Confederates at TheatreWorks_Encore Arts San Francisco
Transcription
Confederates at TheatreWorks_Encore Arts San Francisco
A WORLD PREMIERE CONFEDERATES DROFNATS RETNEC GNIPPOHS About TheatreWorks Silicon Valley July 2016 Volume 48, No. 1 Welcome to TheatreWorks Silicon Valley and our 47th season of award-winning theatre. Led by Founding Artistic Director Robert Kelley and Managing Director Phil Santora, TheatreWorks Silicon Valley presents a wide range of productions and programming throughout the region. Founded in 1970, we continue to celebrate the human spirit and the diversity of our community, presenting contemporary plays and musicals, revitalizing great works of the past, championing arts education, and nurturing new works for the American theatre. TheatreWorks has produced 66 world premieres and 160 US and regional premieres. In the 2016/17 season, we add the world premiere of Confederates and four more regional premieres to our résumé. TheatreWorks Silicon Valley’s 2015/16 season included the world premiere of the musical Triangle, as well regional premieres of The Country House, Hershey Felder as Irving Berlin, tokyo fish story, Cyrano, and The Velocity of Autumn. Hershey Felder as Irving Berlin broke all our box office records, becoming the highest-grossing show in TheatreWorks’ history. In the course of the year, shows that debuted here were produced at theatres around the world. With an annual operating budget of $8 million, TheatreWorks Silicon Valley produces eight mainstage productions at the Lucie Stern Theatre in Palo Alto and the Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts. Sixteen years ago, we launched the New Works Initiative, dedicating ourselves to the development of new plays and musicals. The Initiative has since supported over 150 new works through retreats, workshops, staged readings, developmental productions, and the annual New Works Festival, inspiring The Mercury News to call us “a premiere breeding ground for new musicals, which has put the company on the national map.” TheatreWorks believes in making theatre accessible to the entire Silicon Valley community. Our Education Department reaches on average 25,000 students in 70 schools in 7 counties annually. It sponsors outreach programs that include the Children’s Healing Project at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital, the Young Playwrights’ Initiative, specially-priced student matinees, extensive school tours, post-show discussions, and theatre camps, classes, and conservatories for youth. The Mercury News is TheatreWorks’ 2016/17 Season Media Sponsor. 2 THEATREWORKS J. Lohr is the official wine of TheatreWorks. Hengehold Trucks is the official trucking provider of TheatreWorks. Mike Hathaway Sales Director Brieanna Bright, Joey Chapman, Ann Manning Seattle Area Account Executives Marilyn Kallins, Terri Reed, Rob Scott San Francisco/Bay Area Account Executives Brett Hamil Online Editor Jonathan Shipley Associate Online Editor ENCORE Jonathan Shipley Ad Services Coordinator Carol Yip Sales Coordinator Paul Heppner President Sara Keats Marketing Manager Ryan Devlin Business Development Manager FRONT COVER: NEW WORKS FESTIVAL PHOTO KEVIN BERNE Garden Court is the official hotel of TheatreWorks. Ana Alvira, Robin Kessler, Shaun Swick, Stevie VanBronkhorst Production Artists and Graphic Design Genay Genereux Accounting & Office Manager AFFILIATIONS—TheatreWorks Silicon Valley is a member of the League of Resident Theatres (LORT) and The director is a member of the Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers, Inc., an independent national labor union. The scenic, lighting, and sound designers are members of United Scenic Artists. This season is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts. Susan Peterson Design & Production Director Mike Hathaway Vice President For more information on our 2016/17 season, New Works Festival, and Education programs, please visit theatreworks.org or call 650.463.1960. operates under agreement between LORT and Actors’ Equity Association (AEA), the union of professional actors and stage managers in the United States. TheatreWorks is a constituent member of Theatre Communications Group, Inc., the national organization for the nonprofit professional theatre. TheatreWorks is a member of the National Alliance for Musical Theatre, a national service organization for musical theatre. In addition, TheatreWorks is a member of Theatre Bay Area, the Palo Alto Chamber of Commerce, and the Mountain View Chamber of Commerce. TheatreWorks’ 2016/17 Season is presented in cooperation with the City of Mountain View and the City of Palo Alto, Community Services Department, Division of Arts and Sciences. Paul Heppner Publisher Corporate Office 425 North 85th Street Seattle, WA 98103 p 206.443.0445 f 206.443.1246 [email protected] 800.308.2898 x105 www.encoremediagroup.com Encore Arts Programs is published monthly by Encore Media Group to serve musical and theatrical events in the Puget Sound and San Francisco Bay Areas. All rights reserved. ©2016 Encore Media Group. Reproduction without written permission is prohibited. From the Board Chair Where to begin… First, a big welcome to TheatreWorks’ Silicon Valley’s 47th season! So many terrific happenings this summer: the world premiere of Confederates, the upcoming New Works Festival (August 12–21), and rolling out the red carpet for the musical The Life of the Party (August 24–September 18) and our friends across the pond. Let’s take them in order… We have an amazing season ahead including a world premiere, regional premieres, reprised and reimagined favorites, comedies, dramas, and musicals. There’s clearly something for everyone—including students home for the summer. Which leads me to a small detour. Did you know that attending live theatre engages students in ways that movies or books never can? Researchers from the University of Arkansas confirmed that live theatre encourages a deeper understanding of plot while also promoting greater tolerance and more empathy among 7th to 12th graders than either reading the play or watching the movie. So what are you waiting for? Summer is the perfect time to bring your kids to TheatreWorks. And the timing couldn’t be better. Confederates’ politically charged tale of media muckraking during a Presidential campaign is headline hot and leads directly into our 15th Annual New Works Festival, an incredible array of plays and musicals about people and issues as diverse as the artists who created them. With their shows still in development, playwrights ask our audience to experience and help shape the final product. The works invariably change from reading to reading, and the process of playmaking becomes as rewarding as the product. It’s a unique theatre experience, perfect for the whole family. Consider a Festival Pass, which gives you access to all five staged readings. I’ll be seeing each one at least twice and it would be great to see you there. Lastly, I want to let you know how excited we all are to partner with London’s acclaimed Menier Chocolate Factory theatre and its very talented artistic director, David Babani, on the American premiere of The Life of the Party. How wonderful it will be to celebrate the brilliant music of Broadway composer Andrew Lippa with all of you. So let the fun begin! And once again...welcome to TheatreWorks’ 47th season... Barbara Shapiro BOARD OF TRUSTEES Barbara Shapiro, Chair Jayne Booker Bill Coughran Ciro Giammona Anne Hambly Larry Horton Charlotte Jacobs Roy Johnson Derry Kabcenell Michael Kahn Julie Kaufman Robert Kelley Phil Santora Loren Saxe Nancy Ginsburg Stern Debra Summers Lynn Szekely-Goode Ewart Thomas Tzipor Ulman Mark Vershel Holly Ward Lisa Webster Jane Weston Gayla Lorthridge Wood In this Issue 2 About TheatreWorks Silicon Valley 4 THE 2016/17 SEASON 7 From the Artistic Director 8 10 12 13 From the Festival to Premiere on TheatreWorks’ Main Stage On the Trail: A Conversation with Playwright Suzanne Bradbeer Director’s Notes by Lisa Rothe TheatreWorks Silicon Valley presents CONFEDERATES 18 The New Works Festival 22 The Life of the Party 24 The Party of the Decade 25 Outside Mullingar 26 Contributors 28 The Healing Project Expands 30 TWSV Staff 31 TWSV General Information BOARD EMERITUS Nancy Meyer, Founder • William F. Adler • Edward T. Anderson, MD • Doug Barry • Lauren Berman • Chuck Bernstein • Sharon Anthony Bower • Michael Braun • Polly W. Bredt • Bruce C. Cozadd • Jeff Crowe • Peggy Dalal • Yogen Dalal • Jenny Dearborn • Susan Fairbrook • Michael R. Flicker • Peggy Woodford Forbes • Dan Garber • Doug Garland • Aaron Gershenberg • Marcia Goldman • Emeri Handler • Judy Heyboer • Susan M. Huch • Perry A. Irvine • Nan cy Lee Jalonen • Lisa Jones • Gina Jorasch • Roberta R. Katz • Robin Kennedy • Michael Kwatinetz • Dick Maltzman • Suzanne Martin • Patti McClung • Tom Kelley • Don McDougall • Bruce McLeod • Cynthia S. Miller • Leslie Murphy-Chutorian • Eileen Nelson • Karen Nierenberg • Carrie Perzow • Carey Pickus • Margot Mailliard Rawlins • John Reis • Eddie Reynolds • Sandi Risser • Lynn Wilson Roberts • Ray A. Rothrock • Adam Samuels • Denise Stanford • Rosina Lo Sun • James Sweeney • Cathie Thermond • Helaina Titus • Robert J. Van der Leest, MD • Ronni Watson • Elissa Wellikson Continue the conversation online! Become our fan on Facebook! Follow us on Twitter and Instagram @TheatreWorksSV #TWConfederates #TWNewWorks encore art sprograms.com 3 THEATREWORKS SILICON N Summer Studio @ TheatreWorks A HIGH STAKES POLITICAL DRAMA A JOYOUS MUSICAL REVUE Confederates The Life of the Party By Suzanne Bradbeer Directed by Lisa Rothe A Celebration of the Songs of Andrew Lippa WORLD PREMIERE Father’s running for President. Daughter’s running wild. And the press is running out of time. With the campaign in full swing, someone unfurls a confederate flag and the scandal hits the fan. The provocative hit of TheatreWorks’ 2015 New Works Festival, this headline-hot political drama is a fresh, fascinating look at today’s muckraking media and the world it relentlessly pursues. Contains mature language. July 13 – August 7, 2016 Lucie Stern Theatre, Palo Alto Conceived by David Babani & Andrew Lippa Music & Lyrics by Andrew Lippa Directed by David Babani American Premiere Reprising its hit run in London, this spectacular musical evening stars renowned Tony Award®-nominated composer Andrew Lippa and friends in a sexy, tantalizing revue of hits from Broadway’s hilarious The Addams Family and tender Big Fish, his award-winning The Wild Party, poignant I Am Harvey Milk, and many more. Expect sensational surprises along the way in this laugh-filled evening of song and sophistication. Contains mature subject matter. “Sexy, sophisticated, and funny. 5 Stars!” The Telegraph, London August 24 – September 18, 2016 Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts A CLASSIC AMERICAN COMEDY Crimes of the Heart By Beth Henley Directed by Giovanna Sardelli Winner of the Pulitzer Prize NY Drama Critics Circle Award Three hard-luck Mississippi sisters are betrayed by their passions in this Southern Gothic classic—a zany, warm-hearted, and brilliantly imaginative tale of relationships run amok and dreams gone awry. In a hurricane of hilarity and hurt, Lenny’s turning 30, Meg’s fresh from rehab, and Babe’s out on bail, testing the boundaries of sisterhood in a world full of pitfalls and a town without pity. “Overflows with infectious high spirits.” The New York Times AN EAST/WEST COMIC DRAMA Calligraphy By Velina Hasu Houston Directed by Leslie Martinson Regional Premiere Two continents, two cultures, two estranged sisters, and the two cousins determined to bridge the gap between them—all are boldly calligraphed in this international comic drama set in Los Angeles and Tokyo, past and present. East and West collide as biracial American Hiromi and Japanese free spirit Sayuri confront tradition, prejudice, and their heritage of filial duty in one final attempt to reunite their aging parents. “Intimate, sensitive…the emotional stakes are high.” LA Times March 8 – April 2, 2017 Lucie Stern Theatre, Palo Alto January 11 – February 5, 2017 Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts Order a subscription by Aug. 14 and subtract the cost of your Confederates tickets! 4 THEATREWORKS N VALLEY 2016/17 SEASON A WRY ROMANTIC COMEDY Outside Mullingar By John Patrick Shanley Directed by Robert Kelley Tony Award® Nominee, Best Play 2015 Regional Premiere With a touch of blarney and a wealth of heart, the Oscar, Pulitzer, and Tony Award-winning author of Moonstruck and Doubt conjures up a wry and wondrous romantic comedy with a dark Irish twist. Family feuds and rustic fences have kept two eccentric, lovelorn neighbors apart since childhood, but in this passionate, compassionate Broadway hit it’s never too late to take a chance on love. “Shanley’s finest work since Doubt.” The New York Times October 5 – 30, 2016 Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts A MUSICAL ROMANCE FOR THE HOLIDAYS Daddy Long Legs Book by John Caird Music A B R I&L LLyrics I A N TbyCPaul O NGordon T E M P O R A RY D R A M A Based on the 1912 novel by Jean Webster Directed by Robert Kelley Proof Reprising TheatreWorks’ World Premiere By David Auburn From the creator of Jane Austen’s EMMA and the adaptor of Les Directed by Leslie Martinson Misérables comes an intimate musical valentine that captivated the for Drama—Tony AwardTokyo, Best Play Bay Area andPulitzer has sincePrize charmed audiences in London, and New York. ItsProof joyousisreturn for the holidays is set in suffragette-era a riveting drama of the heart, a captivating tale of New England, where a spirited orphan girl is sent to a prestigious faded mathematical genius and his brilliant but damaged college by a mysterious benefactor. Her heartwarming journey to daughter, a young woman caught in a quest for legitimacy independence, education, and romance is chronicled in a wealth of male-dominated world of top-level science. It is a mystery o witty letters and glorious songs. family instability and fledgling attraction, an exhilarating, fu “An absolute charmer suitable for the whole family.” and fulfilling tribute to the humanity that permeates our wo The Mercury News of equations, equivocations, and codes.* November 30 – December 23, 2016 “Rich andPalo compelling. Full of life, laughter, and hope.” Lucie Stern Theatre, Alto New York Daily News A MUSICAL SAGA OF IMMIGRANT AMERICA Rags Book by Joseph Stein Music by Charles Strouse Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz Directed by Robert Kelley America’s Greatest Unknown Musical Hope, good will, and fierce determination light the ragtag journey of Jewish immigrant Rebecca and her son from European persecution to new lives in the teeming, turnof-the-century tenements of New York in this exhilarating musical from the creators of Fiddler on the Roof and Wicked. A soaring, tuneful score highlights this sweeping saga of dreams and disillusion, love lost and inspiration found, of the heart and soul of the American character. “A winner, warm and witty. You are tempted to rise cheering.” The Mercury News April 5 – 30, 2017 Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts theatreworks.org BACKGROUND: FRANCIS JUE IN TOKYO FISH STORY / PHOTO KEVIN BERNE October 7 – November 1, 2015 Mountain V Center AN EXTRAORDINARY MUSICAL PLAY Hershey Felder, BEETHOVEN By Hershey Felder Music by Ludwig van Beethoven Directed by Joel Zwick Regional Premiere Following his triumph as Irving Berlin, the brilliant Hershey Felder now brings Ludwig van Beethoven to life through the eyes of a Viennese Doctor who as a boy spent Beethoven’s last years by the Maestro’s side. Featuring some of the composer’s greatest works, from the “Moonlight Sonata” to the “9th Symphony” and the “Emperor Concerto,” this intense, illuminating, and unforgettable journey through time will immerse you in the astounding life of the Maestro and his genius that transcended it all. “A hypnotic production...a chamber music piece of exquisite beauty.” Chicago Sun Times June 7 – July 2, 2017 Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts 650.463.1960 encore art sprograms.com 5 “First Republic shares our passion for innovation and world-class performance.” ANDREA MILLER Founder, Artistic Director and Choreographer, Gallim Dance 2014 Guggenheim Fellow (855) 886-4824 or visit www.firstrepublic.com New York Stock Exchange Symbol: FRC Member FDIC and Equal Housing Lender 6 THEATREWORKS From the Artistic Director NEW WORKS FOR A NEW NOW American politics have changed dramatically since Suzanne Bradbeer’s Confederates electrified our 14th New Works Festival last summer. The play focuses on both the ethics of the press and the lingering impact of racist symbolism throughout the country. When we decided to premiere this headline-hot play during both national political conventions, we wondered what America would be thinking at the time. Now we know: racial and cultural prejudice have become critical issues of the campaign, the press has become a political piñata, and inflammatory rhetoric has replaced civility as the national norm. And the nation seems more divided than ever before. Confederates explores the critical ways in which the media affects the political discussion, shaping the choices we make about our leaders and our future. It is a reality that Americans both relish and resent. Our press is free to speak but inherently not free of opinion, and we therefore pick our media to match our own vision of the country. Confederates suggests that the truth is inevitably altered by the prism of human interpretation. Today’s world is absorbed with symbols. We wear the colored caps of our sports teams and colored ties of our political parties; our leaders dare not appear without a flag pinned to their lapels; we’ve even begun to communicate via emojis. Until recently, some states displayed symbolically racist flags before their capitol buildings, a practice that only began to change when a mass murderer appeared online wrapped in just such a flag. Yet throughout the past year, sales of “rebel” flags have skyrocketed throughout the country. Confederates puts a human face on this world of symbols, acknowledging that in our current political landscape, what are negative symbols to some may be positive to others. We once celebrated the tumbling of the symbolic Berlin Wall; now many Americans champion the building of one of our own. Confederates is TheatreWorks’ 67th world premiere and marks the first phase of our 15th Annual New Works Festival. It is followed, from August 12 to 21, with the Festival itself, offering professional staged readings of five remarkable new plays and musicals. Some may be destined for our next season, as were Festival hits Confederates and tokyo fish story, the latter produced here last April. The excitement is palpable at TheatreWorks, where the memory of our first Festival in 2002 still lingers. It previewed the musical Memphis, subsequent winner of the Tony Award for Best Musical, and we hope that similar success awaits the thrilling new shows we’ll all soon share. Come discover these new works for yourself, and witness the future of American theatre. Robert Kelley Upcoming TWSV Events July, Aug, Sept 7/20, 7/27, 8/3 CONFEDERATES POST-SHOW DISCUSSIONS Question and Answer with the cast and staff following the performance 8/10 & 8/11 @ 7:30pm SUMMER STUDIO @ TW PRESENTATION Students grades 8–12 present The Feathers, their own wacky adaptation of Aristophanes’ The Birds. FREE Lucie Stern Theatre, Palo Alto 8/12–8/21 15TH ANNUAL NEW WORKS FESTIVAL Staged readings of 3 musicals and 2 plays as well as exciting extras, including keynote addresss by Pulitzer Prize finalist Rajiv Joseph and meet-the-artists panel Lucie Stern Theatre, Palo Alto See schedule on page 21 8/27 THE LIFE OF THE PARTY OPENING NIGHT Post-show reception with the cast and staff Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts 8/31, 9/7, 9/14 THE LIFE OF THE PARTY POST-SHOW DISCUSSIONS Question and answer with the cast and staff following the performance Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts encore art sprograms.com 7 From the Festival to Premiere on TheatreWorks’ Main Stage 2004 2004 Memphis My Ántonia James Monroe Iglehart & Cast Photo David Allen 2010 2013 Auctioning the Ainsleys Jessica Lynn Carroll Photo Tracy Martin Jessica Meyers & Ian Leonard Photo David Allen 2011 The North Pool Remi Sandri & Adam Poss Photo Tracy Martin Wild with Happy Sharon Washington & Colman Domingo Photo Mark Kitaoka 2013 2013 The Loudest Man on Earth Being Earnest Maureen McVerry Photo Mark Kitaoka 8 THEATREWORKS Julie Fitzpatrick, Adrian Blue, & Mia Tagano Photo Mark Kitaoka 2005 2004 2007 Baby Taj Striking 12 Valerie Vigoda Photo David Allen 2011 Sunita Param & Sam Younis Photo David Allen 2012 Upright Grand Emma TImothy Gulan & Lianne Marie Dobbs Photo David Allen 2012 Dan Hiatt & Renata Friedman Photo Mark Kitaoka Fly By Night Wheelhouse Wade McCollum Photo Mark Kitaoka Brendan Milburn, Gene Lewin, & Valerie Vigoda Photo Tracy Martin 2015 2014 The Great Pretender Triangle Ross Lekites & Zachary Prince Photo Kevin Berne 2016 tokyo fish story Francis Jue & James Seol Photo Kevin Berne Steve Brady & Sarah Moser Photo Kevin Berne encore art sprograms.com 9 On the Trail: The Cre e A Conversation with Playy TheatreWorks Silicon Valley: Has your background always been in playwriting? Suzanne Bradbeer: When I was growing up I fantasized that I was the reincarnation of Louisa May Alcott, but that’s about as close to being a writer as I could imagine myself. Both of my parents tell Playwright Suzanne Bradbeer a good story and so does my brother. My dad is great at long form humor—often a swashbuckling adventure from his childhood that will end in a belly laugh. My mother’s stories tend to focus on loss and redemption and will make your heart break. We didn’t go to plays much. I remember seeing Jesus Christ Superstar and, and…that’s about it. My mother had a few cast albums and years later I discovered that I had written on her copy of The King and I—in my sprawling five-year-old print—“Mommy, I love this record.” In high school I played sports (field hockey and lacrosse). I was also, which is more pertinent to this play, on the staff of the school newspaper and was editor my senior year. It wasn’t until my last year in college that I discovered theatre (by way of New Zealand, long story). I auditioned for the fall play, which was Mark Medoff’s When You Comin’ Back, Red Ryder? The exhilaration of working on that play with those folks changed my life. I eventually moved to New York and was a (not great) actor, but I was in a small do-it-yourself theatre company (we produced two shows a year, did the fundraising, swept floors, acted, ran the lights, etc) 10 THEATREWORKS and when we were offered a writing workshop, I jumped at the chance. And that was it—that was the missing piece of the puzzle for me. TWSV: Can you talk about the creation of Confederates? Where did the idea come from? SB: The idea for the play came from a few places. I had just spent two years researching and writing a play (The God Game) where a politician is asked to compromise one of his most cherished values in order to reach the bigger prize. Among the materials I read as research was the David Foster Wallace book, McCain’s Promise: Aboard the Straight Talk Express with John McCain and a Whole Bunch of Actual Reporters, Thinking About Hope. Rolling Stone has a tradition of hiring non-journalists to follow a presidential campaign and Mr. Wallace was their guy in 2000. Wallace happened to be in South Carolina during a critical week in McCain’s campaign and the resulting article (and later, book) is so beautifully composed—it’s one of my favorite pieces of writing, in any genre. That book eventually led me to the Alexandra Pelosi (journalist daughter of Nancy) documentary called Journeys with George, documenting George W. Bush’s rise through the primaries. Ms. Pelosi later covered the Democrats in the 2004 campaign and her book, Sneaking Into the Flying Circus, is an irresistible, yet depressing read. I am fascinated (and horrified) by the idea that one misstep could ruin your life: this is true if you’re in the public eye, of course (unless you’re Donald Trump?), but not just there. With the modern ea eation of Confederates y wright w Suzanne Bradbeer loss of privacy I think it is a risk that we all share, and you don’t have to have skeletons in your closet to be vulnerable. As Matt Bai asks in his recent book about the Gary Hart debacle, should we be defined by our worst moment? Very early in the writing the Confederate flag made its disturbing appearance. It was unplanned actually, although I wrote that scene while I was visiting my parents in Virginia. Once the flag materialized I knew it was going to be a vital part of the story. TWSV: How did being in TheatreWorks’ New Works Festival last summer benefit the script for Confederates? What has your experience been with the development of this piece? SB: I’ve been fortunate with the development support that I’ve had with Confederates. I started writing it in my Playwright/Director’s Workshop at the Actors Studio, working with the director and journalist Ellen Maguire. I was also able to work on the play through the Labyrinth Theater’s Summer Intensive and then Lisa Rothe and I did a workshop at The Lark, all in New York City. After that, the New Works Festival was just the opportunity I had been hoping for, and with Lisa and our big-hearted, smart cast I was able to focus on certain questions in a very targeted way. For example, I felt I could push the urgency for Will throughout the play, and I also wanted to apply more pressure in the climax. TWSV: You put these three characters into a tough situation together—is there one character you identify with the most? One you feel has the moral right-of way? Or are you as conflicted bout them as people were, watching the New Works Festival reading? SB: I am just as conflicted! TWSV: Although Maddie’s presidential candidate father is a pivotal person in the story of the play, he’s offstage the entire time. Did you ever think about including him as a character onstage? SB: I never thought about Maddie’s father as an onstage character but your question reminds me that in a lot of my plays there is at least one very strong offstage presence. The play started out as a 20 minute one-act, and was called Maddie and Will. When I decided to expand it to a full-length, I knew there would be at least one more character. At first I tried adding Will’s mother, but I stopped after a couple of scenes because it brought Will out of the crucible of the campaign trail, and that felt wrong. Eventually I landed on having a second reporter, senior to Will—Stephanie—and at that point I knew I had found the people of this play. I love working on plays with three characters; it lends itself to such interesting, even primal dynamics. TWSV: Is there anything else you’d like the audience to know? SB: I am just so grateful to premiere this play here with this cast, with Lisa as director, and with the support of [New Works Director] Giovanna, [Casting and Associate Artistic Director] Leslie, [Artistic Director] Kelley, and everyone at TheatreWorks. I received so much great energy from the community last summer, and I left so inspired. To come back for this next and most important step in the play’s journey is an extraordinary gift. encore art sprograms.com 11 A Director’s Notes by Lisa Rothe few years ago, I directed a reading of Suzanne Bradbeer’s play The God Game, at Hudson Theatre in upstate New York. This smart and provocative play is about a Senator who is tapped to serve as the running mate for a conservative Presidential candidate, and as a popular, moderate politician, it is clear that he would add balance and appeal to the ticket. However, there is just one problem: he needs to sound a bit more Christian and unfortunately, the Senator is agnostic. It’s a troubling conversation about the private dilemmas that drive the public side of politics. Suzanne has done it again with Confederates, but this time around, the story revolves around the Senator's daughter. In The God Game, Maddie was an offstage character, but in this play, she is a central figure with quite a dilemma on her hands. Over the last few years, I have spent time with Suzanne while facilitating a writer’s retreat in Vermont, where she has been a playwright in residence. When she approached me about working on Confederates as part of the Lark Studio Retreat series in 2014, I was thrilled. I was captivated by Suzanne’s passion for political journalism, and followed her recommendation to check out David Foster Wallace's book, McCain's Promise, a compelling read dealing with questions of ethics and authenticity on the campaign trail. Presidential elections today are more akin to theatre, if not reality television. Confederates addresses these ethical conundrums and more. At the center of the play is the Confederate flag, a symbol of our vexed racial history, the repercussions of which still persist today. It’s convenient to use the flag to scapegoat the south for what is clearly a national rather than regional scourge. Ultimately, the Confederate flag represents the original sin of the United States. Witness the shootings in South Carolina that inspired that state to finally outlaw the Confederate flag on state property, though it is still flown proudly—if such an adverb really captures the motive behind the impulse—on private property. Witness the school district in Cleveland, Mississippi, that is finally getting around to desegregating its schools, 123 years after the Emancipation Proclamation was signed into law and 62 years since the U.S. Supreme Court declared segregation unconstitutional in Brown vs Board of Education. This play is both timely and prescient. When we presented the reading of Confederates during the New Works Festival last August, the shooting in South Carolina had just taken place a month prior. Since then, the discussion over the Confederate flag’s place in the country has increased. Just this past June, the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant Christian denomination in the U.S. with 15.8 million members, adopted a resolution that said the flag was an emblem of slavery, and called members to discontinue its display. During the run of Confederates, we will follow both the Democratic and Republican National Conventions and there will be an abundance of sensational news coverage. Needless to say, this election season reminds us of what is at stake. 12 THEATREWORKS TheatreWorks S I L I C O N V A L L E Y presents the WORLD PREMIERE of CONFEDERATES By Suzanne Bradbeer D Directed by Scenic Designer S Costume Designer C LLighting Designer Sound Designer S Casting Director C New York Casting Director N Stage Manager S L Lisa Rothe Andrew Boyce A Noah Marin N Pamila Z. Gray P Brendan Aanes Leslie Martinson L Alan Filderman A Randall K. Lum* R *Member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. Confederates was developed at TheatreWorks Silicon Valley as part of their New Works Festival. Confederates was also developed at The Lark, the Labyrinth Theater Company’s Summer Intensive, the Actors Studio P/D Workshop, and the Dorset Theatre Festival / Theresa Rebeck Writer’s Colony. VISIONARY PRODUCERS TheatreWorks Board Emeritus PRODUCERS Elaine Baskin & Ken Krechmer Julie Kaufman & Doug Klein Bart & Nancy Westcott Garden Court Hotel • SEASON SPONSORS J. Lohr Vineyards & Wines • Sobrato Philanthropies SEASON MEDIA SPONSOR The Mercury News CONFEDERATES plays July 13–August 7, 2016 encore art sprograms.com 13 Questions for the Car Ride Home... What would you do with the central conflict of the play? Do you think there’s a right answer to Will’s question? With which character did you most sympathize? Confederates tackles the intersection of media and politics. In today’s world— especially in this lead up to the presidential election this fall—what do you think is the media’s responsibility when it comes to politics? Tasha Lawrence, Jessica Lynn Carroll, & RIchard Prioleau / Photo Kevin Berne What have you noticed about the portrayal of politics over the last year in the media? Have you noticed inconsistencies? We say children shouldn’t have to pay for the sins of their parents. Do you think parents, especially those in the public eye, should be held accountable for mistakes made by their children? Should Maddie’s father have to answer for the secret Will uncovers? What do you think happens after the final scene of the play? What do you think is left for these characters? 14 THEATREWORKS THE CAST In order of appearance Stephanie Tasha Lawrence Will Richard Prioleau Maddie Jessica Lynn Carroll The actors and Stage Manager employed in this production are Members of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States TIME & PLACE Presidential primary season. Various. CONFEDERATES WILL BE PERFORMED WITHOUT INTERMISSION. SPECIAL THANKS Ellen Maguire; John Clinton Eisner, Suzy Fay, Lloyd Suh; Dina Janis; Andy Lucien, Florencia Lozano, Emily Kratter. Tim Weiner, Steve Wink. Thank you Padraic Lillis, Neil Tyrone Pritchard, Paola Lazaro-Munoz; Amy Wagner and Abrams Artists; Brandon Gill, Charlotte Graham, Carol Halstead, Jeremy Tardy, Will Harper; Chris Campbell. Bart and Nancy Westcott. Giovanna, Kelley, Leslie and all the lovely folks at TheatreWorks. Lisa Rothe and our dreamy cast: Jessica, Richard, and Tasha. Also! Randall and Becca and our swell design team. And finally, the Playwrights Unit at The Ensemble Studio Theatre. Who’s Who JESSICA LYNN CARROLL (Maddie) is delighted to return to TheatreWorks, having previously appeared in Auctioning the Ainsleys and multiple New Works Festivals. She most recently performed at Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park in The Revolutionists as Marie Antoinette; other regional credits include I and You and Bellwether at Marin Theatre Company, Jesus in India at Magic Theatre, and The Big Meal at San Jose Repertory Theatre. Additionally in the Bay Area, she has been seen at Crowded Fire Theater (Truck Stop), Center REPertory Company (BoeingBoeing), and Encore Theatre Company (Hookman), where she is also an associate artist. Ms. Carroll earned her BFA in acting from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. TASHA LAWRENCE (Stephanie) has been seen on Broadway in Good People (Manhattan Theatre Club), Wilder Wilder Wilder (Circle in the Square, Willow Cabin), and the National Tour of Proof. Off-Broadway credits include Lost Girls (MCC Theatre); The Few (Rattlestick Playwrights Theatre); The Whale (Playwrights Horizons— Drama Desk Nom.); Asheville, and Bhutan (Cherry Lane Theatre). Regional credits include A Great Wilderness (Williamstown Theatre Festival); The Roommate (Actors Theatre of Louisville Humana Festival); Bad Dates, Human Error (City Theatre Company); Les Liaisons Dangereuses (Huntington Theatre Company); and Clover Road (Contemporary American Theatre Festival). Film: Romance and Cigarettes (dir. John Turturro), Hangnail (Slamdance), Pooka, and Irma and Floyd. TV: Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Law and Order (Classic, SVU, Criminal Intent), Third Watch (recurring), Deadline, Kevin Hill, Royal Pains, Life with Boys, and The Line (ACTRA, Gemini Nominations: Best Actress). RICHARD PRIOLEAU (Will) was last seen at TheatreWorks in Wild with Happy (Terry). Off-Broadway credits include A Persistent Memory with Beckett Theatre/Theatre Row, and Tom in The Glass Menagerie with Masterworks Theater Company. His regional credits include Actors Theater of Louisville, The Repertory Williams Project, Clarence Brown Theatre, American Conservatory Theater, and Arkansas Repertory Theatre. NYC credits include Access Theater, The Gallery Players, La MaMa ETC, and New Ohio Theatre. Film and TV: Madam Secretary, HBO’s The Normal Heart, and 30 Rock. Mr. Prioleau earned his BA from Fordham University at Lincoln Center, and his MFA from American Conservatory Theater. SUZANNE BRADBEER (Playwright) has written Naked Influence (Capital Repertory Theatre); The God Game (Gulfshore Playhouse/Capital Repertory Theatre, Hudson Stage, etc); Full Bloom (Barrington Stage, Vital Theatre Company, etc.); and Bethlehem, PA (City Theatre of Miami). She has received grants from the New York Foundation for the Arts, the Berrilla Kerr Foundation, the Anna Sosenko Trust, and the BMI Foundation’s Harrington Award for Creative Excellence. She has twice been a Kilroy’s Honorable Mention, and was a winner of the Ashland New Plays Festival. Her work has been developed at The New Harmony Project, PlayPenn, the LAByrinth Theatre Company’s Summer Intensive, the Alabama Shakespeare Festival’s Southern Writers’ Project, the Dorset Theatre Festival, and as a Fellow in the Lark Theater Playwright’s Workshop. Ms. Bradbeer is a member of the Ensemble Studio Theatre and the Dramatists Guild. LISA ROTHE (Director) directed the 2015 New Works Festival reading of Confederates. Recent productions include Ropes at Two River Theater; Dear Elizabeth and The Harassment of Iris Malloy at People’s Light; and Science Fair at HERE Arts Center. She was nominated for SDC’s Joe A. Callaway Award for Direction for Hold These Truths (this fall at the Guthrie Theater), and has developed plays with New York Theatre Workshop, Epic Theatre Ensemble, Women’s Project Theater, Primary Stages, Ensemble Studio Theatre, and The New Harmony Project. She has directed at NYU's Graduate encore art sprograms.com 15 Who’s Who Acting Program, Yale School of Drama, and The Juilliard School. Ms. Rothe is the co-President of the League of Professional Theatre Women, and for over five years was the Director of Global Exchange at the Lark Play Development Center. She received her MFA in Acting from NYU. BRENDAN AANES (Sound Design) has designed sound for a variety of performances, most recently for TheatreWorks’ The Velocity Of Autumn, Triangle (TBA Award for Outstanding Sound Design), The Country House, and The Lake Effect. Elsewhere, he has designed The Unfortunates (American Conservatory Theater); Fire In Dreamland (Kansas City Repertory Theatre); The Way West (Marin Theatre Company); Rapture Blister Burn (Aurora Theatre Company); Truck Stop and The Hundred Flowers Project (Crowded Fire Theater); Mutt: Let’s All Talk About Race! (Impact Theatre); Abigail’s Party, Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson, and The Aliens (San Francisco Playhouse). ANDREW BOYCE (Scenic Design) designed TheatreWorks’ The Velocity of Autumn and Now Circa Then. He is a Chicago and NYCbased designer working in theatre, opera, and film/TV. He has credits with Lincoln Center Theater, Roundabout Theatre Company, Atlantic Theater Company, Primary Stages, Rattlestick Playwrights Theater, The Play Company, Playwrights Realm, Cherry Lane Theatre, and more. Regional credits include American Conservatory Theater, Actors Theatre of Louisville, 16 THEATREWORKS Alliance Theatre, Asolo Repertory Theatre, California Shakespeare Theater, Curtis Opera Theater, Dallas Theater Center, Geffen Playhouse, George Street Playhouse, Goodman Theatre, Kirk Douglas Theatre, Long Wharf Theatre, Magic Theater, Mark Taper Forum, Milwaukee Repertory Theater, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Portland Center Stage, Syracuse Stage, and Yale Repertory Theatre. Mr. Boyce is a member of Wingspace Theatrical Design, a graduate of The Yale School of Drama, and an Assistant Professor in the Northwestern University Theater Department. andrewboycedesign.com PAMILA Z. GRAY (Lighting Designer) designed TheatreWorks’ Cyrano, Once on This Island, Sense and Sensibility, The Light in the Piazza, Tinyard Hill, Baby Taj, My Ántonia, Kept, and A Civil War Christmas. Her work on Bingo! The Musical was seen in Chicago, Ft. Lauderdale, and the Bay Area’s Center REPertory Company. Her designs have also been seen in Los Angeles, Portland, Sacramento, Houston, Dallas, and Washington, DC. She has won seven Bay Area Theatre Critics Circle Awards including her TheatreWorks designs for Grey Gardens, Floyd Collins, Cabaret, and Almost September, which also garnered a Bay Area Drama-Logue Award. She has won four Dean Goodman Awards, including both Ragtime and The Cripple of Inishmaan, at TheatreWorks. Ms. Gray is a graduate of Northwestern University. RANDALL K. LUM (Stage Manager) has stage managed TheatreWorks’ The Velocity of Autumn, Jane Austen’s EMMA, The Country House, Fallen Angels, The Lake Effect, Peter and the Starcatcher, Water by the Spoonful, Marry Me a Little, Once on This Island, Little Women, Time Stands Still, and Other Desert Cities. Other credits include five years at Oregon Shakespeare Festival (Equivocation; American Night: The Ballad of San Juan José; Dead Man’s Cell Phone; Ruined; The Unfortunates), Denver Center Theatre Company, La Jolla Playhouse, Center Theatre Group, The Old Globe, American Conservatory Theater, Berkeley Repertory Theatre, California Shakespeare Theatre, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Laguna Playhouse, Pasadena Playhouse, and 18 seasons and over 90 productions as Resident Stage Manager at South Coast Repertory (Wit, Intimate Apparel, Three Days of Rain, Blue Door, The Further Adventures of Hedda Gabler, Kimberly Akimbo). NOAH MARIN (Costume Designer) is TheatreWorks’ Assistant Costume Designer, and designed costumes for Proof, 2 Pianos 4 Hands, and Warrior Class. He has assisted on many TheatreWorks productions, including Wheelhouse, Of Mice and Men, Now Circa Then, The Pitmen Painters, The Secret Garden, Clementine in the Lower 9, and Sense and Sensibility. He also assisted on Broadway productions of Ragtime and Blithe Spirit. Other assistant design credits include Westport Country Playhouse (She Loves Me), Berkeley Repertory Theatre (Three Sisters), California Who’s Who Shakespeare Theater (Titus Andronicus), Marin Theatre Company (Seagull), and Magic Theatre (Why We Have a Body). His film credits include Disney’s The Sorcerer’s Apprentice. He earned his MFA from Brandeis in Boston and BFA from San Francisco State, both in Costume Design. LESLIE MARTINSON (Casting Director) is TheatreWorks’ Associate Artistic Director and Casting Director. Her many TheatreWorks directing credits include Proof, the regional premieres of Water by the Spoonful and Time Stands Still, and the West Coast premieres of The Pitmen Painters and Superior Donuts. A graduate of Occidental College, she has been a Watson Fellow in political theatre, a member of Lincoln Center Director’s Lab, a member of the La MaMa International Directing Symposium, and has served on Theatre Bay Area’s Theatre Services Committee since 2002. She was awarded an Individual Artist Fellowship in Stage Direction from the Arts Council of Silicon Valley for artistic achievement and community impact. She leads master classes and audition workshops throughout the Bay Area, and is a Performance Coach in leadership communication training with Stand and Deliver Group. Paine Knickerbocker Award for lifetime achievement; BATCC Awards for Outstanding Direction for his productions of The Hound of Baskervilles; Into the Woods; Pacific Overtures; Rags; Sweeney Todd; Another Midsummer Night; Sunday in the Park with George; Jane Eyre; and Caroline, or Change; and Back Stage West Garland Awards for his direction of Side Show and Sunday in the Park with George. He recently directed Cyrano, Jane Austen’s EMMA, The Country House, Fallen Angels, Peter and the Starcatcher, Sweeney Todd, Marry Me a Little, The Hound of the Baskervilles, Once On This Island, and Little Women. PHIL SANTORA (Managing Director) joined TheatreWorks in 2007. He has served as Managing Director of Northlight Theatre (Chicago) and Georgia Shakespeare Festival (Atlanta), as well as Development Director for Great Lakes Theatre Festival (Cleveland) and George Street Playhouse (New Brunswick). He holds an MFA in Theatre Administration from the Yale School of Drama and a BA in Drama from Duke University. He is Vice President of the National Alliance for Musical Theatre Board. Prior board service includes the League of Chicago Theatres, Atlanta Coalition of Theatres, and the executive committee of the League of Resident Theatres (LORT). He was named 2000’s Best Arts Administrator by Atlanta Magazine and received the Atlanta Arts and Business Council’s 1998 ABBY Award for Arts Administrator. GLEIM ROBERT KELLEY (Artistic Director) is a Bay Area native and Stanford University graduate. He founded TheatreWorks in 1970 and has directed over 165 TheatreWorks productions, including many world and regional premieres. He has received the Silicon Valley Arts Council’s Legacy Laureate Award; the Bay Area Theatre Critics Circle encore art sprograms.com 17 TheatreWorks S I L I C O N THE DRAMA OF A NEW CENTURY Archduke By Rajiv Joseph Directed by Giovanna Sardelli V A L L E Y 15TH Rajiv Joseph Rajiv Joseph is the author of the Broadway play Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo, a 2010 Pulitzer Prize finalist for Drama. Other plays include Guards at the Taj (recipient of the 2016 OBIE and Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Play), The North Pool (TW 2011), Gruesome Playground Injuries, Animals Out of Paper, and The Lake Effect (TW 2015). A N N U A L NEW Giovanna Sardelli (Director) is the Director of New Works for TW and has directed 12 productions of Rajiv Joseph’s plays, including TW’s World Premieres of The North Pool (2011) and The Lake Effect (2015). 8/16 @ 8pm • 8/20 @ 12 noon WORKS FEST IVAL OF LOVE AND LUST I Enter the Valley By Dipika Guha Directed by Kirsten Brandt Dipika Guha Kirsten Brandt recently directed tokyo fish story for TW. She is an award-winning director and playwright with many regional credits including Arizona Theatre Company, San Jose Repertory, Marin Theatre Company, The Old Globe, San Diego Repertory, La Jolla Playhouse. Lucie Stern Theatre, Palo Alto See all five readings and the Artists Panel for one low price with a FESTIVAL PASS: Subscribers $49 Non-Subscribers $65 Single tickets for readings $19 each Single tickets for Panel / Extras $10 each theatreworks.org 650.463.1960 8/19 @ 7pm • 8/21 @ 3pm SPECIAL EXTRA Rajiv Joseph Keynote Address “The Black Cat That Isn’t There” Rajiv Joseph is the author of the Broadway play Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo (2010 Pulitzer Prize finalist for Drama). His other plays include Guards at the Taj (recipient of the 2016 OBIE and Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Play), The North Pool (TW 2011), Gruesome Playground Injuries, Animals Out of Paper, and The Lake Effect (TW 2015). Rajiv has written for television and film and is the librettist for the opera Shalimar the Clown, adapted from the novel of the same name by Salman Rushdie. He served for three years in the Peace Corps in Senegal and now lives in Brooklyn, NY. 8/12 @ 8pm 18 THEATREWORKS Augusto has loved, must love. Now in the twilight of life, the famous poet gathers lovers like birds, each with gifts to give, memories to take, dreams to share. But who will remain when summer ends? Inspired by the life of Pablo Neruda. Dipika Guha had two Bay Area premieres this spring: Mechanics of Love at Crowded Fire and The Rules at SF Playhouse. The Art of Gaman was developed by Ground Floor at Berkeley Rep. She is currently under commission from Oregon Shakespeare Festival, South Coast Rep, and Playwrights Horizons Theatre School. MFA: Yale School of Drama under Paula Vogel. August 12–21 Our Festival, a nationally-acclaimed incubator for new works, includes “script-in-hand” debuts of five new musicals and plays, Meet the Festival Artists Panel, and Special Extras. Can one man, one moment, define a century? Pulitzer Prize finalist Rajiv Joseph explores the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo, 1914—the flash that lit the fuse of World War I. A HAUNTING MUSICAL THRILLER Something Wicked This Way Comes Based on the novel by Ray Bradbury Music & Lyrics by Neil Bartram / Book by Brian Hill Directed by Brian Hill Neil Bartram Brian Hill 1938. A tiny town. A mysterious carnival. A time-traveling carousel. Freaks and fireworks, lingering memories. And two boys bent on escaping the midway of life to find adventure, and themselves. Look there! In the dark— a tuneful, tantalizing musical parable for all ages and all time. Neil Bartram (Music & Lyrics) BROADWAY: The Story of My Life (four Drama Desk Award nominations). REGIONAL: The Adventures of Pinocchio, The Story of My Life, The Theory of Relativity, You Are Here, Senza Luce, Bedknobs & Broomsticks. CAST ALBUMS: The Story of My Life, The Theory of Relativity (PS Classics). Brian Hill (Book/Director) BROADWAY: The Story of My Life (four Drama Desk Award nominations), The Little Mermaid (Associate Director), The Lion King (Resident Director). REGIONAL: Brigadoon (revised book), The Adventures of Pinocchio,The Story of My Life, The Theory of Relativity, You Are Here, Senza Luce, Bedknobs & Broomsticks. 8/13 @ 8pm • 8/17 @ 8pm • 8/20 @ 4pm Dan Moses & Kate Kilbane AN INNOVATIVE NEW MUSICAL Eddie the Marvelous: Who Will Save the World Book, Music, & Lyrics by Kate Kilbane & Dan Moses Directed by Becca Wolff Eddie the Marvelous fronts a band, struts the stage, saves the world. Eddie the Real can’t leave the house, can’t hold a job, can’t keep a friend. His mom makes every sacrifice, but when she finds a new man neither Eddie knows what to say or what to sing. The Kilbanes, a theatrical rock band led by married songwriting duo Kate Kilbane and Dan Moses, are the authors of Weightless (won “Best of Fringe” at the SF Fringe Festival in 2012) and the medea cycle (2010). Eddie the Marvelous got its start at Berkeley Rep’s Ground Floor in 2014. Becca Wolff (Director) has directed and developed premieres by writers including Lauren Yee, Dan LeFranc, Krista Knight, Emma Donaghue, Jon Caren, Dorothy Fortenberry, and Bess Wohl. She co-founded Tilted Field. MFA (Directing): Yale. 8/19 @ 9:30pm • 8/21 @ 7pm FROM THE FUNNY PAGE TO THE STAGE The Four Immigrants: An American Musical Manga Book, Music, & Lyrics by Min Kahng Based on Manga Yonin Shosei by Henry Yoshitaka Kiyama Translated as The Four Immigrants by Frederik L. Schodt Bad Kitty On Stage, and The Song of the Nightingale. He is a Resident Playwright with Playwrights Foundation and received the 2014 Titan Award for Playwrights. minkahng.com In a comic musical drawn from one of the first graphic novels ever created, four endearing Japanese immigrants discover turn-of-the-twentieth-century America as a world of both possibility and prejudice. Can they succeed with limited options in the land of opportunity? Leslie Martinson (Director) is TW’s Associate Artistic Director. Her TW directing credits include Proof, Water by the Spoonful, and Superior Donuts. She also works with Theatre Bay Area and Stand & Deliver Group. Directed by Leslie Martinson Min Kahng Min Kahng is a Bay Area playwright and composer whose recent works include Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, 8/14 @ 7:30pm • 8/18 @ 8pm • 8/20 @ 8pm Meet the Festival Artists SPECIAL EXTRA A NEWTONIAN MUSICAL Gravity Created by Joel Chapman, Weston Gaylord, Matt Herrero, Jessia Hoffman, and Ken Savage Directed by Ken Savage Modern day physicist Sophie travels back in time to 1666, meeting young Isaac Newton but upsetting the applecart of history in the process. An original comedy with a fresh, contemporary score, Gravity is a delightful tale of romance, feminism, and the art of science. Gravity co-creators Joel Chapman, Weston Gaylord, Matt Herrero, Jessia Hoffman, and Ken Savage are artists and friends from their time working together on The Festival’s featured playwrights and composers share their anecdotes and insights into creating brave new works for the American Theatre. Bring your questions and be a part of the conversation with writers who are shaping the theatre landscape of tomorrow. 8/21 @ 12 noon various musical projects at Stanford University. Since winning the Stanford Arts’ 72-Hour Musical competition in January 2015, they have developed their Newtonian musical with support from Stanford Arts, Z Space, and Encore Theatre Company. 8/14 @ 3pm Continued on next page encore art sprograms.com 19 TheatreWorks Silicon Valley Accessibility TheatreWorks strives to create an environment that is accessible for all members of our community. The following services are available to assist patrons with limited mobility, visual impairments, and hearing loss. WHEELCHAIR ACCESS Both the Mountain View Center for the Perfoming Arts and the Lucie Stern Theatre offer accessible parking, wheelchair ramps, and ADA with companion seating. AUDIO DESCRIBED PERFORMANCES Audio description is a verbal commentary that tells patrons who are visually impaired what is happening on the stage during the parts of the performance where there is no dialogue. Audio described performance dates: Confederates: Aug 5 @ 8pm, Aug 6 @ 8pm, Aug 7 @ 2pm The Life of the Party: Sep 16 @ 8pm, Sep 17 @ 8pm, Sep 18 @ 2pm Outside Mullingar: Oct 28 @ 8pm, Oct 29 @ 8pm, Oct 30 @ 2pm Daddy Long Legs: Dec 11 @ 2pm, Dec 17 @ 8pm, Dec 23 @ 8pm Crimes of the Heart: Feb 3 @ 8pm, Feb 4 @ 8pm, Feb 5 @ 2pm Calligraphy: Mar 31 @ 8pm, Apr 1 @ 8pm, Apr 2 @ 2pm Rags: Apr 28 @ 8pm, Apr 29 @ 8pm, Apr 30 @ 2pm Hershey Felder, BEETHOVEN: Jun 30 @ 8pm, Jul 1 @ 8pm, Jul 2 @ 2pm OPEN CAPTIONED PERFORMANCES NEW! Open captioning is a text display of words and sounds heard during an event, and is provided for patrons with hearing loss. The display is positioned in such a way that is open for anyone to see in a particular seating area. It is considered passive assistance, a service that is there to use or ignore. No one is labeled as needing the captioning with special equipment required at his or her seat. Caption seating is available for best viewing of the screen. Open captioned performance dates: Confederates: July 31 @ 2pm and 7pm, Aug 3 @ 2pm The Life of the Party: Sept 4 @ 2pm, Sept 11 @ 7pm, Sept 14 @ 2pm Outside Mullingar: Oct 23 @ 2pm and 7pm, Oct 26 @ 2pm 20 THEATREWORKS Daddy Long Legs: Dec 18 @ 2pm and 7pm, Dec 21 @ 2pm Crimes of the Heart: Jan 29 @ 2pm and 7pm, Feb 1 @ 2pm Calligraphy: Mar 26 @ 2pm and 7pm, Mar 29 @ 2pm Rags: Apr 23 @ 2pm and 7pm, Apr 26 @ 2pm Hershey Felder, BEETHOVEN: June 25 @ 2pm and 7pm, June 28 @ 2pm ASSISTIVE LISTENING DEVICES Both of our venues offer assistive listening devices in the lobby prior to performance. No advance reservations are required. Instruction pamphlets are available to provide you with helpful tips on how to best use your hearing aid or assistive listening device. They are available in the lobby, or download them from our website: theatreworks.org/about/accessibility SCRIPTS We have scripts of the play available to read prior to your performance. To request a script, email [email protected]. DO YOU HAVE TROUBLE HEARING? We have partnered with Pacific Hearing Service to help create the best possible audio experience for our communities. If you have questions or concerns about hearing loss, we encourage you to call their office at 650.249.4088 or visit their website today. pacifichearingservice.com. New Works Festival Schedule at a Glance encore art sprograms.com 21 A Celebration of the Songs of ANDREW LIPPA HHHHH The Telegraph, London Aug 24 – Sept 18 Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts theatreworks.org 650.463.1960 22 THEATREWORKS Coming Next at TheatreWorks Silicon Valley THE LIFE OF THE PARTY Conceived by David Babani & Andrew Lippa Music & Lyrics by Andrew Lippa “It’s a really satisfying Directed by David Babani to play—they love it. AMERICAN PREMIERE Reprising its hit run in London, this spectacular musical evening stars renowned Tony Award®-nominated composer Andrew Lippa and friends in a sexy, tantalizing revue of hits from Broadway’s hilarious The Addams Family and tender Big Fish, his award-winning The Wild Party, poignant I Am Harvey Milk, and many more. Expect sensational surprises along the way in this laugh-filled evening of song and sophistication. Contains mature subject matter. Meet some of the cast members: ANDREW LIPPA’s work has been seen on and off-Broadway and around the world. His musicals include The Addams Family, The Wild Party, Big Fish, John & Jen, A Little Princess (TheatreWorks 2004 World Premiere), I Am Harvey Milk, and more. SALLY ANN TRIPLETT is making her TheatreWorks Silicon Valley debut. She has appeared on Broadway in Finding Neverland (Mrs. DuMaurier), The Last Ship (Peggy White), and Carrie (Sue Snell), and in fifteen West End/UK Tours. TEAL WICKS is making her TheatreWorks Silicon Valley debut. She appeared on Broadway in Finding Neverland (Mary Barrie), Jekyll & Hyde (Emma Carew), and Wicked (Elphaba), as well as the National Tours of Jekyll & Hyde and Wicked. show for the performers And for the audience, it delights and entertains in act one, and then goes very dark and sexy, and then gets heartfelt, then goes all show-biz at the end. It really does have something for everybody.” David Babani Co-conceiver and Director The Life of the Party AMERICAN PREMIERE FUN FACTS The Life of the Party producer Menier Chocolate Factory also produced the revival of The Color Purple, directed by John Doyle. The production opened in London in 2013, and on Broadway in 2015, recently winning the 2016 Tony Award® for Best Revival of a Musical. Cynthia Erivo also took home a Tony® for Best Actress in a Musical for her portrayal of Celie. encore art sprograms.com 23 PARTYOFTHEDECADE THEATREWORKS SILICON VALLEY (Really, we’re not bragging!) SAVE THE DATE! Saturday, November 12, 2016 Palo Alto Hills Golf and Country Club 5:30 pm This November, journey back with TheatreWorks Silicon Valley as we celebrate our inaugural Party of the Decade. Each fall, we will pick a decade from the past 150 years to explore the fashion, trends and music of a bygone era. This gala evening will include sumptuous food, dancing, an action packed live auction, and a peek at the theatre of the time. The Party of the Decade promises to be the party of the year! Mark your calendars now! For more information contact Events Manager Jodi Corwin [email protected] 650.463.7112 24 THEATREWORKS It’s never too late to take a chance on love... Outside Mullingar By John Patrick Shanley REGIONAL PREMIERE Tony Award® Nominee, Best Play 2015 With a touch of blarney and a wealth of heart, the Oscar, Pulitzer, and Tony Award®-winning author of Moonstruck and Doubt conjures up a wry and wondrous romantic comedy with a dark Irish twist. Family feuds and rustic fences have kept two eccentric, lovelorn neighbors apart since childhood, but in this passionate, compassionate Broadway hit it’s never too late to take a chance on love. Meet the cast: STEVE BRADY starred in TW’s The Great Pretender (2014). He has appeared on Broadway in Inherit the Wind, toured nationally in The Exonerated, and toured the world with West Side Story. ROD BROGAN was seen in TW’s Other Desert Cities (2014). He has appeared on Broadway in Mauritius, in the National Tour of Doubt, and off-Broadway and at regional theatres around the country. LUCINDA HITCHCOCK CONE “Shanley’s finest work since Doubt.” The New York Times October 5 – 30 Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts theatreworks.org 650.463.1960 was most recently seen at TW in Big River (2012). She performed off-Broadway in Eyes on the Harem, and in the National Tour of Big River, as well as at regional theatres around the country. JESSICA WORTHAM is mak- ing her TW debut. She has performed off-Broadway in Green Girl and Bone Portraits, and won a Bay Area Theatre Critics Circle Award for her performance in San Jose Rep’s Black Pearl Sings. encore art sprograms.com 25 TheatreWorks Silicon Valley Contributors THE PRODUCER CIRCLE TheatreWorks Producers have made a gift of $10,000 or more. They are invited to exclusive events with visiting artists, and on special theatre trips. Producers may select a production to follow from “page to stage” by attending the design presentation, rehearsals, and opening nights. Producers also receive all Inner Circle benefits. Contact Hans Cárdenas at 650.463.7155 or [email protected] for more information. Visionary Producers ($50,000 and above) Ann S. Bowers Dr. & Mrs. W. M. Coughran, Jr. Anne & Larry Hambly The Dirk & Charlene Kabcenell Foundation Ray & Meredith Rothrock TheatreWorks Board Emeritus Executive Producers Morgan Family Foundation Cynthia Sears Rick Stern & Nancy Ginsburg Stern Janet Strauss & Jeff Hawkins Lynn Szekely-Goode & Dr. Richard Goode Mark & Teri Vershel Lisa Webster & Ted Semple Gayla Lorthridge Wood & Walt Wood ($25,000 to $49,999) Anonymous Bruce Cozadd Yogen & Peggy Dalal The John & Marcia Goldman Foundation William Green Judy Heyboer & Brian Shally Phil Kurjan & Noel Butler Michelle & Michael Kwatinetz Mendelsohn Family Fund Producers ($10,000 to $24,999) Marsha & Bill Adler Lois & Dr. Edward Anderson Paul Asente & Ron Jenks Elaine Baskin & Ken Krechmer Lucy Berlin & Glenn Trewitt Jayne Booker Bredt Family Fund at Truckee Tahoe Community Foundation 45 for 45Circle TheatreWorks 45 for 45 Circle members have made a multi-year pledge of $45,000 or more to honor Robert Kelley and TW’s 45th Anniversary. Contact Hans Cárdenas at 650.463.7155 or [email protected] for more information. Elaine Baskin & Ken Krechmer Ann S. Bowers Suzanne Martin & John Doyle Gayle & Steve Brugler Mendelsohn Family Fund Bruce Cozadd Rebecca & James Morgan Gordon & Carolyn Davidson Cynthia Sears Sylvia & Ron Gerst Barbara Shapiro & Anne & Larry Hambly Judy Heyboer & Brian Shally Julie Kaufman Mark Lewis Rick Stern & Nancy Ginsburg Stern Tom & Sharon Kelley Mark & Teri Vershel Phil Kurjan & Noel Butler Lisa Webster Michelle & Michael Kwatinetz Watkins Family Charitable Dorothy Lazier Trust Mark & Debra Leslie Carol Watts Carole & Michael Marks Janne & Bill Wissel 26 THEATREWORKS Steve & Gayle Brugler Steven & Karin Chase George & Susan Crow Gordon & Carolyn Davidson John & Susan Diekman Susan Fairbrook Dan & Catharine Garber Sylvia & Ron Gerst William J. Higgs Larry Horton & George Wilson Lisa & Marc Jones Mike & Martha Kahn Julie Kaufman & Doug Klein Robert Kelley & Ev Shiro Tom & Sharon Kelley Robin & Don Kennedy Dick & Cathy Lampman Dorothy Lazier Mark & Debra Leslie Mark Lewis & Barbara Shapiro Marks Family Foundation The Marmor Foundation/ Drs. Michael & Jane Marmor Suzanne Martin & John Doyle Gillian & Tom Moran Leslie & Douglas Murphy-Chutorian Yvonne & Mike Nevens Adam Samuels Philip Santora & Cristian Asher Dorothy Saxe Loren & Shelley Saxe Martha Seaver & Scott Walecka Leonard Shustek & Donna Dubinsky Larry & Barbara Sonsini Debra Summers & John Baker Watkins Family Charitable Fund Carol Watts Harriet & Frank Weiss Nancy & Bart Westcott Jane Weston & J. Horn Bill & Janne Wissel THE INNER CIRCLE Members of The Inner Circle contribute a minimum of $1,500 each season and enjoy a variety of benefits including priority subscription seating, VIP ticket purchases and exchanges, access to house seats on Broadway, and invitations to Meet-the-Artists events. Contact Hans Cárdenas at 650.463.7155 or [email protected] for more information. Associate Producers ($6,000 to $9,999) Anonymous David & Ann Crockett David E. Gold & Irene Blumenkranz Linda M. Hinton & Vince Foecke Edward Hunter & Michelle Garcia Sue & Dick Levy Rob & Ann Marangell Richard Niblock Bill & Janet Nicholls Joe, Nancy, Sam & Sara Ragey Directors ($3,000 to $5,999) Anonymous (2) Carol Bacchetti Paul & Debbie Baker Joel & Wendy Bartlett Jim Bassett & Lily Hurlimann Anne & Buz Battle Katherine Bazak & John Dohner The BelleJAR Foundation Steven & Michele Boal Marah & Gene Brehaut Bruce & Gail Chizen Dean & Wilma Chu Diane & Howard Crittenden Randy Curry & Kay Simon John & Wynne Dobyns Richard & Josephine Ferrie Gayle Flanagan Lynda & Steve Fox Peter & Rose Friedland Terry & Carolyn Gannon in honor of Robert Kelley Peter & Laura Haas Emeri & Brad Handler Jerre & Nancy Hitz D & J Hodgson Family Foundation Barbara Jones Claiborne S. Jones Chris Kenrick Hal & Iris Korol John & Catharine Kristian Bill & Terry Krivan Arlene & Jack Leslie Janet Littlefield & William Coggshall The Merrimac Fund Buff & Cindy Miller Myrna & Hy Mitchner, PhD Eileen Nelson & Hugh Franks Margo & Roy Ogus Tom Rindfleisch & Carli Scott Paul & Sheri Robbins Ron & Lila Schmidt Edward & Jane Seaman Bart Sears Ron & Ellen Shulman Joyce Reynolds Sinclair & Dr. Gerald M. Sinclair Lisa & Matthew Sonsini Susanne Stevens & Monte Mansir Anthony & Rosina Lo Sun* Catherine & Jeff Thermond Brent & Michèle Townshend Ted & Betty Ullman Holly Ward & Scott Spector Griff & Lynne Weber Mark & Sheila Wolfson Players ($1,500 to $2,999) Anonymous (4) Marc & Sophia Abramson Douglas & Loretta Allred Mary Ann Anthony & Ken Fowkes Peter Bacchetti in memory of Ray Bacchetti Lisa Backus & Anthony Montefusco Shirley Bailey Doug & Marie Barry Pat Bashaw & Gene Segre Jane Baxter & Steve Beck Mr. & Mrs. David W. Beach Betsy & George Bechtel Don & Deborah Bennett Stuart & Marcella Bernstein Dr. Barbara L. Bessey in memory of Dr. Kevin J. Gilmartin Caroline Beverstock Charlotte & David Biegelsen Wendell & Celeste Birkhofer Bob & Martha Bowden Lauren & David Boyle Michael & Leslie Braun Kathy Bridgman Ellen & Marc Brown Chet & Marcie Brown Christine B. Butcher+ Eric Butler MD & Suzanne Rocca-Butler Jeff & Deborah Byron Calvin & Jennifer Carr Ron & Sally Carter Josephine Chien & Stephen Johnson Nancy M. Cohen Jodi Corwin & Irv Duchovny in memory of Milt, Michael, & Jack Jeff & Amy Crowe Redwood Serenity Fund Richard & Anita Davis Scott & Edie DeVine Douglas Dexter Dennis & Cindy Dillon Carl & Meredith Ditmore Monica Donovan Pamela Dougherty Jack & Marcia Edelstein Sue & Jeff Epstein Frances Escherich Patrick Farris Sheldon Finkelstein & Beatriz V. Infante Kathleen Fitts Peggy Woodford Forbes & Harry Bremond Diane & Bob Frankle Barbara Franklin & Bernie Loth Francis Franklin Jodye & Jonny Friedman Jay & Joyce Friedrichs Markus Fromherz & Heike Schmitz Marilee Gardner Nancy & Charles Geschke Ciro & Eileen Giammona Kenneth & Susan Greathouse Renee & Mark Greenstein Nancy & Bill Grove Barbara Gunther Jim & Linda Hagan Kovin Hagan Elaine & Eric Hahn Russell & Debbie Hall Jane Hamlin & Steven Schow Susan Heller Helen Helson David & Noreen Henig Craig & Deborah Hoffman in memory of Susan Woods Anne & Emma Grace Holmes David Hornik & Pamela Miller-Hornik Susan M. Huch Perry A. Irvine & Linda Romley-Irvine Ken Jaffee Sudhanshu & Lori Jain Leigh & Roy Johnson Hilary Jones* Craig & Gina Jorasch Family Fund Jack Jorgenson Mr. & Mrs. Abdo Kadifa Thomas Kailath & Anu Maitra Louise Karr Ruth Ann & David Keefer Cynthia & Bert Keely Arthur Keller Woof Kurtzman & Liz Hertz Jim & Marilyn Lattin Marcia & Henry Lawson Linda Lester Donald & Rachel Levy Robert J. Lipshutz & Nancy Wong, MD Drs. John & Penny Loeb Tom & Sally Logothetti Malcolm MacNaughton Joe Margevicius Anne B. McCarthy Patricia McClung & Allen Morgan Kevin McCoy Gerald & Betty McIntyre Dave & Carolyn McLoughlin Rani Menon & Keith Amidon Shauna Mika & Rick Callison Sondra Murphy & Jeremy Platt Melinda Nasif & Michael Scruggs James Niemasik Lynn & Susan Orr Ellice & Jim Papp Richard Partridge David Pasta in memory of Gloria J.A. Guth Beth & Charlie Perrell Carrie Perzow & Von Leirer Carey & Josh Pickus John & Valerie Poggi Kathy & Gary Reback In memory of Pearl Reimer Karen & John Reis Eddie Reynolds & Ed Jones Edward & Verne Rice Orli & Zack Rinat Alicia Rojas & Howard Lyons Betsy Boardman Ross Rita & Robert Rove Robert & Suzanne Rubenstein Alan Russell & Fred Thiemann Ellen & Jerry Saliman Joseph & Sandy Santandrea Elizabeth & Mark Schar Lee & Kim Scheuer Charles G. Schulz & Claire E. Taylor Pamela & Rick Shames Jack & Dorothy Shannahan Sarah Shema & Neyssa Marina Marge & Jim Shively Ursula Shultz Carolyn & Rick Silberman Gerry Sipes Ellen & Ed Smith Pamela Smith Jim Stephens & Abraham Brown Mark Stevens & Mary Murphy The Sher-Right Fund Polly Taylor Jan Thomson & Roy Levin Helaina Titus Tzipor Ulman & Yigal Rubinstein Robert J. Van der Leest, MD Mimi & Jim Van Horne Thomas Vogelsang Margaret & Curt Weil Paul & Barbara Weiss Elissa Wellikson & Tim Shroyer Karen Carlson White Ken & Ruth Wilcox Bruce & Elinor Wilner Lynn Wilson & Howard Roberts Neil & Ann Wolff Bill & Sue Worthington Benefactors ($750 to $1,499) Anonymous • Sally Abel • Robert Block • Sharon & John Brauman • H. Hans Cardénas • Marni Brown & Gabe Garcia • Lee & Amy Christel • Robert A. Cook • Ursula & Paul Cooney • Anne Dauer • Mary David • Ronald & Marion Dickel • James J. Elacqua • Suzanne & Allan Epstein • Patrick Farris • Aaron & Julia Gershenberg • Mark Gorenberg • Sue & Bill Gould • Mary Ann & John Grilli • Laura Hale • Susan & Don Hanson • Tom & Mary Haverstock • Anna Henderson • Mitzi Henderson • In memory of Bridget Ross • Nancy Lee Jalonen • Laurie T. Jarrett • Dean & Patricia Johnson • Mary Louise Johnson • Carl Jukkola & Desmond Lee • Deborah Karlson • Professor & Mrs. David Kennedy • Bob & Edie Kirkwood • Michael & Ina Korek • Jim & Marilyn Lattin • Stephen & Nancy Levy • George & Ann Limbach • Robert & Paige Locke • Alexander & Anne Long • Richard & Charlene Maltzman in memory of Carol Adler • Anders & Juneko Martinson • Karen & Bob McCulloch • Nancy & Patrick McGaraghan • Sharon & Harris Meyers • Gus Meyner in memory of Miriam • William & Sue Miklos • Heidi & Jorge Ochoa • Bob Rodert & Bev Kiltz • Mary Rodgers in memory of David Rodgers • Nancy & Magnus Ryde • Jill Sagner & Steve Lipman • Emil J. & Barbara Sarpa • David & Harriet Schnur • Maria & Mitch Segal • Perry Segal • Sheri Sobrato • The Fred Terman & Nan Borreson Fund • Thomas Vogelsang • Arlene & Bruce S. White • Judith & Peter Wolken • Joel & Linda Zizmor Contributions listed were received between 6/6/2015 and 6/6/2016. Program deadlines and space limitations prevent us from listing all of our greatly appreciated patrons. For corrections, or to make a contribution, please contact Michelle Piasecki at 650.463.7132 or [email protected]. * Indicates donors whose gifts include in-kind goods or services. + Indicates members of the Encore Club, who make ongoing monthly or quarterly gifts. encore art sprograms.com 27 ALL PHOTOS BY TRACY MARTIN TheatreWorks’ Healing Project at Lucile Packard Is Expanding! Since 2003, TheatreWorks Silicon Valley has brought joy and laughter to the patients at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital. Throughout the school year, two gifted Teaching Artists visit the hospital and serve patients and their siblings in elementary, middle, and high school. Through improvisation at patients’ bedsides, creative drama workshops in the hospital classrooms and comprehensive care units, as well as monthly special family workshops, these artists shed a special light in patients’ lives. On any given Wednesday you might see our artists playing a wacky version of “American Idol” in the dialysis unit, four youngsters laughing uproariously as they disqualify each actor's attempt to master a certain singing style. Or you might witness fifteen high school students, some in various stages of chemotherapy, playing with the language of Shakespeare. You may even hear a couple of young siblings explaining why they were a superhero that day. Through the Children’s Healing Project, patients have the opportunity to forget their troubles and enjoy creative and imaginative exploration. New this summer, we are very excited to announce that TheatreWorks is expanding a portion of the Children’s Healing Project! TheatreWorks will now visit the Comprehensive Care Unit for Teens with Eating Disorders throughout the summer months, providing creative programming to these patients even when school is out. This program is located at El Camino Hospital in Mountain View and is part of Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital. For information on how hospitals and arts organizations can implement a similar program, please contact Amy Cole-Farrell, Director of Education, [email protected], 650.463.7134. 28 THEATREWORKS VISIONARY SPONSORS CORPORATE CIRCLE, FOUNDATION, & GOVERNMENT GIFTS Foundations and Corporate Circle members sponsor productions, support new works, and fund education programs for K–12 students. Sponsors may host events at the theatre, receive heightened community visibility, and enjoy other hospitality benefits. Contact Hans Cárdenas at 650.463.7155 or [email protected] for more information. Visionary Sponsors Sponsors Friends ($50,000 and above) ($10,000 to $14,999) ($1,000 to $2,499) The Garden Court Hotel* The William & Flora Hewlett Foundation J. Lohr Vineyards & Wines* The Mercury News* Microsoft Corporation The David & Lucile Packard Foundation The Shubert Foundation Sobrato Philanthropies* Adams Wine Group* The Leonard C. & Mildred F. Ferguson Foundation Harrell Remodeling Heising-Simons Foundation Hengehold Motor Company* Anonymous Applied Materials Excellence in the Arts Grants, a program of Silicon Valley Creates ChaseVP* The Dramatists Guild Fund International ProInsurance Services LLC Nikon Precision, Inc. Presenting Sponsor ($25,000 to $49,999) Avant! Foundation National Endowment for the Arts Sand Hill Foundation Stephen Silver Fine Jewelry* Supporting Sponsors PRESENTING SPONSORS ($15,000 to $24,999) Applied Materials Carla Befera Public Relations* Fenwick & West LLP The Kimball Foundation The Harold & Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust Benefactors ($5,000 to $9,999) Dodge & Cox Investment Managers Hurlbut-Johnson Charitable Trusts Palo Alto Weekly Holiday Fund Supporters ($2,500 to $4,999) Avidbank Cooley LLP* Los Altos Community Foundation S. H. Cowell Foundation The Morrison & Foerster Foundation Palo Alto Weekly* Perkins Coie LLP Synaptics Wells Fargo Matching Gifts Many companies will double or triple their employees’ contributions to nonprofits. It’s a great way to make your gift to TheatreWorks go further at no extra cost. Call 650.463.7155 for more information. * Indicates donors whose gifts include in-kind goods or services. ENDOWMENT FUND TheatreWorks Silicon Valley thanks the following lead donors for their extraordinarily generous Endowment gifts. SUPPORTING SPONSORS Marsha & Bill Adler • William C. Anderson • Ann S. Bowers • Polly & Tom Bredt • Bruce Cozadd & Sharon Hoffman • Peter & Melanie Cross • Yogen & Peggy Dalal • Carl H. Feldman • Kathryn Green • The John & Marcia Goldman Foundation • Emeri & Brad Handler • Hurlbut-Johnson Charitable Trusts • Charles & Roberta Katz Family Foundation • Patricia McClung & Allen Morgan • The Rathmann Family Foundation • Eddie Reynolds • John & Diane Savage • Joyce Reynolds Sinclair • Lynn Szekely-Goode & Dr. Richard Goode FUTUREWORKS FutureWorks members have made an estate gift from a will or living trust, a beneficiary designation in an IRA, a gift of life insurance, a gift that returns lifetime income, or another planned gift. Contact [email protected] for more information. SPONSORS Anonymous (6) • Marc Abramson • The Estate of William C. Anderson • Ray & Carol Bacchetti • Pauline Berkow & Ronald Kauffman • David & Lauren Berman • Jayne Booker • James & Diane Bordoni • Ann S. Bowers • Steve & Gayle Brugler • Carol Buchser • The estate of Cathryn Z. Cannon • Eleanor W. Caughlan • Steven & Karin Chase • Jodi Corwin & Irv Duchowny • Bruce Cozadd & Sharon Hoffman • George & Susan Crow • John & Linda Elman • Frances Escherich • Susan Fairbrook • Harriett Ferziger • Gayle Flanagan • Carole & David Florian • Peter & Rose Friedland • Terry & Carolyn Gannon • Ed Glazier • Marcia & John Goldman • Kathryn Green • Lorie Griswold • Maureen Hoberg • Anne & Emma Grace Holmes • Kenny Hom • Sam & Elaine Housten • Susan M. Huch • Edward Hunter & Michelle Garcia • John W. & Nancy Lee Jalone n • Barry Lee Johnson • Stanley Earl Johnson • Claiborne S. Jones • Mike & Martha Kahn • Dr. Steve Kelem • Robert Kelley & Ev Shiro • Bill & Terry Krivan • Phil Kurjan & Noel Butler • Woof Kurtzman • Mr. & Mrs. Robert Mangelsdorf • Steve Mannshardt • Monte Mansir • Suzanne Martin & John Doyle • Leigh Metzler & Jim McVey • Cynthia S. Miller • Tami & Craney Ogata • Karen & John Reis • Eddie Reynolds • Betsy Boardman Ross • Adam Samuels • Philip Santora & Cristian Asher • Dorothy Saxe • Loren & Shelley Saxe • Edward & Jane Seaman • Barbara Shapiro & Mark Lewis • Joyce Reynolds Sinclair • Gerry Sipes • Carol Snell & Mindy Rauch • Esther Sobel • Jim & Mary Southam • Cherrill M. Spencer • Rick Stern & Nancy Ginsburg Stern • Susanne Stevens • Mark Stevenson • Laurie Waldman • Carol Watts • Renee & Herm an Winick encore art sprograms.com 29 TheatreWorks SV Staff ARTISTIC Artistic Director Robert Kelley Managing Director Phil Santora Lighting & Sound Intern Andrew Robbin Associate Artistic Director Leslie Martinson SCENERY Director of New Works Giovanna Sardelli Technical Director Frank Sarmiento Company Manager/ Casting Associate Jeffrey Lo Lead Scenic Artist / Craftsman Tom Langguth FutureWorks Fellow Akemi Okamura Resident Musical Director William Liberatore New Works Reading Committee Bill Adler, Cristian Asher, Elaine Baskin, Doug Brook, Sue Krumbein, Shareen Merriam, Patty Reinhart, Cindi Sears, Amy Sundberg, Scott Walecka Artistic Engagement Apprentices Davis Banta, Kieran Beccia, Nina McMurtrie, Carolyn Murray Company Management Intern Benjamin Wong New Works Festival Intern Alexander Ronneburg Literary Interns Lillian Cole, Grace Hoffman, Cameron Wells PRODUCTION, LIGHTING, & SOUND Production Manager David A. Milligan Assistant Production Manager Elizar Ivanov Operations Manager/ Master Electrician Steven B. Mannshardt Master Carpenter Bill Roberts Associate Director of Individual Gifts H. Hans Cárdenas Director of Marketing Lorraine VanDeGraaf-Rodriguez Events Manager Jodi Corwin Development Operations Manager Michelle Piasecki Telefunding Associate Constance Gannon Development Apprentice Jake Hurwitz PROPERTIES Development Intern Cameron Wells Properties Master Christopher Fitzer EDUCATION Properties Stock Manager Alfred Rudolph Director of Education Amy Cole-Farrell Properties Intern Justine Law Associate Education Director Katie Bartholomew COSTUMES Master Teaching Artist Piper LaGrelius Costume Director Jill Bowers Assistant Costumer Noah Marin Lead Cutter/Draper Yen La Wong Costume Rentals Manager Conni Edwards Wardrobe Manager Sarah Hatton Assistant Cutter/First Hand Michelle Earney Stitchers Nhan Thi Luu, Son Pham Resident Wigmaster Sharon Ridge Production Coordinator Karen Szpaller Hair Stylist Jeanne Naritomi Electricians Justin Barnett, Rudy Chapman, Steven Fetter, Carolyn Foot, A.C. Hay, Cosmo Hom, Dan Kaminski, Sean Kramer, Nick Kumamoto, Kelly Jean Mack, Harris Meyers, Gary Nelson, Seth Tuthall, Alex Underwood, Jarku Virtanen, Jackson Wijtman Costume Construction Intern Alejandra Wahl 30 THEATREWORKS MARKETING Carpenters Esteban Calvillo, Andrew Clark, Rodrigo Frausto, Henry Ing Resident Lighting Designer Steven B. Mannshardt Load-in / Strike Volunteers Rick Amerson, Ed Hunter DEVELOPMENT Teaching Artists Jake Arky Brittany Caine Lauren Mayer Maggie Cole Jennifer Debevec Martin Rojas Dietrich Vicki Graff Meghan Hakes Mary Kalita Fredrika Keefer Josh Marx Jennifer Mitchell Michileen Oberst Kelly Rinehart Cassie Rosenbrock Elissa Stebbins Kristina Sutherland Amanda Wallace Maryssa Wanlass Education Intern Hanna Berggren Resident Stage Manager Randall K. Lum Associate Director of Marketing Syche Phillips Box Office Manager Alix Josefski Sales Manager Sarah Benjamin Digital Media Manager Jennifer Gosk Tessitura Specialist Andrew Skelton Marketing & Ticketing Supervisor Heather Orth Patron Services Coordinator Tracy Hayden Ticket Services Representatives Andree Beals, Laura Henricksen, Margaret Purdy, Michelle Skinner Graphics Assistant Katie Dai Public Relations & Advertising Carla Befera & Co. Carla Befera, Molly Kullman Company Photographers Kevin Berne Alessandra Mello ADMINISTRATIVE General Manager Scott DeVine Database Administrator Ken Maitz Bookkeeper Jason Hyde Staff Accountant Barbara Sloss Front Desk Volunteers Joan Doherty, Cindi Sears And thanks to our fabulous TheatreWorkers! Costume Rentals Interns Laini Katheiser, Sara Yates STAGE MANAGEMENT Art Director Ev Shiro CONFEDERATES ADDITIONAL STAFF Production Assistant Rebecca Sharpe Light Board Operator Justin Buchs Sound Board Operators Quinn Pierron, Dimitri Wentworth Show Carpenter Megan Hall Properties Runner Marissa Mendoza Deck Crew Briana Billups A MUSICAL ROMANCE FOR THE HOLIDAYS Daddy LongLegs Book by Music & Lyrics by Paul Gordon Based on the 1912 novel by Jean Webster Directed by Robert Kelley John Caird Reprising TheatreWorks’ Hit World Premiere! Nov 30 – Dec 23, 2016 Lucie Stern Theatre, Palo Alto theatreworks.org 650.463.1960 SINGLE TICKETS ON SALE JULY 20! TheatreWorks SV General Information CONTACT US GROUP SAVINGS LOST AND FOUND Mailing Address: PO Box 50458, Palo Alto, CA 94303-0458 Phone: 650.463.1950 Fax: 650.463.1963 E-mail: [email protected] Savings are available for groups of 8 or more. For more information, call Sarah Benjamin at 650.463.7177 or email [email protected]. For Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts lost and found, please call 650.903.6568. For Lucie Stern Theatre lost and found, please call 650.463.1960. TICKET SERVICES Tickets to all TheatreWorks Silicon Valley performances are sold through the TheatreWorks Silicon Valley Box Office Hours: Monday–Friday, 11am–6pm; Saturday-Sunday, 12pm-6pm Phone: 650.463.1960 Tickets may also be obtained through the Mountain View Center Ticket Office Hours: Wednesday–Saturday, noon–6pm Phone: 650.903.6000 WALK-UP TICKET SERVICES The walk-up ticket office will open one hour prior to each performance. PERFORMANCE TIMES Wed, Thur, Fri Previews 8pm Tuesday & Wednesday Eve 7:30pm Thursday–Saturday Eve 8:00pm Sunday Eve 7:00pm Wednesday, Saturday, & Sunday Matinee 2:00pm INDIVIDUAL TICKET PRICES Starting at $32 (balcony). Discounts available for Seniors, Educators, and Patrons 35 & Under. For pricing, call 650.463.1960 or visit theatreworks.org. WHEELCHAIR SEATING Seating is available for wheelchair patrons. Please telephone the Ticket Office in advance so that special arrangements may be made. LISTENING SYSTEMS Both theatres are equipped with listening systems for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. Please see the house manager for details. AUDIO-CAPTIONING Audio captioning for the visually impaired is available at certain performances. Please call 650.463.1960 for details. OPEN-CAPTIONED PERFORMANCES Open-captioned performances for Confederates: 7/31 at 2pm & 7pm, 8/3 at 2pm The Life of the Party: 9/4 at 2pm, 9/11 at 7pm, 9/14 at 2pm For more information about open captioning, please contact the box office at 650.463.1960 or [email protected]. PLEASE REMEMBER There is no smoking in the theatres or lobbies. Cameras and recording devices of any kind are strictly prohibited. Neither food nor drink is permitted in the theatres. Please ensure that all electronic devices are set to the “off“ position while you are in the theatre. Children 5 and under are not permitted in the theatre. Persons 14 and under must be accompanied by an adult. Every person, regardless of age, must have a ticket. Schedules, shows, casts, and ticket prices are subject to change. Single ticket purchases are non-refundable, but are exchangeable for $15 per ticket. Some restrictions apply. Visit theatreworks.org for detailed information or to purchase tickets. LATE ARRIVALS Latecomers will not be seated until appropriate intervals, and may not be seated in their exact seat locations until intermission. encore art sprograms.com 31