Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013
Transcription
Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013
Pittsburgh Public Theater’s education and outreach programs are generously supported by BNY Mellon Foundation of Southwestern Pennsylvania. Funding for Open Stage is provided by the Grable Foundation, the Buhl Foundation, and Mike & Steffie Bozic. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 1 Contents Characters………………………………………………….……………3 The Character of Bobby…………………………...…………………….5 Company and the Concept Musical……………………...……………….8 Further Thoughts on Company……………...…………………………11 Stephen Sondheim……………………………………….……..………13 Other Musicals by Stephen Sondheim……………………...………….15 A History of Musical Theater…………………………………………21 Meet the Director……………………………..……………………….25 Meet the Cast…………………………………..………………………26 Theater Etiquette………………………………………………....……34 Discussion Questions……………………………………………..……35 P.A. Academic Standards……………………………………………....37 References……………………………………………………………...40 Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 2 Characters Robert : The main character of the show, Robert is thirty-five years old and has never been married. Bobby has ten friends, who break down into being five married couples. Throughout the musical, Bobby tries to both validate and criticize his opinions of marriage as he visits his friends who are all experiencing different points of marriage (or divorce). Couple #1: Sarah and Harry: Sarah is unsuccessfully trying to diet as Harry is unsuccessfully trying to give up drinking. They argue about small, insignificant things with each other very often, but never get too heated and are still quite happy together. Couple #2: Susan and Peter: Now that they are getting divorced, Susan and Peter are happier with each other than they have ever been. Couple #3: Jenny and David: Jenny is straight-laced, but David is not, which causes some tension between the two of them in their marriage. Couple #4: Amy and Paul : Paul is extremely excited to be marrying Amy. Amy, on the other hand, is extremely anxious about her up-coming wedding. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 3 Couple #5: Joanne and Larry : Joanne is loud, assertive and opinionated. Larry is wild and confident. Larry is completely in love with Joanne, but Joanne remains cautious. From the 2010 New York Philharmonic Version of Company, seen here are Marta, April and Kathy (l-r) Bobby’s Three Love Interests: Marta : Wild and young, she relates to the excitement and energy of the city. Kathy : She wanted to marry Robert at one point, and he wanted to marry her as well, but their (continuing) lack of communication led to nothing ever coming of it. Kathy is now planning on leaving New York City to get married to someone else. April : A flight attendant who has the tendency to be a bit dim-witted. She is naïve and sweet. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 4 The Character of Bobby by June Abernathy, writer for Sondheim.com With the recent revivals of Company in NYC and now London, many old debates and a few new ones have surfaced regarding Bobby. Hal Prince has said that Bobby was, at least originally, a device used to link a series of vignettes about marriage. As originally directed, the whole evening is a "flashback" on the occasion of Bobby's 35th Birthday, and as such, happens in his head. Although we see everything through Bobby's point of view, or perhaps because we do, we don't get much opportunity to examine HIS feelings and motivations in detail. One reviewer (Mel Gussow of The New York Times) felt that Bobby's part was "intentionally underwritten" and therefore, "especially difficult to play". Sondheim has said that the whole score is "Brechtian" in nature - the songs standing outside the action and commenting, rather than being born within the scene from a character's intense emotion. This can make the show, (and Bobby) seem very cold and remote. Exactly what to do with Bobby was evidently as much a question with the creators as it has remained for fans. Perhaps the most telling evidence of this is the three separate numbers written for Bobby's final "anthem" - "Marry Me a Little", "Happily Ever After" and finally, "Being Alive". It is in that song, many contend, that Bobby finally becomes a character - finally establishes a point of view. Both Sondheim and Prince have said that "Being Alive" is not the end they wanted, but Prince knew that the show needed some kind of resolution at the end, and if the book wasn't going to provide it, then the Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 5 score would have to. Of course, in the recent revivals, "Marry Me a Little" has been reinserted, but at the end of Act I - to sort of define a halfway point for Bobby. What this also does is to make Bobby more of a three dimensional and realized character much earlier in the play. It almost forces an actor and director to weigh Bobby's character with more importance than in the original production. The actor who originates a role often has a great effect on what the character becomes, and it is interesting to note that the character was conceived with Tony Perkins in mind, developed with Dean Jones in the role, and refined with Larry Kert. Three quite different takes on the role, which can only add to the trouble everyone has in defining it. One of the central questions in an audience member's mind is "Why won't/can't Bobby commit?" Perhaps in the 90's the answer seems obvious, and he doesn't seem so unusual, but in the 70's, to be antimarriage and commitment implied that there was something "wrong" with you. Audiences and critics began inventing reasons - that Bobby was a closet homosexual was the most obvious. This would not work, of course, since such a pat reason for Bobby's doubts and fears would negate much of the message of the play. Sondheim and all of the original creators have repeatedly said that this isn't the case, but the rumor continues. Apparently, early drafts of the show had a Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 6 scene where Bobby mentions past liasons with men to Peter, who promptly propositions him, and is turned down. One can imagine that the scene was originally there to give Bobby the opportunity to examine, and remain unfulfilled by, ALL forms of romantic committment. One can also imagine several dozen reasons why the scenes may have been cut, but the least inflammatory and probably most true would be that to drop a bomb like that without examining it would be too distracting, and that examining it would pull the play off course. The new British production is said to be restoring this scene. We'll have to wait and see what comes of it. There has been a trend in the more recent revivals to humanize Bobby more, making the show more about him than about his friends. While this was not the original intention, it is certainly a valid choice, and one which allows for some fresh perspective on an old show. "And that's what it's all about, isn't it . . ." Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 7 Company and the Concept Musical By Thomas Hischak, for pbs.org "What is a "concept musical"? Difficult to define, and consequently even harder to trace historically, this form of stage musical has sometimes been described as any show that is bold and original in some aspect. A better definition might be any musical that puts as much importance on the unique manner of its presentation as on its content. Concept musicals tend to be less linear and more thematic than the usual fare, which suggests that the plays and musicals by Bertolt Brecht might be the source of the genre. Looking specifically at Broadway, many point to "Lady The cast of a 2011 Production of Company in the Dark" (1940) as the granddad of the concept musical. The show was highly expressionistic and took a psychological approach to characters; the plot was secondary in importance. "Allegro" (1947) was a less successful musical, but one that also used a bold method of telling a rather conventional story. "Love Life" (1948), another box-office disappointment, may be the best candidate for the first concept musical; it disregarded the traditional use of time, interrupted its action with jolting vaudeville numbers that commented on the story, and even tried to illustrate Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 8 sociological ideas by paralleling them to a long-term personal relationship. "Anyone Can Whistle" (1964) was so disarming in its presentation and "Hallelujah, Baby!" (1967) was so allencompassing in its scope that they have also been pointed out as fledging concept shows. The allegorical "Celebration" (1969) was similarly offbeat and unconventional; the fact that all three shows failed at the box office also indicates something conceptual about them. Wherever it may have come from, the concept musical truly arrived with Company (1970), which managed to be palatable to audiences even as it broke just about every rule of musical comedy. Company was expressionistic and psychological, it played around with time and place, and it was unabashedly contemporary. The show was successful in its own right, but more importantly, it opened doors for similarly adventurous musicals: "A Chorus Line" (1975), "Nine" (1982), "Assassins" (1990), "Tommy" (1993), "Seussical" (2000) "Movin' Out" (2002), "Spring Awakening" (2006), and others. Some of the techniques of the concept musical would work their way into even traditional, escapist Broadway musicals, such as "Barnum" (1980), "The Will Rogers Follies" (1991), "Jersey Boys" (2005), and "Tarzan" (2006). One never knows when the effects of the concept musical will pop up again; its unpredictability and tendency to surprise are among its strongest characteristics. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 9 Were George Furth, the author of the book for Company, and Stephen Sondheim, its composer-lyricist, aware that they were creating a concept musical? The show started as a series of short playlets about New Yorkers that Furth envisioned as a nonmusical piece. Producer-director Harold Prince saw them as a musical even though there was no through plotline. The character of Bobby was a unifying element thematically and was in most of the scenes, but there still was no traditional story. By the time the musical was finished, scenes overlapped in an expressionistic manner. Characters who had never met each other appeared on the stage at the same time. Past memories and regrets combined with the present and they all were part of the whole collage. Prince staged the musical unconventionally as well. The action took place on different levels and various locales sometimes merged on scenic designer Boris Aronson's sculpture-like setting that used steel, Plexiglas, and projections. Michael Bennett choreographed, and although there were few conventional dances as such, the whole show moved like a frantic urban ballet. Even the costumes were conceptual; each character wore only one defining costume throughout the performance: wedding dress for Amy, stewardess's uniform for April, and so on. But a concept musical is more than just a conceptual presentation. Sondheim (r) with George Furth (l), who wrote the book for Company Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 10 Further Thoughts on Company A Musical for City People by David Olivenbaum Roundabout Theatre Company Study Guide When Company was first produced, in 1970, it showed its audiences their own lives on stage in a way that musicals had never done. That doesn’t mean every previous musical fit the stereotype of silly Broadway fluff. Some—such as West Side Story, Carousel, or Fiddler on the Roof—were as moving or thought provoking as any good play. Besides, Company isn’t “serious” at all. It is funny, sarcastic, and full of the high energy we associate with musicals. But its nervous rhythms, and its rather nasty tone—especially its very unromantic view of marriage—gave it a modern, New York flavor at a time when many people thought musicals were old-fashioned and out of touch. It wasn’t a fantasy, or set in a distant time and place, or a romance raised to operatic heights. Instead, it depicted New Yorkers just like the audience sitting in the theatre—even if the reflection wasn’t too flattering. Of course, these people aren’t typical of everybody. For one thing, they all seem to live in expensive high-rises. But Stephen Sondheim and George Furth depict characters who—like anyone—get into arguments, or are jealous of their husband or wife, or say one thing when they mean another. And they try hard to be hip. They’re terrified of not being sophisticated or cool enough. In Company, this feeling—the pressure to be in on the latest thing, even if you’re not really comfortable with it—is seen as part of the insistent pace of New York. Characters in a musical had never sung this way before. Sondheim conveys the sense of being a little off balance not just in the urgent Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 11 pulse of his music, but also in his sometimes unbelievable rhymes. And the characters often express their confused feelings in big, brassy musical numbers—the way someone who’s trying to convince you of something can be too wound up, too “on”. That’s why some songs in Company seem like numbers we might see in another type of musical. But these aren’t lighthearted singers and dancers performing them—these are mixed-up people who act out their problems musical comedy style. And that gives the songs an anxious quality, as if the characters are straining to measure up to what they’re singing about. At the time that Company was first produced, society seemed to be changing faster than some people could handle. Even a few years earlier, many issues that these characters contend with—smoking pot, or having a lot of sex before marriage, or being afraid to commit themselves to marriage at all—hadn’t been talked about openly. Now, marriages were falling apart more than ever before; some women asserted their independence from their husbands for the first time. People sometimes felt liberated, sometimes just confused. That’s the background that Company is set against, and it’s the source of its slightly hysterical tone. Traditionally, people thought of musical comedy’s high energy as the expression of an optimistic, wholesome attitude—a cliché of what “American” is supposed to mean. In Company that energy is more the result of a bad case of nerves. In this high-strung world, we can recognize our own. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 12 Stephen Sondheim March 22, 1930-Stephen Joshua Sondheim is born in New York City 1937-Sondheim begins piano lessons 1945-Sondheim and his friends write the school musical 1948-Phinney’s Rainbow is performed at Williams College 1950-Sondheim graduates from Williams College 1956-After a few failed Broadway attempts, Sondheim is chosen to write the lyrics for West Side Story 1957-West Side Story opens on Broadway 1959-Gypsy opens on Broadway 1962-A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum opens 1970-Company opens on Broadway 1971-Follies opens on Broadway Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 13 1973-A Little Night Music opens on Broadway 1979-Sweeney Todd opens on Broadway 1984-Sunday in the Park with George opens on Broadway 1987-Into the Woods opens on Broadway 1990-Assasins opens Off-Broadway 1993-Sondheim is a recipient of the Kennedy Center Honors 2008-Sondheim is presented with a special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Theater. 2010-Sondheim’s 80th birthday is celebrated by the New York Philharmonic. Over the past 25 years, his shows had been revived dozens of times, leaving Sondheim a strong presence on Broadway. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 14 Other Musicals by Stephen Sondheim West Side Story Based on Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, this musical with book by Arthur Laurents, music by Leonard Bernstein, and choreography by Jerome Robbins was a breakthrough for the Broadway theatre for many reasons. Like On Your Toes and Oklahoma!, it contributed to the pioneering use of dance in musicals as a major story-telling device. Unlike the predecessors, its score juxtaposed many styles for a much more dissonant and vibrant show, and the subject itself involved more somber issues than previously tackled on Broadway. The show concerned rival gangs, one of Puerto Rican immigrants, the other of second- and third- generation Polish-Americans, and their reactions when Tony, the ex- leader of the Jets (the Polish-Americans), falls in love with Maria, the sister of Bernardo, the leader of the Sharks (the Puerto Rican immigrants). Includes the songs "Tonight," "Maria," and “Something's Coming." Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 15 A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum Based on the plays of Plautus, this musical with a book by Burt Shevelove and Larry Gelbart reveled in "low comedy" without playing off anachronisms. The plot concerned a young hero, named Hero, who has fallen in love with a courtesan from next door. He promises freedom to his slave, Pseudolus, in exchange for the girl. Out of the ordinary in that the songs' function was not to advance plot or illuminate character, but rather to give the audience a vaudevillian break from the breakneck pace of the farcical plot. Includes the songs "Comedy Tonight," and "Everybody Ought to Have a Maid." Gypsy Gypsy is based on the memoirs of Gypsy Rose Lee, a famous burlesque stripper. The musical focuses on her overbearing mother, Rose, the quintessential stage mother, as she pushes Gypsy (then known as Louise) and her sister June into life on the vaudeville circuit, forever trying to break into the The Cover of the New Cast Recording of Gypsy, starring Bernadette Peters (2003) big time. One of the greatest musicals of all time, Gypsy features music by Jule Styne, lyrics by Sondheim, and a book by Arthur Laurents. It was directed by legendary director/choreographer Jerome Robbins and the original 1962 production starred Ethel Merman as Mama Rose. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 16 Into the Woods Into the Woods blends various familiar fairy tales with an original story of a childless Baker and his Wife, who catalyze the action of the story by attempting to reverse a curse on their family in order to have a child. In the first act, the characters set out to achieve their goal of living "Happily Ever After" through familiar routes - Cinderella goes to the Ball and captures the heart of Prince Charming, Jack climbs the Beanstalk and finds a land of Giants and Gold, Little Red Riding Hood survives her clash with the wolf at Grandma's house, and Rapunzel Into the Woods Original Cast Recording manages to escape her tower with the aid of a handsome prince who climbs her long hair. The Baker and his Wife move through their stories while pursuing their own goal - the witch who keeps Rapunzel (revealed to be the Baker's sister) has put the curse on his house, and agrees to lift it if the Baker and his Wife can find the ingredients to help her reverse a spell which her mother has laid on her, keeping her old and ugly. Those ingredients are: A Slipper As Pure As Gold, which the Baker's wife gets from Cinderella, A Cow As White As Milk, which the Baker buys from Jack in exchange for the fateful magic beans, A Cape As Red As Blood, which the Baker gets from Little Red Riding Hood in exchange for freeing her and Granny from Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 17 the Wolf, and Hair As Yellow As Corn, which they get from Rapunzel. The ingredients are gathered, and the spell works, stripping the Witch of her power, but restoring her beauty. At the end of Act I, all characters seem poised to live "Happily Ever After". Act Two, however, deals with the consequences that traditional fairy tales conveniently ignore. What does one do with a dead Giant in the back yard? Does marrying a Prince really lead to a happy and fulfilling life? Is carving up the wolf the solution? Is the Giant always wrong? In Act Two, all the characters must deal with what happens AFTER "Happily Ever After". As they face a genuine threat to their community, they realize that all actions have consequences, and their lives are inescapably interdependent, but also that that interdependence is their greatest strength. Featuring such great songs as “No One is Alone,” “Agony” and “I Know Things Now.” Sunday in the Park with George A musical with book by James Lapine, based on the painting "A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte." Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. George, a painter, has trouble connecting with his lover, Dot, when he thinks he has to choose between her and painting because he can't balance them both. The second act reveals that his great-grandson has similar problems, but he is able to start working through them when he returns to the island (now covered in condos) and is visited by a spectral vision of Dot. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 18 "A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte" Like Merrily We Roll Along, Sunday employs evolving musical motifs such as Dot's first act showstopper, "We Do Not Belong Together," which eventually becomes her message to the 1984 George: "Move On," in which she and George realize, "We have always belonged together." Includes the songs "Finishing the Hat," "Putting It Together," and "Children and Art." A Little Night Music Based on the Ingmar Bergman film Smiles of a Summer Night, this musical with a book by Hugh Wheeler, concerns three mismatched couples. Desiree Armfeldt, an actress, is seeing Count Carl-Magnus Malcolm who is married to Charlotte Malcolm. Frederik Egerman, Desiree's past lover, is married to the still-virginal Anne, who is half his age. Henrik Egerman, Frederik's son who is also a divinity student, loves his stepmother Anne, who is a year younger than him. Petra, Frederik and Anne's maid, Madame Armfeldt, Desiree's mother, and Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 19 Frederica, Desiree's daughter round out the action which occurs in town and at "A Weekend in the Country" at Madame Armfeldt's house in the land of the midnight sun. The musical features a lieder quintet as a Greek chorus. Sweeney Todd Based on Christopher Bond's retelling of the Victorian pennydreadful The String of Pearls, (which was itself a retelling of a British myth, possibly rooted in truth) this musical (with a book by Hugh Wheeler) tells the tale of Sweeney Todd, a murderous barber, and his partner in crime, Nellie Lovett, a baker who disposes of the bodies by baking them into her pies. Meanwhile, Anthony Hope, a sailor who saved Todd's life, falls in love with Todd's estranged daughter, Johanna, who is being brought up as the ward of the twisted Judge Turpin. Includes the songs "Not While I'm Around," "Pretty Women," and A Sign for the Original Production of Sweeney Todd "A Little Priest." Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 20 A History of Musical Theater The Broadway musical's history is a fascinating one. While Broadway was a popular destination for theatre-goers for many years, it wasn't until the end of the 19th century that plays featuring music and dance became an entertainment staple on the Great White Way. Here is a brief history of the musical on Broadway. Early Years The Seven Sisters opened in 1860 and was the first ever musical performed on Broadway. The musical production ran for 253 performances. There are no known copies of the play or its score still in existence. The Black Crook, which premiered in 1866, is thought by many to be the first real Broadway musical. It was a huge success, running for over a year. There were eight revivals of the show on Broadway. Initially, the show was a melodrama. A fire at a nearby theater displaced a ballet troupe and its orchestra, so the producers of The Black Crook decided to add the group to the show to create what they called "A Musical Spectacular." Burlesque was popular Broadway fare during the 1800s. In 1868, Lydia Thompson brought her Burlesque troupe The British Blondes to New York. The elaborate production, filled with comedy, extravagant sets and risqué costumes, was a huge hit. Broadway's theater district was one of the first areas in America to get electric light. By 1880, one mile of the street was lit electrically, earning the nickname, "The Great White Way." Early 20th Century In 1907, a new Broadway phenomenon was born. Originally called Follies 1907, Flo Ziegfeld's lavish production would become a Broadway staple for many years to come. New productions were mounted each year until 1925, with additional productions produced in Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 21 1927, 1931, 1934, 1936 and 1943. A final Ziegfeld Follies show was produced in 1957, but was a failure. When Showboat opened in December 1927, it was unlike anything The Great White Way had ever seen. The early part of the 1920s had been filled with lighthearted comedies, such as No No, Nanette and Funny Face. Showboat featured dramatic themes and the first-ever completely integrated book and score. In 1935, the Gershwin brothers and DuBose Heyward debuted Porgy and Bess. It featured an all African-American cast, which was quite controversial at the time. While considered a masterpiece by many, it has also been criticized for its racist portrayal of African-Americans. The Golden Age In 1943, Rodgers and Hammerstein's first show, Oklahoma!, was produced. The duo would go on to write some of the most beloved Broadway Musicals in history, including Carousel, South Pacific, The King and I and The Sound of Music. The Sound of Music When Brigadoon premiered in 1947, this show marked the first major success of one of Broadway's other power duos, Lerner and Loewe. They had been collaborating for about five years when Brigadoon premiered, and they would continue to work together for many years, creating such memorable shows as My Fair Hayden Tee as Arthur and Kimberly Burns as Guenevere in the Pittsburgh Public Theater's 2011 production of Camelot Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 22 Lady in 1958 and Camelot in 1960. A New Era Produced in the midst of the politically turbulent 1960s, Hair was quite a departure from the musicals of the '40s and '50s, with its counter-culture themes and rockinspired score. With high energy and a HAIR sparse use of costumes and sets, it opened the door for a more aggressive, nontraditional form of musical, compared with the elaborate song-and-dance shows that dominated previous decades. In 1977, the hugely successful Annie debuted. Its young star, Andrea McArdle, drew much acclaim for her portrayal of the charming redhaired orphan. Broadway show tickets sold fast for this optimistic, upbeat musical, which represented a return to happier shows following a decade of grittier, more dramatic musicals. Cats began its successful 18-year run in 1981. Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber, already well established with shows like Jesus Christ Superstar and Evita, would later go on to write Phantom of the Opera, the longestrunning show on Broadway. Jesus Christ Superstar Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 23 In 1987, Les Miserables opened on Broadway. This popular show continues to be one of the most-performed musicals worldwide. Les Miserables is a sung-through musical, where all dialogue is sung, as in operas. Les Miserables The '90s and Beyond In recent years, the trend on Broadway has been to adapt films and books into musical productions. Mel Brooks found huge success with a musical version of his comedy, The Producers. Off-Broadway plays have also found mainstream success, led by Jonathan Larson's hit show, Rent. The original Broadway cast of Rent Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 24 Meet the Director TED PAPPAS celebrates his 14th season as Producing Artistic Director of Pittsburgh Public Theater and his 21st year of close association with the company as a director. He has staged more than 40 productions for The Public, including the works of Euripides, Shakespeare, Schiller, Wilde, Gilbert & Sullivan, and Sondheim. Some highlights include Sophocles’ Electra, Shakespeare’s As You Like It, Kaufman & Ferber’s The Royal Family, Peter Shaffer’s Amadeus, Mary Zimmerman’s Metamorphoses, Kander & Ebb’s Cabaret, the American premiere of Alan Ayckbourn’s RolePlay, and the world premiere of Rob Zellers & Gene Collier’s The Chief, which played The O’Reilly for seven seasons and was filmed. His career began in New York City where he worked at Playwrights Horizons, Joseph Papp’s Public Theater, John Houseman’s The Acting Company, New York City Opera under the leadership of Beverly Sills, and shows on and off Broadway. His regional credits are numerous and varied and include productions for Williamstown Theatre Festival, Arena Stage in Washington DC, the Kennedy Center, the Canadian Opera Company, Toronto’s Royal Alexandra, and Goodspeed Musicals. He staged a hip-hop concert hosted by Harry Belafonte which galvanized the Cannes Film Festival, directed a Las Vegas extravaganza for impresario Steve Wynn, and served as choreographer for NBC’s legendary series “Saturday Night Live.” He studied Shakespeare with Samuel Schoenbaum and modern drama with Eric Bentley, and holds degrees from Northwestern University and Manhattan’s Hunter College. He is a past president of the Stage Directors and Choreographers Society, the national labor union. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 25 Meet the Actors NANCY ANDERSON (Sarah) Broadway: Wonderful Town (Helen, Eileen), A Class Act (Mona). West End and Tours: Kiss Me Kate (Bianca - Olivier nomination, Helen Hayes nomination, "PBS Great Performances"), Doctor Dolittle (Emma). OffBroadway: Eleanor in Far From Heaven (starring Kelli O'Hara), Fanny Hill (Drama Desk nomination), Jolson & Co. (Drama Desk nomination), Yank!, Ionescapade. Encores!: No, No, Nanette, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. Concerts: Carnegie Hall with Michael Feinstein, 92nd Street Y, Atlanta Symphony, and Birdland. Regional: Oolie in City of Angels (Goodspeed), Peter Pan in Peter Pan and Gloria in Damn Yankees (Papermill), First Fairy in A Midsummer Night's Dream (Shakespeare Theater), Side by Side by Sondheim (Signature Theater DC - Helen Hayes nomination), She Loves Me (Westport, Papermill), The Women (Old Globe), By Jeeves (Kennedy Center), The Black Monk (Yale Rep), Johanna, Crazy for You (Pioneer Playhouse). CD, Ten Cents a Dance. Upcoming cast albums: Far From Heaven, Yank! Mesmeralda (singing voice) on Skylanders: Swapforce video game. www.nancyanderson.name. COURTNEY BALAN (Amy) has appeared in the original Broadway companies of [title of show], Cry-Baby, and In My Life. OffBroadway: I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change; I Love You Because; Rated P for Parenthood; The Extraordinary Ordinary; [title of show]; The Marvelous Wonderettes; How To Save the World; and Stars of David. Her most recent regional roles include Funny Girl (Fanny Brice) at Riverside Theatre in Florida; Into the Woods (Baker's Wife) at the Alliance in Atlanta; The Music Man (Marian) at Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 26 Connecticut Repertory Theatre; Urinetown (Pennywise) at Theatre Raleigh; and A Grand Night for Singing (Alyson) at Bucks County Playhouse. Courtney is originally from New Jersey and is a graduate of the University of Michigan Musical Theatre department. She is a proud member of Actors' Equity Association. For more information please visit www.courtneybalan.wordpress.com PAUL BINOTTO (Peter) is very glad to be back at Pittsburgh Public Theater. His Pittsburgh credits include The Public's 1776, American Radio Company of the Air with Garrison Keillor at Heinz Hall, Starlight Express at the Benedum Center, Miss Saigon with the Pittsburgh Musical Theater, Peer Gynt at the Playhouse REP, and several shows at the University of Pittsburgh a long time ago! His Broadway credits include: the original cast of Dreamgirls, the first revival of Hair, Starlight Express, King of Schnorrers, One Night Stand, and It's So Nice To Be Civilized. Off-Broadway credits include: Forever Plaid, Enter Laughing, and Ionescopade. Earlier this year Paul played Gustav Mahler in Love, Genius and a Walk in the Midtown International Theatre Festival (Outstanding Lead Actor in a Play nomination). He also played a rogue FBI agent in the soon-to-bereleased movie, Cold in July. Originally from Canonsburg, Paul makes his home in New York. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 27 JUDY BLAZER (Joanne) Broadway: Love Musik, 45 Seconds from Broadway, Titanic, Me and My Girl, A Change in the Heir. Off-Broadway: Whida Peru; Resurrection Tango; New York City Opera's Sweeney Todd and Candide; The Torch Bearers, Hurrah at Last, Bernalda Alba, and Hello Again (Lincoln Center Theater); Connecticut Yankee (Encores!); Twyla Tharp's Everlast (Metropolitan Opera). Regionally: title roles of Funny Girl, The Night Governess, The Miracle Worker, Peter Pan, and My Fair Lady. Additional: Twelfth Night, On the 20th Century, Lend Me a Tenor, The Thomashefskys with Michael Tilson Thomas (for "PBS Great Performances"). Television: "Law & Order," "As the World Turns," "Guiding Light," "Bernstein's New York," and "In Performance at the White House." ELIZABETH BROADHURST (Susan) is delighted to be performing in Pittsburgh, her second home, having married into the Altman Family, natives of Brookline! New York has seen Elizabeth as Grace in Annie (Theater at Madison Square Garden) opposite Kathie Lee Gifford and Conrad John Schuck. Most recently, Elizabeth toured the country for four years with the National Tour of Mary Poppins, understudying Mary, Mrs. Banks, and Mrs. Andrew (the evil nanny), and eventually taking over for Mrs. Banks in her final years. Other touring credits include Annie, 30th Anniversary Tour (Grace) and Hair (European Tour, Jeanie U/S). Regional credits include: 1776 at The Guthrie Theater (Martha Jefferson), Two Gentlemen of Verona, the rock musical at Baltimore Center Stage (Milkmaid), and Kiss Me Kate at Gateway Playhouse (Ensemble). Elizabeth can be heard singing Grace on the Annie, 30th Anniversary Cast Recording (Time Life Records) and holds a BFA from The Boston Conservatory. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 28 DARREN ELIKER (Larry) most recently appeared at The Public as John Dickinson in last season's production of 1776. Past PPT performances include ART (Serge), Metamorphoses (Midas), The Comedy of Errors (Antipholus of Syracuse), with appearances in Oedipus the King, The Tempest, and Broadway. Other local roles include Pittsburgh Irish & Classical's Copenhagen (Heisenberg), Hamlet (Claudius), The Seagull (Aston), The Cripple of Inishmaan (Babbybobby), The Rivals (Jack Absolute), Translations (George), and leading roles in She Stoops to Conquer and The Picture of Dorian Gray, Macbeth, All My Sons, The Grapes of Wrath, and Death of a Salesman (Starlight Productions); The Underpants and Picasso at the Lapin Agile (City Theatre); The Lion in Winter (Unseam'd Shakespeare); and Take 2 Interactive's Black Dahlia (VG-1998). He is a prolific voiceover artist with numerous awards for his work in radio advertising and a graduate of Carnegie Mellon University's drama program. DAINA MICHELLE GRIFFITH (Jenny) is thrilled to begin the New Year back at The Public! Company marks her sixth production with PPT, having previously been seen in Circle Mirror Transformation (Theresa), Metamorpheses (Aphrodite), Amadeus (Constanze), Cabaret, and Broadway. Most recently, Daina appeared in Well at Off the Wall Theater and The Motherf**ker With the Hat with barebones productions. She's performed with theaters across the country including Kansas City Starlight, Gateway Playhouse, Human Race Theater, NYC International Fringe, and heXtc, to name a few. Locally, she's performed with Quantum Theatre, City Theatre, Pittsburgh Irish & Classical Theatre, The REP, Bricolage, No Name Players, Carrnivale Theatrics, Prime Stages, Pittsburgh CLO, and Pittsburgh Musical Theater. Televions: "Guidng Light," "Munhall." Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 29 Film: Civilians, Love and Other Drugs, The Dark Knight Rises (Foley's wife). Daina was recently named Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's 2013 Performer of the Year. LEE HARRINGTON (Kathy) is excited to be making her Pittsburgh Public debut in Company! Favorite credits include Merrily We Roll Along (Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park), Marvelous Wonderettes (Stoneham Theatre), Man of La Mancha (Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey), Fiddler on the Roof (West Virginia Public), and 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee and Dead Man's Cell Phone (Carnegie Mellon). Lee also has a onewoman show, Jellybean, directed by Daniel Jenkins, that she performs at the PIT in New York. Training: Carnegie Mellon University. Represented by Stewart Talent. LARA HAYHURST (April) is thrilled to be performing with Pittsburgh Public Theater, where she was an intern and Shakespeare Monologue & Scene Contest participant 10 years ago! Now a New Yorker with a BFA from Pace University, some favorite credits include Kim in the National Tour of Bye Bye Birdie, Clara in The Light in the Piazza (Carbonell nomination, Best Supporting Actress), Dainty June in Gypsy and Amber in Hairspray (both at Fulton Theater), and Margot in Legally Blonde (Maine State). Locally she has been seen as Elle in Legally Blonde and Maria in The Sound of Music, both with Pittsburgh Musical Theater. LaraHayhurst.com for more! Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 30 BILLY HEPFINGER (Paul) is ecstatic to make his debut with The Public in one of his favorite musicals. A graduate of Princeton and a Pittsburgh native, Billy's local credits include Pittsburgh CLO (Plaid Tidings, Side By Side By Sondheim, A Musical Christmas Carol), Pittsburgh Irish & Classical Theatre (Three Sisters, Ivanov), Pittsburgh Musical Theater (The Sound of Music, Hairspray), City Theater (2011 Young Playwrights Festival), the REP (Antarktikos), and Carrnivale Theatrics (Next to Normal). NYC: workshop of Tamar of the River (Prospect Theater Company). BENJAMIN HOWES (Harry) hails from Australia where his credits include Les Miserables, Beauty and the Beast, Little Shop of Horrors, and Grease. Here in the U.S., his credits include Broadway: Scandalous, Mary Poppins, [title of show]. National Tours: Mary Poppins, Shrek the Musical. Off-Broadway: Mint Theatre Company, Vinyard, Encores!, and many regional theaters. His television credits include "Flight of the Conchords," "Law & Order: Criminal Intent," and a small but glamorous recurring role on "One Life to Live" as a Shakespeare-reciting drag queen, Alma Children. Full scoop at www.benjaminhowes.com. Twitter: @benjthestar Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 31 DANIEL KRELL (David) is happy to return to The Public for his 22nd appearance with the company. His performances here have encompassed contemporary works, classics, and musicals and include such favorites as Born Yesterday, As You Like It, Circle Mirror Transformation, A Moon for the Misbegotten, Metamorphoses, Amadeus, Cabaret, Oedipus the King, Much Ado About Nothing, Sweeney Todd, and most recently the acclaimed Our Town. He has played a variety of major roles with the region's professional theaters, such as City Theater, CLO, Quantum, Bricolage, Pittsburgh Irish & Classical, and The REP as well as with theaters around the country, including Clarence Brown Theatre, PlayMakers Repertory, and Gateway Playhouse among others. Mr. Krell is also a veteran of many films, commercials, industrials and voice-overs. HANNAH SHANKMAN (Marta) is thrilled to be making her Pittsburgh Public debut! Broadway: Hair, West End: Hair, National Tours: Rent and Les Miserables. Regional: Side Show (La Jolla Playhouse), The Last Goodbye (Westside Theatre and Joe's Pub), Tommy (Berkshire Theatre Group), After the Revolution and Golden Gate (Williamstown Theatre Festival), Rent (Syracuse Stage), Pippin (ReVision Theatre). Other NYC credits: Beauty Queens (The Lark), Kaspar Hauser (The Flea), Girls in Trouble (The Flea). Film/TV: "The 85th Annual Academy Awards" Singer/Performer for the film Les Miserables. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 32 JIM STANEK (Robert) is a Cranberry Township native who's been a working actor in New York City (but still rooting for the Pirates, Penguins, & Steelers!) for the last 20 years, living with his wife, Beth, and their three boys. He couldn't be happier to be "home" playing Bobby in his Pittsburgh Public Theater debut! He got his start at Seneca Valley, Comtra, and Pittsburgh CLO. After graduating from Carnegie Mellon, he made his Broadway debut going on (nude) for Jude Law in Indiscretions. He then played Hero (not nude), for two years in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. Other Broadway: The Rivals, Little Women, Lestat, and The Story of My Life. Besides multitudes of Off-Broadway/Regional shows, commercials, and voiceovers, his TV/Film Credits include: "Law & Order", "Guiding Light," "As the World Turns," "The Good Wife," Borough of Kings, and Bella, recordings of ...Forum, Frankenstein, 3hree Musketeers, Sweet Bye and Bye, Kitty's Kisses, Lestat and songs on Out of Context and Love on a Summer Afternoon. He most recently played "Son" opposite Marlo Thomas' "Mother" in the world premiere of Clever Little Lies at George Street Playhouse. His last performance in "The 'Burgh" was Leo Bloom in Pittsburgh CLO's The Producers. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 33 Theater Etiquette When you visit the theater you are attending a live performance with actors that are working right in front of you. This is an exciting experience for you and the actor. However, in order to have the best performance for both the audience and actors there are some simple rules to follow. By following these rules, you can ensure that you can be the best audience member you can be, as well as keep the actors focused on giving their best performance. 1. Turn off all cell phones, beepers, watches etc. 2. Absolutely no text messaging during the performance. 3. Do not take pictures during the performance. 4. Do not eat or drink in the theater. 5. Do not place things on the stage or walk on the stage. 6. Do not leave your seat during the performance unless it is an emergency. If you do need to leave for an emergency, leave as quietly as possible and know that you might not be able to get back in until after intermission. 7. Do clap—let the actors know you are enjoying yourself. 8. Do enjoy the show and have fun watching the actors. 9. Do tell other people about your experience and be sure to ask questions and discuss the performance. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 34 Discussion Questions 1) We see Robert’s surprise party happen at three different points in the musical. Each occasion the events go differently. When the musical ends, the third surprise party is underway, but Robert never shows up. Stephen Sondheim has created an interesting structure. What is Stephen Sondheim getting at by structuring the plot this way? What message is an audience deriving? 2) What do you think are Robert’s priorities in life? How do these priorities compare to his friends’ priorities? 3) How would you describe Robert? What would you say are his positive and negative personality traits? 4) Why do you think getting married is so important to all of the characters in Company? Why do all of Robert’s friends worry about him not get married? 5) Robert often says he’s ready to get married, but his friends disagree with that conviction. Why do they have conflicting views? In what ways do you think Robert is ready to get married and in what ways might he not be? 6) Company is a show about marriage. Attitudes and practices regarding marriage have changed since its premiere in 1970, but in some ways it is still the same institution. Explain. 7) Company is a non-linear musical, meaning that it does not follow a straight-forward storyline. Instead, it is made up of vignettes, or Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 35 short, somewhat unrelated stories. What does this add to the play and why did Sondheim choose this style of story-telling? 8) The following conversation happens between Joanne and Robert towards the end of the musical. “Joanne: There’s my place. It’s free tomorrow after two. Larry goes to his gym, then right to the office. Don’t talk. Don’t do your folksy Harold Teen with me. You’re a terribly attractive man. The kind of a man most women want and never seem to get. I’ll take care of you. Robert: (pause) But who will I take care of? Joanne: Well did you hear yourself? Did you hear what you just said, kiddo? Robert: I didn’t mean that. Joanne: Oh, I just heard a door open that’s been stuck a long time.” What revelation has been made by Robert? How does this affect how the musical ends? 9) In the final song of the play, Robert contemplates “Being Alive.” What conclusions does he arrive at? What other things are similarly part of “being alive” for you? 10) Do you think the various married couples presented in Company are realistic? If you could add another type of couple into the musical, what would they be like? Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 36 Pennsylvania Academic Standards The plays of Pittsburgh Public Theater’s 39th season, subtitled the Masterpiece Season, are a wonderful celebration of some of the greatest works in theatrical history, with rich benefits for school students. The 2013-2014 line-up features a six-play subscription series, all by world renowned composers and playwrights that hold a special place in any theater enthusiast’s heart. The Masterpiece Season will provide examples of the wittiest dialogue, the sharpest characters, and the most captivating scores. Applicable to All Plays and Productions: Arts and Humanities Standards and Reading-Writing-Speaking-Listening Standards Attendance and participation by students at any play produced by Pittsburgh Public Theater bears direct applicability to the PA Education Standards in Arts and Humanities and Reading-Writing-SpeakingListening (RWSL). These applicable standards are summarized first. Then, each play for Season 39 is taken in turn, and its relevance to standards in other Academic Content Areas is cited. All standards are summarized by conceptual description, since similar concepts operate across all the grade levels served by The Public’s Education-Outreach programs (Grades 4 through 12); the principal progressive difference is from basics such as Know, Describe and Explain, moving through grade levels towards more mature activities such as Demonstrate, Incorporate, Compare-Contrast, Analyze and Interpret. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 37 9.1: Production, Performance and Exhibition of Dance, Music, Theatre and Visual Arts Elements Scenario • script/text • set design • stage productions • read and write scripts • improvise • interpret a role • design sets • direct. Principles Balance • collaboration • discipline • emphasis • focus • intention • movement • rhythm • style • voice. Comprehensive vocabulary within each of the arts forms. Communicate a unifying theme or point of view through the production of works in the arts. Explain works of others within each art form through performance or exhibition. Know where arts events, performances and exhibitions occur and how to gain admission. 9.2: Historical and Cultural Contexts The historical, cultural and social context of an individual work in the arts. Works in the arts related chronologically to historical events, and to varying styles and genres, and to the periods in which they were created. Analyze a work of art from its historical and cultural perspective, and according to its geographic region of origin. Analyze how historical events and culture impact forms, techniques and purposes of works in the arts. Philosophical beliefs as they relate to works in the arts. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 38 When Company hit the Broadway stage in 1970 it swept the Tony Awards and in one master stroke propelled the American musical into a completely new era. Company was hailed as the first musical play about adults, for adults, and it marked the beginning of Sondheim’s ascendency as a master expositor of inner character through music and lyrics that continually conjure far more than the sum of their parts. Sondheim’s re-visioning of meaning in musical idiom over the course of a 60-year career can well be compared to Thornton Wilder’s quest a half-century earlier to illuminate and amplify meaning through the stripping away of distracting externals. Family and Consumer Sciences Justify the significance of interpersonal communication skills in the practical reasoning method of decision making. Student Interpersonal Skills Evaluate the emotional responses in relation to the impact on self and others at home, school, work, and community. Demonstrate personal traits leading to positive relationships and life achievements. Actively engage in creating and promoting an environment that encourages healthy relationships (upstanders vs. bystanders) and positive responsibility as an observer of negative behavior. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 39 References Abernathy, June. "Bobby Baby." Stephen Sondheim Stage. N.p., n.d. Web. Summer 2013. <http://www.sondheim.com/discussions/bobby.html> Cheever, Jenney. "A Brief Broadway Musicals History." Life123. N.p., n.d. Web. Fall 2013. Hischak, Thomas. "Company and the Concept Musical." PBS. PBS, 2008. Web. Summer 2013. <http://www.pbs.org/wnet/gperf/shows/company/essay1.html> Hutchins, Michael H. "Sondheim: A Chronology." The Stephen Sondheim Reference Guide. N.p., 17 Aug. 2010. Web. Summer 2013. Pope, Deborah. “Company NYNEX Family Series Study Guide.” Roundabout Theatre Company. Print. "Shows." Sondheim.com. N.p., 2004. Web. Summer 2013. Pittsburgh Public Theater Company 2013-2014 Season Page 40