actor John Malkovich performing in The Infernal Comedy: Confessions of a Serial Killer at the Cutler Majestic Theatre for two performances only. The award-winning Malkovich is famed for his roles in films like Places in the Heart, The Killing Fields, Dangerous Liaisons, In the Line of Fire and for playing a cinematic version of himself in Charlie Kaufman’s Being John Malkovich. Written and directed by Michael Sturminger, The Infernal Comedy is the perfect vehicle for Malkovich’s patented brand of creepy, self-possessed intensity. The play is based on the true story of serial killer Jack Unterweger, who was sentenced to life in prison in 1976 for murdering a young girl and later became a literary celebrity after the publication of his autobiography. Considered a model of prisoner rehabilitation, Unterweger was paroled in 1990—only to end up murdering 11 more women. Sturminger’s play imagines Unterweger back from the grave for an autobiographical book tour as he narrates his sordid story. Each section concludes with a different aria—yes, an aria—from the likes of Mozart, Haydn and Vivaldi, sung by two sopranos and accompanied by the Musica Angelica Orchestra. THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 5 Michael Lutch RE-IMAGINING AN AMERICAN CLASSIC Seventy-six years after its premiere, Diane Paulus, Suzan-Lori Parks and company revamp the Gershwins’ landmark masterpiece, Porgy and Bess by Christopher Wallenberg G eorge and Ira Gershwin’s landmark “folkopera” Porgy and Bess, with a libretto cowritten by DuBose Heyward, may be three quarters of a century old, but Diane Paulus, the director of the current re-imagining of this operatic masterpiece, has been steadfastly approaching Porgy and Bess as if it’s a living, breathing entity as relevant today as it was in 1935. To that end, she’s simultaneously looking backwards to understand its history and its original inspirations while pushing forward to think about what this iconic American work means right now. “What makes a classic great is that it responds. Shakespeare responds. It’s not stuck in 6 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER 1598. And Porgy and Bess continues to reverberate and hold universal meaning over time,” says Paulus, nestled in an armchair in her spacious office at the American Repertory Theater’s Loeb Drama Center in Cambridge, where her musical-theater version of The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess made its highly anticipated debut on August 17. “That’s been my whole interest as a director: How do we look to the masterworks of our theGONE FISHIN’: (above, left to right) Norm Lewis (as Porgy), Joshua Henry, Wilkie Ferguson, Roosevelt André Credit and Trevon Davis perform a scene from The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess. Michael Lutch atrical history and bring them forward in a way that continues to make them feel pertinent and immediate—to make the audience feel as if they’re alive with the work, almost as if it were written yesterday.” These aren’t platitudes, says Paulus, the A.R.T.’s artistic director. She says that she believes in this approach and in these ideals with all her soul and tries to infuse them into every aspect of the theater she creates, which includes the 2009 Broadway revival of another landmark musical work, Hair. That production landed Paulus on the national radar, and Porgy marks another watershed moment for the artistic leader. Indeed, it stands as her biggest and boldest project yet—and the one with the highest stakes—since she took the reins at the A.R.T. three years ago, dramatically shaking up that storied institution. The creative team she’s assembled for Porgy, including Pulitzer Prize-winning writer SuzanLori Parks and Obie Award-winning composer Diedre Murray, have been hard at work, shaping and developing their vision for Porgy, which hasn’t been seen on Broadway in decades. (Today, it’s mostly performed as an opera.) The fruits of Paulus and Co.’s nearly year-long labor was unveiled at the A.R.T. last month when the curtain went up on The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess for a seven-week run, with the production then moving to Broadway in December. (The star-studded cast includes four-time Tony Award-winner Audra McDonald as Bess, Broadway veteran Norm Lewis as Porgy and actor/comedian David Alan Grier as Sporting Life.) The project was launched when Paulus’ Hair producer, Jeffrey Richards, told her that the Gershwin estates and the DuBose Heyward trust (Heyward helped adapt the libretto from his original novel) had been looking for a team to revive Porgy as a musical and asked her if she was interested. “What moved me was their impulse to come to a team in 2011 and say, ‘The opera is the opera. But what about Porgy and Bess living on the musical stage? What could that be? How could it speak to the next generation?’ That was the gauntlet they threw down to us—how can you make this piece dramatically the most powerful and meaningful version for an audience today?” BESS ACTRESS: Stage and screen star Audra McDonald portrays Bess alongside Broadway veteran Norm Lewis, who plays Porgy, in the American Repertory Theater’s production of The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess. When Porgy premiered in 1935 at the Colonial Theatre in downtown Boston, it was immediately embraced. Yet when it moved to Broadway, it was greeted by a mixed reaction. Its reputation, however, grew in the 1940s, especially in Europe. Over time, the groundbreaking and culturally significant nature of the score was applauded. Not only did George Gershwin mash-up the operatic form with folk music styles like gospel and the dynamic sounds of jazz and THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 7 blues, but he insisted on casting classically trained African-American singers—something of a bold decision at that time. When Paulus and Parks made their presentation for the estates last year, they talked about the strength of the show being the immortal score, including classic songs such as “Summertime,” “It Ain’t Necessarily So” and “I Loves You, Porgy.” But what needed developing and underlining, they argued, was the story and character arcs. They talked about a production that wasn’t operatic in scope, but intimately scaled—zooming in on the interior life of the characters. The story centers on the denizens of the Catfish Row enclave in Charleston, South Carolina circa 1930, focusing in particular on the searing love triangle between three unlikely lost souls. When the troubled prostitute Bess is abandoned after her controlling lover Crown commits murder and flees town, she turns to the crippled beggar Porgy for nurturing and a place to call home. As their love blooms, Crown and his conniving cohort, the drug-dealing gambler Sporting Life, threaten to pull the new lovers apart—while Bess struggles to contain her addiction and Porgy veers towards a desperate act. Paulus says she and Parks were clear from Day 1 that they were not going to “Katrina-ize” Porgy by moving it to a contemporary setting. Instead, the women concentrated on strengthening and adding dimension to the characters and their story arcs, figuring out what makes these people tick and underlining the dramatic transformations that happen to them through the course of the story—often using the novel as a guide to flesh out specifics. They paid particular attention to fleshing out Bess’ character arc and understanding her motivations. “We want to strip away anything that becomes distracting, that would raise the question of: Is that authentic? What’s authentic is the emotions, the story, the desperate journeys of these characters and the complexity of who these people are. Therein lies the richness of the theatrical experience: The audience’s identification with these people. Sitting in the audience, no matter what century I live in and whatever my background, I can say I understand what Bess is feeling. I can ("--&3: 7*4*5 )"37"3% "35 .64&6.4 Classic. Homer and Joyce. Shakespeare and Mamet. Velasquez and Sargent. If you’re interested in how great writers and artists transform our world, we invite you to check out our courses—on campus or online. Select courses: t 1PFUSZ BOE 'JDUJPO 8SJUJOH t "NFSJDBO %SBNB 4JODF t 1IJMPTPQIZ PG .JOE t *OUSPEVDUJPO UP +B[[ o t 4IBLFTQFBSFT &BSMZ 1MBZT t "DUJOH 8PSLTIPQ 5IF .POPMPHVF t 8JU BOE )VNPS www.extension.harvard.edu 8 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER identify with Porgy. I’m rooting for that love affair to survive. It’s the specific becoming universal.” In moving Porgy from the opera form to the musical-theater idiom, the team has had to decide which musical recitatives should now be spoken as dialogue instead of sung and which ones should be retained. Paulus has also kept the set design simple, shunning supposedly authentic scenery in favor of a more abstract, timeless approach. “We’ve tried to break free of the past conventions of Porgy and Bess, having ‘realistic’ architecture on stage, with gates and shutters and buildings. We all know that’s not real anyway.” Two other potentially controversial changes to the show: Gone is Porgy’s goatdrawn cart (he ambles around with a cane instead), and there’s a new, more upbeat ending. One of the biggest challenges facing Paulus and Parks is the thorny problem of racial stereotyping in Porgy and Bess. With the birth of the Civil Rights movement, Porgy became a radioactive property among African-Americans. Harry Belafonte turned down the 1959 film version, and Sidney Poitier later said he THREE’S COMPANY: American Repertory Theater Artistic Director Diane Paulus (middle) poses with The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess collaborators Suzan-Lori Parks (left) and Diedre Murray (right). at the shalin liu SUNDAY, AUGUST 28, 2 PM Grace Kelly and Phil Woods, saxophones JAZZ: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 5 PM JAZZ: Bill Charlap Trio THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 7 PM COMEDY: 37 Main Street, Rockport, Massachusetts CLASSICAL – JAZZ – FOLK – OPERA & THEATRE HD BROADCASTS CONCERTS AND EVENTS THROUGHOUT THE YEAR! One Man, Two Guvnors National Theatre HD Broadcast SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 7 PM JAZZ: Regina Carter, violin THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 7 PM COMEDY: The Kitchen National Theatre HD Broadcast Met Opera HD Broadcasts Six Encore Productions September 6 – October 4 Visit www.rockportmusic.org for a full calendar of events! Group and senior discounts available! FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 8 PM JAZZ: New York Voices FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 8 PM FOLK: Livingston Taylor www.rockportmusic.org | 978.546.7391 THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 9 regretted doing it. But Parks has talked about the script’s flirtations with minstrelsy and “noble savage” cliches as a “shortcoming of understanding.” While the creative team has altered material in the book, always with a careful hand, Paulus says the stereotyping usually stems from the lack of dramaturgical purpose. “ ‘I Got Plenty of Nuthin’’ can have a bad rap, because here it is, this African-American man singing how he’s happy with nothing. What Suzan-Lori was interested in, even more than [the derogatory stereotyping], is the context of the song in the show. So she has written a few lines that give it a purpose that relates to the specific action of the story at that moment. We’re looking at anything in the script that sticks out as dramaturgically questionable, because usually the problem is that the characters are incomplete. Therefore, you can look at them as cliches.” Paulus may be striving to make Porgy and Bess resonate today, but she certainly has a reverence for the work’s rich history. After all, she taught a course on Porgy at Harvard last spring with renowned cultural historian Marjorie Garber. Indeed, Paulus’ grasp of Porgy’s roots are impressive. She mentions how George Gershwin and his associates famously walked Boston Common the night after the show’s premiere and decided to make major cuts to the show. She talks passionately about Porgy’s complex social and racial history and its evolution over the decades in various mediums. She points out that Porgy had its real breakthrough and solidified its status in the canon when it was revived on Broadway in 1942 as a musical under the auspices of Cheryl Crawford, ran for nine months, then toured the country. In the 1950s, it became a main diplomatic export of the U.S. State Department, she says, and the cast (including a young Maya Angelou) were some of the first American artists to perform behind the Iron Curtain. When the 1960s hit, with the rise of the Civil Rights and black power movements, few wanted to touch Porgy and Bess because of its stereotypes and perceived racism. But at that time, the music exploded into the popular consciousness, as jazz and blues artists, from Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday to Stop Guessing tutoring test preparation admissions call to inquire about courses and small group lessons 617 395 4160 or visit us at veritutors.com $50 off your first lesson if you sign up before september 1st. just mention this ad. 10 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER Miles Davis and Nina Simone, popularized many of its songs. In the ’70s, Porgy and Bess reentered the culture as an opera (thanks to the famous 1976 Houston Grand Opera production), and the fashion was to perform it uncut. Today, that’s the medium where most people experience the show. Paulus relishes sharing one anecdote in particular about Porgy’s history that most people don’t know. Following the show’s run on Broadway in 1936, it went on a four-city tour, including a stop in Washington, D.C. Todd Duncan, who played Porgy, discovered that the National Theatre, where they were scheduled to play in D.C., was segregated. He said he would refuse to perform the show there if the theater was not desegregated, and the cast, including Anne Brown as Bess, rallied to his side. The theater offered to open up the top half of the balcony and to hold specific “blacks only” performances, says Paulus. The musicians’ union even threatened to fine the performers, yet the cast would not relent. Finally, the National Theatre management acquiesced, and the venue was desegregated for the run of the show. “This is all because Todd Duncan said, ‘I will not perform this unless anybody can sit anywhere—regardless of the color of your skin.’ This is March 1936—like 20 years before Rosa Parks and the birth of the Civil Rights movement. Who knows that this man did this? Here’s an artist who stood up for his rights politically, who made this social action through this piece of work. It’s sort of reprehensible that we as a country, or certainly as artists, don’t even know the history that goes back only 76 years—that we don’t own that action and that story and teach people about it.” Considering Porgy’s lofty status as such a bold work for its time, Paulus says she and her creative team are trying to honor, embrace and tap into the same daring spirit in which the show was created. “Gershwin was a hybrid artist, this mash-up artist who was way ahead of his time,” Paulus says. “So our goal is to get in touch with those original impulses and to transfer all those impulses out of the opera house and onto a musical stage, where we can create a more intimate, theatrical, visceral experience that is putting as much emphasis on the words and the story as the music. That’s the radical step for Porgy and Bess now.” su ffi eld aca d e my Founded in 1833 | Grades 9-12 (PG) 400 Students | 5:1 student & faculty ratio Co-ed boarding & day 185 North Main Street Suffield, Connecticut 06078 www.suffieldacademy.org Suffield Academy is a school grounded in rich tradition with a healthy respect for community and an eye toward innovation. Come to Suffield and discover endless opportunities for you to create your Suffield experience. Suffield Academy does not discriminate on the basis of sex, race, color, religion, creed, national or ethnic origin, citizenship, physical attributes, disability, age, or sexual orientation. We administer our admissions, financial aid, educational, athletic, extracurricular, and other policies so that each student is equally accorded all the rights, privileges, programs, and facilities made available by the school. THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 11 Photo: Dario Acosta Artistic Director’s Welcome Welcome to the American Repertory Theater’s production of The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess! This production is a homecoming of sorts. The first performance of this American masterpiece took place on September 30th, 1935 at the Colonial Theatre, right across from Boston Common where Gershwin famously walked for hours after the curtain came down, making forty-five minutes of cuts to the score that very evening. That night marked the beginning of a journey for Porgy and Bess that tells a story about American history as much as it does about the evolution of this iconic work. In 1936, the show went on a tour that landed the cast in Washington, D.C. at the National Theatre, which had a policy of segregation. Todd Duncan, the first Porgy, was determined not to perform unless every seat was made available to any person regardless of the color of their skin. Anne Brown, the original Bess, stood by his side. The theater’s manager offered to allow African Americans to attend Wednesday and Saturday matinees. When Duncan refused, he offered to allow African Americans to sit in the second balcony for every performance. But Duncan did not relent, and in March of 1936, the National Theatre was desegregated for the first time in its history. It is to the memory of Todd Duncan and Anne Brown that we dedicate this production. As we look to the future of sharing this important classic with new generations, we honor the legacy of these two artists and their impact on our cultural and social history. We are very grateful to the estates of George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin, and DuBose and Dorothy Heyward for their support of this production. They have encouraged us to create a show for an intimate theatrical setting that focuses on the story and characters as much as on the glorious score that we all cherish. I could not imagine a better team to work on this than Suzan-Lori Parks, Diedre Murray, Ron K. Brown, our designers, orchestrators, musical and production staff, and the entire cast of performers who have thrown their hearts and souls into this process. Lastly, I must express gratitude to the A.R.T. Trustees and Advisors for their belief in this project, and to all the individuals and companies who have come forward to support Porgy and Bess and our mission to serve the broadest possible audience in Boston with a version of this work that promotes dialogue, education and access. The A.R.T. lost a longtime friend and supporter with the passing of Myra Kraft, a true force within the Boston community. We honor her spirit of inclusion and community building with this production. Thank you for engaging with us at the A.R.T., and joining us for this next chapter in the history of Porgy and Bess. 12 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER Charlie Haydock, CFA Chief Investment Officer Harvard A.B. 1974 Adrienne Silbermann, CFA Director of Research Knowing wealth. Knowing you. AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER PRESENTS BY GEORGE GERSHWIN, DUBOSE and DOROTHY HEYWARD and IRA GERSHWIN ADAPTED BY SUZAN-LORI PARKS SCENIC DESIGN DIEDRE L. MURRAY COSTUME DESIGN RICCARDO HERNANDEZ ESOSA LIGHTING DESIGN SOUND DESIGN CHRISTOPHER AKERLIND ACME SOUND PARTNERS ORCHESTRATORS WILLIAM DAVID BROHN and CHRISTOPHER JAHNKE MUSIC SUPERVISOR DAVID LOUD CONDUCTOR ASSOCIATE CONDUCTOR SHEILAH WALKER BRIAN HERTZ CASTING ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR/PRODUCTION STAGE MANAGER TELSEY + COMPANY NANCY HARRINGTON* CHOREOGRAPHER RONALD K. BROWN DIRECTOR DIANE PAULUS First performance on August 17, 2011 Production Sponsor Gala Sponsor Opening Night Sponsor THE WORLDWIDE COPYRIGHTS IN THE WORKS OF GEORGE AND IRA GERSHWIN FOR THIS PRESENTATION ARE LICENSED BY THE GERSHWIN® FAMILY THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 15 Cast (in order of appearance) Clara ..................................................................................NIKKI RENÉE DANIELS* Mariah ....................................................................NATASHA YVETTE WILLIAMS* Frazier, the Crab Man ......................................................................CEDRIC NEAL* Lily..................................................................................................HEATHER HILL* Jake................................................................................................JOSHUA HENRY* Mingo, the Undertaker ....................................................................J.D. WEBSTER* Sporting Life ..........................................................................DAVID ALAN GRIER* Robbins ............................................................................NATHANIEL STAMPLEY* Serena ........................................................................BRYONHA MARIE PARHAM* Porgy ................................................................................................NORM LEWIS* Crown ..........................................................................................PHILLIP BOYKIN* Bess ........................................................................................AUDRA McDONALD* Peter, the Honey Man ............................................................PHUMZILE SOJOLA* Detective ..........................................................................CHRISTOPHER INNVAR* Policeman ..................................................................................JOSEPH DELLGER* Strawberry Woman ........................................................ANDREA JONES-SOJOLA* Fishermen................................................................ROOSEVELT ANDRÉ CREDIT*, TREVON DAVIS*, WILKIE FERGUSON* Women of Catfish Row ....................................................ALLISON BLACKWELL*, ALICIA HALL MORAN*, LISA NICOLE WILKERSON* (*) members of Actors’ Equity Association UNDERSTUDIES Understudies never substitute for listed players unless a specific announcement for the appearance is made at the time of the performance. For Porgy and Crown—NATHANIEL STAMPLEY*; for Bess—ALICIA HALL MORAN*; for Sporting Life—CEDRIC NEAL*; for Serena and Mariah—ALLISON BLACKWELL*, ANDREA JONES-SOJOLA*; for Clara—ANDREA JONES-SOJOLA*; for Robbins— WILKIE FERGUSON*; for Jake and Mingo—TREVON DAVIS*; for Frazier and Peter— J.D. WEBSTER*; for Male Ensemble—CARL JAMES; for Female Ensemble—SARITA LILLY ORCHESTRA Violin—SASHA CALLAHAN; Viola—ASHLEIGH GORDON; Cello—LEO EGUCHI; Bass—JOE HIGGINS; Piano/Celeste—BRIAN HERTZ; Flute/Piccolo— EBONEE THOMAS; Oboe/English Horn—MIE SHIRAISHI; Clarinet/Flute/Alto Sax— BOB BOWLBY; Clarinet/Bass Clarinet/Alto & Tenor Sax—PETER L. COKKINIAS; Horn 1—ROSLYN BLACK; Horn 2—DIANTHA MILLOTT; Trumpet 1/Flugelhorn— JOHN REPLOGLE; Trumpet 2/Flugelhorn—GREG SMITH; Trombone— MARTIN WITTENBERG; Tuba/Bass Trombone—DON ROBINSON; Tenor Sax/Bari Sax/ Bassoon—GREG NEWTON; Accordion—ROBERTO CASSAN; Percussion—ROBERT SCHULZ THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 17 BO STO N’S BES TD ISC OD AN CE PAR TY THE SEC SECOND STAGE OF THE AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER AMERIC AN REPER TORY THEA ATER A DES DESTINATION TINATION ION FFOR OR THEATER & NIGHTLIFE N THE DONKEY EY SHO SHOW W SHAKESPEARE AND DISC DISCO OC COLLIDE OLLIDE EVERY SATURDAY EVERY S ATURD DAY NIGHT TICKETS FR OM $25 TICKETS FROM THE BIG QUIZ IZ THIN THING G MONTHLY MONTHL LY MULTIMEDIA MULLTIMEDIA MEDIA TRIVIA FREE ADMISSION—CASH ADMISSION—C —CASH PRIZE NEW WOR WORKS KS SERIES SERIES AUGUST A UGUST 29 8PM M | FREE INSPIRED BY BY OBERON OBER ERON ITSELF, ITSELF, LLOCAL OCAL ARTISTS ARTISTS SHARE ARE EXCITING EXCITING WORKS PROGRESS W ORKS IN PR ROGRESS JUSTIN JUS TIN VIVIAN AN B BOND OND SEPTEMBER ER 2 21 1 RETURNING RETURNING TO TO OBERON OBERON FOR ONE ONLY F OR O NE NIGHT GHT ONL LY EV EVERY VERY Y SATURDAY SA ATURDAY URD NIGHT! NI IGHT T!! T 7:30 7 30 P.M. PM 1 10:30 P.M. AND MANY O OTHER THER HER EVENTS EVENTS ARROW ST. ST. C AMBRIDGE 2 ARROW CAMBRIDGE WWW.CLUBOBER ERON.COM WWW.CLUBOBERON.COM TICKE TICKETS: ETS: 6 617.547.8300 17.547.830 00 americanrepertorytheater.org ameri icanreperto orythe eater.org GROUPS PARTIES: GROU UPS & P ARTIE IES: 617.599.7718 6 17.599 9 .7718 or [email protected] vip@amr v @amrep.orrg ADDITIONAL STAFF Dialect Coach..............Denise L.Woods Dramaturgy................Ryan McKittrick, Jenna Clark Embrey Stage Manager................Julie Baldauff* Asst. Stage Manager ........Sharika Niles* Asst. Director ......................Mia Walker Asst. Choreographer ......Arcell Cabuag Asst. to Diedre Murray ........Robin Pitre Dance Captain....Lisa Nicole Wilkerson Orchestra Coordinator ......Neil Grover Rehearsal Pianist ......David F. Coleman Music Preparation ..............Larry Abel, Supervising Copyist Music Preparation International Wig/Hair Design ..........J. Jared Janas & Rob Greene Asst. Set Designers ..........Maruti Evans, Andrew Boyce Asst. Costume Designer ....Ashley Farra Asst. Lighting Designer ......Seth Reiser Music Interns ......................Neil Reilly, Nehemiah Luckett Sound Intern..............Samantha Sewell PORGY AND BESS INTERNSHIP PROGRAM— HARVARD UNIVERSITY Charlotte Alter, Directing Haley Bennett, Music Andrew Boyd, Artistic Jacob Brandt, Artistic Kayla Ixtlahuac, Stage Management Lily Karlin, Dramaturgy Margaret Kerr, Costumes and Props Anh Marie Le, Production Elizabeth Yun Yeng Mak, Lighting Katherine Olaskiewicz, Marketing Telsey + Company: Bernie Telsey CSA, Will Cantler CSA, David Vaccari CSA, Bethany Knox CSA, Craig Burns CSA, Tiffany Little Canfield CSA, Rachel Hoffman CSA, Justin Huff CSA, Patrick Goodwin CSA, Abbie Brady-Dalton CSA, David Morris, Cesar A. Rocha, Andrew Femenella, Karyn Casl Rehearsed from July 5–15, 2011 at the New 42nd Street Studios Rehearsed from July 18–August 16, 2011 at the Loeb Drama Center SPECIAL THANKS Jerry Frankel and Jeffrey Richards Bess costumes by Tricorne, Inc.; Huntington Theatre Costume Shop (Nancy Brennan, Costume Director; Anita Canzian, Draper; Becky Hylton, First Hand; Michelle Theresa Ross, First Hand); Liz Perlman and Costume Works, Inc.; Cyberhoist North America; Pearl Studios NYC; Steve Weiss Music; Eric Engel, Dana Knox, Andrew Gitchel, New College Theater; Christie Teeters; Patrick Hollenbeck; Brenda Anderson and the Kendall Hotel; Robin Young; Evgenia Eliseeva; Anastasia Korotich; Will Trice; Jody Steiner THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 19 A Note from Suzan-Lori Parks When Diane Paulus called me on the phone and said, “I’m thinking about doing a revival of Porgy and Bess, do you want to help revive the book?” My first question was, how many other writers are you talking to? She said, “Just you.” And I said, “I’m in.” Was I familiar with the book of Porgy and Bess? Not at all. But I felt a gut thing: I was literally called on the phone, and I felt that I’d also been “called” in a spiritual sense. This project feels right up my alley; an organic next-step in the kind of writing I’ve been doing for years. Whether riffing on The Scarlet Letter, or “dancing” with Abraham Lincoln throughout my plays, or entering the world of Porgy and Bess to help give it a new life— throughout my work, shaped by the aesthetic of “repetition and revision,” I’m continually called (and re-called) to create an understanding between the past and the present. Porgy and Bess was written by white authors attempting to replicate an “authentic” black voice and, while the original opera triumphs on so many levels, I feel the writing sometimes suffers from what I call “a shortcoming of understanding.” There are times in all of our lives when, regardless of who we are, we experience shortcomings of understanding. In DuBose and Dorothy Heyward and the Gershwins’ original, there’s a lot of love and a lot of effort made to understand the people of Catfish Row. In turn, I’ve got love and respect for their work, but in some ways I feel it falls short in the creation of fully realized characters. Now, one could see their depiction of African-American culture as racist, or one could see it as I see it: as a problem of dramaturgy. It’s very important and very liberating to my writing process that I continually make that distinction and that I allowed myself to see Porgy and Bess as a piece of writing that, while not morally flawed, very much needed to be fleshed out. When I wrote Topdog/Underdog, and we premiered it downtown, the rapper Mos Def, before he was cast in the Broadway version, attended the off-Broadway production countless times. Once he ran backstage wanting to meet “the guy who wrote the play.” Ah! He hadn’t read the program! He thought some dude wrote Topdog—he was having a shortcoming of understanding. As a writer, you’re constantly extending yourself; and if, like DuBose and Dorothy Heyward, like George and Ira Gershwin, and like myself now with Porgy and Bess, if you’re a writer going into new and important territory, you’ve got to be much more than badass. You’ve got to be bold. Diedre Murray, Diane Paulus and Suzan-Lori Parks 20 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER Porgy and Bess: Reinvention and Restagings By Jenna Clark Embrey September 30, 1935: Colonial Theatre, Boston Courtesy of Ira and Leonore Gershwin Trusts On the opening night of Porgy and Bess, George Gershwin receives a fifteenminute standing ovation. Despite the applause, director Rouben Mamoulian paces Boston Common with Gershwin until 3 o’clock in the morning and tries to convince him to make cuts to the almost four-hour production. Before the show transfers to Broadway, Gershwin agrees to cut 45 minutes from the score. October 10, 1935: Alvin Theatre, New York City Porgy and Bess opens on Broadway starring Todd Duncan (Porgy), Anne Brown (Bess), and John Bubbles (Sportin’ Life). Some critics deride the work as either a too-populist opera or an overly ambitious piece of musical theater. Others laud the work—Brooks Atkinson writes in the New York Times, “Mr. Gershwin has contributed something glorious.…A resounding new sound in American theater.” The production runs for 124 performances. March 21, 1936: National Theatre, Washington D.C. Courtesy of Ira and Leonore Gershwin Trusts Todd Duncan and Anne Brown January 22, 1942: Majestic Theatre, New York City Cheryl Crawford directs a streamlined Broadway revival with Todd Duncan and Anne Brown reprising their roles as Porgy and Bess. Crawford replaces the recitatives with spoken dialogue and reduces the orchestra by half. The musical theater-style revival runs for a record 286 performances. March 23, 1943: Danish Royal Opera, Copenhagen The European premiere opens in Copenhagen with an all-white cast in blackface, during the Nazi occupation. The Gestapo strongly disapproves of this American work about blacks and written by a Jew, and orders the theater to 1956 Breen-Davis close the production. The Royal Opera only shuts down the show after the Tour Warsaw poster Gestapo threatens to bomb the theater. Later, the Danish underground jams Nazi radio broadcasts with recordings of “It Ain’t Necessarily So.” Institute on the Federal Theatre Project and New Deal Culture, George Mason University Institute on the Federal Theatre Project and New Deal Culture, George Mason University When the national tour makes its final stop in Washington, D.C., Picnic time: “Oh, I Can’t Sit Todd Duncan will not perform unless the National Theatre forgoes Down” (Vandamm Studio, NYC) its policy of white-only audiences. The theater’s manager, S.E. Cochran, refuses. Duncan holds his ground, even under threat of a ten-thousand dollar fine from the Theatre Guild. Finally, Cochran relents, and the National Theatre allows integrated audiences for the first time. 1952–1956: International Tour Director Robert Breen and producer Blevins Davis take a new production of Porgy and Bess on an international tour, which is funded in part by the U.S. Department of State. Leontyne Price (Bess), William Warfield (Porgy), Cab Calloway (Sportin’ Life), and Maya Angelou (ensemble) all perform in the production. After playing in Berlin, London, Athens, Cairo, New York, and the famed Teatro alla Scala in Milan, the company arrives in the Soviet Union. Performances in Leningrad and Moscow prove to be a hit with Russian audiences, and the show sells out. June 24, 1959: The Samuel Goldwyn Company, Hollywood 1952 Breen-Davis Tour Chicago Porgy and Bess makes it to the big screen, though critics are underwhelmed. Despite the star power of Sidney Poitier, Dorothy Dandridge, Diahann Carroll and THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 21 THE GAMES PEOPLE PLAY p r o g r a m no te s (con tin u ed ) Pearl Bailey, reviews cite the film’s “loss of authenticity” from the stage versions. Foreign and Domestic Board Games and Table Games Chess Sets, Clocks, Books Mathematical Puzzles and Toys Jig Saw Puzzles from 35 to 32,000 Pieces Since 1974 As a featured event in Charleston’s Tricentennial celebration, Porgy and Bess is performed in the town of its setting for the first time. The George and Ira Gershwin Collection, Library of Congress June 25, 1970: Municipal Auditorium, Charleston, South Carolina 1959 Porgy and Bess film poster September 26, 1976: Houston Grand Opera, Texas Directors Jack O’Brien and John DeMain restore many of the cuts that had been made to Porgy and Bess since the Boston opening in 1935. This expanded three-hour production becomes the first opera to win a Tony Award. February 6, 1985: Metropolitan Opera, New York City Fifty years after the premiere, Anne Brown and Todd Duncan meet with the leads, Simon Estes and Grace Bumbry, of the Metropolitan Opera production, 1985 “We’re A.R.T. fans!” watertownsavings.com Not your average bank. Member FDIC Member DIF 22 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER Fifty years after its Broadway premiere, Porgy and Bess is finally performed at the Met. The production features Grace Bumbry and Simon Estes in the title roles. James Levine, who served as music director and conductor for the production, describes Porgy and Bess as having “everything great opera has—great music, great drama and a psychological and social milieu that is as involving as the milieu of Don Giovanni or Boris Godunov.” July 5, 1986: Glyndebourne Festival, England British director Trevor Nunn mounts a nearly four-hour production, which is later scenically expanded and filmed for television in 1993. Winnie Klotz, photographer, Metropolitan Opera Association, Inc., Lincoln Center, New York, NY 10023 MAKE A SMART MOVE VISIT Cast ALLISON BLACKWELL Woman of Catfish Row A.R.T.: Debut. Las Vegas: The Lion King (u/s Shenzi & Sarabi). Regional: Ragtime, Paper Mill Playhouse; Caroline, or Change, TheatreWorks and The Studio Theatre; A Little Night Music and Nunsense, Sacramento Music Circus; Aida, Arvada Center; Dreamgirls, PCLO; Hairspray and Les Misérables, North Shore Music Theatre. Concerts: Show Boat, Carnegie Hall; Burt Bacharach to the Future, New World Stages; Kurt Weill and His Music, NY Historical Society. Award: 2008 San Francisco Bay Area Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress (Caroline, or Change). B.A. Spelman College, M.M. The Boston Conservatory. PHILLIP BOYKIN Crown A.R.T.: Debut. National Tours: The 75th anniversary of Porgy and Bess (Crown, dir. Charles Randolph-Wright), Show Boat (Joe, dir. Clayton Phillips). Regional: Crowns (Man, dir. Ken Roberson), Arena Stage; Jesus Christ Superstar (Caiaphas, dir. Robert Johanson), North Shore Music Theatre; Smokey Joe’s Café (Fred, dir. Barry Ivan), Pittsburgh CLO; If This Hat Could Talk (Sonny/Roy Wilkins, dir. George Faison), The Apollo Theater; Ain’t Misbehavin’ (Ken), Show Palace. Opera credits: Séance On A Wet Afternoon (Inspector Watts, Stephen & Scott Schwartz), New York City Opera; Porgy and Bess (Crown) Dayton Opera, also in Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Japan, Australia, Russia, Poland and New Zealand; The Rape of Lucretia (Tarquinius), Così fan Tutte (Don Alfonso), The Hartt School Opera. Gospel: Jesus Christ Super Star Gospel (Lewis St. Lewis), Alliance Theater; Golden Gospel Singers, Europe, Harlem Gospel Singers Europe, Director/ Baritone NY Harlem Singers (Linda Twine) annual Asian tour, concert: You Believed In Me Phillip Boykin Live Recording. For more information www.phillipboykin.com. ROOSEVELT ANDRÉ CREDIT Fisherman A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: Harold Prince revival of Show Boat (also national tour). Off Broadway: Marie Christine, Prince and the Pauper at Madison Square Garden. Regional theater: Show Boat and Ragtime, Forestburgh Playhouse; For The People, Majestic Playhouse, Gettysburg; Voice From Within, Apollo Theatre; The Whitehouse Cantata, Alice Tully Hall. Concerts: Neil Burg’s 100 Years of Broadway, U.S., Barbados; Duke Ellington’s Sacred Service, Jazz at Lincoln Center; Schubert’s Mass, Carnegie Hall; Music Is In the Air, Town Hall; Bach’s B Minor Mass, Basically Bach Festival of Saint Peter’s Church; Fauré’s Requiem, Bach’s St. John Passion and Handel’s Messiah. Movie short, All American Eyes. Recordings: Ol’ Time Religion, Letting Go. Published choral and solo music with Laurendale Publishing. Eagle Scout of troop 254. M.M. in Voice and M.M. in Conducting Northwestern University, B.S. Oregon State University. For more information visit www.RooseveltACredit.com. NIKKI RENÉE DANIELS Clara A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: Anything Goes; Promises, Promises; Les Misérables 2006 revival; Little Shop of Horrors; Lestat; Nine; The Look of Love; Aida. New York City Opera: Porgy and Bess (Clara). Regional: Caroline, or Change (Emmie), The Guthrie; Anything Goes (Hope Harcourt), Williamstown Theatre Festival; Ray Charles Live! (Della B), Pasadena Playhouse; Beauty and the Beast (Belle), American Musical Theater of San Jose and Sacramento Music Circus; Ragtime (Sarah), North Shore Music Theatre; Dorian (Celia Vane), The Denver Center; Aida (Aida), Artpark. Television/Film: “Chappelle’s Show” and The Other Woman. Concert appearances: soloist with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, the Ottawa Symphony Orchestra, the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra and at Carnegie Hall. B.F.A. in Musical Theatre from the University of Cincinnati, College-Conservatory of Music. THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 23 c ast (con tinued) TREVON DAVIS Fisherman A.R.T.: Debut. New York City: Dreamgirls (C.C. White), Apollo Theater/national Broadway tour; Amazing Grace (Reading). Atlanta, Georgia: Black Voices: The Struggle Continues, The Urban Theatre Company of Atlanta, Inc. Television: BET’s “Sunday Best” Season 1 (Top 7 Finalist), MTV’s “Making the Band 4” (Atlanta Finalist; New York City Contestant). Graduate of Clark Atlanta University, B.A. Mass Media Arts: Television. Member of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Fraternity of America, Inc. and Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. JOSEPH DELLGER Policeman A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: Ragtime (Father), Lestat (Magnus). Regional: My Way—A Sinatra Tribute, Infinity Theater Company, Annapolis, MD; A Christmas Carol (Scrooge), Arvada Center; Jacques Brel (Man #1), Alliance Theater; 101 Dalmatians (Splendid Vet). National Tour: The Phantom of the Opera (André), San Francisco; The Visit (Inspector Hanke), The Goodman Theater; Man of La Mancha 25th anniversary production (Padre), Goodspeed Opera House; Nerds (Tom Watson), world premiere at the Philadelphia Theatre Company; Follies (Ben), Signature Theatre; Camelot (Arthur), Shubert Theatre, Boston; Les Misérables (The Bishop), Theater of the Stars. WILKIE FERGUSON Fisherman A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: Wonderland. First national tours: In The Heights, Hairspray. Other theater: Sister Act (world premiere), Pasadena Playhouse; Ray Charles Live! (Young Ray), Pasadena Playhouse; Stormy Weather (with Leslie Uggams), Pasadena Playhouse; Porgy and Bess (Undertaker, Jim), Hollywood Bowl; Dreamgirls (with Frenchie Davis), West Coast tour, Pittsburgh CLO; Annie, Trinity Rep; South Pacific (with Reba McEntire), Hollywood Bowl; Smokey Joe’s Café (Victor), Pioneer Theatre, Westchester Broadway; Miss Saigon (John), Westchester Broadway. Assistant Director/Piano Accompanist/Music Theory Instructor, Boys’ Choir of Harlem. Eastman School 24 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER of Music, classical piano performance, Morehouse College, New World School of the Arts. DAVID ALAN GRIER Sporting Life A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: The First (Jackie Robinson, Tony nomination, Theatre World Award), Dreamgirls, A Soldier’s Play, Race (Tony nomination). Films: A Soldier’s Story, Robert Altman’s Streamers (Golden Lion for Best Actor at the Venice Film Festival), Dance Flick and the upcoming We the Peeples. Television: “In Living Color” (1990–1994, Emmy Award); “DAG” (2000–2001); “Life with Bonnie” (2003, Image and Golden Satellite nomination); and he also appeared on “Chocolate News.” Grier has been named one of Comedy Central’s “100 Greatest Stand-ups of All Time.” In his first, recently published book, Barack Like Me: The Chocolate Covered Truth, he expounds on politics, culture and race while recounting his own life story in this edgy, timely, timeless and hilarious memoir and look at all things Barack. He holds an M.F.A. from the Yale School of Drama. JOSHUA HENRY Jake A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: The Scottsboro Boys (Haywood Patterson, Tony nomination), American Idiot (Favorite Son), In the Heights (Ensemble/u.s. Benny, Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Ensemble Performance). Off-Broadway: The Wiz and In the Heights. Regional: American Idiot, Berkeley Rep Theatre; Godspell, Paper Mill Playhouse. Film: Sex and the City. Television: “Kings.” Bachelor in Music degree from University of Miami Frost School of Music. Founding member of Jaradoa Theater Company and Revolucion Latina, for which he composed the title track “Dare to Go Beyond” on their debut CD Dare to Go Beyond the album. HEATHER HILL Lily A.R.T.: Debut. Opera: L’elisir d’amore, Semiramide, Caramoor Festival; MobyDick, Dallas Opera; Mitridate, LOTNY; Strange Fruit, New York City Opera Vox; Porgy and Bess, European/Australian tour; Die Entführung aus dem Serail, Opera Colorado; Die Zauberflöte, Bronx Opera. Concert soloist ap- c ast (con tinued) pearances include Knickerbocker Holiday and Grapes of Wrath at Lincoln Center, Carmina Burana at Carnegie Hall. Education: B.S. Biology Clark Atlanta University, M.M. Voice Manhattan School of Music. www.HeatherHillSoprano.com. ANDREA JONES-SOJOLA Strawberry Woman A.R.T.: Debut. Theater: Three Mo’ Divas, Big River, Iroquois Amphitheater. Opera: Porgy and Bess, New York Harlem Productions in Germany and Italy; Carmen, Die Zauberflöte, Dayton Opera; Don Giovanni, Lucca, Italy; Dead Man Walking, Cincinnati Opera. Concerts: Show Boat, Carnegie Hall; The Messiah, Milwaukee Symphony; Fauré Requiem, Lexington Philharmonic. Film: For Colored Girls. Recordings: For Colored Girls soundtrack; The Tender Land; The Spirit of the Holidays, Old Time Religion, with the American Spiritual Ensemble; and Treemonisha, with Paragon Ragtime Orchestra. CHRISTOPHER INNVAR Detective A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: The People In The Picture (Chaim), 110 In The Shade (File), The Three Penny Opera (Tiger Brown), Roundabout at Studio 54; Les Misérables (Javert); Victor/Victoria. Off-Broadway: Floyd Collins, GunShy, Playwrights Horizons; The Boys In The Band, Transport Group; A New Brain, Lincoln Center; The Witch Of Edmonton, Red Bull; The Chemistry Of Change, Women’s Project; Eight Days Backwards, Vineyard; Speck’s Last, Atlantic; Time And Again, MTC. Regional: Steppenwolf, Guthrie, Yale Rep, McCarter, Long Wharf, Wilma, Shakespeare Theatre D.C. (Affiliated Artist). Director: The Whipping Man, Collyer Brothers At Home, Period Piece, Barrington Stage (Artistic Associate). Film/TV: Don’t Mess With The Zohan, Prime, Speck’s Last, Rock The Paint, “Gravity,” “Law & Order CI/SVU,” “Third Watch,” “Spin City.” COMMONWEALTH SCHOOL BEST PRIVATE SCHOOL —Boston magazine, September 2009 Photo by Layla M., Class of 2011 SHARP MINDS & GENEROUS HEARTS Small, challenging classes led by inspiring faculty. Meaningful service to others. Independent projects each year. Deep and durable friendships. High-powered academics and robust arts. Fall Open House, Sunday, October 23, 3–5 p.m. www.commschool.org/learnmore 151 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02116 | (617) 266-7525 THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 25 c ast (con tinued) NORM LEWIS Porgy A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: Sondheim on Sondheim (Soloist), The Little Mermaid (King Triton), Les Misérables (Javert, Drama League nomination), Chicago (Billy Flynn), Amour, The Wild Party, Side Show (Jake), Miss Saigon (John) and Tommy. London: Les Misérables (Javert), West End, London; Les Misérables 25th anniversary concert, London’s O2 Arena. Off-Broadway: Dessa Rose (Nathan, Drama Desk nomination, Audelco Award), The Two Gentlemen of Verona (Valentine, Drama League nomination), Captains Courageous (Doc), A New Brain (Roger). Regional: Ragtime (Coalhouse), Dreamgirls (Curtis, with Jennifer Holliday), First You Dream, Sweeney Todd (Sweeney), The Fantasticks (El Gallo). Concerts: Chess (Molokov, with Josh Groban), Dreamgirls (Curtis), Actor’s Fund; Golden Boy (Eddie), Encores! Film and television: Sex and the City 2, Preaching to the Choir, Confidences, Mystery Woman, “Cosby,” “Strong Medicine,” “All My Children” and “As the World Turns.” Recordings include: his debut solo CD, Norm Lewis: This Is The Life. www.normlewis.com. AUDRA McDONALD Bess A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: Carousel (Tony Award), Master Class (Tony Award), Ragtime (Tony Award), A Raisin in the Sun (Tony Award), Marie Christine (Tony nomination), 110 in the Shade (Tony nomination, Drama Desk Award for Best Actress in a Musical), Henry IV, The Secret Garden. Opera: Francis Poulenc’s La Voix Humaine and the world premiere of Michael John LaChiusa’s Send (who are you? I love you), Houston Grand Opera; Kurt Weill’s Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny, Los Angeles Opera. Television: “Private Practice” (Dr. Naomi Bennett) on ABC, “A Raisin in the Sun” (Emmy nomination), “Wit” (Emmy nomination), “Homicide: Life on the Street,” “Law & Order: SVU,” “Having Our Say: The Delany Sisters’ First 100 Years,” “The Bedford Diaries,” and “Kidnapped,” and the 1999 television remake of “Annie” (Miss Farrell). Films: She Got Problems, Best Thief in the World, It Runs in the Family, The Object of My Affection, Seven Servants and Rampart (upcoming, starring Woody Harrelson). McDonald has recorded four solo al26 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER bums for Nonesuch Records, including Way Back to Paradise, How Glory Goes, Happy Songs and Build a Bridge, and won two 2009 Grammy Awards for The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny. She maintains an active concert career, appearing with her own ensemble and with major orchestras and conductors across the U.S. and abroad. In the fall of 2011, she opens the season of Celebrity Series of Boston at Symphony Hall and embarks on a coast-to-coast North American concert tour. Training: The Juilliard School. Favorite role: Mommy to Zoe Madeline. ALICIA HALL MORAN Woman of Catfish Row A.R.T.: Debut. Theater: The Motown Project Chamber Ensemble (Leading Lady); Things of the Heart (Marian Anderson); Threepenny Opera (Jenny); Milestone (Wife). Concert and Recital: Jazz@Lincoln Center with Charles Lloyd, Café Sabarsky, Duke University, WNYC Greene Space, Rubin Museum. Other Theater: Bill T. Jones/ Arnie Zane Dance Company’s Chapel/Chapter (U.S./Europe, Bessie Award for Musical Collaboration); Jason Moran & the Bandwagon’s Slang and Live: Time and Milestone (U.S./Europe); Simon Schama’s Rough Crossings; Joan Jonas’ Mirror Piece II (U.S./Mexico); Adam Pendleton’s The Revival and three scenes (Isabella Gardner Museum); Simone Leigh and Liz Magic Laser’s Breakdown (opera/film). Education: B.A. Barnard College of Columbia University, B.M. Manhattan School of Music. CEDRIC NEAL Frazier A.R.T.: Debut. Regional: A Christmas Carol; Henry IV; It’s a Bird, It’s a Plane…It’s Superman; Death Of A Salesman; A Midsummer Night’s Dream; The Who’s Tommy (Rabin Award), Dallas Theater Center; Lost In The Stars, A Dog’s Life, Theatre Three; Porgy and Bess (Austin Critics Circle Award), Zach Theatre, Austin; Ain’t Nothin’ But The Blues, Brief History of White Music, WaterTower Theatre; The Life, Aida, The Normal Heart and tick, tick…BOOM!, Uptown Players; Crowns, Ain’t Misbehavin’, Jubilee Theatre. Television/Film: “The Good Guys,” “Chase,” “Friday Night Lights.” Attended Eastman School of Music (Rochester, New York) and a member of the Brierley Resident Acting Company, Dallas Theater Center. c ast (con tinued) BRYONHA MARIE PARHAM Serena A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: Ragtime (revival). New York: Red Eye of Love (workshop), Ain’t Love Grand (workshop). Regional: Ragtime, Kennedy Center; For the Glory/Civil War, Networks/Flat Rock Playhouse; Ain’t Misbehavin’, Mason Street Warehouse; Crowns, Seaside Music Theatre; Once on This Island, Coterie Theatre; A Streetcar Named Desire, Greenbrier Valley Theatre; Kiss Me, Kate, Show Palace; Chicago/Seussical, Peach State Summer Theatre. Graduate of Illinois Wesleyan University, B.F.A. Music Theatre. Proud Actors Equity member. PHUMZILE SOJOLA Peter A.R.T.: Debut. Off-Broadway and tour: Three Mo’ Tenors, Little Schubert Theater, Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Opera: L’étoile, Troubled Island, New York City Opera; Porgy and Bess, Edinburgh International Festival, Opera National de Lyon, New York Harlem Theater; Lost in the Stars, Skylark Opera; Just Above My Head, Pittsburgh Opera Theater; La Bohème, Missouri Symphony Orchestra; Carmen, Die Zauberflöte, Dayton Opera; Death in Venice, Glimmerglass Opera; La Traviata, Cincinnati Opera. Recordings: Paragon Ragtime Orchestra— Treemonisha; American Spiritual Ensemble—The Spirituals, Lily in the Valley. Education: B.M. University of Kentucky, College Conservatory of Music University of Cincinnati. NATHANIEL STAMPLEY Robbins A.R.T.: Debut. West End, London: The Lion King (Disney UK Ltd). Broadway: The Color Purple, The Lion King. Tours: Ragtime. Regional: Abyssinia, North Shore Music Theatre; Pacific Overtures, Chicago Shakespeare Theater; Lost in the Stars, NY City Center’s Encores!; Strike Up the Band and One Touch of Venus, Auditorium Theatre’s Ovations! Series; Violet, Once on This F PER AMILY FOR MAN CE The Snow Queen Join us this holiday season for a world premiere adaptation inspired by Hans Christian Andersen’s beloved tale. STARTS DECEMBER 10 ON SALE NOW! americanrepertorytheater.org 617.547.8300 | All tickets $15 THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 27 c ast (con tinued) Island and Big River (Joseph Jefferson Award nomination), Apple Tree Theatre; Show Boat, Sacramento Music Circus. The voice of “Sudden Death” on NFL Rush Zone: Guardians of the Core. “Lanette’s husband, Ayana and Isaiah’s papi.” J.D. WEBSTER Mingo A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: Wonderful Town, Ragtime, Show Boat. New York: Two Gentlemen of Verona, New York Shakespeare Festival; 17 Encores!, City Center; Mufti Series, York Theatre; Bernstein’s Mass, South Pacific, Ira Gershwin at 100 and Spring is Here, Carnegie Hall. Regional: Avenue X, Jesus Christ Superstar Gospel, Alliance Theatre; An American in Paris, Houston Alley Theatre; The Blackamoor Angel, Bard Music Festival; Violet, Connecticut Rep; Jam and Spice, Westport Playhouse; Guys and Dolls, Alabama Shakespeare Festival; Finian’s Rainbow, Coconut Grove; The Desert Song, Sacramento Music Circus. Graduate of The College of William and Mary and The Juilliard School. LISA NICOLE WILKERSON Woman of Catfish Row/Dance Captain A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: The Lion King (Nala u/s, Shenzi u/s). National Tours: Mamma Mia! (Ali), The Lion King (Nala). Off-Broadway: River Deep: Tribute to Tina Turner, Playwright’s Horizons. Regional: Abyssinia (Lily), Goodspeed, North Shore; Once on This Island (TiMoune), Gallery Players; Godspell (Robin), St. Louis Black Rep; Purlie (with Blaire Underwood and Loretta Devine, respectively), City Center ENCORES!, Pasadena Playhouse. Television: “The Tony Awards” 2008, “The Today Show,” “Oprah,” “Jay Leno.” Film: Unconditional Love. Dance: xodus dance collective, Karen Gayle, artistic director; Joel Hall Dancers, Joel Hall, a.d.; Deeply Rooted (apprentice), Kevin Iega Jeff, a.d. Broadway in South Africa cofounder. Northwestern University, B.S., Journalism. NATASHA YVETTE WILLIAMS Mariah A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: The Color Purple (Sofia) and Dessa Rose, Lincoln Center. West End, London: Trevor Nunn’s Gone With the Wind (Mammy). National Tours: Xanadu (Melponmene), The Drowsy Chaperone (Trix the Aviatrix), All Shook Up (Sylvia), Seussical the Musical (Sour Kangaroo), Cinderella (Grace). Selected regional credits: Hairspray (Motormouth) and Ain’t Misbehavin’ (Armelia), Paper Mill Playhouse; Mahalia (title role), Cleveland Playhouse; Abyssinia (Selma), Goodspeed/North Shore. Featured soloist with the Indianapolis, Baltimore and Ottawa symphony orchestras and The Naples Philharmonic. NaTasha will be singing at Carnegie Hall in October with the NY Pops. She is the mother of newborn twins Mackenzie and Nile. NaTasha’s CDs are available at www.digstation.com; for more information, please visit her website at www.natashayvettewilliams.com. Orchestra SASHA CALLAHAN ASHLEIGH GORDON Violin Assistant principal 2nd violin, Portland Symphony; member of Rhode Island Philharmonic and New Hampshire Music Festival. Frequent performances with Boston Modern Orchestra Project, Boston Lyric Opera, Opera Boston, the Boston Pops and Boston Pops Esplanade. B.M. in Violin Performance, Rice University; M.M. in Violin Performance, Boston University. Further studies: Meadowmount School of Music, Mozarteum Academy, Leopold Auer Academy, Tanglewood Music Center. Viola Member of Neponset Valley Philharmonic Orchestra and Juventas New Music Ensemble. Performances with Callithumpium Consort, Atlantic Symphony and Glens Falls Orchestra. Anticipated Master of Contemporary Music from International Ensemble Modern Academy (Germany), Master of Music in Viola Performance from New England Conservatory, Bachelor of Music in Viola Performance from Baldwin-Wallace College. Summer Festivals: International Ensemble Modern Academy (Austria, 2010), Pierre Monteux School for Conductors and Orchestral Musicians (Maine, 2003/2007), Aspen Music Festival (Colo., 2005). 28 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER o r chestra (continued) LEO EGUCHI Cello Xanthos (a new music ensemble in residence at Boston University); Assistant Principal of Camerata New England; principal of New Bedford Symphony; member of New Hampshire Music Festival and Portland Symphony. Frequent performer with the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, Boston Lyric Opera, Boston Pops Esplanade. B.S. in Physics, University of Michigan; B.M. in Cello Performance, University of Michigan; M.M. in Cello Performance, Boston University; Meadowmount School of Music (1998–2001). JOE HIGGINS Double Bass/Electric Bass Principal Bass, New Hampshire Music Festival; member of the Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra. Regular performer with the Portland Symphony Orchestra, Providence Performing Arts Center, North Shore Music Theatre. Performances with the Boston Pops Esplanade Orchestra, Hartford Symphony Orchestra, Spoleto Festival, Emmanuel Music, the Artie Shaw Orchestra, Jaki Byard, George Garzone and the Aardvark Jazz Orchestra. B.M. from the New England Conservatory. Studies in Double Bass Performance at Oberlin Conservatory. To make sure your art looks boffo, bring it to: 30% off custom framing Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee 3 LOCATIONS: Harvard Square 1100 Mass. Ave. 617.864.4487 Belmont Porter Square 493-B Trapelo Rd. 2044 Mass. Ave. 617.484.5900 617.491.0011 BigPictureFraming.com click on “locations” or e-mail [email protected] EBONEE THOMAS Flute/Piccolo Principal Flute of the Florida Grand Opera in Miami, Florida. One-year position as Second Flute with the Houston Symphony. Recently completed a four-year fellowship with New World Symphony. Degrees from Southern Methodist University and the New England Conservatory. Performances with: Star Wars in Concert Orchestra, The Los Angeles Philharmonic; Sarasota Orchestra; Florida Orchestra; Oregon, Omaha, Kansas City and San Antonio symphonies. Studies with Claire Johnson, Patty Mecklin, Helen Blackburn, Jean Larson and Fenwick Smith. MIE SHIRAISHI Oboe/English Horn Member of Atlantic Symphony Orchestra; performances with Boston Pops Esplanade Orchestra, A Far Cry Chamber Orchestra, Gardner Chamber Orchestra, New Bedford Symphony Orchestra, Plymouth Philharmonic Orchestra; International Musical Arts Institute, Chamber Music Concert Series, Fryeburg, Maine, 2005–2011. Graduate Performance Degree from THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 29 o r chestra (continued) Longy School of Music; M.M. New England Conservatory; B.M. from Musashino Academia Musicae, Tokyo, Japan. BOB BOWLBY Flute/Clarinet/Alto Saxophone Multi woodwind player in Boston theaters. Saxophonist with Boston Pops since 1981. Toured with Artie Shaw, Buddy Rich, Frank Sinatra, Mel Torme, Natalie Cole, Rita Moreno, Carol Channing, Barry Manilow, Star Wars in Concert. National Broadway tours: Fosse, Avenue Q, Cats. Berklee College of Music: alumnus/ former faculty. JOHN REPLOGLE Trumpet/Flugelhorn Performances with Chico O’Farrill Afro Cuban Jazz Orchestra, George Russell The Living Time Orchestra, Terri Lyne Carrington, Danilo Perez, Warren Wolf, Eric Reed, Idan Santhus Jazz Orchestra, Kendrick Oliver and the New Life Jazz Orchestra, NPR/WGBH: “Toast of the Nation” program, Boston Pops eight-piece group and others. Bachelor of Arts Berklee College of Music in Jazz Performance. Master of Music New England Conservatory in Jazz Studies. GREG SMITH PETER L. COKKINIAS Clarinet/Bass Clarinet/Alto Saxophone/Tenor Saxophone Professor at Berklee College of Music. Boston, Rhode Island and North Shore Musicians’ Union. Performances with Boston Symphony and Boston Pops, Music Director/Conductor Metrowest Symphony Orchestra. Theater Musician: Boston Opera House, Colonial, Huntington Theatre. Doctor of Music. College: Conservatory University of Cincinnati, Ohio. Master: Manhattan School of Music; Hartt School of Music, Tanglewood Music Center: 1980. ROSLYN BLACK French Horn Member of the New World Symphony, Miami for four years; in 2008 Acting Sub-Principal Horn of the BBC Symphony, London. Other: Porgy and Bess, Opéra Comique, Paris. Performs regularly with the Toronto Symphony and the Canadian Opera Company. B.M. from the University of Victoria, M.M., New England Conservatory. Trumpet/Flugelhorn Member: Atlantic, Cape Cod and Glens Falls symphonies. Performances with Emmanuel Music and the Berkshire, Indian Hill, Granite State, Lexington, Nashua, New Bedford and New World symphonies. Graduate diploma from New England Conservatory; B.A. from Bard College; fellowships for the Tanglewood Music Center, Pacific Music Festival and the Spoleto Festival USA. MARTIN WITTENBERG Trombone Bala Brass. Principal Trombone, Philharmonia of the Nations, 2006–09. Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, Boston Modern Orchestra Project, Opera Boston, Colorado Music Festival, Spoleto Festival USA, Munich Brass, Munich Bach Soloists, Ensemble Classique, Cape Cod Symphony. Recordings: Decca Concerts, EuroArts, BMOPSound, MMO, Profil, Haenssler Classics, NCA. Trombone Faculty: Longy School of Music, Gordon College. Doctoral Candidate, Boston University; M.M. Yale University; Music Performance and Music Education Diplomas, Trossingen Hochschule für Musik, Germany. DIANTHA MILLOTT French Horn Regular member of Bay Colony Brass Ensemble, Occasional Brass and Strings. Recent theater: Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, Orpheum Foxboro Theater; 42nd Street, Walnut Hill School for the Arts; Curtains, Newton North. Former member of the Air Force Band of Liberty at Hanscom Air Force Base, Sudbury Savoyards, New Philharmonia Orchestra, Concord Band. B.M. DePaul University, M.M. Yale University School of Music. 30 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER DON ROBINSON Bass Trombone/Tuba Member of Indian Hill and New Hampshire Music Festival orchestras. Performances with Boston Symphony, Boston Pops, Esplanade, Boston Ballet and Boston Lyric Opera. Performed in musicals at the Colonial, Shubert, Wang Center and Boston Opera House. B.M. Eastman School of Music, M.M. New England Conservatory. o r chestra (continued) GREG NEWTON Tenor Saxophone/Baritone Saxophone/Bassoon Member of Boston Philharmonic, Boston Classical Orchestra, Radius Ensemble, Landmarks Orchestra. Performances with Boston Symphony, Boston Pops, Boston Ballet, Bolshoi, Prague Radio Orchestra, BMOP, Boston Lyric Opera, Opera Boston. Pre-Broadway/National Tours (New England segments): A Chorus Line, Carousel, Marty, Titanic, Miss Saigon, The Producers, The Sound of Music, Sweet Charity, Camelot, Fiddler on the Roof, The Light in the Piazza, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Young Frankenstein. M.M. New England Conservatory, B.F.A. SUNY Buffalo. ROBERTO CASSAN Accordion Performed and recorded with many artists, including Mexican folk singer Lila Downs and singer-songwriter Martin Sexton. The duo Roberto Cassan and John Muratore (guitar) performs music of Piazzolla, Galliano, Brouwer, Debussy and Cassan. Member of Grand Fatilla, a superb world music quartet; Newpoli, a ninepiece ensemble exploring the ancient Southern Italian Tarantella; and Musaner. Degree in Musicology from University of Cremona and studies at Berklee College of Music. ROBERT SCHULZ Percussion A.R.T.: The Sound of a Voice. Principal Percussionist with Boston Landmarks Orchestra, Boston Modern Orchestra Project, Boston Musica Viva, Opera Boston. Grammy nomination in 2004 for Yehudi Wyner’s The Mirror, world premiere recording of Kick and Ride (concerto for drumset and orchestra) by Eric Moe, to be released on BMOP/Sound in 2011. International tours with Allea III, Boston Symphony, Musica Viva and pipa virtuoso Wu Man. THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 31 Creative Team GEORGE GERSHWIN Music George Gershwin was born in Brooklyn on September 26, 1898, and began his musical training when he was 13. At 16 he quit high school to work as a “song plugger” for a music publisher, and soon he was writing songs himself. “Swanee,” as introduced by Al Jolson, brought George his first real fame and led to his writing a succession of 22 musical comedies, most with his older brother, Ira. The Gershwins’ shows include Lady Be Good; Oh, Kay!; Strike Up The Band; Girl Crazy; and the Pulitzer Prize-winning Of Thee I Sing. From his early career George had ambitions to compose serious music. These ambitions were realized in some of his masterpieces, among them “Rhapsody In Blue,” “Concerto In F,” “An American In Paris” and “Second Rhapsody.” In the late ’20s George became fascinated by the DuBose Heyward novel Porgy, recognizing it as a perfect vehicle for opera using jazz and blues idioms. George’s “folk opera” Porgy and Bess opened in Boston on September 30, 1935, and had its Broadway premiere two weeks later. In 1937 George was at the height of his career. While working on the score of The Goldwyn Follies in Hollywood, he collapsed, and on July 11, died of a brain tumor. He was not quite 39 years old. DUBOSE HEYWARD Librettist/Lyricist DuBose Heyward (1885–1940) was a native and life-long resident of Charleston, South Carolina. Although born into modest economic circumstances, he was of an old Charleston family and his ancestors were prominent members of Charleston society, one of whom, Thomas Heyward, Jr., was a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence. In the early 1920s, Heyward co-founded the Poetry Society of South Carolina and co-published Carolina Chansons: Legends of the Low Country, which established his reputation as an American poet. In 1923 Heyward married Dorothy Hartzell Kuhns (1890–1961), whom he had met the previous year at the MacDowell Colony, an artists’ retreat in New Hampshire, and who was an aspiring author from Ohio. He then devoted himself full-time to writing. The first major result of this effort was the novel, Porgy, published with great success in 1925. In his 2000 biography of Heyward, James Hutchisson describes Porgy as the first major southern novel to present African Americans realistically and without condescension. Dorothy inspired, and collaborated in, the transformation of Porgy 32 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER into a play, which ran a total of 367 performances on Broadway. The Heywards later collaborated with George and Ira Gershwin in the creation of the opera, Porgy and Bess, contributing the libretto, based largely on the play, and co-writing many of the songs. Heyward’s many other works include the novel, Mamba’s Daughters, which he, together with Dorothy, transformed into a play. Mamba’s Daughters successfully opened in New York in 1939, with Ethel Waters in the cast; a 1997/1998 production was awarded an Obie, and was also presented at the 1999 Spoleto Festival in Charleston. Among his other works were the play, Brass Ankle, the novella, Half Pint Flask, and the novel, Peter Ashley, all of which portray the lives of African Americans in Charleston and the surrounding low country. He also wrote (for his daughter, Jenifer) Country Bunny and the Little Gold Shoes, which became an American classic children’s book, and the screenplays for the movie versions of Eugene O’Neill’s Emperor Jones, starring Paul Robeson, and Pearl Buck’s The Good Earth. IRA GERSHWIN Lyricist Ira Gershwin, the first songwriter to be awarded the Pulitzer Prize, was born in New York City on December 6, 1896. In 1917 The Evening Sun published his first song (“You May Throw All The Rice You Desire But Please Friends, Throw No Shoes”). Four years later Ira enjoyed his first major stage success, Two Little Girls in Blue, written with another Broadway newcomer, Vincent Youmans. In 1924 Ira and his brother, George, created the smash hit Lady Be Good and went on to continue their remarkable collaboration through a dozen major stage scores, producing such standards as “Fascinating Rhythm,” “The Man I Love,” “S’ Wonderful,” “Embraceable You,” “I Got Rhythm,” “But Not For Me” and others far too numerous to mention. During his long career, Ira also enjoyed productive collaborations with such songwriters as Harold Arlen, Vernon Duke, Kurt Weill, Burton Lane and Jerome Kern, with whom he created his greatest song hit of any one year, “Long Ago And Far Away.” Ira Gershwin died on August 17, 1983, in Beverly Hills, California. SUZAN-LORI PARKS Adapter/Additional Scenes A.R.T.: The America Play. Named one of Time magazine’s “100 Innovators for the Next New Wave,” Ms. Parks’ plays include The Book of Grace, In the Blood (2000 Pulitzer Prize finalist), c r eative team (continued) Venus (1996 OBIE Award), The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World, Father Comes Home from the War Part I: The Union of My Confederate Parts, Fucking A, Imperceptible Mutabilities in the Third Kingdom (1990 OBIE Award for Best New American Play), and Topdog/Underdog (Broadway) for which she won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Drama becoming the first African-American woman to do so. Ms. Parks has a leading acting role in The Making of Plus One, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival. She’s written screenplays for Brad Pitt, Denzel Washington, Girl 6, written for Spike Lee, and adapted Zora Neale Hurston’s classic novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, which premiered on ABC’s “Oprah Winfrey Presents.” In 2007, her project 365 Days/365 Plays was produced in over 700 theaters worldwide, creating one of the largest grassroots collaborations in theater history. Parks’ first novel, Getting Mother’s Body, (Random House, 2003) is set in the west Texas of her youth. A student of James Baldwin, with whom she credits the launch of her interest in playwriting, Ms. Parks is a MacArthur “Genius” Award recipient, and has been awarded grants by the National Endowment of the Arts, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Ford Foundation, and the New York State Council on the Arts. She is recipient of a Lila-Wallace Reader’s Digest Award, a CalArts/Alpert Award, a Guggenheim Foundation Grant and is an alumna of Mount Holyoke College and New Dramatists. Her work is the subject of the PBS film The Topdog Diaries. Ms. Parks is at work on her second novel and her Ray Charles musical, Unchain My Heart, is scheduled to premiere on Broadway within the coming year. She teaches at NYU, and is currently performing her experimental solo show, Watch Me Work at the Public Theater, where she serves as Master Writer Chair. Please visit Suzanloriparks.com. DIEDRE L. MURRAY Musical Adapter A.R.T.: Best of Both Worlds (composer). Pulitzer Prize finalist, two-time OBIE Award winner, innovative composer, cellist, and producer. In the 1970s and 1980s, she pioneered the use of the cello as a jazz and new world music instrument touring extensively worldwide. Musical and theater works: Unending Pain, a choral/chamber work (co-presented by the Performance Garage and the Whitney Museum of American Art); Let’s Go Down to the River, a score for octet, Willasau Jazz Festival in Switzerland; The Eves of Nhor, a string trio for National Dutch Radio and De Effenaar Festival in Eindhoven Holland; Kamerados, for mixed ensemble, The Women’s Improviser Festival in New York; Five Minute Tango, a score for the inaugural concert at the Danny Kaye/Sylvia Fine Playhouse, performed by the Manhattan Brass Quintet; The Conversation for the Seattle-based New Performance Group at the Walker Arts Center in Minnesota; You Don’t Miss the Water, a musictheater piece, in collaboration with noted poet Cornelius Eady, produced by the Music-Theatre Group (MTG); FANGS; Women In The Dunes, a dance piece created by Blondel Cummings for the Japan Society; the jazz-opera Running Man, for which she wrote the original story and score, and book with Cornelius Eady, Here Theatre in New York City (two OBIE Awards, finalist for the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for Drama); music arrangements for Eli’s Coming (OBIE Award), Vineyard Theatre; In 2006 Ms. Murray composed the music for the Music Theater Group/Kathryn Walker production of the Rage of Achilles and the Odyssey which was performed at the Lensic Theater in Santa Fe; The Blackamour Angel, an opera written by Carl Hancock Rux, Bard College; an adaptation by Diane Paulus of James Baldwin’s Another Country, Columbia University; an adaptation of The Voice Within with Marcus Gardley, Harlem Stage and the Apollo Theatre. Current projects include a new musical, Sweet Billy and the Zooloo’s, with writer Lynn Nottage, for Colored Girl Productions; and Patient Zero, book by Cornelius Eady for the Music Theater Group for a production scheduled for 2012. Ms. Murray has received numerous grants and awards for her work as a composer. She received a B.S. degree from Hunter College in ethnomusicology, and has appeared on over 100 recordings as a cellist. DIANE PAULUS Director Artistic Director of the A.R.T., where her directing credits include: Prometheus Bound, Death and the Powers: The Robots’ Opera (premiered in Monaco in September 2010), Johnny Baseball, Best of Both Worlds and The Donkey Show, a disco adaptation of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, which ran for six years Off-Broadway. Her recent theater credits include The Public Theater’s revival of HAIR on Broadway (2009 Tony Award winner for Best Revival of a Musical, nominated for eight Tony Awards including Best Director, as well as winner of a Drama Desk Award, Outer Critics Circle Award and Drama League Award for Best Revival of a THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 33 c r eative team (continued) Musical), and in the West End. Other recent work includes Kiss Me, Kate (Glimmerglass Opera) and Lost Highway (ENO co-production with the Young Vic). Opera credits include Il Mondo Della Luna (Gotham Chamber Opera at the Hayden Planetarium), Don Giovanni, Le nozze di Figaro, Turn Of The Screw, Cosi fan tutte; and Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria, L’incoronazione di Poppea and Orfeo at the Chicago Opera Theater. Diane is a Professor of the Practice of Theater at Harvard University. This year Paulus was named one of the “50 Most Powerful Women in Boston” by Boston magazine and received the 2011 Elliot Norton Award for Best Director for her work on Prometheus Bound, Johnny Baseball and HAIR. She is a recent recipient of an Honorary Doctorate from Boston Conservatory. RONALD K. BROWN Choreographer A.R.T.: Debut. Founder and Artistic Director of Evidence, A Dance Company, a New York-based contemporary dance ensemble since 1985. Has also created work for the African American Dance Ensemble, Philadanco, Cleo Parker Robinson Dance Ensemble, Dayton Contemporary Dance Company, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater (Grace in 1999, Serving Nia in 2001, IFE/My Heart 2005 and Dancing Spirit during special tribute season), Ailey II, Cinque Folkloric Dance Theater, Jennifer Muller/The Works and Jeune Ballet d’Afrique Noire. He has collaborated with composer/designer Omotayo Wunmi Olaiya, the late writer Craig G. Harris, director Ernie McClintock’s Jazz Actors Theater, choreographers Patricia Hoffbauer and Rokiya Kone, and composers Robert Een, Oliver Lake, Bernadette Speech, David Simons and Don Meissner. Awards and fellowships include a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship in Choreography, a National Endowment for the Arts Choreographer’s Fellowship, a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in choreography, New York Dance and Performance Award (Bessie), a Black Theater Alliance Award, the American Dance Festival Humphrey/Weidman/ Limón Award, and fellowships from the Edward and Sally van Lier Fund. In addition, Brown was named Def Dance Jam Workshop Mentor of the Year in 2000. In 2003, he received an AUDELCO (Black Theatre Award) for his choreography for Crowns: Portraits of Black Women in Church Hats, originally produced by the McCarter Theater and presented off-Broadway in 2003. In fall 2006, Brown received The United States Artists Rose Fellowship, being one of only four choreogra34 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER phers out of fifty artists to receive the inaugural award. He is a member of Stage Directors and Choreographers Society. RICCARDO HERNANDEZ Set Designer A.R.T.: Close to 20 credits, including most recently Prometheus Bound, Best of Both Worlds, The Seagull, Julius Caesar, Britannicus and Marat/Sade. On Broadway he designed The People in the Picture (Studio 54); Caroline, or Change (also National Theatre London); Topdog/Underdog (also Royal Court, London); Elaine Stritch at Liberty (also West End’s Old Vic, London and national tour); Parade Hal Prince director (Tony and Drama Desk nominations); Bells Are Ringing; Noise/Funk (also national tours and Japan); The Tempest. Other New York credits: Over two dozen productions at New York Shakespeare Festival/Public Theater; as well as Lincoln Center, Second Stage, NYTW, MTC, MCC, Playwrights Horizons, Cherry Lane, BAM; and numerous regional theaters: Guthrie, Goodman, Taper, etc. Opera: Lyric Opera of Chicago, San Francisco Opera, NYCO, Houston Grand and most recently Il Postino for Los Angeles Opera, Opera de Chatelet Paris, Theater an der Wien and Lost Highway (London’s English National Opera/Young Vic) directed by Diane Paulus. Also: Avignon Festival, Festival Automne Paris, Oslo National Theater, Det Norske Teatret, Norway. Upcoming: Die Entfuhrung Aus dem Serail for Opera de Nice, France. ESOSA Costume Designer A.R.T.: Best of Both Worlds. Broadway: Topdog/Underdog, also London and various regional theaters. Off Broadway: By the Way, Meet Vera Stark and Trust, Second Stage; Break of Noon, MCC, also Geffen Playhouse; The Capeman, Delacorte; Juan and John; Father Comes Home from the Wars, Parts 1, 8 & 9, Public Labs; Romeo and Juliet, The Public Theater and Shakespeare in the Park; The Story and Radiant Baby, The Public Theater. Regional: Ruined, Arena Stage; Twist, Alliance; Measure for Measure and American Night, Oregon Shakespeare Festival; Fences, Geva Theatre. 2003 Audelco Award and 2006 TDF/ Irene Sharaff Young Master Award. ESosa is a “Project Runway” Season 7 finalist. CHRISTOPHER AKERLIND Lighting Designer A.R.T.: The Seagull, Britannicus, Island of Slaves, Orpheus X, Olly’s Prison, Desire Under the Elms, Oedipus, La Dispute, Uncle Vanya, Enrico IV, c r eative team (continued) and Misalliance. Broadway: Superior Donuts, Top Girls, 110 In The Shade (Tony nom.), Talk Radio, Shining City, Awake and Sing! (Tony nom.), Well, Rabbit Hole, A Touch of the Poet, In My Life, The Tale of the Allergist’s Wife, Reckless, The Piano Lesson, Seven Guitars (Tony nom.), and The Light in the Piazza (Tony, Drama Desk, Outer Critics’ Circle Awards). Recent credits include Groove Lily’s new musical Sleeping Beauty Wakes (La Jolla Playhouse/McCarter Theatre), Ariadne auf Naxos (Opera Nationale de Bordeaux), The Emperor of Atlantis/After Image (Boston Lyric Opera), Kafeneion (Athens/Epidaurus Festival), Franco Dragone’s holiday circus K’do! (Foret Nationale, Brussels), All My Sons (Huntington Theatre), and the world premiere of Phillip Glass’s opera, Appomattox (San Francisco Opera). His extensive credits in opera include productions at the Boston Lyric, Bordeaux, Dallas, Glimmerglass, Hamburg, Houston, Los Angeles, Metropolitan, Minnesota, New York City, Nissei, San Francisco, Washington National, and Santa Fe operas, and over 50 productions for Opera Theater of Saint Louis where he was Resident Lighting Designer for twelve years. He is the recipient of an OBIE Award for Sustained Excellence in Lighting Design, the Michael Merritt Award for Design and Collaboration and numerous nominations for the Drama Desk, Lucile Lortel, Outer Critics Circle and Tony Awards. ACME SOUND PARTNERS Sound Design A.R.T.: Johnny Baseball. Over 30 Broadway shows since 2000 including: Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo (Tony nomination), The Merchant of Venice, Lombardi, Fences (Tony nomination), The Addams Family, Ragtime, Hair (Tony nomination), In The Heights (Tony Nomination), [title of show], Legally Blonde, A Chorus Line (2006), The Drowsy Chaperone, The Light in the Piazza, Monty Python’s Spamalot, Avenue Q, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, and La Bohème. Acme is Tom Clark, Mark Menard, Nevin Steinberg and Sten Severson. WILLIAM DAVID BROHN Orchestrations A.R.T.: Debut. Orchestrations: Miss Saigon, Martin Guerre, Crazy For You, The Secret Garden, Wicked, Oklahoma!, Carousel, South Pacific, My Fair Lady, Oliver!, Betty Blue Eyes, Witches of Eastwick, Sweet Smell of Success, Curtains, Ragtime (1998 Tony Award—Best Orchestrations), Dessa Rose, A Man of No Importance, The Three Musketeers, Marguerite, Wuthering Heights, High Society, Show Boat, Jerome Robbins’ Broadway, Gone With the Wind, Hey Mr. Producer, Busker Alley, The Red Shoes, 110 in the Shade, King of Hearts. Arranger: O! Freedom (with Jack Waddell). Recordings: Joshua Bell (Gershwin album/West Side Story Suite), Andre Previn, Prokofiev “Alexander Nevsky” (Reconstruction), Marilyn Horne, Placido Domingo. CHRISTOPHER JAHNKE Orchestrations A.R.T.: Debut. Orchestrations: Dessa Rose, A Man of No Importance, Legally Blonde (2011 Olivier Award Best Musical), Cry-Baby, Grease (2007 revival), Tom Jones (Stiles/Leigh), Chasing Nicolette, The Toxic Avenger Musical, Not Wanted On The Voyage (Bartram & Hill), Just So (Stiles & Drewe), Dear World. New orchestrations for Les Misérables (Broadway/U.S. tour/Madrid/Netherlands/ London/UK tour/Dutch cast album/25th anniversary cast album/O2 arena concert in London, UK, DVD/Blu-ray). Assistant to William David Brohn: Sweet Smell of Success, Ragtime, The Three Musketeers (Stiles/Leigh), The Witches of Eastwick, Mary Poppins, Wicked. Music Producer/Music Supervisor of Memphis (Tony Award Best Musical 2010). Current: Music Producer/Arranger of Operation: Mindcrime with actor Adam Pascal and writer Micah Schraft. DAVID LOUD Music Director A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: The Scottsboro Boys, Ragtime, Curtains, Sondheim On Sondheim, Steel Pier, A Class Act, The Look of Love and revivals of She Loves Me, Sweeney Todd, Company and The Boys From Syracuse. Off-Broadway: And the World Goes ’Round, for which he wrote the vocal and dance arrangements, and Pacific Overtures. Regional: The Visit (world premiere), Harold and Maude (world premiere), First You Dream, Billy Bishop Goes to War. He recently created the arrangements for two acclaimed concerts in New York: All the Things You Are (Songs of Jerome Kern) and On a Clear Day: the Musical Vision of Burton Lane. Acting credits: originated three roles on Broadway: Curtains (Sasha) Terrence McNally’s Master Class (Manny) and Harold Prince’s original production of Stephen Sondheim’s Merrily We Roll Along (Ted). He is a graduate of Yale University and has served on the faculty of the Yale School of Drama. SHEILAH WALKER Conductor A. R. T.: Debut. Winner of the 2005, 2006 Leon Rabin Award for Outstanding Music Direction for Ragtime and Urinetown, Dallas-Ft. Worth area. THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 35 c r eative team (continued) Music Supervisor for Ragtime in London, starring Maria Friedman. Music Director/Conductor: National tour of Ragtime, with David Loud, supervisor; two national tours of Fiddler on the Roof, starring Theodore Bikel; national tour of Funny Girl, starring Deborah Gibson; national tour of Oprah Winfrey’s production of The Color Purple, starring Fantasia (NAACP Theatre Award nomination for Best Music Direction in Los Angeles). Broadway: Fiddler on the Roof (associate conductor) starring Topol, Don’t Get God Started with BeBe Winans. National tours of The Mystery of Edwin Drood, Grand Hotel, South Pacific and Hello, Dolly!, with Jean Stapleton, Joel Grey, Liliane Montevecchi and Carol Channing. Tours in Europe, Japan, Canada and Puerto Rico as pianist/accompanist for several theater productions. Acting credits: Ain’t Misbehavin’ and Tintypes, Dallas-Ft. Worth; Barnum (Joyce Heth), New Mexico. Vocal coach/accompanist in New York; former head of the Vocal Department at Dallas Arts Magnet High School, receiving a teacher of the year award for outstanding work. BRIAN HERTZ Associate Conductor/Piano/Celeste A.R.T.: Debut. Pianist for the Radio City Christmas Spectacular; played in the Broadway orchestras of Shrek, 9 to 5, The Little Mermaid, Avenue Q, Legally Blonde, Xanadu, Les Misérables, Sister Act. Assistant conductor at Avenue Q and Altar Boyz. National tours: Legally Blonde (Associate Music Director), Wonderful Town (Associate Conductor); Paper Mill Playhouse: Peter Pan (conductor), Forum (keyboards), Full Monty (keyboards). Ithaca College grad. TELSEY + COMPANY Casting A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway/Tours: SPIDER-MAN: Turn Off the Dark, The Normal Heart, Baby It’s You!, Sister Act, Catch Me If You Can, Priscilla Queen of the Desert, The Addams Family, Memphis, Rock of Ages, Wicked, Bring It On, Next to Normal, 9 to 5, Peepshow in Vegas. Off-Broadway: Rent, Million Dollar Quartet, Atlantic, MCC, Signature. Film: The Odd Life of Timothy Green, Joyful Noise, Friends with Kids, Margin Call, Howl, Sex and the City 1 & 2, Jonah Hex, Main Street, The Other Woman, I Love You Phillip Morris, Rachel Getting Married, Dan in Real Life, Then She Found Me, Across the Universe, Ira & Abby, Rent, Pieces of April, Camp, The Grey Zone, Finding Forrester, The Bone Collector. TV: “Smash,” “A Gifted Man,” “The Big C,” “Ugly Betty” (pilot), “Whoopi,” HBO’s “Undefeated,” commercials. www.telseyandco.com. 36 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER NANCY HARRINGTON Associate Director/ Production Stage Manager A.R.T.: Children of Heracles, Prometheus Bound, Death and the Powers. Broadway: Collaborator of Bill Irwin for 28 years, one of the creators of the Tony Award-winning Fool Moon, Largely NY & The Regard of Flight. Other Broadway: The Rainmaker, Uncle Vanya, A View From The Bridge, The Full Monty, The Play What I wrote, I Am My Own Wife, HAIR. Other projects with Ms. Paulus include: Capeman, Turandot— Rumble For The Ring, HAIR also in Central Park, London, and national tour. In Additional: 60 premiere productions of New American plays and musicals, over 200 productions worldwide. DENISE L. WOODS Dialect Coach A.R.T.: Debut. Denise Woods’ work as a dialect coach includes working with Academy Awardnominated actors Will Smith (Ali) and Ken Watanabe (The Last Samurai). Woods has worked as a vocal coach with “NBC Nightly News,” CNBC, “The Today Show,” CNN, “Inside Edition” and “KTLA News.” Some of her clients include Phylicia Rashad, Ellen Burstyn, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Morris Chestnut, Taye Diggs, Paul Rodriguez, Ray Liotta, Porscia Derossi, Rachel Weisz, Forest Whitaker, Maggie Gyllenhaal and Mike Myers. She is a graduate and former faculty member of The Juilliard School and is currently on faculty at California Institute of the Arts. RYAN McKITTRICK A.R.T. Dramaturg A.R.T.: Lead dramaturg on more than thirty productions, half of which were world premieres. He is the A.R.T. Dramaturg and Co-Head of the A.R.T. Institute’s Dramaturgy Program. He received his M.F.A. in Dramaturgy from the A.R.T./Moscow Art Theatre School Institute for Advanced Theater Training at Harvard and his B.A. in History and Literature from Harvard. He is also a Lecturer in Dramatic Arts at Harvard University and a Lecturer in Theater Arts at Brandeis University. His articles on theater have appeared in The Boston Globe, Correspondence, Theatre and The Boston Phoenix. He is a recipient of the TCG New Generations Award and the NTC Scholarship Award. His co-translations with Julia Smeliansky include Anton Chekhov’s Lady with a Lapdog, Rezo Gabriadze’s Forbidden Christmas and The Selected Letters of Olga Bokshanskaya. c r eative team (continued) JULIE BALDAUFF Stage Manager A.R.T.: Children of Herakles, Death and the Powers: The Robots’ Opera. Broadway: Hair, The Wedding Singer, I Am My Own Wife, King Lear, Henry IV parts 1 & 2, The Play What I Wrote, The Full Monty, Fool Moon, The Little Foxes, The Rehearsal, Summer and Smoke, Getting Away with Murder. Off-Broadway: You Never Can Tell, Roundabout; Prides Crossing, LCT; Arms and the Man, Roundabout; Hapgood, LCT. Regional: Death and the Powers: The Robots’ Opera, Monaco and Chicago; I Am My Own Wife, European and U.S. tour; The Children of Herakles, European tour; Fool Moon, Kennedy Center; and six seasons and more than twenty productions at The Old Globe Theatre in San Diego. SHARIKA NILES Assistant Stage Manager A.R.T. Debut. Broadway: The Color Purple, First National Tour. Other credits: Seed; Without You (Korea); P**ssy Valley; Indomitable; F**king A; See What I Wanna See; All That I Will Ever Be; Flow; The Seven; Satellites; Richard III; Well; Take Me Out; Helen; House Arrest; A Winter’s Tale; Slanguage; Cavedweller; Suburbia; Caroline, or Change; Two Gentleman of Verona; This Is How It Goes; The Book of Grace; Summerstage NYC; The Apollo Theater; KCD Worldwide; The Public Theater/New York Shakespeare Festival; HBO; Lincoln Center. Film: Our Song. MIA WALKER Assistant Director A.R.T.: Prometheus Bound, Johnny Baseball. New York: Paul Simon’s The Capeman (The Public Theater, dir. Diane Paulus). Trained at The Berkshire Theatre Festival, American Conservatory Theater, NYU Tisch and Vassar Powerhouse. Resident Director at The Flea Theater, where she directed the world premiere of Trista Baldwin’s American Sexy. B.A. in Film Production/Studies (Magna Cum Laude), Harvard University. Tabuchi Show, Branson, Missouri; the Richard Rodgers Centennial Production of The King and I, Paper Mill Playhouse. Television: Episode “Choreographed” on “Law and Order: SVU.” Commercial: “Codorinu” with Pilobolus. NEIL GROVER Orchestra Coordinator A.R.T.: Debut. Principal: Boston Musical Services. Founder: Grover Pro Percussion, Inc. On the Board of Directors of Percussive Arts Society (Indianapolis, Ind.), Margaret & H.A. Rey Center (Waterville Valley, NH) and Winchester Community Music School (Winchester, MA). He has lectured in music at more than 100 universities throughout the U.S., Canada, Europe and Australasia, a published author (Alfred Music) and a former faculty member of Boston Conservatory, University of Massachusetts. Grover attended Florida State University. New England Conservatory. J. JARED JANAS & ROB GREENE Wig/Hair Design A.R.T.: Debut. Broadway: All About Me, Next to Normal. Other: By the Way, Meet Vera Stark (world premiere), Twist, Alliance Theatre; Curtains and Peter Pan, Paper Mill Playhouse; Meet Me in St. Louis, TUTS; NEWSical; Beebo Brinker Chronicles; Shout!; Smokey Joe’s Café; Speech and Debate; Oroonoko; Ohio State Murders; M. Butterfly; Tea and Sympathy; Accomplices; Dinah Was; Silence! the Musical; Trouble in Paradise. National Tour: The Full Monty. Television: “The Supreme Court” (PBS documentary). They have also built wigs currently seen in Wicked, The Addams Family, How to Succeed… and Jersey Boys. Members of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. Actors’ Equity Association (AEA), founded in 1913, represents more than 45,000 actors and stage managers in the United States. Equity seeks to advance, promote and foster the art of live theatre as an essential component of our society. Equity negotiates wages and working conditions, providing a wide range of benefits, including health and pension plans. AEA is a member of the AFL-CIO and is affiliated with FIA, an international organization of performing arts unions. The Equity emblem is our mark of excellence. www.actorsequity.org ARCELL CABUAG Assistant Choreographer A.R.T.: Debut. Associate Artistic Director and senior dancer of the Ronald K. Brown Evidence Dance Company. He has assisted Brown in creating work on Ballet Hispanico, MUNTU, Philadanco and the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. 2004 recipient of the New York Dance Bessie Award. Dance credits include: Paramount Picture’s Rock the House, California; The Shoji The scenic, costume, lighting and sound designers in LORT Theatres are represented by United Scenic Artists Local USA-829 IATSE. A.R.T. Musicians are members of the Boston Musicians’ Association, Local 9-535 which has protected the interests of musicians and promoted the art of live music since 1896. GERSHWIN is a registered Trade Mark of Gershwin Enterprises, and PORGY AND BESS is a registered Trade Mark of Porgy and Bess Enterprises THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 37 About the A.R.T. Diane Paulus, Artistic Director The American Repertory Theater (A.R.T.) is one of the country’s most celebrated resident theaters and the winner of numerous awards, including the Tony Award, the Pulitzer Prize and regional Elliot Norton and I.R.N.E. Awards. In May of 2003 it was named one of the top three regional theaters in the country by Time magazine. The A.R.T. was founded by Robert Brustein in 1980, who served as Artistic Director until 2002, when he was succeeded by Robert Woodruff. In 2008, Diane Paulus became the A.R.T.’s Artistic Director. During its 31-year history, the A.R.T. has welcomed many major American and international theater artists, presenting a diverse repertoire that includes premieres of American plays, bold reinterpretations of classical texts and provocative new music theater productions. The A.R.T. has performed throughout the U.S. and worldwide in 21 cities in 16 countries on four continents. The A.R.T. is also a training ground for young artists. The Theater’s artistic staff teaches undergraduate classes in acting, directing, dramatic literature, dramaturgy, voice, and design at Harvard University. In 1987, the A.R.T. founded the Institute for Advanced Theater Training at Harvard University. A two-year, five-semester graduate program that operates in conjunction with the Moscow Art Theater School, the Institute provides world-class professional training in acting, dramaturgy and voice. Since becoming the A.R.T.’s Artistic Director, Diane Paulus has programmed innovative work that has enhanced the A.R.T.’s core mission to expand the boundaries of theater. Productions such as Sleep No More, The Donkey Show, Gatz, The Blue Flower and Prometheus Bound have immersed audiences in original theatrical experiences. The A.R.T.’s club theater, OBERON, which Paulus calls a “second stage for the 21st century,” has become an incubator for local artists and has also attracted national attention for its groundbreaking model for programming. Through all of its work, the A.R.T. is committed to building a community of artists, technicians, educators, staff and audience, all of whom are integral to the A.R.T.’s mission to expand the boundaries of theater. A.R.T. Board of Trustees A.R.T. Board of Advisors Donald Ware, Chairman Kathleen Connor, Co-Chair Rachael Goldfarb, Co-Chair Philip Burling Paul Buttenwieser Kevin Cole Costin Mike Dreese Michael Feinstein Provost Alan M. Garber Lori Gross Ann Gund Sarah Hancock Fumi Matsumoto Rebecca Milikowsky Ward Mooney Diane Paulus James Rhee Diana Sorensen Lisbeth Tarlow Frances Shtull Adams Joseph Auerbach* Page Bingham Greg Carr Antonia Handler Chayes* Susan Cohen Susan Edgman-Levitan Erin Gilligan Barbara Grossman Horace H. Irvine II Dan Mathieu Natalie Reed Ellen Gordon Reeves Linda U. Sanger Maggie Seelig John A. Shane Michael Shinagel Sam Weisman Alfred Wojciechowski Yuriko Jane Young *Emeriti Founding Director Robert Brustein 38 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER A.R.T./MXAT Institute For Advanced Theater Training Scott Zigler, Director Julia Smeliansky, Administrative Director Marcus Stern, Associate Director Nancy Houfek, Head of Voice and Speech Andrei Droznin, Head of Movement Anatoly Smeliansky, Co-Head of Dramaturgy Ryan McKittrick, Co-Head of Dramaturgy American Repertory Theater Diane Paulus, Artistic Director/CEO Moscow Art Theater School Anatoly Smeliansky, Head The Institute for Advanced Theater Training at Harvard was established in 1987 by the American Repertory Theater (A.R.T.) as a training ground for the professional American theater. Its programs are fully integrated with the activities of the A.R.T. In the summer of 1998, the Institute commenced a historic joint program with the Moscow Art Theater (MXAT) School. Students engage with two invaluable resources: the work of the A.R.T. and that of the MXAT, as well as their affiliated schools. Together, this exclusive partnership offers students opportunities for training and growth unmatched by any program in the country. The core program features a rigorous two-year, five-semester period of training in acting, dramaturgy, or voice pedagogy, during which students work closely with the professionals at the A.R.T. and the MXAT as well as with the best master teachers from the United States and Russia. At the end of the program, students receive a Certificate of Achievement from the faculty of the American Repertory Theater and an M.F.A. Degree from the faculty of the Moscow Art Theater School. Further information about this program can be obtained by calling the Institute for a free catalog at (617) 495-2668 or going to our web site at www.harvardtheatertraining.org. Faculty Staff Donna Ames Singing Robert Brustein Criticism and Dramaturgy Erin Cooney Yoga Thomas Derrah Acting Andrei Droznin Movement Jane Guyer Fujita Voice Tatyana Gassel Russian Language and Culture Jeremy Geidt Acting David Hammond Acting, Shakespeare Arthur Holmberg Theater History, Dramaturgy Nancy Houfek Voice and Speech Robert Lada Alexander Technique Jodi Leigh Allen Coordinator of Movement Training Will Lebow Voice-over Ryan McKittrick Dramaturgy, Dramatic Literature Pamela Murray Singing Robert Najarian Combat Diane Paulus Theater Practice Anatoly Smeliansky Theater History, Dramaturgy Julia Smeliansky History of Set Design, Translation Marcus Stern Acting Tommy Thompson Alexander Technique Catherine Ulissey Ballet Robert Walsh Combat Sam Weisman Director of Professional Development Scott Zigler Acting, Dramaturgy Angela DeVivo Chelsea Keating Christopher Viklund Skip Curtiss Financial Aid Institute Associate Production Manager Technical Director Acting David Abrams Milia Ayache Elizabeth Bates Kristen Alyson Browne Matthew Christian Liza Dickinson Samantha Eggers Marisa Fratto Teri Gamble Ashruf Ghanimah Alison Gregory Dustyn Gulledge Elijah Guo Rose Hogan Megan Hopp Amen Igbinosun Carl James Michael Kane Rushi Kota Luke Lehner Lindsey Liberatore Lisa Maley Mark Parrish Scott Ray Sarah Beth Roberts Adeola Role Lanise Shelley Henry Austin Shikongo Dereks Thomas Robert Torres Katherine Vos Roland Walsh Luke Woodruff Alexandra Wright Jing Xu Dara Yazdani Dramaturgy Annie DiMario Jenna Clark Embrey Christina Farris Kenneth Molloy Liana Stillman Tyler Monroe Voice Ronald Carlos Sarah Jessop THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 39 The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess: Sharing a Cultural Treasure The American Repertory Theater expresses our sincere thanks to the following generous donors whose extraordinary gifts were designated to support the production as well as the expanded education and community access programs for The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess: LEADERSHIP CIRCLE Bank of America Paul and Katie Buttenwieser Philip and Hilary Burling Bernadette Mannix Feeney Ira and Leonore Gershwin Philanthropic Fund Marc George Gershwin and Andrea Gershwin Frances Gershwin Godowsky Trust Ann and Graham Gund John Hancock Financial Marcia Head DuBose Heyward Trust KarmaLoop Lizbeth and George Krupp Rebecca and Nathan Milikowsky Don and Susan Ware Welch and Forbes Anonymous FRIENDS: Jim and Chris Barker; Nancy and David Berman; Michael and Linda Frieze; Paul Traub; Susan Whitehead Special thanks to Dan Mathieu and Max Ultimate Food for underwriting the celebratory Welcome Reception for The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess cast. Annual Fund Donors The American Repertory Theater is deeply grateful for the generous Annual Fund support from individuals, foundations, corporations and government agencies, whose contributions make our work possible. The following gifts were received between August 1, 2010 and August 11, 2011. $100,000 and above The President and Fellows of Harvard College Andrew W. Mellon Foundation The Shubert Foundation The Harold and Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust $50,000–$99,999 Anonymous The Carr Foundation Edgerton Foundation New American Plays Award Doris Duke Charitable Foundation Rebecca and Nathan Milikowksy Sarah Hancock Lisbeth Tarlow and Stephen Kay Hershey Family Foundation Don and Susan Ware $25,000–$49,999 Philip and Hilary Burling Paul and Katie Buttenwieser Michael and Laura Dreese The E.H.A. Foundation, Inc. Ann and Graham Gund Massachusetts Cultural Council Ward K. and Lucy Mooney National Corporate Theatre Fund National Endowment for the Arts Michael Feinstein and Denise Waldron Barbara W. Hostetter Horace H. Irvine II Heni Koenigsberg Fumi and Kako Matsumoto Cokie and Lee Perry James Rhee Greg and Dina Selkoe Trust for Mutual Understanding Yuriko Jane Young Steve and Rosemarie Johnson Dan Mathieu and Neal Balkowitsch/ MAX Ultimate Food Bob and Alison Murchison Janet and Irv Plotkin Valerie Beth Schwartz Foundation Maggie and John Seelig The Shane Foundation Beth Weir Ted and Mary Wendell Alfred Wojciechowski and Tammerah Martin Joseph W. Hammer The Roy A. Hunt Foundation Paul and Wladzia McCarthy Robert and Janine Penfield Cynthia Samuelson John Travis $10,000–$24,999 Anonymous (2) Leo L. Beranek Foundation Cambridge Trust Company Kevin Cole Costin Ted and Joan† Cutler $5,000–$9,999 Anonymous Bernard Chiu Clarke and Ethel D. Coggeshall Susan and Gerald Cohen Erin Gilligan and Hoil Kim Rachael Goldfarb $2,500–$4,999 Anonymous Dr. Millicent Bell Barbara Wallace Grossman and Steve Grossman 40 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER a nnual fund donors (continued) $1,000–$2,499 Anonymous (2) Elizabeth Adams Frances Shtull Adams Sheldon Appel Barbara E. Bierer and Steven E. Hyman Linda Cabot Black Foundation Sheldon and Dorothea Buckler Candy Kosow Gold Jill Goldweitz and Morris Levitz Nicholas Greville Lori E. Gross Gardner Hendrie and Karen Johansen Jerome and Sheridan Kassirer Lars Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Richard Levitan John D.C. Little Nick and Jennifer Littlefield Gregory Maguire James and Marie Marlas Alan Muraoka Diane Paulus Finley and Patricia Perry Carol and Steve Pieper Dr. Lawrence Pratt Ellen Gordon Reeves Andres Rodriguez Patricia Romeo-Gilbert and Paul B. Gilbert The Schneer Foundation Michael Shinagel and Marjorie North Marshall Sirvetz Mason and Jeannie Smith John Snow, Inc. Dr. Clive Standley Deborah Sweet and Steven Lazar Francis H. Williams Zipcar Lawrence Kotin Ellen Kulik and Bill Barry Liberty Mutual Give with Liberty Program Barbara Manocherian Erica and Bob Mason Mark Natale NSTAR Foundation Jeryl and Stephen Oristaglio Vincent Piccirilli and Anita Meiklejohn Skip Pile and Mary Jane Patrone Thomas and Jennifer Pincince Sally C. Reid and John D. Sigel Charles and Patty Ribakoff Janice Saragoni Wendy Shattuck and Sam Plimpton Mark Slovenkai Michele Steckler Mindee Wasserman, Esq. Ms. Kelsey Wirth and Dr. Samuel Myers Peter and Dyann Wirth Margaret and Timothy Heitz Alison M. Hodges and Thomas F. Clarke Hurlbut Family Charitable Lead Trust Dr. Joseph Kahan Tosh Kawakami Bill and Lisa Laskin Mary Pfeifer Lentz and Tom Lentz Greg and Mary Beth Lesher Lorraine Lyman Barbara A. Manzolillo Steven and Kelly Migliero Michael and Annette Miller Evelyn Musser Drs. Hilda and Max Perlitsh Emily Rooney Belinda and Evan Schapiro Mary Shannon Ellen Simons Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Snider Diana Sorensen Stephen Stulck Wendell Sykes Arnold and Gloria Tofias Kirk and Glynis Wood $500–$999 Howard and Leslie Appleby Leonard and Jane Bernstein Diane Borger Herrick Chapman and Lizabeth Anne Cohen Antonia H. Chayes Liz Coxe and David Forney Thomas Engelman and Laurie Burt Howard Gardner Dena and Felda Hardymon Mr. and Mrs. James Joslin Carol and Jonah Kanin CC King and Tom Tarpey $250–$499 Anonymous Karen Allen Clark and Susana Bernard Ronnie Bretholtz Paul and Cris Carter Judith Chernoff, in honor of Audra McDonald Robert and Kathleen Garner Tiffani Gavin Mark Glasser Marie and Daniel Glenn Dr. Jeffrey and Laurie Goldbarg Professor Byron Good and Professor Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good Homer Hagedorn † deceased In-Kind Supporters The A.R.T. thanks the following individual and corporate supporters for their invaluable in-kind donations. MAX Ultimate Food/Dan Mathieu & Neal Balkowitsch The Weekly Dig Boston Beer Company Cambridge 1 The Charles Hotel Event Illuminations Google Inc. Grafton Street Grendel’s Den Henrietta’s Table OM Sandrine’s Robert Stolzberg Tory Row The Urban Grape Upstairs on the Square The Hotel Veritas Every effort has been made to ensure that all donor information is accurate, but if you have any questions or concerns, please contact the Development Office: 617.496.2000 x8847. THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 41 National Corporate Theatre Fund National Corporate Theatre Fund is a not-for-profit corporation created to increase and strengthen support from the business community for ten of this country's most distinguished professional theatres. The following foundations, individuals and corporations support these theatres through their contributions of $10,000 or more to National Corporate Theatre Fund: Bank of America # Bloomberg BNY Mellon * Steven Bunson Christopher Campbell/ Palace Production Center * Cisco Systems, Inc. * Citi # Datacert, Inc. Dorsey and Whitney Foundation Ernst & Young Goldman, Sachs & Co. Marsh & McLennan Companies The McGraw-Hill Companies # MetLife Morgan Stanley Pfizer, Inc. RBC Wealth Management RVM/Vincent Brunetti salesforce.com * Sharp Electronics ^ George S. Smith, Jr. James S. Turley UBS USA Today * ^ Vernalis Systems ^ Wells Fargo # Wilkie Farr & Gallagher LLP * * NCTF/BNY Mellon Fund for New American Theatre ^ Includes In-kind support # NCTF Fund for Theatre Education As of June 2011 A.R.T. in N.Y.C. This new initiative is expanding the A.R.T.’s presence and supporters in New York City. The first event, held in June 2011 in conjunction with Sleep No More, was a success thanks to the work of the A.R.T. in N.Y.C. Committee: Kevin Cole Costin, Chair Devon Aoki and James Bailey, Jim Bailey and RoAnn Costin, Rachel Berman and David Finch, Caroline Costin, John and Jill Dietz, Stephanie Altman Dominus and Andrew Dominus, Leigh Fondakowski, Scott Frankel, David Goldweitz, Erin Jacobs and Rob Valentine, Brian Kenny, Annmaria Mazzini and Rob Sedgwick, Brina Milikowsky, Rebecca Milikowsky, Becky Mode, Joan Parker, Julia Pearlstein, Julia Pershan and Jonathan Cohen, Gwen and Woody Pier, Ellen Gordon Reeves, Maura Costin Scalise and Bob Scalise, Angus Shillington and Lisa Tornell, Todd Shuster, Steven Skybell, Robert Stanton, Don and Susan Ware, Ann Wozencraft Willey and Craig Willey For more information about getting involved with A.R.T. in N.Y.C. please call the Development Office: 617.496.2000 x8847 The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess Gala Celebration On September 10, 2011, the A.R.T. will celebrate the landmark homecoming of this cultural treasure with a special gala, which will raise funds to support the production and its education and outreach activities. For more information or to order tickets, please contact Emily O’Neil: 617.496.2000 x8832 or [email protected]. GALA SPONSOR: Bank of America Event Co-Chairs: Ann Gund, Trustee • Kevin Cole Costin, Trustee Honorary Committee Governor Deval Patrick and First Lady Diane Patrick Harvard University President Drew Faust Dr. Maya Angelou Alexis Bittar Ted Cutler Harry J. Elam, Jr. Morgan Freeman Henry Louis Gates, Jr. John Lithgow Diane Paulus Stephen Schwartz Tommy Tune Individual Sponsors Jim Bailey and RoAnn Costin Kevin Cole Costin Ted Cutler Ann and Graham Gund Steve and Rosemarie Johnson 42 Host Committee Andrew E.S. Anderson Kathy Connor Jim Bailey and RoAnn Costin Phil and Hilary Burling Carol Beggy Paul and Katie Buttenwieser Amy Fine Collins and Brad Collins, Jr. Daher Interior Design Alan and Suzanne Dworsky Michael Feinstein and Denise Waldron Pat Romeo-Gilbert and Paul Gilbert Erin Gilligan and Hoil Kim Rachael Goldfarb Alicia and Martin Gordon Barbara Lemperly-Grant and Frederic Grant Sarah Hancock Priscilla S. Hunt and Richard M. Hunt AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER Hod Irvine II Steve and Rosemarie Johnson Lizbeth and George Krupp Renée Landers and Thomas L. Barrette, Jr. Dan Mathieu Kathleen McCartney Rebecca and Nathan Milikowsky Ward K. and Lucy Mooney Karen and Gary Mueller David G. Mugar Bob and Alison Murchison Ofer and Shelly Nemirovsky Ellen Gordon Reeves Saragoni and Company James Swan Lis Tarlow and Stephen Kay Don and Susan Ware Yuriko Young Wine Sponsor: The Urban Grape As of August 11, 2011 A.R.T. EDUCATION EXPERIENCE & COMMUNITY CONNECTIONS The A.R.T. outreach initiatives are designed to provide an unprecedented level of access to A.R.T. artists and productions. The Education Experience engages the theater’s resources to provide a deep arts education experience for students in the Greater Boston area. Each of the A.R.T.’s partner schools enter into a season-long collaboration with the A.R.T., during which students are provided subsidized access to A.R.T. performances, mentoring opportunities, classroom visits from A.R.T. to specific A.R.T. productions. To date, more than 500 students are committed to attend The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess. Community Connections aligns the theater with Greater Boston nonprofit organizations, for the purpose of providing under-resourced families and individuals with access to high-quality arts experiences. Community Connections partners get a custom-built arts program that pairs subsidized tickets to the A.R.T. with an array of enrichment programming— ranging from private artist talks to creative workshops. Our 2011/12 Community Connections Partners: Artists for Humanity Boston Learning Center Downtown Boston Veterans Shelter Goddard House Mssng Lnks MGH Center for Community Health Improvement Wheelock Family Theater YWCA Boston The A.R.T. would like to thank the following for being our “connectors”: Susan Edgman-Levitan, Erin Gilligan, Mike Feinstein, Sheldon Fisher, Sarah Patrick and Ann Moritz. Both the A.R.T. Education Experience and A.R.T. Community Connections are dependent upon charitable contributions. Providing support for education and outreach not only underwrites a ticket, but also provides a student or community member with an unforgettable arts experience. A Gift of $25 Sponsors a Child A Gift of $50 Sponsors a Child and a Parent A Gift of $100 Sponsors a Child for the Entire 2011-2012 Season Please visit americanrepertorytheater.org, or call the Development Department at 617.496.2000 x8838 for more information on sponsorship, including opportunities to sponsor an entire school or non-profit organization. GET THE BEST SEATS AT THE BEST PRICES WITH A SUBSCRIPTION OR MEMBERSHIP VISIT: AMERICANREPERTORYTHEATER.ORG CALL: 617.547.8300 BOTH THE LOEB DRAMA CENTER & OBERON ARE FULLY ACCESSIBLE. ASSISTIVE LISTENING DEVICES ARE AVAILABLE TO ALL A.R.T. PERFORMANCES. LARGE PRINT LARGE PRINT PROGRAMS ARE AVAILABLE FOR USE DURING EVERY A.R.T. PERFORMANCE. THE A.R.T. OFFERS ASL INTERPRETATION COMING SOON Three Pianos By Rick Burkhardt, Alec Duffy, and Dave Malloy Directed by Rachel Chavkin Hilarity and heartbreak unfold on a blustery winter night, when three friends come upon a copy of Schubert’s song cycle Winterreise. starts 12/7 AT DESIGNATED PERFORMANCES OF PORGY AND BESS. EMAIL: [email protected] FOR TICKETS P DISCOUNTED PARKING IS AVAILABLE AT CHARLES SQUARE GARAGE (BENNETT ST.) & UNIVERSITY PLACE GARAGE (UNIVERSITY RD) FOR BOTH VENUES. AT OBERON OBERON IS THE SECOND STAGE OF THE A.R.T.—A DESTINATION FOR THEATER & NIGHTLIFE ON THE FRINGE OF HARVARD SQUARE. ADVANCED PURCHASE PERMIT PARKING IS AVAILABLE AT THE 1033 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE LOT FOR OBERON. REFRESHMENTS ARE AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE AT ALL A.R.T. PERFORMANCES. LOOKING TO DINE BEFORE OR AFTER A SHOW? FOR OUR RESTAURANT PARTNERS In addition to A.R.T. season programming, OBERON is a thriving incubator for local and emerging artists. Attracting national attention for its groundbreaking model of programming, the immersive experience at OBERON makes the audience a partner in the theatrical event. CLUBOBERON.COM AND THEIR GREAT DEALS VISIT: AMERICANREPERTORYTHEATER.ORG/ DISCOUNTS NEW THIS SEASON: WEDNESDAY MATINEES AT THE LOEB DRAMA CENTER DON’T MISS POST-SHOW DISCUSSIONS FOLLOWING SELECT MATINEES BOX OFFICE ADDRESS: 64 BRATTLE ST., CAMBRIDGE, MA. 02138 HOURS: TUE-SUN, NOON-5 P.M. OR 1/2 HOUR BEFORE CURTAIN The Donkey Show NOW PLAYING—EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT FAMILY FUN The Snow Queen By Hans Christian Andersen Directed by Allegra Libonati Adapted by Tyler Monroe Featuring The A.R.T./MXAT Institute Class of 2012 Hans Christian Andersen’s exuberant ode to childhood comes to life in this new adaptation. starts 12/10 — TICKETS FROM $15 BOOK A GROUP: AMERICANREPERTORYTHEATER.ORG/ GROUPS LOVE US? Facebook: americanrepertorytheater Twitter: americanrep Give: americanrepertorytheater.org/support Our 2011/12 Season is generously supported by: OFFICIAL PRINT SPONSOR Staff AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER STAFF ARTISTIC Artistic Director/CEO.......................................Diane Paulus Producer/Interim Managing Director ..............Diane Borger Artistic Coordinator .................................Chris De Camillis Director of Special Projects ........................Ariane Barbanell Dramaturg...................................................Ryan McKittrick Special Assistant to the Artistic Director/CEO...................................Lauren Antler Artistic Associate .........................................Allegra Libonati Artistic Director Fellow .............................Shira Milikowsky Artistic Intern....................................Kendrick Terrell Evans Dramaturgy Intern ................................................Eli Keehn INSTITUTE Director ...............................................................Scott Zigler Administrative Director..............................Julia Smelianksy Associate Director ............................................Marcus Stern Co-head of Dramaturgy ........................Anatoly Smeliansky Co-head of Dramaturgy..............................Ryan McKittrick Resident Literary Advisor ..........................Arthur Holmberg Head of Voice and Speech .............................Nancy Houfek Institute Associate .......................................Chelsea Keating Financial Aid ................................................Angela DeVivo Production Manager............................Christopher Viklund Technical Director..............................................Skip Curtiss EXTERNAL AFFAIRS DEVELOPMENT Director of Development ....................................Ellen Kulik Deputy Director of Development...............Megan Hinckley Institutional Giving Officer .....................Meghan Coleman Donor Information Coordinator .....................Emily O’Neil MARKETING Director of Marketing and Communications...Anna Fitzloff Director of Press and Public Relations........Katalin Mitchell Marketing and Communications Manager ..........Jared Fine Interim Communications Manager........Amanda Gutowski Graphic Design Associate .....................................Joel Zayac Outreach and Education Associate.................Brendan Shea Marketing and Communications Associate......Grace Geller Marketing Interns ...........Chris Masterson, Olivia D’Angelo FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION Comptroller ................................................Barbara Addison Assistant Comptroller ...................................Angela DeVivo Financial Administrator ....................................Stacie Hurst Theater and Facilities Manager .........................Tracy Keene Company Manager .......................................Mark Lunsford Front of House Manager ........................Stephen Wuycheck Receptionists ............................Sarah Leon, Maria Medeiros House Managers .........Kevin Cloud, Gretjen Hargesheimer, Michael Haviland, Heather Quick, Eleanor Regan, Matthew Spano, Matt Wood Volunteer Usher Coordinator .................Barbara Lindstrom BOX OFFICE Head of Patron Systems .................................Derek Mueller Box Office Manager ...........................................Ryan Walsh Box Office and Group Sales Coordinator .........Alicia Curtis Box Office Representative ...............................Karen Snyder PRODUCTION Production Manager...................................Patricia Quinlan Associate Production Managers .....................Christopher Viklund, Skip Curtiss Loeb Technical Director ............................J. Michael Griggs COSTUMES Costume Shop Manager ...........................Jeannette Hawley Assistant Costume Shop Manager ..................Mary R. Hurd Crafts Artisan ......................................David Israel Reynoso Costume Draper...........................................Caitlin Menotti Wardrobe Supervisor ...................................Stephen Drueke Costume/Props Stock Manager.....................Suzanne Kadiff LIGHTS Master Electrician ..........................................Derek L. Wiles Light Board Operator ................................Matthew Houstle PROPERTIES Properties Manager ............................ Cynthia Lee-Sullivan Properties Carpenter............................Stacey Horne-Harper SCENERY Technical Director ....................................Stephen Setterlun Assistant Technical Directors.............................Nick Fouch, Chris Swetcky Scene Shop Supervisor....................................David Buckler Scenic Charge Artist..............................................Jerry Vogt Master Carpenter...........................................Peter Doucette Scenic Carpenters ............York-Andreas Paris, Jason Bryant, Kristin Knutson Carpentry Interns .....................Nathaniel Drake, Jon Seilor Paint Intern .....................................................Laura Muñoz SOUND Resident Sound Designer/Engineer ..............Clive Goodwin Production Sound Engineer.......................Katrina McGuire Sound Console Operator.................................Brian Walters STAGE Stage Supervisor .............................................Jeremie Lozier Assistant Stage Supervisor ............Christopher Eschenbach Production Assistants ..........Kevin Klein, Matthew Sebastian OBERON Producer .........................................................Randy Weiner Associate Producer .....................................Ariane Barbanell Production Manager ..........................................Skip Curtiss Venue Manager....................................................Erin Wood Programming Manager....................................James Wetzel House Technician...........................................Garrett Herzig Donkey Show VIP Coordinator......................Sonia Carrion ADDITIONAL STAFF FOR PORGY AND BESS Carpenters ...............................Dan Black, Nathaniel Drake, George Kane, Rena Luczkiewicz, Martin Lynch, Sam Lynch, Garrett McEntee, Jon Seilor, Ben St. Louis Scenic Painters .........................Heather Morris, Lori Hruska Paint Intern.....................................................Laila Milevski Stitchers ......................................Ameera Ali, Teka England, Sally Ravitz, Carmel Dundon Dressers............................Robin Rittenour, Brian Choinsky, Emily Damron, Amber Voner Milliner .........................................................Denise Wallace Crafts Assistant .............................................Jeffery Burrows Draper.........................................................Penney Pinnette First Hands..............................Jen Bennett, Karen Martakos Wig Maintenance ..............................Rachel Padula-Shufelt Wig Crew ..................................................Sydney Robinson Props Assistant/Craftspersons ........................Justin Seward, Rebecca Helgeson THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 45 GUIDE to LOCAL THEATER September/ October 2011 DOWNTOWN/THEATRE DISTRICT BLUE MAN GROUP, Charles Playhouse, 74 Warrenton St., 617931-2787 or 617-426-6912. Ongoing. This giddily subversive off-Broadway hit serves up outrageous and inventive theater where three muted, blue-painted performers spoof both contemporary art and modern technology. Wry commentary and bemusing antics are matched only by the ingenious ways in which music and sound are created. The show has recently been updated with new performance pieces and music. DELUSION, Paramount Theatre, 559 Washington St., 617-8248000. Sep 27–Oct 2. This evening of performance art legend Laurie Anderson’s personal meditations on life, language, mem- ory and identity is centered around the belief that words and stories can create the world, as well as make it disappear. HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH?: OUR VALUES IN QUESTION, The Foundry Theatre, The Jackie Liebergott Black Box at the Paramount Center, 559 Washington St., 617-824-8000. Sep 13–25. This interactive theater piece, a world premiere, is a series of questions posed to audience members, creating a lively talk show environment that discusses how participants have lived their lives, what plans they’ve made for the future and what advice they can offer to us and one another as we all attempt to create lives of value. THE INFERNAL COMEDY, Cutler Majestic Theatre at Emerson College, 219 Tremont St., 800-233-3123. Sep 29 & 30. Featuring stage and screen star John Malkovich, this cross between a chilling crime drama and Baroque opera (featuring a live orchestra playing period instruments) is based on the life story of serial killer Jack Unterweger. Mysteriously back from the grave for an autobiographical book tour, Unterweger oozes disconcerting charm as he narrates his sordid and shocking history. MORTAL TERROR, Boston Playwrights’ Theatre and Suffolk University, Modern Theatre at Suffolk University, 525 Washington St., 866-811-4111. Sep 15–Oct 2. National Medal of Arts winner Robert Brustein brings the spirit of William Shakespeare back to the stage in his imaginative story of political upheaval set during the ignition of the Gunpowder Plot. SHEAR MADNESS, Charles Playhouse Stage II, 74 Warrenton St., 617-426-5225. Ongoing. This hilarious Boston-set whodunit, where the clues change every night and the laughs THE FESSENDEN SCHOOL Honesty, Compassion and Respect ADMISSIONS OPEN HOUSES Sunday, October 23, 1:00-3:00 p.m. Tuesday, November 15, 6:30-8:00 p.m. for prospective Kindergarten parents Sunday, December 4, 1:00-3:00 p.m. ADMISSIONS RECEPTION Monday, January 9, 2012, 7:00-9:00 p.m. BRINGING OUT THE BEST IN BOYS K- GRADE 9 DAY, GRADES 5–9 BOARDING 250 Waltham Street, West Newton, MA www.fessenden.org 617-630-2300 46 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER g uide to local theater (continued) come fast and furious, is a worldwide phenomenon filled with up-to-the-minute spontaneous humor and quicksilver improvisation where the audience becomes part of the action and gets to solve the crime. SOUTH PACIFIC, Boston Opera House, 539 Washington St., 617-931-2787. Sep 27–Oct 2. Based on James Michener’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book Tales of the South Pacific, Rodgers & Hammerstein’s classic musical set on a tropical island during World War II tells the story of two couples and how their happiness is threatened by the realities of war. The beloved show’s songs include “Some Enchanted Evening,” “I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair,” “This Nearly Was Mine” and “There is Nothin’ Like a Dame.” THE SPEAKER’S PROGRESS, Sulayman Al-Bassam Theatre, Paramount Theatre, 559 Washington St., 617-824-8000. Oct 12–16. Using Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night as a starting point to explore events in the Middle East, this play set in a totalitarian Arab state where all forms of theater have been banned is a satire on the decades of political inertia that have fed recent revolts across the Arab region and a daring theatrical metaphor for the mechanisms of dissent. YOU BETTER SIT DOWN: TALES FROM MY PARENTS’ DIVORCE, The Civilians, Paramount Theatre, 559 Washington St., 617-824-8000. Oct 12–16. This hysterical account of marriage and divorce, based on the troupe members’ interviews with their own parents, presents four actors—each playing his or her own parents—who serve as conduits for stories of family division. Stage Spotlight YOUR GUIDE TO NEW ENGLAND THEATRE PRESENTS THE MUSICAL ADAPTATION OF NORTON JUSTER’S ACCLAIMED STORY The Phantom Tollbooth OCTOBER 21–NOVEMBER 20, 2011 617-879-2300 • [email protected] www.WheelockFamilyTheatre.org Boston’s Professional, Affordable Theatre for Every Generation LOCAL/REGIONAL THEATER AS YOU LIKE IT, Theatre@First, Seven Hills Park (behind the Davis Square T station), Holland Street, Somerville, 888-8747554. Sep 8–11. This free outdoor production presents one of Shakespeare’s most enduring comedies, in which city and country collide as Rosalind, a Duke’s daughter fleeing the wrath of her uncle, heads into the woods to find her father— and herself. THE BACCHAE, Whistler in the Dark, Charlestown Working Theater, 442 Bunker Hill St., 866-811-4111. Sep 15–23. In Euripides’ ancient tragedy, the citizens of Thebes deny the divinity of Dionysos, who punishes them by inciting the women into a frenzy—driving them from their homes into the mountains where they enact the wild rituals of worship to Bacchus. The young king Pentheus wrestles the god for control of his city, but will his lack of understanding lead to his ruination? BEFORE I LEAVE YOU, Huntington Theatre Company, Wimberly Theatre, Calderwood Pavilion at the Boston Center for the Arts, 527 Tremont St., 617-933-8600. Oct 14–Nov 13. In a blink, Emily’s Harvard Square world falls apart. Her husband Koji suddenly embraces his Asian roots. Her friend Jeremy’s work on his novel gets interrupted by a health scare and his sister Trish moving in. Four longtime friends face too much past and too little future in this moving new comedy. BIG RIVER, Lyric Stage Company, 140 Clarendon St., 617-5855678. Sep 2–Oct 8. Join Huck and Jim on the Mississippi River in the 1840s, where Huck, escaping from his drunken father, meets up with Jim, a runaway slave. The story of their journey downstream is an American classic that captures the idyllic pleasures and unacknowledged injustices of life on the big river with humor, song and spirit. THE BOSTON CONSERVATORY Curtains THE MUSICAL COMEDY WHODUNIT FROM THE CREATORS OF CABARET AND CHICAGO DIRECTED BY DAVID GRAM MUSICAL DIRECTION BY BILL CASEY OCTOBER 3–6, 2011 BY JEAN The Balcony GENET • DIRECTED BY JOHN KUNTZ FOR MATURE AUDIENCES NOVEMBER 17–20, 2011 The Boston Conservatory Theater 31 Hemenway Street Box Office opens Sept. 6, 2011: 617-912-9222 http://bostonconservatory.ticketforce.com Advertise in Theatrebill’s Not-for-Profit Theater section. Call 617-423-3400 for more information. SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION g ui d e to l o c a l the a te r book, music, and lyrics by Jonathan Larson directed by Benjamin Evett musical direction by Todd C. Gordon choreography by Kelli Edwards featuring New Rep Favorites Aimee Doherty, Eve Kagan and Maurice E. Parent Sept. 4 - Sept. 25, 2011 charles mosesian theater 321 ARSENAL ST. WATERTOWN MA Tickets start at $28 Free Parking! (con tin u ed ) BUDDY COP 2, Stoneham Theatre, 395 Main St., Stoneham, 781-279-2200. Oct 20–Nov 6. For the residents of Shandon, Indiana, it’s Christmas in August as the town rallies to honor a girl’s dying wish and the local police fight crime from the community center after a flood. As the fruitcakes and Christmas watermelons collect, this quirky and touching play shows how a community unites to help one of its own, and how, even in the smallest of towns, secrets are waiting to be revealed. CANDIDE, Huntington Theatre Company, Boston University Theatre, 264 Huntington Ave., 617-266-0800. Sep 10–Oct 16. Featuring Leonard Bernstein’s soaring score and lyrics from some of the wittiest writers of all time, this outrageous musical satire tells the story of naïve Candide. Banished for romancing the Baron’s daughter, Candide is plagued by a series of absurd hardships that challenges his optimistic outlook on life and love. CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF, Riverside Theatre Works, 45 Fairmount Ave., Hyde Park, 617-361-5269. Sep 16–Oct 2. Set in the 1950s in the Deep South, Tennessee Williams’ classic begins as a plantation owner celebrates what he thinks is his cure from cancer on his 65th birthday. This sultry drama explores a family’s internal battle to look truthfully at its own past as shocking secrets are revealed. CHICAGO, Metro Stage Company, Cambridge Family YMCA Theatre, 820 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, 617-524-5013. Oct 21–29. In roaring ’20s Chicago, Roxie Hart murders a faithless lover and is sent to death row, where she and fellow “Merry Murderess” Velma Kelly vie for headlines and the spotlight, ultimately joining forces in search of the “American Dream”: fame, fortune and acquittal. IN RESIDENCE AT THE ARSENAL CENTER FOR THE ARTS BY D TE IR EC ICH COLLECTED STORIES, New Repertory Theatre, Charles Mosesian Theater, Arsenal Center for the Arts, 321 Arsenal St., Watertown, 617-923-8487. Oct 9–30. Ruth Steiner, a critically acclaimed author, takes her student, Lisa, under her wing. When Lisa becomes a much-admired published writer and uses Ruth’s secretive life story for her own novel, the balance of power shifts and the boundaries of their relationship is called into question in this play by Pulitzer Prize winner Donald Margulies (Dinner With Friends). BU TH EAT RE / AVE N UE OF T HE A RTS TH EG LOR SEP CA T.10 NDID -OC E T.16 D LY R IC BY S BY C SI U M R E MA AR D BE NTS RY D W RNS ZIM ILB TE ME UR IN RM AN HU NT IOU ING SM C US OM TH TON ICA L PAN EAT LEO Y P RE RES R NA newrep.org 617-923-8487 “Gorgeously imagined, Candide is a garden of delights!” — CHICAGO SUN-TIMES 48 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER CURTAINS, The Boston Conservatory Theater, 31 Hemenway St., 617-912-9222. Oct 3–6. It’s the brassy, bright and promising year of 1959. Boston’s Colonial Theatre is host to the opening night performance of a new musical. When the leading lady mysteriously dies on stage, the entire cast and crew are suspects. Enter a local detective, who just happens to be a musical theater fan. DEARLY BELOVED, The CoLab Theatre Company, Unity Church of God, 6 William St., Somerville, 800-838-3006. Oct 21–Nov 19. In this world premiere by by Brendan Doris-Pierce, Julius and his best friend Morrie live together comfortably, reliving their college days. But Julius’ girlfriend, June, is growing frustrated with Morrie’s quirks—specifically his phobia of all things related to love and sex. They find themselves awash in wedding invitations, prompting a crisis in Julius’ and June’s relationship. THE DIVINE SISTER, SpeakEasy Stage Company, Roberts Studio Theatre, Calderwood Pavilion at the Boston Center for the Arts, 527 Tremont St., 617-933-8600. Oct 21–Nov 19. This gleefully twisted tale by Charles Busch (Die, Mommie, Die! and Psycho Beach Party) tells the story of an indomitable Mother g uide to local theater (continued) Superior trying to cope with a young postulant experiencing “visions,” a sensitive schoolboy in need of mentoring, a mysterious nun visiting from Berlin and a former suitor intent on luring her away from her vows. DOGG’S HAMLET and CAHOOT’S MACBETH, Whistler in the Dark, Plaza Black Box Theatre, Boston Center for the Arts, 539 Tremont St., 617-933-8600. Oct 27–Nov 19. An evening of word-wizardry combining two short Tom Stoppard plays is presented. In the first play, three students are setting up for their production of a 15-minute Hamlet to be performed in its original language. The catch? These students speak Dogg—a language comprised of English words but with different meanings. In the second play, renegade actors stage a secret performance of Shakespeare’s Macbeth that becomes a stark and moving metaphor for resistance in a time of censorship. THE DONKEY SHOW, American Repertory Theater, Oberon, 2 Arrow St., Cambridge, 617-547-8300. Ongoing. Bringing the ultimate disco experience to Boston, this crazy circus of mirror balls, feathered divas, roller skaters and hustle queens tells the story of A Midsummer Night’s Dream through great ’70s anthems you know by heart. THE FARM, Boston Playwrights’ Theatre, Walcott Theatre, 949 Commonwealth Ave., 866-811-4111. Sep 29–Oct 23. Something went wrong, but Finn’s not talking. Instead, he’s retiring, and Parker needs to know why. But trust doesn’t come easy at the CIA, and as the two operatives match wits, it becomes clear that they may not even be on the same side. FIGHTING OVER BEVERLEY, Gloucester Stage Company, 267 East Main St., Gloucester, 978-281-4433. Through Sep 11. Israel Horovitz’s romantic comedy pits three 70-somethings—Beverley, a WWII English war bride; Zelly, her fisherman husband; and Archie, the Brit Beverley jilted 53 years ago—against each other as they hash out their feelings while plotting an uncertain future. FISHNET-NETWORKS.NET!, The Theatre at Club Cafe, 209 Columbus Ave., 866-811-4111. Through Sep 9. Economy got you down? Job trouble? Sick of being trapped in your cubicle? Get the urge to smack your co-workers with a fish stick (or 10)? Don’t worry! FishNet-NetWorks.Net is hiring in this hilarious, politically incorrect audience-interactive parody of a large American computer networking company. THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS, American Repertory Theater, Loeb Drama Center, 64 Brattle St., Cambridge, 617547-8300. Through Oct 2. Internationally renowned stars Audra McDonald, Norm Lewis and David Alan Grier and A.R.T. Artistic Director Diane Paulus take on a revival adapted by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Suzan-Lori Parks (Topdog/Underdog ) and OBIE-winning composer Diedre Murray (Best of Both Worlds). Set in 1930s Charleston, South Carolina, this classic (which had its world premiere at Boston’s Colonial Theatre in 1935) tells the story of beautiful and troubled Bess, who turns to crippled beggar Porgy in search of safety after her possessive lover commits murder, and boasts such beloved works as “Summertime,” “Bess, You Is My Woman” and “It Ain’t Necessarily So.” Richard Bell: Uz vs.Them Ken Gonzales-Day: Profiled 6(37(0%(5 72 129(0%(5 38%/,& 23(1,1* 5(&(37,21 6(37(0%(5 30 TU F T S U N I V ERSI T Y ART G AL L E RY @ TH E SH I R LEY AN D AL EX A I DE K M A N A RT S CE NTE R 7DOERW $YHQXH _ 0HGIRUG 0$ _ DUWJDOOHU\#WXIWVHGX _ KWWSDUWJDOOHU\WXIWVHGX OHIW .HQ *RQ]DOHV'D\ 8QWLWOHG +HQU\ :HHNHV %XVW RI DQ $IULFDQ :RPDQ >EDVHG RQ D SKRWRJUDSKLF LPDJH RI 0DU\ 6HDFROH@ DQG -HDQ%DSWLVWH 3LJDOOH %XVW RI 0P $GpODwGH -XOLH 0LUOHDX GH 1HXYLOOH QpH *DUQLHU G·,VOH 7KH - 3DXO *HWW\ 0XVHXP /RV $QJHOHV ULJKW 5LFKDUG %HOO 7KH 3HFNLQ· 2UGHU DFU\OLF RQ FDQYDV [ LQFKHV SULYDWH FROOHFWLRQ %ULVEDQH SKRWR FRXUWHV\ $PHULFDQ )HGHUDWLRQ RI $UWV THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 49 g uide to local theater (continued) THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES, Central Square Theater, 450 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, 866-811-4111. Sep 7–Oct 2. Three actors, sixteen roles: Steven Canny and John Nicholson’s fast-paced send-up of the classic Sherlock Holmes novel returns after a hit run in summer of 2010, teeming with physical humor and visual gags. IN THE RED AND BROWN WATER, Company One, Plaza Theatre, Boston Center for the Arts, 539 Tremont St., 617933-8600. Oct 28–Dec 3. Oya can run faster than anyone, but not fast enough to escape her fate. When pressed to choose between her dying mother and her dreams of escape, she makes a life-changing decision in this play by Tarell Alvin McCraney, one of the most celebrated young writers in the American theatre. THE KING AND I, North Shore Music Theatre, 62 Dunham Road, Beverly, 978-232-7200. Sep 27–Oct 9. It is 1862 in Siam when an English widow and her young son arrive at the Royal Palace in Bangkok, having been summoned by the King to serve as tutor to his many children and wives. With both keeping a firm grip on their respective traditions and values, Anna and the King grow to understand and eventually respect one another in a truly unique love story featuring a dazzling Rodgers and Hammerstein score that includes such beloved songs as “Getting to Know You” and “Shall We Dance.” MOJO, Theatre on Fire, Charlestown Working Theater, 442 Bunker Hill St., 866-811-4111. Oct 7–22. Silver Johnny is the new singing sensation of 1958 London. His success could be the big break for two dead-end, pill-popping bar hands, but before they can dream what to do with all the money they’ll make, the owner turns up dead, Silver Johnny disappears, the second in command takes over the bar and a power struggle ensues in this high-speed, menacing comedy filled with the raw energy of early rock ’n’ roll. NEIGHBORHOOD 3: REQUISITION OF DOOM, Happy Medium Theatre, Factory Theatre, The Piano Factory, 791 Tremont St., 617-549-9854. Oct 20–29. In a suburban subdivision with identical houses, parents find their teenagers addicted to an online horror video game. The goal? Smash through an army of zombies to escape the neighborhood for good. But as the line blurs between virtual and reality, both parents and players realize that fear has a life of its own. NEXT FALL, SpeakEasy Stage Company, Roberts Studio Theatre, Calderwood Pavilion at the Boston Center for the Arts, 527 Tremont St., 617-933-8600. Sep 16–Oct 15. Luke, a devout Christian, and Adam, a non-believer, have been together for four years, yet spiritual differences continue to spark trouble in their relationship. A sudden twist of fate, however, changes everything in this compelling new play that looks at what it means to believe and what it might cost us not to. THE ODYSSEY, Charlestown Working Theater, 442 Bunker Hill St., 866-811-4111. Sep 14–25. This adaptation of Homer’s epic poem—told in fragments floating on top of song, text, Intermezzo The New England Chamber Opera Series presents ROCKET’S RED BLARE an opera buffa in two acts PXVLF DQG OLEUHWWR E\ -DPHV <DQQDWRV starring 6HS WHPE HU SP $ JDV V L ] 7K HD WHU +DUYDUG &DPSXV & DPEULGJH 0 $ For tickets call 617-899-4261 $20, 30, $45 in advance or at the door; cash or check See www.intermezzo-opera.org for more information 50 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER D’Anna Fortunato David Kravitz Ray Bauwens Natalie Polito Gregory Zavracky Edward Jones, conductor Kirsten Z. Cairns, director William A. Fregosi, designer g uide to local theater (continued) image and physicality—is performed by two people traveling together in a small boat, sailing across a half-real, half imaginary landscape of one-eyed giants, voodoo priestesses and seafarers. OR, Lyric Stage Company, 140 Clarendon St., 617-585-5678. Oct 14–Nov 6. Aphra Behn is getting out of the spy game and into showbiz. All she has to do is finish her first play, lure Nell Gwynne to be the star, keep King Charles II as her patron and stop her former lover from getting them all killed. This sexy, riotous comedy is loosely inspired by the true story of the literal first lady of the stage. OUR TOWN, Riverside Theatre Works, 45 Fairmount Ave., Hyde Park, 617-361-5269. Oct 28–Nov 13. Thornton Wilder’s memorable American classic tells the story of two families in a small New England town and their personal hopes for a good life, lasting love and eternal peace as they experience life’s greatest joys and tragedies. THE PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH, Wheelock Family Theatre, 200 The Riverway, 617-879-2300. Oct 21–Nov 20. Passing through a mysterious tollbooth, Milo embarks on a quest to restore the Princesses of Rhyme and Reason to the Kingdom of Wisdom in the musical adaptation of Norton Juster’s awardwinning book. RENT, New Repertory Theatre, Charles Mosesian Theater, Arsenal Center for the Arts, 321 Arsenal St., Watertown, 617-923-8487. Sep 4–25. Jonathan Larson’s Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning musical tells the story of a group of struggling bohemian artists living in New York City’s Lower East Side. This ground-breaking and powerful rock opera, based on Puccini’s La Bohème, explores the necessity of love and friendship, and the repercussions of living with AIDS in modern day society. THE RIVER WAS WHISKEY, Boston Playwrights’ Theatre, Odyssey Theatre, 949 Commonwealth Ave., 866-811-4111. Oct 27–Nov 20. A gritty ghost story set amongst the racial tensions of 1940s Mississippi, William C. Fancher’s Southern Gothic tale features original music by the playwright and pulses with past revenge and present retribution. THE ROCKY HORROR SHOW, Turtle Lane Playhouse, 283 Melrose St., Newton, 866-811-4111. Oct 7–30. Newly engaged couple Brad and Janet encounter a problem when their car halts in the rain and they find themselves at the castle of transvestite Dr. Frank-N-Furter. A place to stay is offered, but will Brad and Janet want to remain there? Especially when a large group of Transylvanians dance to the “Time Warp” and Dr. Frank-N-Furter builds his own man. ROSENCRANTZ AND GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD, The Footlight Club, Eliot Hall, 7A Eliot St., Jamaica Plain, 617524-3200. Sep 16–Oct 1. Tom Stoppard’s absurdist, existentialist tragicomedy expands upon the exploits of two minor characters from Shakespeare’s Hamlet, who voice their confusion at the progress of events of which they have no direct knowledge. SLASHER, Apollinaire Theatre Company, Chelsea Theatre Works, 189 Winnisimmet St., Chelsea, 617-887-2336. Oct 14–Nov 5. In this horrifying comedy by Allison Moore, Sheena is cast as the “last girl” in a low-budget slasher flick. She thinks it’s the big break for which she’s been waiting, but it in- Located in Stowe, Vermont at the EDVH RI 0W 0DQVÀHOG DQG 6SUXFH 3HDN World class performances in a stunning mountain setting... your destination for the arts! The Grand Opening 2010-2011 Season has included artists and performances by James Taylor, Ben Vereen, Juan DeMarcos and the Afro-Cuban All Stars, Little Feat, The Bacon Brothers, Celtic Crossroads and many more... Upcoming events include: An Evening with Groucho starring Frank Ferrante (Sept 2-3) Bo Bice in Concert (Sept 4) Blackberry Smoke (Sept 9) Orla Fallon (Oct 7) Classic Albums Live! presents Thriller (Oct 14) ETHEL with Robert Mirabal (Oct 21) The Second City (Oct 22) Mad Science Theatre presents CSI Live! (Oct 28-29) For more information, please visit www.sprucepeakarts.org or call 802-760-4634 THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 51 g uide to local theater (continued) stead unleashes her malingering mother’s thwarted feminist rage. Mom is prepared to do anything to stop filming—even if it kills her. STEEL MAGNOLIAS, Stoneham Theatre, 395 Main St., Stoneham, 781-279-2200. Sep 15–Oct 2. On the morning of her wedding day, Shelby Eatenton, her mother and her mother’s outrageous friends—the lovable curmudgeon Ouiser and small-town grande dame Clairee—gather in Truvy’s smalltown Louisiana beauty parlor. Filled with humor and heartbreak, these women make us laugh and cry as they face life’s uncertainties with courage and humor. TWELFTH NIGHT, Actors’ Shakespeare Project, Plaza Theatre, Boston Center for the Arts, 539 Tremont St., 617-933-8600. Sep 27–Oct 23. A shipwreck on the shores of Illyria provides the collision that sends Shakespeare’s sublime characters on a course toward self-discovery. Through foibles and mistaken identities, we learn that neither love nor knowledge is ever uncomplicated, and that laughter at others comes at one’s own peril. WOMEN OF WILL, The Nora Theatre Company, Central Square Theater, 450 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, 866-811-4111. Oct 13–Nov 6. Shakespearean impresario Tina Packer takes audiences on a journey, illuminating the evolution of the femi- nine in the Bard’s plays and revealing the ways in which Shakespeare believed we could build a better world. DANCE KINGS OF SALSA, Cutler Majestic Theatre at Emerson College, 219 Tremont St., 800-233-3123. Oct 13–15. This sizzling, high-energy dance and music performance captures the hottest salsa moves direct from Havana. OPERA BÉATRICE ET BÉNÉDICT, Opera Boston, Cutler Majestic Theatre at Emerson College, 219 Tremont St., 800-233-3123. Oct 21–25. Based on Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing, Hector Berlioz’ lovely, luminous opear stars tenor Sean Panikkar and mezzo-soprano Kelley O’Connor as Shakespeare’s battling couple who realize their love for each other through their friends’ plotting. ROCKET’S RED BLARE, Intermezzo New England Chamber Opera Series, Aggasiz Theater, Harvard University, 14 Mason St., Cambridge, 617-899-4261. Sep 23 & 24. A king and queen of a mythical kingdom forbid their son to marry a girl from the village or risk banishment by being sent in a rocket to the other side of the world in this two-act work by James Yannatos fashioned after the traditional “opera buffa.” Audra McDonald in concert Sunday | October 2 | 5pm | Symphony Hall Join Celebrity Series of Boston for the opening night performance of the 2011-12 season, an unforgettable evening of songs with Audra McDonald! Tickets start at $40. To purchase call: SymphonyCharge | 888-266-1200 www.celebrityseries.org 52 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER Direct from its sold-out run at the New York Theatre Workshop THREE PIANOS A lively romp inspired by Schubert’s Winterreise "Just the cure for seasonal affective disorder conceived with hedonistic gusto. Three Pianos is a fast festive ode to a somber work of art." Ben Brantley, The New York Times ON SALE NOW TO MEMBERS & SUBSCRIBERS ON SALE TO PUBLIC: OCT. 11 STARTS DEC. 7 VISIT: americanrepertorytheater.org CALL: 617.547.8300 GUIDE to CAMBRIDGE DINING L–Lunch • D–Dinner • B–Breakfast C–Cocktails • VP–Valet Parking SB–Sunday Brunch • LS–Late Supper THE ASGARD IRISH PUB & RESTAURANT, 350 Massachusetts Ave., 617-577-9100. The Asgard was designed in Ireland, with local artists putting the finishing touches on a truly one-of-akind bar. Communal tables and a variety of cool, comfortable places to sit—along with an extensive menu, a large craft beer selection, outdoor patio, live music, trivia nights, DJs and no cover charge—make the Asgard a perfect spot for a pint and a meal. L, D, Sat & SB, LS, C. BONDIR, 279A Broadway, 617-661-0009. This cozy, farmhouse-style restaurant showcases the pastoral and marine SOME ’PHIN FOR EVERYONE: Enjoy some of the freshest seafood around—from oysters and lobsters to fried clams and swordfish—at Dolphin Seafood. bounty of New England and offers a finely curated selection of American and European wines and beers. Following a simple philosophy of quality and care, Chef Jason Bond uses vegetables picked the same day, fish hours out of the ocean and pasture-raised meats on his daily-changing menu. D Wed–Mon 5–10 p.m. V q t ub j s t p o uif Trvbsf Qsf.Uifbufs Nfovt Bgufs.Uifbufs Gvo Kpjo Vt" Mvodi- Csvodi ' EjoofsBgufsoppo Ufb ' Mbuf Ojhiu vqtubjstpouiftrvbsf/dpn :2 Xjouispq Tusffu 728 975/2:44 54 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER g uide to cambridge di ni ng (continued) BORDER CAFE, 32 Church St., 617-864-6100. Sizzling fajitas, overstuffed quesadillas and giant margaritas are the highlights at this Tex-Mex hotspot in Harvard Square. Other specialties include Cajun and Creole dishes, all served in a bustling, lively and fun atmosphere. L, D, C, LS. CAMBRIDGE, 1., 27 Church St., Harvard Square, 617-5761111; 1381 Boylston St., Boston, 617-437-1111. City dwellers looking for refined, sophisticated pizzas can find comfort in Cambridge, 1. Its Best of Boston award-winning, thin crust, charcoal-grilled pies include such toppings as grilled chicken, potato, arugula and even lobster. Both locations offer salads in addition to beer and wine while the Fenway site features select appetizers and pasta dishes. L, D, C, LS. CHEZ HENRI, 1 Shepard St., 617-354-8980. Chef/owner Paul O’Connell offers up delicious French cuisine with a Cuban twist in a classy and comfortable settting, located between Harvard and Porter Squares. Be sure to sample signature dishes like the camarones rellenos de yuca (baked stuffed shrimp) and the blanquette de lapin (braised rabbit with creme fraiche), and pair them with one of Chez Henri’s standout tropical cocktails. D Mon–Thu 6–10 p.m., Fri & Sat 5:30–10:30 p.m., Sun 5:30–9:30 p.m. DANTE, Royal Sonesta, 40 Edwin H. Land Blvd., 617-4974200. Chef Dante de Magistris dishes out playful, rich fare with Italian, French and Spanish influences. The sophisticated eatery boasts a seasonal patio and gorgeous views of the Charles River and the Boston skyline. B Mon–Fri 6:30–10:30 a.m., Sat & Sun 7–11 a.m.; L Mon–Fri 11:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m.; D Mon–Thu 5:30–10 p.m., Fri & Sat ’til 11 p.m.; Sat & SB 11 a.m.–2 p.m. DOLPHIN SEAFOOD, 1105 Massachusetts Ave., 617-6612937. If you’re in the mood for quality seafood, then this longtime neighborhood favorite is not to be missed. From fried seafood platters to healthier options like swordfish to all varieties of shellfish, if it comes from the sea, Dolphin serves it up deliciously and fresh off the boat. L, D. EAST COAST GRILL, 1271 Cambridge St., 617-491-6568. This eatery from chef Chris Schlesinger offers fresh seafood and grilled fish as well as hot and spicy barbecue options, all served with traditional sides like cole slaw, beans, cornbread and watermelon. An oyster bar, cabana-like cocktails and a funky atmosphere prove fine dining can be fun. D, SB. THE ELEPHANT WALK, 2067 Massachusetts Ave., 617-4926900. Offering the city’s most extensive menu of Cambodian/ French cuisine, The Elephant Walk has long been lauded as one of Cambridge’s most unique and delicious dining destinations. Chef Gerard Lopez pleases all palates with a full range of menus—including those for vegetarians, vegans and glutenintolerant diners—packed with tasty traditional Cambodian soups, salads and entrees and classic French dishes. FINALE, 30 Dunster St., Harvard Sq., 617-441-9797; One Columbus Ave., Boston, 617-423-3184; 1306 Beacon St., Brookline, 617-232-3233. A trendsetter among dessertfocused restaurants, Finale offers a wide array of time honored favorites and specialty desserts, savory fare for lunch and “Serving The Best Since 1975” TWIN TW WIN LO LOBSTERS OBS BSTER RS $22.95 special price for Theatrebill readers must present ad for discount LATE NIGHT DINING EVERY FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT EVERY WEDNESDAY– SATURDAY $1 RAW BAR 617-661-2937 1105 MASS MASSACHUSETTS SSA AC CHUSETTS SETTS TTS S AVENUE AVENUE NUE AM MBR RIDGE, DGE, GE,, H HARVARD ARV RVA VARD VARD ARD SQUARE SQ QU UARE UARE ARE T CCAMBRIDGE, www.dolphinseafood.com w ww w.d dolphinseafood.com lphinseafood.com hinseafood.com nseafood.com eaffood.com od.com THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 55 guide to cambridge dining (continued) dinner, and an impressive selection of Illy coffee drinks, wine and cocktails. Sample award-winning creations like the gooey Molten Chocolate Cake and enjoy carry-out options from The Finale Bakery including freshly baked cookies, cakes, minipastries and tarts. Dunster St.: Mon 11 a.m.–11 p.m.; Tue–Thu ’til 11:30 p.m.; Fri ’til 12:30 a.m.; Sat noon–12:30 a.m.; Sun ’til–11 p.m. Columbus Ave.: Mon 11:30 a.m.–11 p.m.; Tue–Thu ’til 11:30 p.m., Fri ’til midnight; Sat 5 p.m.–midnight; Sun 4–11 p.m. Beacon St.: Sun & Mon 11 a.m.–11 p.m.; Tue–Thu ’til 11:30 p.m.; Fri–Sat ’til 12:30 a.m. www.finaledesserts.com. GRAFTON STREET, 1230 Massachusetts Ave., 617-497-0400. This neighborhood hotspot is named after the spirited cobblestone-lined shopping district in Dublin’s famed Temple Bar area. Grafton Street deftly combines a traditional Irish pub’s warmth and coziness with a comfortable full-service restaurant serving contemporary American cuisine. L,D, LS, C, Sat & SB. Sustainable, Sustainable, fresh, fresh,, local ingr ingredients edients dai daily. ilyy. 279A Broadway Broadway | Cambridge, MA A 02139 5–10 p p.m. .m. | Closed on Tuesday Tuesd uesday day now 617-661-0009 Call no w for rreservations: eservations: 617-661 1-0009 www www.bondircambridge.com w.bondircambridge.com m GRENDEL’S DEN, 89 Winthrop St., 617-491-1160. Since 1971, Grendel’s Den has been a comfortable, down-to-earth neighborhood eatery and bar, justly earning landmark status in the Harvard Square community. Priding itself on a wide and varied selection of domestic and imported beer, Grendel’s also offers excellent food at even better prices. Tucked away in a basement off the cobbled paths of Winthrop Street, this Cambridge classic is open late and never disappoints. L, D, BR, LS, C. HARVEST, 44 Brattle St., 617-868-2255. In keeping with its name, Harvest—located in the heart of Harvard Square—specializes in dishes that incorporate only the freshest local ingredients. Chef Mary Dumont adjusts her expansive menu of classic American cuisine seasonally, taking full advantage of the bounty available from New England farms and greenhouses. Diners can treat themselves to delicious dishes like roasted squash and apple soup, roasted local beet salad and Nova Scotia halibut, as well as selections from Harvest’s raw bar. HENRIETTA’S TABLE, The Charles Hotel, One Bennett St., 617661-5005. Nothing but locally grown and organic produce is used to create a lively, textured menu of reinterpreted New England classics. Private dining room available. B Mon–Fri 6:30–11 a.m., Sat 7–11 a.m., Sun 7–10:30 a.m.; Sat and SB noon–3 p.m.; L Mon–Fri noon–3 p.m.; D daily 5:30–10 p.m. 58 JFK JFK St St.,., Cambr Cambridge idge 617.864.9161 617.864.9161 HONG KONG, 1238 Massachusetts Ave., 617-864-5311. A local favorite for more than five decades, this Harvard Square fixture serves a full array of classic Chinese dishes and exotic drinks, including its world-renowned scorpion bowl. Perfect for a meal with friends, including lunch, dinner or late-night snacks, or for checking out the latest sports action in the bar. Sun–Wed 11:30 a.m.–2 a.m., Thu ’til 2:30 a.m., Fri & Sat ’til 3 a.m. what to do • where to go • what to see THE Welcome Center A T C O P L E Y P L A C E presented by PANORAMA, The Official Guide to Boston Adjacent to the Skybridge connecting to The Westin Hotel 56 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER JASPER WHITE’S SUMMER SHACK, 149 Alewife Brook Parkway, 617-520-9500; 50 Dalton St., Boston, 617-8679955. Top-notch fare such as pan-roasted lobster, awardwinning fried chicken and an impressive raw bar in a casual setting. Boston: Sun–Wed 11:30 a.m.–10 p.m., Thu–Sat ’til 11 p.m., raw bar Thu–Sat ’til 1 a.m. Cambridge: Mon–Thu 11:30 a.m.–10 p.m., Fri & Sat ’til 11 p.m., Sun 3–9 p.m. LEGAL SEA FOODS, 20 University Road, Charles Square, 617-491-9400; 5 Cambridge Center, Kendall Square, 617-8643400; Prudential Center, 800 Boylston St., Boston, 617-2666800; other locations. Legal Sea Foods, a Boston tradition for more than 50 years, features more than 40 varieties of fresh g uide to cambridge di ni ng (continued) fish and shellfish as well as an award-winning wine list. Named “Boston’s Most Popular Restaurant” (Zagat 2009). L & D. www.legalseafoods.com. NOIR, The Charles Hotel, One Bennett St., 617-661-8010. This award-winning, stylish bar and lounge offers seasonally inspired cocktails as well as classic drinks like the Sidecar and Old-Fashioned along with crispy pressed sandwiches, flavorful flatbread pizzas, fresh salads and small bites in a sophisticated setting. C 4:30 p.m.–2 a.m.; D 5–11 p.m. NUBAR, Sheraton Commander Hotel, 16 Garden St., Harvard Square, 617-234-1365. Under the glow of a Cambridge landmark, this restaurant and lounge boasts food reflective of its surrounding neighborhood: smart, seasonal and approachable. Nubar serves elegant comfort food with a modern approach applied to classic dishes. Private dining & reservations available. B, L, D daily ’til 11 p.m. C Sun–Thu ’til midnight, Fri & Sat ’til 1 a.m. www.nubarcambridge.com. OM, 92 Winthrop St., 617-576-2800. OM Restaurant & Lounge in Harvard Square offers globally-influenced modern American cuisine, drawing in foodies and neighborhood patrons alike. A popular nightlife destination, OM’s lounge boasts sleek leather sofas, a hypnotic water wall and signature cocktails. D, C. THE RED HOUSE, 98 Winthrop St., 617-576-0605. Savor the cozy atmosphere inside this funky 1802 cottage nestled in the center of Harvard Square, which offers an intimate main dining space, a cozy fireside bar, three private dining rooms for small groups and a shaded bluestone patio for seasonal al fresco dining. Chef/owner Paul Overgaag serves eclectic European and Mediterranean fare loaded with fresh, organic ingredients from his very own local farm, as well as homemade pasta, fresh seafood and Maine lobster. L & D Tue–Sun noon-3 p.m. and 5–11 p.m. RENDEZVOUS, 502 Massachusetts Ave., Central Square, 617576-1900. Acclaimed Boston chef Steve Johnson uses regional products and the spices of Northern Africa, Italy, France and Spain to create his own twist on seasonal cuisine. Rotating entrees can include grilled Portuguese sardines with roasted peppers, fennel and capers or Moroccan style kofte with minted yogurt. D. RUSSELL HOUSE TAVERN, 14 JFK St., 617-500-3055. Combining Executive Chef Michael Scelfo’s seasonally inspired menu of modern interpretations of American classics with a bar serving all-American wines, a locally driven craft beer selection and classic as well as modern hand-crafted cocktails, this Harvard Square restaurant is a comfortable gathering spot for every occasion. L, D, SB, LS, C. SANDRINE’S BISTRO, 8 Holyoke St., 617-497-5300. Renowned chef Raymond Ost serves delicious French cuisine with German flair in a cozy, upscale atmosphere right around the corner from Harvard University. Signature dishes include Alsatian pizza, escargots, steamed mussels, foie gras and creme brulee for dessert. L Mon–Sat 11:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m.; D daily 5:30–11:30 p.m. SHAYS PUB & WINE BAR, 58 JFK St., 617-864-9161. A Harvard Square fixture since 1984, this casual and comfortable tavern boasts an excellent beer and wine selection along with made-from-scratch appetizers, burgers, sandwiches and *Applies to food items only. Our Treat Enjoy 10% off* any meal or dessert, pre or post theatre during the ART 2011 season. a t t h e c o m m a n d e r · 16 garden street cambridge, ma 617.234.1365 · www.nubarcambridge.com · dining until 11pm THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS 57 guide to cambridge dining (continued) Best Western PLUS Bravo! t Experience the BEST of Cambridge & Boston t Family friendly lodging t Complimentary hot buffet breakfast daily t Bar 220, now open t Convenient to area attractions t Free shuttle to Harvard Square & public transportation AAA and Special Packages available Stephanie Mitchell www.hoteltria.com (617) 491-8000 or (866) 333-Tria SWEET DREAMS: Finale, a paradise for dessert aficionados, offers such delectable dishes as the Chocolate Crescendo (above) at its Harvard Square location, one of three in the Boston area. Mexican specialities, all at reasonable prices. L & D Mon–Sat 11 a.m. –1 a.m., Sun noon–1 a.m. TORY ROW, 3 Brattle St., Harvard Square, 617-876-TROW. Located at the heart of Harvard Square, Tory Row takes its name from the 1770s term for Brattle Street, once populated by British loyalists. Serving up an eclectic mix of Euro-American dishes at affordable prices, this neighborhood bar and restaurant has shed the conservative roots of its name and replaced them with a diverse and creative culinary aesthetic. L, D. UPSTAIRS ON THE SQUARE, 91 Winthrop St., 617-864-1933. Boasting an eclectic decor, this lush urban oasis features everything from poached Atlantic salmon to fire-roasted Meadow Farms lamb chops. A charming blend of eccentricity and culinary luxury. L, D, C, LS. ZOE’S, 1105 Massachusetts Ave., 617-495-0055. Offering a menu of delicious homemade Greek and American food in a fun atmosphere, this retro establishment serves breakfast all day, and take-out and catering are available. A popular destination for the weekend brunch crowd, Zoe’s is also a great place for dinner, boasting an affordable selection of beer and wine. For dessert, try the delicious cheesecake frappe or the famous frozen hot chocolate. B, L, D, SB. Mon–Wed 7:30 a.m.–9 p.m., Thu–Sat ’til 10 p.m., Sun 8 a.m.–9 p.m. 58 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER CAM BRID GA RADCLIFFE YARD N W AY EN PP IA Our Neighborhood Partners A ST HARVARD MBTA T HARVARD MBTA ST QUIN Sandrine’s BE P DEN LIN BOW ST BOW ST RO W ST E AV AR MT .A UB ST DS T TS ST RVA R T SE RO HA U TH H IN C A SS A ST W Grafton Street M T IO EL UpStairs on the Square Henrietta’s Table The Charles Hotel ST OM TO N Hotel Veritas ST K UR GE NS T EL L TR OBERON OW BR ID TS T HO LYO KE ET PLY MP NN JF RD TY Tory Row LE ST BRATT ST T NS T WA RE UR ER SI HARVARD YARD PRES COTT ST MT .A UB IV HARVARD MBTA ST Y OR ST T LE T AT BR HI UN Cambridge, 1. CHURCH ST CY S T AR I LL ST D ST LOEB DRAMA CENTER ST GE S T RD MEMORIAL DR CHARLES RIVER 27 Church St. cambridge1.us 1 Bennett St. charleshotel.com 1230 Massachusetts Ave. graftonstreetcambridge.com 1 Remington St. thehotelveritas.com 1 Bennett St. henriettastable.com 92 Winthrop St. omrestaurant.com 8 Holyoke St. sandrines.com 3 Brattle St. toryrow.us 91 Winthrop St. upstairsonthesquare.com For current promotions and discounts, visit: americanrepertorytheater.org/discounts Restaurant Partners as of Aug. 1. Dining Out UPSTAIRS ON THE SQUARE H aute cuisine and childlike whimsy deliFor appetizers, the salad of wild arugula, shaved ciously and delightfully intersect in zucchini and tempura blossom with a sliver of feta Harvard Square at Upstairs on the tart offers a refreshing start to any meal. On the Square, a venerable restaurant that offers diners a heartier side, the gorgonzola dulce ravioli served over wealth of refined culinary experiences in roasted peach and pistachio delivers a a vibrant setting. UPSTAIRS ON perfect blend of sweet and salty. Diners who come to Upstairs have THE SQUARE Entrees are presented with panache the option of eating in either the first- 91 Winthrop St. but never resemble the kind of over-the617-864-1933 Refer to Dining floor Monday Club Bar, a bright and coltop modern “food art” that diners are too Guide, page 58 orful wood-paneled room which features afraid to dig into. Whether one opts for a rotating menu of upscale casual Chef Steven Brand’s prime skirt steak brunch, lunch and dinner fare; or the served with tater tots and Where haute Soiree Dining Room, which resembles chimichurri, the roasted chicken pancuisine and the inside of a young girl’s dollhouse zanella served with cucumber, sunwith its pink and raspberry walls and childlike whimsy burst tomato and fennel flowers, the gold-painted chairs. Both venues are sirloin cheeseburger on a buttered potato deliciously lighthearted and welcoming, allaying roll with gruyere cheese, Niman intersect. any fears of a stuffy dining experience. Ranch bacon and pickles, or any of One notable aspect about dining at Upstairs is the other sumptuous selections, diners are assured the equanimity with which carnivores and vege- of a dish bursting with flavor and flair. tarians are considered, with almost an even split Delectable desserts range from rich zebra cake between meat and meat-free dishes. Even the chef’s to ginger pavlova served with roasted peaches, tasting menu (available nightly in five- or seven- blackberries and honey ginger ice cream, and are course options) has a vegetarian version, making the perfect way to round out your meal. Upstairs Upstairs that rare restaurant where those who es- on the Square truly elevates gourmet cuisine, chew meat can still feel fully invited to the fine proving that fine dining and fun dining aren’t dining party. mutually exclusive. “ ” 60 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER Dining Out NUBAR I f you were familiar with the old-fashioned white wine sauce), pan seared diver scallops (acrestaurant formerly at the landmark Sheraton companied by wild mushrooms, spinach and poCommander Hotel in Harvard Square, then tatoes) and a thick-as-can-be New England clam Nubar, the newly renovated eatery that stands in its chowder, garnished with steamed littlenecks still in place, will be a revelation. For those who their shells and crumbled bacon. NUBAR weren’t familiar with the Commander’s Innovative dishes that give a nod to Sheraton old dining space, welcome to one of seasonal fare include appetizers like the Commander Hotel Cambridge’s newest places to enjoy the blue fish fingers and the asparagus, golden 16 Garden St. 617-234-1365 freshest New England cuisine around. beet and goat cheese salad. New England’s Refer to Dining Guide, page 57 With a modern and stylish decor ethnic heritage is highlighted as well in highlighted by dark wood floors, starters like the Taleggio polenta served cream-colored walls, a sleek bar and a with wilted baby spinach and a crispy Cambridge’s cozy lounge warmed by a gas firepoached egg, entrees such as potato newest place to place, Nubar boasts an elegant and gnocchi with seasonal vegetables and enjoy the breezy atmosphere thanks to its high even a savory meatball sandwich loaded ceilings and open floor plan. freshest cuisine with marinara sauce and mozzarella. The decor is not the only thing Tasty flatbreads are also available and around. that is brand new, however. The can be topped with everything from menu has been reinvented as well, taking advan- caramelized onion, bacon and gruyere to duck contage of the bounty available throughout the region fit, mushrooms and Manchego cheese. with a heavy emphasis on local ingredients. Nubar even keeps it local with desserts, servUpdated takes on crowd pleasers like grilled steak ing Cambridge’s own Christina’s ice cream, among frites and the Nubar burger (Angus beef served on other sweet treats. A wonderful wine, beer and a brioche bun) are joined by Nubar’s variations on cocktail selection and a friendly, knowledgeable Yankee staples, such as Maine peeky toe crabcake, waitstaff help complete a dining experience sure Gloucester cod, Pat’s littleneck clam roast (served on to stay as enjoyable and ever-surprising as the angel hair pasta with baby shrimp in a garlic and changing of the seasons. “ ” 62 AMERICAN REPERTORY THEATER ASOa]\ ;OabS`a +HFWRU %HUOLR] %pDWULFH HW %pQpGLFW @SW[OUW\SR 2FWREHU -XOLH %RXOLDQQH DV %pDWULFH 6HDQ 3DQLNNDU DV %pQpGLFW 0LFKDHO 7LSSHWW 7KH 0LGVXPPHU 0DUULDJH 1HZ (QJODQG 3UHPLHUH )HEUXDU\ -RpOOH +DUYH\ DV -HQLIHU 3HWHU 7DQWVLWV DV 0DUN )HDWXULQJ %RVWRQ %DOOHW ,, 9LQFHQ]R %HOOLQL , &DSXOHWL H L 0RQWHFFKL $SULO DQG 0D\ 0DULH /HQRUPDQG DV 5RPHR +DH -L &KDQJ DV *LXOLHWWD $OO SHUIRUPDQFHV FRQGXFWHG E\ $UWLVWLF 'LUHFWRU *LO 5RVH 3HUIRUPDQFHV DUH KHOG DW WKH &XWOHU 0DMHVWLF 7KHDWUH ,QGLYLGXDO 7LFNHWV RQ VDOH 6HSWHPEHU WK WKURXJK $(6WDJHVRUJ RU ZZZRSHUDERVWRQRUJ