wilmabill - The Wilma Theater
Transcription
wilmabill - The Wilma Theater
2007 - 2008 Season & Newsletter of The Wilma Theater wilmatheater.org by Sarah Ruhl Dear Audience Members, In This Issue Sponsors.......................................p.4 Production Information................p.5 Meet the Artists............................p.7 Open Stages......................centerfold Wilma Staff .................................p.10 About the Wilma........................p.11 Supporters..................................p.12 To advertise in the Wilmabill, contact Nora Sidoti at 215.893.9456 x102 The Wilma Theater first introduced Philadelphia audiences to Sarah Ruhl’s talent when we produced her play, The Clean House, in the 2004/05 Season. At the time, she was a relatively unknown playwright. In the years since, her career has skyrocketed. The Clean House was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 2005. In 2006, Sarah was the recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship, the prestigious “Genius Grant”. During the past 18 months, three of her plays have received critically-praised OffBroadway productions. We’re happy now to bring Sarah back to the Wilma with Eurydice, her retelling of the classic myth, which The New York Times has called “a love letter to the world.” We’re also happy to announce our 2008/09 Season. It begins with Tom Stoppard’s latest play, Rock ’n’ Roll. With half of the play taking place in former Czechoslovakia, Rock ’n’ Roll brings us back to one of the defining moments in our lives when we left Czechoslovakia in 1976. It is the perfect play to open our 30th Anniversary Season. Over the holiday season, we’ll be producing a comedy called Schmucks by Roy Smiles, an imaginative tale of a meeting between two comic icons, Groucho Marx and Lenny Bruce. Our third production will be the intensely dramatic and moving play, Scorched, from the internationally acclaimed Lebaneseborn playwright Wajdi Mouawad. Portraying characters searching for humanity while surrounded by the irrationality of war in the Middle East, this play was called “a fiery epic of intricate layers that mixes humor, tenderness, tragedy, and social upheaval.”(TorontoStage.com) Closing our season will be Terry Johnson’s Olivier Award Winner for Best New Comedy, Hysteria. Based on an historical meeting between Sigmund Freud and Salvador Dalí, this is a play we’ve been after for seven years; we can’t wait to stage this explosive comedy! Blanka Zizka co-Artistic Director Jiri Zizka co-Artistic Director Thank you to our 2007 - 2008 Season Sponsors Production Sponsors Eurydice is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts. Eurydice was made possible in part by a grant from the Philadelphia Theatre Initiative a program of the Philadelphia Center for Arts and Heritage, funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts and administered by The University of the Arts Opening Night Sponsors Media Sponsor For information about upcoming sponsorship opportunities, please contact Lea Montalto-Rook, Development Associate, at 215.893.9456 x 109. under the direction of Blanka Zizka Artistic Director Jiri Zizka Artistic Director James Haskins Managing Director presents by Sarah Ruhl featuring (in alphabetical order) Gene D’Alessandro, Benjamin Huber*, Merritt Janson*, Stephen Novelli*, Erin Reilly*, Triney Sandoval*, Cathy Simpson* Set Designer Mimi Lien Sound Designer Jorge Cousineau Dramaturg Walter Bilderback Costume Designer Oana Botez-Ban Music Composer Toby Twining Lighting Designer Tyler Micoleau New York Casting Jerry Beaver Associates Production Manager Patrick Heydenburg Philadelphia Casting Carol Laratonda Stage Manager Patreshettarlini Adams* Directed by Blanka Zizka The Wilma deeply appreciates the generous support of Michael J. Finney, Honorary Producer, for this pro*Member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. This Theatre operates under an agreement between the League of Resident Theatres and Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. Eurydice is produced by special arrangement with Bruce Ostler, BRET ADAMS, LTD., 448 West 44th Street, New York, NY 10036 This play was originally produced by Madison Repertory Theatre, Madison, Wisconsin, August 29, 2003, Richard Corley, Artistic Director, Tony Forman, Managing Director, and subsequently produced by Berkeley Repertory Theatre in 2004, Tony Taccone, Artistic Director, Susan Medak, Managing Director and Yale Repertory Theatre in 2006, James Bundy, Artistic Director, Victoria Nolan, Managing Director. Produced by Second Stage Theatre, New York, NY on June 12, 2007, Carole Rothman, Artistic Director Cast (in order of appearance) Eurydice..........................................................................................................................................................Merritt Janson Orpheus.......................................................................................................................................................Benjamin Huber Father............................................................................................................................................................Stephen Novelli Nasty Interesting Man/Lord of the Underworld...........................................................................................Triney Sandoval Little Stone............................................................................................................................................................Erin Reilly Big Stone..................................................................................................................................................Gene D’Alessandro Loud Stone.....................................................................................................................................................Cathy Simpson Musicians (in alphabetical order) Tenor............................................................................................................................................................Steven Bradshaw Soprano..............................................................................................................................................................Eric Brenner Mezzo/Alto.....................................................................................................................................................Elizabeth Filios Conductor/Bass................................................................................................................................................Mark Johnson Cello...............................................................................................................................................................Floreta Shapiro The Wilma Theater proudly participates in the Barrymore Awards for Excellence in Theatre, Philadelphia's premier professional theatre awards program. The Wilma Theater is a member of the following organizations: League of Resident Theatres, Rittenhouse Row, Theatre Communications Group, Inc., Theatre Alliance of Greater Philadelphia, and Greater Philadelphia Cultural Alliance. Children Policy Some subject matter may be deemed objectionable for children; therefore, children under 12 will not be permitted in the theater. Distracting Noise The noise of cellular phones, electronic devices and candy wrappers is distracting to both audiences and actors. Please turn off all cellular phones and electronic devices. Also, please be sure that your watch alarm does not sound during the performance. Smoking, eating and drinking are prohibited inside the theater. Please note Photography or sound recording inside the theater, without the written permission of the management, is prohibited by law. Violators may be asked to leave the theater and may be liable for financial charges. Meet the Artists Sarah Ruhl (Playwright) Plays include The Clean House (Pulitzer Prize Finalist, 2005; The Susan Smith Blackburn Prize, 2004); Passion Play, A Cycle (The Fourth Freedom Forum Playwriting Award from The Kennedy Center, a Helen Hayes Awards nomination for Best New Play); Dead Man’s Cell Phone; Melancholy Play; Eurydice; Orlando and Late: a cowboy song. Her plays have been produced at Lincoln Center Theater, Goodman Theatre, Arena Stage, Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, South Coast Rep., Yale Rep., Berkeley Rep., The Wilma Theater, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Madison Rep. and the Piven Theatre, among others. Her plays have also been produced in London, Germany, Australia, Canada, and Israel, and have been translated into Polish, Russian, Spanish, Norwegian, Korean, and German. Originally from Chicago, Ms. Ruhl received her MFA. from Brown University where she studied with Paula Vogel. In 2003, she was the recipient of the Helen Merrill Emerging Playwrights Award and the Whiting Writers’ Award. She is a member of 13P and New Dramatists and recently won the MacArthur Fellowship. Blanka Zizka (Director, co-Artistic Director) has been Co-Artistic Director of The Wilma Theater since 1981. In February Blanka directed her first opera Kát’a Kabanová by Leoš Janáček for AVA. Recently she directed Age of Arousal, The Life of Galileo (5 Barrymore nominations), My Children! My Africa!, Ariel Dorfman’s The Other Side starring Rosemary Harris and John Cullum at Manhattan Theatre Club, Cloud 9 by Caryl Churchill, I Am My Own Wife by Doug Wright, the World Premiere of Raw Boys by Dael Orlandersmith, Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train by Stephen Adly Guirgis (Barrymore Winner, Best Overall Production and Best Director), the World Premiere of Embarrassments by Laurence Klavan and Polly Pen, and the Philadelphia Premieres of Lillian Groag’s The Magic Fire and Chay Yew’s Red. In 2002 she directed the World Premiere of Dael Orlandersmith’s Yellowman at ManhattanTheatre Club, McCarter Theatre Center, Long Wharf Theatre, ACT in Seattle, and at The Wilma Theater. She was awarded the first Barrymore Award for Best Direction of a Play for Cartwright’s Road. She directed Jiler and Leslee’s Avenue X (Barrymore Winner, Best Overall Production of a Musical and Best Direction of a Musical), Wright’s Quills (Barrymore Winner, Best Overall Production of a Play), and the East Coast Premiere of The Invention of Love by Tom Stoppard (Barrymore Winner, Best Overall Production of a Play and Best Direction of a Play). Her other favorite productions include Orwell’s Animal Farm, O’Neill’s The Hairy Ape, Ionesco’s Macbett, Fugard’s Statements After an Arrest Under the Immorality Act and Playland, Dulack’s Incommunicado, Sherman’s When She Danced, Stoppard’s Travesties, Brecht’s The Threepenny Opera, Freed’s The Psychic Life of Savages, Klavan and Pen’s Bed and Sofa, Sherwood’s Spin, Thompson’s Perfect Pie, Carr’s Portia Coughlan and Sherman’s Patience. Gene D'Alessandro (Big Stone) was last seen in Marsha Norman's Getting Out for Simpatico Theatre Project. Recent productions include Flashpoint Theatre Company's The Faculty Room, The Ritz's production of Scrooge, and Romeo and Juliet with Shakespeare in Clark Park. Gene has also performed with Bristol Riverside Theatre, REV Theatre Company, and the Pennsylvania, Texas, and Philadelphia Shakespeare Festivals. Benjamin Huber (Orpheus) Off-Broadway: A Midsummer Night's Dream (The Public Theater/NYSF); Yellowface u/s (The Public Theater). Regional: King Lear, The Tempest (Seattle Shakespeare Company); Crimes of the Heart, Macbeth (Tacoma Actors Guild); Ring Round the Moon, Richard II, As You Like It (American Players Theater). Education: NYU Tisch School of the Arts Graduate Acting Program (MFA). Ben is pleased to be making his Wilma debut. Love to Sarah and family. Merritt Janson (Eurydice) Stage credits include: Chevalier in The Deception (La Jolla Playhouse, Theatre de la Jeune Lune); Junia in Britannicus and The Onion Cellar (American Repertory Theatre); Emilia Lanier in The English Channel (Vineyard Playhouse); Lillian Aster in Black-Eyed Susanna (Hasty Pudding Theatre); Tuesday (Barrymore Award for Outstanding Ensemble, Amaryllis Theatre Co.); Bonnie in HurlyBurly and Maggie in Drive to a Departing Flight (Adrienne Theatre). New York credits include: Ashley in Three Years from Thirty (Pantheon Theatre); Kate in Daddy Longlegs in the Evening (Chashama); Cavalleria Rusticana (Opera of the Hamptons). Film credits include: Mail Order Wife (Best American Film - Santa Barbara International Film Festival); Otto and Anna. Merritt received her MFA from the A.R.T./MXAT Institute at Harvard University. Stephen Novelli (Father) is delighted to be making his first appearance on The Wilma Theater stage. In addition to being a long-time member of the resident acting company at The People’ s Light & Theatre in Malvern, Stephen also serves as Associate Artistic Director. He was most recently seen at People’s Light as the villainous John Aycliffe in Crispin, The Cross of Lead and the tormented Father in Six Characters in Search of an Author. Other recent roles at PLT include Argan in The Imaginary Invalid, George Pye in Humble Boy and the title role in The Giver. Plays he directed at PLT include Tuesdays with Morrie, Camping with Henry and Tom, Measure for Measure and Glengarry Glen Ross. Erin Reilly (Little Stone) is thrilled to be making her Wilma debut! Credits: Mr. Bailey's Minder (Walnut Street Theatre); Turn of the Screw (Cape May Stage); Holiday Show at the Swing Club, The Violet Hour (Theatre Horizon); Wizard of Oz, A Midsummer Night's Dream (Mum Puppettheatre); Whores (InterAct); A Play on Two Chairs (Inis Nua); Valparaiso (Theatre Exile); Nocturne (Theatre Catalyst). Upcoming: The Stephen Schwartz musical Working in July 2008 in King of Prussia at Theatre Horizon, where she is Artistic Director. Thank you to Blanka and this wonderful cast! For my young prince, Patrick. Triney Sandoval (Nasty Interesting Man/Lord of the Underworld) makes his Wilma debut with Eurydice. Broadway: Frost/Nixon. Off Broadway: The Idiot, Elliot, a Soldier’s Fugue, As You Like It. Regional: Death and the Maiden (Baltimore Center Stage); The Underpants (Actors Theatre of Louisville); Taming of the Shrew, Ladies of the Camillias (Yale Rep); Day of the Kings (The Alliance); Napoli Millionaria (Milwaukee Rep); Figaro Gets a Divorce (La Jolla Playhouse); The Tempest (Alabama Shakespeare); Art (Virginia Stage); Much Ado About Nothing, Christmas Carol (Great Lakes Shakespeare); Taming of the Shrew, The Tempest, Arms and the Man (California Shakespeare); Hamlet, Merchant of Venice, As You Like It, and others (Old Globe); company member for five seasons with The Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Television: Sopranos, One Life to Live, All My Children, recurring roles on Law & Order and Law & Order: SVU. 7 8 Cathy Simpson (Loud Stone) is a company member of The People’s Light and Theatre as well as the “Freedom Rising” Company at the National Constitution Center, and the American Historical Theatre Company. Her work in local theatres include InterAct, Philadelphia Theatre Company, Philadelphia Shakespeare Festival, Philadelphia Young Playwrights, Hedgerow, Theatre Catalyst and the Arden. Regional theater credits include Arena Stage, The Kennedy Center, the National Theatre, Studio Theatre, Source Theatre, Woolly Mammoth, Olney Theatre Center, St. Louis Black Rep, St. Louis Rep., Indiana Rep., Big Arts, and Florida Rep. Film and TV credits include the award winning PBS Maple Ave, Outreach Film P.S. I Love You, numerous industrials and commercials for local Fox TV. A three time Barrymore nominee and a winner for the Freedom Theatre’s production of The Old Settler, she has also been nominated twice for the Helen Hayes Awards in Washington D.C. Cathy is continually grateful for acting jobs and even more so for this one. Thank you Wilma Theater! Steven Bradshaw (Tenor), professional tenor/countertenor, first came to Philadelphia in 2001 to study voice at The University of The Arts. He is a core member and soloist with The Choral Arts Society and The Philadelphia Singers, appears regularly with The Opera Company of Philadelphia, and is a paid section leader and soloist at St. Mark’s Church in Center City. In addition to performing many critically acclaimed concerts with modern chamber ensemble "The Crossing" in both Philadelphia and Spoleto, Italy, Steven covered the role of Capucin in The Opera Company's 2008 production of Cyrano. Upcoming: Steven is scheduled to perform Stockhausen's groundbreaking vocal sextet piece, "Stimmung," with composer Toby Twining at the annual Bang on a Can Marathon in New York City. Eric Brenner (Soprano) was born and raised in the wilds of Long Island where he grew up playing violin & viola–badly. After several years in New York City working with such groups as Early Music New York, New York Collegium, the Saint Thomas Choir, Amnesia Wars (theatre/improv), Consensus (male quartet), and Toby Twining Music, Eric joined the Grammy Award winning ensemble Chanticleer and spent the last three years singing, recording, and wandering the world with them. Back in New York, now pursuing a solo career in baroque opera and oratorio, Eric also writes fiction and is an incorrigible Mets fan. Elizabeth Filios (Mezzo/Alto), a graduate of the University of Michigan, is grateful to have performed in Italy, Japan, South Africa, India, and Venezuela. Wilma credits include: The Life of Galileo (Voice of opera singer); Amadeus (Diction coach); and the staged reading of Days of Significance (Clare). Elizabeth also taught at last summer's Camp Wilma: Viva l'Italia. Regional Credits include: Out of the Shadows (Joyce Soho); Grace: Kingdom (A Grateful Company); Lend Me a Tenor (New Candlelight Theatre); The Food Chain (23 Piece Productions); The Fantasticks (Ann Arbor Civic); and Dances of Pulcinella (Philadelphia Orchestra). Opera credits include: Miranda in La Tempesta, La Donna in Cavalleria Rusticana, and Perdita in Il Racconto d’Inverno. Special thanks to Blanka, Toby, Mom, Dad, and Troy. Mark Johnson (Conductor/Bass) was a member of Toby Twining’s first vocal ensemble, Mouth Music, in the early 1990s. From 1998~2001 he assisted with all aspects of performance and recording of Chrysalid Requiem, including creating midi sequences, preparing scores, singing, conducting, producing, editing, and mixing. Mark has also worked with the Western Wind Vocal Ensemble as producer on some of their recordings and arranger of three songs on their “My Funny Valentine” CD (1997). In New York City, Mark sings in the Sanctuary Choir at Marble Collegiate Church and tunes pianos. More recently he has been working with Roger Treece, editing and singing on a new Bobby McFerrin choral album to be released this year. Floreta Shapiro (Cello) studied at the National Conservatory in Bucharest, Romania (BA), Southeastern Louisiana University (MM, Performance) and West Chester University (MM, Theory/Composition). Performance credits include: Philadelphia Virtuosi, North Penn Symphony, Gulf Port Symphony, and Bucharest Philharmonic as well as performances at the Academy of Music, Ritz-Carlton Hotel Philadelphia, and at many cultural and historical sites in Pennsylvania and Louisiana. Floreta is a founding member of Liric String Quartet; advanced string quartet studies, Brevard. Toby Twining (Composer) began composing, performing, and recording experimental vocal ensemble music in the mid 1980s. His early work often combined classical ensemble singing with world vocal techniques and experimental sounds, such as African yodeling, Tuvan throat singing, unconventional tremolos, and phonetics. To perform the music he was developing, he formed the a cappella quartet Toby Twining Music, which released its début CD Shaman in 1994 on BMG Classics. Around that time, Twining also became interested in new possibilities for harmony through just intonation and began using sequences of extended consonant intervals to modulate microtonally (Hotel Destiné, 1992). He put together an expanded ensemble of twelve voices in 1999 to perform his first large work of this kind, Chrysalid Requiem (Cantaloupe Music, 2002), at the Festival of New Spiritual Music in Amsterdam. Twining’s music has been recorded by avant-garde pianist Margaret Leng Tan (The Art of the Toy Piano, Uni/Point, 1997), pioneering cellist Matt Haimovitz (Anthem and Please Welcome Matt Haimovitz, Oxingale/Artemis, 2002), and has been featured in the film The Sorceress of the New Piano, and FX’s Nip/Tuck (episode 17, Mrs. Grubman). The American Music Center selected his 9/11 Blues for the Annual List of the 2006 IAMIC conference in Sweden. Twining was a 2003 Pew Fellow. He lives currently in Wolfeboro, NH where, in pursuit of another goal—the development and support of cutting edge art within progressive religious communities—he directs music at First Congregational Church (United Church of Christ). Mimi Lien (Set Designer) Mimi has been designing sets for theatre, dance, opera, and film since defecting from the field of architecture 10 years ago. Previous Wilma productions: Outrage, Cloud Nine, A Number, and The Life of Galileo. Recent work includes: Carla Kihlstedt’s Necessary Monsters (MCA Chicago), In the Red and Brown Water (Alliance), Queens Boulevard (Signature), and The Magnificent Cuckold (East River Commedia). Her work has been presented at The Kitchen, The Joyce Theater, Juilliard, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Berkshire Theater Festival, Princeton University, Symphony Space, and Dance Theater Workshop, among others. Collaborators include Eliot Feld, Tina Landau, Charles Moulton, Matthew Neenan, Davis McCallum, Pig Iron Theatre Co., and East River Commedia. Her work has been recognized by a Barrymore Award (Outrage), Barrymore nomination (Galileo), NY Innovative Theatre Award nomination (ERC), and she was a semifinalist in the Ring Award competition for opera design in Graz, Austria. Ms. Lien is a recipient of the 20072009 NEA/TCG Career Development Program. Oana Botez-Ban (Costume Designer), a native of Romania, has designed for major theater and dance companies including The National Theater of Bucharest and was involved in different international theater festivals such as the Quadrennial Scenography Show in Prague. Oana is part of the first Romanian theater design catalogue, Scenografica. Since 1999, her New York costume collaborations in theater and dance include Richard Foreman, Richard Schechner, Brian Kulick, Zelda Fichlander, Karin Coonrod, Jay Scheib, Eduardo Machado, Gus Solomon Jr. & Paradigm, Carmen deLavallade, Adrian Giurgea, Gisela Cardenas, Pavol Liska, Matthew Neenan & Pennsylvania Ballet, Molissa Fenley, Veniamin Smekhov, Zishan Ugurlu, Doris Mirescu, Erin Mee, Alva Rogers, Saviana Stanescu, Naomi Goldberg, Judith Ren-Lay, Michael Sexton, Pig Iron Theatre Company, Play Company, Charles Moulton, Loy Arcenas, Ripe Time. MFA in Design from NYU/Tisch School of the Arts. Princess Grace Recipient for 2007. Tyler Micoleau (Lighting Designer) For the Wilma and director Blanka Zizka: The Life of Galileo (Barrymore nomination). Tyler’s recent Philadelphia area credits include Mary’s Wedding (Delaware Theater Co.), Isabella (Pig Iron), A Night In The Old Marketplace (Prince Music Theater). Recent New York Off-Broadway credits: God’s Ear (Vineyard Theatre), Rainbow Kiss (Play Company), Two Men Talking (Barrow Street Theater), The Screwtape Letters (Theater at St. Clement’s and now at the Lansburgh Theater in Washington D.C.), Max & Ruby (TheatreworksUSA) and 1001 (P73). Recent regional credits at Long Wharf Theatre, Trinity Rep and The Old Globe. Awards: Lucille Lortel, OBIE (for Tracy Letts’ Bug), NEA/TCG Career Development Program. Jorge Cousineau (Sound Designer) is excited to continue his line of work at the Wilma, where he previously designed sound for Ying Tong, Enemies, A Love Story and set and sound for I Am My Own Wife. He usually can be found designing sets, video, and sounds for many dance and theater productions in and out of Philadelphia. Recent highlights include Wittenberg, Assassins, and Sleeping Beauty at the Arden; The Four Of Us and This Is The Week That Is with 1812 Productions; Batch with New Paradise Laboratories in Louisville, and Opus in NYC. Walter Bilderback (Dramaturg/Literary Manager) Now in his fourth season at the Wilma, Walter assists in all aspects of season planning. He also helps to communicate the Wilma’s mission through editing and writing for Open Stages, pre- and post-show discussions, and organizing symposia such as last season’s acclaimed series for The Life of Galileo. Walter has worked as a dramaturg for more than 20 years, working at regional theaters across the country and on Broadway. Anne Frank: Within and Without, on which he worked with puppeteer Bobby Box at the Center for Puppetry Arts in Atlanta, was awarded a UNIMA award (puppetry’s equivalent of a Pulitzer or Tony) for excellence this year. In Philadelphia, he has also worked with Philadelphia Young Playwrights. Walter has contributed numerous articles to American Theatre magazine and the newlypublished Columbia Encyclopedia of Modern Drama. Patreshettarlini Adams (Production Stage Manager/AEA) has been the production stage manager at the Wilma since the theater made its new home on the Avenue of the Arts. She is celebrating her 12th season at the Wilma and is very happy to be a part of the Philadelphia theater family. Prior to coming home to Philly, “Pat” was stage manager at the Tony Award winning Crossroads Theatre in New Brunswick, NJ. She was privileged to work with an awesome array of African-American playwrights, directors, designers, musicians, and actors. Some of her fondest memories encompass the productions of Sheila’s Day, Mothers, The Screened-In Porch, Betsey Brown, Harlem Nocturne, The Love Space Demands, and Two Hah-Hahs and a Homeboy. In past years, Pat has worked at both the National Black Arts Festival in Atlanta and the National Black Theatre Festival in Winston-Salem. When not at the Wilma, she finds herself traveling the world with critically-acclaimed dance company Noche Flamenca! Most recently, Pat became the proud grandmother of Isaiah Nathaniel. God Is Good! Patrick Heydenburg (Production Manager) spent ten years working as a freelance production manager or technical director with most of the nonprofit theaters in New York City. These companies include Playwrights Horizons, Second Stage, CSC, Vineyard, Circle Rep, WPA, New York Theatre Workshop, and American Place Theater. In addition, he was Production Coordinator at the Brooklyn Academy of Music for two years and was Venue Manager for the Dublin Theatre Festival in 1988. Patrick designed the scenery for four productions at the Jean Cocteau Repertory. After spending a season and half as Production Manager at South Coast Repertory in California, he came back to New York to supervise the renovation and construction of Manhattan Ensemble Theater’s new Off-Broadway facility. Patrick is a 1983 graduate of the State University of New York at Purchase. Jerry Beaver Associates (New York Casting) Jerry Beaver has been casting for The Wilma Theater for 12 years. His credits include Ying Tong A Walk with the Goons, Age of Arousal, Amadeus, Enemies, A Love Story, The Pillowman, A Number, 9 Parts of Desire, Shakespeare in Hollywood, Raw Boys, The Clean House, Night and Day, Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train, Wintertime, Embarrassments, Resurrection Blues, Red, Big Love, The Magic Fire, Every Good Boy Deserves Favor, Dirty Blonde, Indian Ink, Yellowman, Les Liaisons Dangereuses, Passion, Patience, Cherry Docs, Black Comedy, Perfect Pie, Arcadia, On the Razzle, The Invention of Love, and many others. In New York, Jerry was the resident casting director of the Signature Theatre Company for ten years casting plays by Romulus Linney, Lee Blessing, Edward Albee, Horton Foote, Adrienne Kennedy, Sam Shepard, Arthur Miller, John Guare, Marie Irene Fornes, and Lanford Wilson. He has worked for Seattle Repertory Theatre, Alley Theatre, Hartford Stage, Actors Theatre of Louisville, The O’Neill Playwrights Conference, and is the Founding President of the Black Bear Film Festival in Milford, PA. Jiri Zizka (coArtistic Director), born in Prague and educated at Charles University, became an Artist in Residence at the Wilma in 1979 and Artistic Director in 1981, where he has directed over 60 productions. Some of the highlights included Orwell’s Animal Farm, Camus’ The Stranger, Brecht’s Mother Courage, Capeks’ The Insect Comedy, Weiss’ Marat/Sade, his own adaptation of Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray, Brecht/Weill’s Happy End, Orwell’s 1984 (also the Kennedy Center and OffBroadway), Fo’s Accidental Death of an Anarchist, and the U.S. Premiere of Havel’s Temptation (a co-production with Joseph Papp’s New York Shakespeare Festival). Jiri has also directed a feature film of Vaclav Havel’s Largo Desolato, adapted by Tom Stoppard, starring F. Murray Abraham for PBS’s Great Performances. He wrote and directed Inquest of Love, a film nominated for an Emmy Award. His theater credits also include George F. Walker’s Love and Anger, Martin McDonagh’s The Cripple of Inishmaan, David Gow’s Cherry Docs (with David Strathairn), Stoppard’s The Real Inspector Hound, Peter Shaffer’s Black Comedy, Stephen Sondheim’s Passion, Christopher Hampton’s Les Liaisons Dangereuses, Stoppard’s Indian Ink, Arthur Miller’s Resurrection Blues, Charles L. Mee’s Big Love and Wintertime. He also directed a co-production between the Wilma and The Philadelphia Orchestra of Tom Stoppard’s and André Previn’s Every Good Boy Deserves Favor, a play for actors and a philharmonic orchestra, at the Kimmel Center’s Verizon Hall. Jiri directed Tom Stoppard’s Night and Day, Itamar Moses’ Outrage, Ken Ludwig’s Shakespeare in Hollywood, Mark Saltzman’s The Tin Pan Alley Rag (Carbonell Award for Best Director), Caryl Churchill’s A Number, Martin McDonagh’s The Pillowman (6 Barrymore nominations), Sarah Schulman’s adaptation of Isaac Bashevis Singer’s novel Enemies, A Love Story, Peter Shaffer’s Amadeus, and most recently Roy Smiles’ Ying Tong - A Walk with the Goons. James Haskins (Managing Director) joined the staff of the Wilma in June 2006. He began his work in theatre administration as Box Office Manager of Circle Repertory Company and went on to work with a number of New York theatres, including National Shakespeare Company, Symphony Space, Provincetown Playhouse, Actor’s Playhouse, Triplex Performing Arts Center and Astor Place Theatre. In Seattle, he served as Business Manager of Seattle Group Theatre and worked intermittently for Ticket/Ticket, Seattle’s half-price ticket booth. In 1999, James moved to Philadelphia and worked as Managing Director of InterAct Theatre Company, while also serving for three years on the Board of the Theatre Alliance of Greater Philadelphia as Chair of the Barrymore Awards Oversight Committee. He later moved into the Executive Director position of the Theatre Alliance and now serves as the Board Chair. Also an actor and director, James holds a BA from the College of Wooster in Ohio, and an MFA from the University of Washington. 10 Eurydice Production Crew Assistant Director.............................................................................Ryder Thornton Assistant Stage Manager............................................................................Erica Fuss Assistant Set Designer.............................................................................Amy Rubin Assistant Lighting Designer............................................................Anjeanette Stokes Wig Designer..........................................................................................Jon Carter Prop Master....................................................................................Kimitha Cashin Choreographer (Fall)................................................................Kate Watson-Wallace Choreographer (Jitterbug)........................................................................Bob Skiba Light Board Programmer.......................................................................Terry Smith Light Board Operator............................................................................John Curall Sound Board Operator......................................................................Andrea Sotzing Wardrobe Mistress...............................................................................Regina Rizzo Dresser..................................................................................................Alison Levy Running Crew.......................................................Matt Zumbo, Christine Richards Carpenters...................................................Steve Gravelle, Jeb Kreager, Alison Levy Christine Richards, Matt Zumbo Electricians............................................................Andrew Cowles, Brendan Gawell Sam Henderson, Nicole Rollo Scenic Artist......................................................................................Rita D’Angelo Scenery Constructed by..........................................................Proof Productions, Inc. Costumes Constructed by......................................................................Douglas Earl Special Thanks: Arden Theatre Company Philadelphia Theatre Company Barbara Tiffany Walnut Street Theatre The Wilma Theater Staff Artistic Director...................................................................................Blanka Zizka Artistic Director.........................................................................................Jiri Zizka Managing Director.............................................................................James Haskins Artistic Dramaturg/Literary Manager........................................................Walter Bilderback Literary Programming Assistant.....................................................Richard Kotulski Marketing Marketing Director.......................................................................Aaron Immediato Group Sales & Special Events Manager.............................................Julie Rossnagle Marketing Assistant................................................................................Nora Sidoti Marketing Interns...............................................................Lindsey Booz, Julie Toth Development Development Associate..............................................................Lea Montalto-Rook Grant Writer..........................................................................................Justin Bauer Development/Special Events Interns............Marie Gorbenko, Danielle Williamson Education Education Director.........................................................................Anne K. Holmes Teaching Artists...............................Vivian Appler, Kristyn Chouiniere, Mike Dees, Bill Felty, Carol Laratonda, Mary McCann, Benjamin Lloyd, Kathryn Nocero, Aaron Oster, Matt Pfeiffer, Greg Romero, Catherine Rush, Jay Wahl, Celeste Walker Business General Manager............................................................................Maggie Arbogast Production Production Manager..................................................................Patrick Heydenburg Technical Director.............................................................................Clayton Tejada Production Stage Manager.....................................................Patreshettarlini Adams Company Manager / Administrative Director.....................Maribeth Maksymowich Facilities Manager............................................................................Kenneth Deprez Master Electrician...................................................................................John Curall Sound Engineer.................................................................................Andrea Sotzing Wardrobe Supervisor............................................................................Regina Rizzo Production Fellow...................................................................................Debby Lau Stage Management Fellow.........................................................................Erica Fuss Front of House Box Office Manager.............................................................................James Specht Assistant Box Office Manager........................................................Crystal Whybark Box Office Staff.....................................................Joel Chartkoff, Matthew Morgan Volunteer Coordinator................................................................Cynthia DiClaudio House Management Staff.....................................Tim Barnes, Carmine DeCinque, Darren Joyner, Javier Mojica Services Publicity.............................................Megan Wendell, Canary Promotion + Design Graphic Designer............................................................................Caren Goldstein Photographer..............................................Paola Nogueras, Jim Roese Photography Printing Services......................................................Color Reflections, Media Copy, Quaker Printing Group, Spectrum Printing Collateral Distribution.........................................A-List Promotions, Jere Edmunds Catering...................................Bacchus Market & Catering, J. Cabot Catering Co. Technology Services...........................................................................Ready, Net Go Auditors....................................................................................Horty & Horty, P.A. Cleaning Service................................................................................1010 Cleaning Insurance Brokers......................................Corporate Synergies, SKCG Group, Inc. How to contact us The Wilma Theater, 265 South Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107 Administrative: 215.893.9456 Box Office: 215.546.7824 Fax: 215.893.0895 Website: www.wilmatheater.org M AY / J U N E 2 0 0 8 THE WILMA THEATER Newsletter Editor Walter Bilderback co-Artistic Director Blanka Zizka Newsletter Designer Nora Sidoti co-Artistic Director Jiri Zizka Managing Director James Haskins THE NEWSLETTER OF THE WILMA THEATER Contributing Writers Walter Bilderback Richard W. Kotulski Eurydice April 30 - June 1, 2008 Eurydice, Grief, and Memory In the years since Sarah Ruhl’s work was last seen on the Wilma stage, The Clean House, Eurydice, and her most recent play, Dead Man’s Cell Phone, have all received major productions in New York, as well as across the country. Passion Play: A Cycle, an ambitious epic piece that weaves together three historical periods and settings (Elizabethan England, Hitler’s Germany, and the U.S. between the late 60s and early 80s), examining the interplay between desire, faith, and political power, has been produced in Washington, DC and Chicago, with a production at Yale Repertory Theatre next season. A new play, on the history of the vibrator, will open at Berkeley Repertory Theater. Sarah Ruhl’s MacArthur Fellow profile describes her work as “fresh, compelling, and versatile,” which verges on understatement: she quite simply writes plays that are like no one else’s. Each play is a separate world, with its own rules. “I feel the world is always open to transformation,” she told us in 2004, and this belief permeates her writing. Sarah’s work reflects Jean Cocteau’s concept of “poetry of the stage, rather than poetry on the stage.” Her work is marked by a sensitivity in the portrayal of death, loss and mourning, which is always balanced by a wry, offbeat, humor. “Humor is a really, sort of, selfless thing,” she said when we produced The Clean House. In the March 17, 2008 issue of The New Yorker, she expanded this: “Lightness isn’t stupidity. It’s actually a philosophical and aesthetic viewpoint, deeply serious, and has a kind of wisdom – stepping back to be able to laugh at horrible things even as you’re experiencing them.” A graduate of Brown University, her alumni magazine christened her “the playwright laureate of grief” in a profile last year. In Eurydice, she draws upon Greek myth for her inspiration. Written not long after her father died of cancer, the play combines elements of the myth with recollections of her father, such as his love of etymology. In fact, “recollection” or “remembering” could be seen as an essential element of the larger theme of grief. For the Wilma’s production, Blanka Zizka has drawn upon a range of influences, including Federico Fellini’s film The Clowns, video artist Bill Viola, and conceptual artist Olafur Eliasson, in the design process. We’ve also commissioned an original score, performed live each night, from composer Toby Twining. The following pages (and the Wilma’s website) will allow you to learn more of what’s behind tonight’s performance. Origin and Early Incarnations of the Orpheus Myth In classical myth, the story of Orpheus and Eurydice surfaced in many different forms and with much commentary. The name Orpheus does not occur in Homer or Hesiod, but appears first in the poetry of Simonides, in the Sixth Century B.C.E. The Greek poet Ibycus says Orpheus charmed the trees, forest beasts, and even the stones with his sweet songs so that none of them disobeyed him. In early accounts of the myth the outcome is more ambiguous than in later versions, seeming to imply that Orpheus was successful in retrieving Eurydice from the underworld. The ancient Greeks seemed to consider Orpheus a historical rather than mythical figure. The scholar Emmet Robbins points out that Orpheus was accorded a higher place by the ancients than the authors of the two greatest extant monuments of ancient Greek literature: Homer and Hesiod. Image Credits: Olafur Eliasson (left); Jennifer Steinkamp (behind text). 2 The myth as it is most known today—with great emphasis placed on the fatal glance backward toward Eurydice and her second death—dates from the Latin writings of Ovid and Virgil. In his Metamorphoses, Ovid writes: . . . there remained but little more to climb till they would touch earth's surface, when in fear he might again lose her, and anxious for another look at her, he turned his eyes so he could gaze upon her. Instantly she slipped away. He stretched out to her his despairing arms, eager to rescue her, or feel her form, but could hold nothing save the yielding air. Dying the second time, she could not say a word of censure of her husband's fault; what had she to complain of—his great love? Her last word spoken was, “Farewell!” which he could barely hear, and with no further sound she fell from him again to Hades. Orpheus and Eurydice by G. Ksatrezntein-Stub The Orpheus Myth in Music From The Renaissance to the Present During the European Renaissance the myth takes on significance as an emblem of the power of music—and musicians begin interpreting the myth with greater frequency. The earliest extant opera, Jacopo Peri’s Euridice, dated around 1600, is based on the myth—as are at least 64 other operas dating from the year 1600 to the present day. These include, most notably: Monteverdi’s The Legend of Orpheus, Telemann’s Orpheus, Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice, Offenbach’s Orphée aux enfers (remembered for giving us the “can-can”), and, most recently, Philip Glass’ Orphée. References to the story of Orpheus and Eurydice have appeared in classical and popular music ranging from the works of Stravinsky—who wrote a ballet for chamber orchestra based on the myth—to singer/songwriter Rufus Wainwright. Rocker Nick Cave recorded a double album in 2004 entitled Abattoir Blues/The Lyre of Orpheus. Black Orpheus, Jean Cocteau, and Rainer Maria Rilke Three of the most famous and influential modern interpretations of the Orpheus myth are Marcel Camus’ film Orfeu Negro, Jean Cocteau’s film Orphée, and the works by Rainer Maria Rilke on the subject: the Sonnets To Orpheus and Orpheus, Eurydice, Hermes. Over the next two thousand years this part of the myth would be retold, taking on different meanings for different generations. The Loss of Eurydice by Elsie Russell, Oil on linen, 1994 Set in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro during Carnival, Camus’ film is a generally faithful reinterpretation of the myth of Orpheus set to a bossa nova soundtrack by Antonio Carlos Jobim. Praised by critics around the world, the film won the 1959 Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival and the 1960 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. Orphée, written and directed by Jean Cocteau, is set in contemporary Paris. In the film, Orpheus is a poet who becomes obsessed with Death (the Princess), while one of Death's associates, Heurtebise, has unrequited feelings for Eurydice. Eurydice is killed by the Princess' henchmen and Orpheus goes after her into the Underworld. Although entangled, the Princess sends Orpheus and Eurydice back out of the Underworld. Adapted from an earlier play by Cocteau, the film is the second of a three-part trilogy by Cocteau based on Orpheus’ mythical character. Orpheus, Eurydice, Hermes, written nearly twenty years before the Sonnets, delves more deeply into the psyche of Eurydice than much of the Orphic literature had before. In the poem, Rilke describes Eurydice as being filled like a fruit with sweetness and darkness and so full of vast death that she comprehended nothing. In Rilke’s poem it is the messenger god Hermes who notices Orpheus’ famous look back: And when suddenly the god stopped her and, with anguish in his cry, uttered the words: ‘He has turned round’ – she comprehended nothing and said softly: ‘Who?’ Combined with the Sonnets, Rilke’s approach to the myth, his views of death within the works, and its emphasis on Eurydice as a central figure, has profoundly influenced the work of fiction authors, poets, musicians, and theatre artists including most prominently Mary Zimmerman and Sarah Ruhl. Engraving of Mercury taking Eurydice back to Hades, 1902 3 Talking to Ghosts and Conjuring the Invisible: A conversation with Sarah Ruhl about life, death, and Eurydice Walter Bilderback: A lot has happened to you since we did The Clean House here in 2004. Can you tell us a little about it? How has your life as an artist changed? Sarah Ruhl: Not much in substance. But I did have a baby. And move to New York. I have less time to do nothing. Which I crave. WB: That seems humble. You won a MacArthur fellowship; you’ve had new plays premiere at some of the most prestigious theaters around the country, as well as three critically-praised productions Off Broadway in the past 18 months. You've even been profiled in Smithsonian Magazine, which usually doesn't pay much attention to theater. SR: Do you mean that as a question or a comment? WB: I was trying to make it a question, but. . . SR: I guess I separate how has my life and writing changed from how has my career changed. Basically you write what you write, you show up at rehearsals— in substance it's very similar, that's what I mean. I don't mean to be disingenuous, I take more taxis, but other than that, life is similar. WB: What made you interested in using the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice as the basis of a play? What led you to put the emphasis on Eurydice and her father in the underworld, rather than on Orpheus, as in most retellings of the legend? SR: There have been lots of re-tellings of the Orpheus story—Cocteau, the operas, Black Orpheus.... We know a great deal about Orpheus’ loss. But for some reason we never hear from Eurydice—she’s always a cipher, someone who dies twice. I’m interested in her voice. I’m interested in anyone who dies twice. In terms of the father, it made intuitive sense to me that Eurydice would meet some of her ancestors in the afterlife. The triangulation between the father and the groom is fascinating to me—watching young women have to choose their husband over their father— it’s a deep, fraught exchange. In my own life, I lost my father too young, and in many ways I think I wrote Eurydice as a way to have more conversations with him. WB: Much of the play takes place in an underworld based in many respects on Greek notions – especially the idea of drinking something that makes you forget. How did the idea of the Stones come about? SR: In the version of the myth I grew up on, Orpheus' music is so sad it makes even the stones weep. So I was interested in the idea of repressed emotion in the underworld... what is it about weeping that breaks the rules of the underworld and allows Orpheus to enter? I also think the Stones enforce the rules of the underworld, they are our guides, and they make us laugh when we want to weep. I love Greek choruses because they mirror the experience of the audience—they remind us that we’re seeing a play and not a film. WB: You’ve also presented a different image of an afterlife in your play Dead Man’s Cell Phone. I can’t think of another playwright who has created two different visions of the afterlife. What has led you back to this theme? SR: Maybe I’ve been around too many death-beds for my age….but I also think there is something about death that feels unintegrated in the modern psyche. In a way it feels to me like an odd casualty of modern life, the way death has been professionalized—other people "handle" it for us, and we're cut off from the whole notion of it, the whole experience of it. It sometimes feels as though we're no longer looking at the whole life cycle. Death is viewed as an odd aberration that happens to the unlucky, rather than something we ought to set our sights on in terms of how we live our daily lives. I think theater is a place where we can talk to ghosts, conjure the invisible, and meditate on the shortness of life, even as we try to live in it fully. 4 An Interview with Composer Toby Twining WB: You’ve mentioned just intonation frequently in our conversations. Can you explain what that is? [Wilma Theater co-Artistic Director Blanka Zizka asked vocal composer Toby Twining to create an original sound score for our production of Eurydice. He spoke with Wilma Dramaturg Walter Bilderback about his compositional techniques.] TT: Put briefly, just intonation is a very old way of tuning music by making intervals sound their smoothest. I say “extended just intonation,” which implies that I am designing scales other than those that are standard, such as the diatonic scale (white keys on a piano) or chromatic scale (black and white keys on a piano). Just scales divide the octave differently than a piano. Furthermore, scales tend to be fixed—that is, they use a handful of pitch regions that do not change frequency: A is always 440 Hz (vibrations per second), E is always 660 Hz, etc. Sometimes I do that, but other times I maximize smoothness to make a chord, with which the music can creep and crawl around microtonally throughout the pitch spectrum—A might begin as 440 Hz, but through a series of chord progressions, might become a little higher or lower. Walter Bilderback: Some in our audience may know your work, from appearances on Prairie Home Companion, for instance, but many will not. Could you tell us a little about your career? Toby Twining: For the past twenty-plus years, I have focused my composing and performing on primarily experimental, unaccompanied vocal ensemble music. I have approached the voice as an instrument, seeking to use its technical agility and many colors to achieve a new choral/vocal sound. Two exemplary recordings are Shaman (1994, BMG Classics), music for vocal quartet, quintet, and eleven voices, and Chrysalid Requiem (Cantaloupe Music, 2003), for twelve-part chamber choir. The latter is also my first large work in extended just intonation, a tuning system, which interests me for its innovative harmony. Comments from Costume Designer Oana Botez-Ban: I've been working with Mimi Lien since my 2nd year at NYU. I love working with Mimi. Her sense of space is very unique: she creates an architectural space that surprises you in its composition and poetry which compliments the work of the other WB: You refer to microtones a lot. What are they? TT: The term microtone needs qualification. According to western music theory, our smallest musical interval is the semitone, that is, the interval made by two adjacent keys on the piano. Anything designers. My first project with both Mimi and Tyler Micoleau was Pig Iron's Love Unpunished. I think Tyler’s work is breathtaking. I am very excited to be on the same design team again. The temptation with this text was to try to abstract everything. Blanka was very clear about the smaller is a microtone, which westerners have traditionally considered to be an exotic feature of the music of other cultures (South Indian, Indonesian, Egyptian, and many more). However, microtones are part of the performance practice of western musicians, whose instruments have flexible pitch, such as the violin and voice, in order to stay in tune with each other. String quartets, Barbershop quartets, and vocal ensembles that specialize in Early Music excel in this. WB: How can we recognize these techniques when we hear them in the play? TT: I'm not sure I want people to recognize it when they hear just intonation in Eurydice. It's the musical qualities made possible by tuning subtleties that I hope will be effective for people, rather than knowing something is "microtonal" or in “just intonation." On the other hand, I feel that tuning with pure intervals can affect the music profoundly, such as the increased sense of serenity it produces in Renaissance church music— another example, like Barbershop Quartet, that everyone hears without knowing what it is. Generally, whenever we hear maximum smoothness between pitches, we are hearing a just tuning. If we are hearing unusual intervals that sound off in some way, but surprise us by their smoothness, we are hearing some form of extended just intonation. need to not lose the human side of the story. Worlds like Fellini's Clowns for the Stones or Alice in Wonderland were references for the design. Blanka kept referring to the Stones as “Clowns of Death”...I think that stayed with me. Costume sketches by Oana Botez-Ban About the Wilma Beginning with their adaptation of George Orwell’s Animal Farm in 1979 for The Wilma Project, Blanka Zizka and Jiri Zizka have created some of the most memorable theatrical productions in Philadelphia for more than 28 years. The Wilma Project, founded in 1973, challenged Philadelphia audiences with productions from avant-garde theater troops such as Bread & Puppet Theatre, Mabou Mines, Charles Ludlam’s Ridiculous Theatrical Company, The Wooster Group, Ping Chong & the Fiji Company, and Spalding Gray. The Zizkas arrived in Philadelphia from their native Czechoslovakia in 1977, and soon after they joined The Wilma Project as artists-in-residence. In 1981, following the Board of Directors’ offer to assume the artistic leadership of the project, the Zizkas converted an old warehouse on Sansom Street into a 100-seat space where The Wilma Theater, as it is known today, was founded. On Sansom Street, the Wilma mounted 16 acclaimed seasons, operating to full capacity. Hugh Hardy. The 300-seat theater allows for intimacy and closeness between the audience and the actors, while providing ample space on stage for more spectacular productions. Productions by the Wilma have been seen at the International Theater Festival in the Czech Republic; in New York at the Public Theater and Manhattan Theatre Club; The Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, DC; McCarter Theatre Center in Princeton, NJ; Long Wharf Theatre in Connecticut; and ACT Seattle. In addition to their presentations and festivals, the Wilma has produced over 100 productions, including 16 World Premieres, 12 US Premieres, 3 East Coast Premieres, and 63 Philadelphia Premieres. The Wilma coproduced a feature film broadcast nationally on Great Performances. The theater has worked with notables such as Stephen Sondheim, Tom Stoppard, Christopher Hampton, Doug Wright, and Arthur Miller as well as playwrights such as Claudia Shear, Lillian Groag, Chay Yew, Charles L. Mee, Jason Sherman, Dael Orlandersmith, Robert William Sherwood, Sarah Ruhl, Polly Pen, and Laurence Klavan. The theater has won 39 Barrymore Awards for Excellence in Theater, the most awards received by any company, and has received high critical acclaim from many publications throughout the tri-state region and from national publications such as: The New York Times, The New York Post, TIME, USA Today, The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune and The Wall Street Journal. Why the Name Wilma? In 1985, a decision was made to find a larger space for the theater and in 1989, a location was identified at the corner of Broad and Spruce Streets. The Wilma opened its new facility on Philadelphia’s Avenue of the Arts in 1996. The first new theater to be built in Center City since 1928 was designed by renowned theater architect In A Room of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf imagines Shakespeare’s sister Judith, as brilliant as her brother but beaten into silence—both literally and figuratively—by the age she lives in. To explain how the lives of two siblings could so dramatically diverge, Woolf recalls a bishop who explained to an inquiring parishioner that, just as cats don’t go to heaven, so cannot any woman possess the talent of Shakespeare: “How much thinking those old gentlemen used to save one! How the borders of ignorance shrank back at their approach! Cats do not go to heaven. Women cannot write the plays of Shakespeare.” It was simply a given. The Wilma Theater inherited its name from the original Wilma Project, which began in 1973 as a feminist collective. They chose to name their theater after an invented sister of Shakespeare, but not after Woolf ’s Judith. The founders created the fantastical Wilma, a talented sister with a room of her own, the means and freedom to express herself. When Blanka Zizka and Jiri Zizka took over The Wilma Project, they did not abandon its namesake. The Zizkas’ The Wilma Theater does not take the status quo as a given. Instead, it constantly strives for new ways of expression and revelation, social significance Board of Directors Officers Peggy Greenawalt, Chair John D. Rollins, Vice Chair Albert E. “Ted” Wolf, Vice Chair Lewis H. Johnston, Secretary Thomas Mahoney, Treasurer Board Members Roger Ballou Autumn Bayles Arjun Bedi Clare D’Agostino, Esq. Mark S. Dichter, Esq. Steve Director Herman C. Fala, Esq. Linda Glickstein Sudhakar Goverdhanam Jeff Harbison Harvey Kimmel Erin Kuhls Robert E. Linck Sissie Lipton David E. Loder, Esq. Marilyn Lucas James F. McGillin Margaret W. Meigs Donald F. Parman Ronald Rock Mary Rucci Dianne L. Semingson Ellen B. Solms Evelyn G. Spritz Gillian Wakely Andrew B. Williams Elizabeth A. W. Williams Jeanne P. Wrobleski, Esq. Ex-Officio James Haskins Dr. R. J. Wallner Blanka Zizka Jiri Zizka 12 A Special Note to Our Donors Thank you to all of our donors, including those who donate through our Ticket Exchange Program. This list acknowledges all donors above $150 from April 15th, 2007 through April 7th, 2008. If your name has been omitted or misprinted, please accept our apologies. Notify us of the change by contacting Lea Montalto-Rook, Development Associate, at 215.893.9456 x109. Student Sunday Evenings This program is generously underwritten by the Virginia and Harvey Kimmel Endowment Fund. This program provides $10 tickets to students. Foundation, Corporate, and Government Supporters Anonymous Altria, Inc. 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Bilderback Proud Recipient of a 2007 Excellence Award from This prestigious award is critical in the Wilma’s effort to broaden participation and engage our audiences by formalizing performance-related symposia and topical discussion events and launching our Building the Audiences of Tomorrow campaign to increase high school and college student participation. Won’t you please join The Wallace Foundation and give the gift of theater to a student in your community? Here are just a few examples of what your contribution can do: • $25 subsidizes a discounted rush ticket for one student • $50 provides the materials for student leaders who participate in our Wilma Student Advisory meetings • $100 subsidizes a discounted season subscription to the Wilma for one student *At the $150 level your name is listed in the Wilmabill program* • $250 funds instruction by a Teaching Artist in our Wilmagination program. 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Anonymous (3) Ms. Natalie Abbott Phyllis and Charles Adams+ Mr. and Ms. Reid Addis+ James and Sandra Andrews+ Peter Arger Ms. Mary Ashley Mr. Joseph F. Baker+ Dr. Donald Bakove and Margaret G. McLaughlin Ms. Leah Baron Alan Barstow and Jennifer Clarke+ Ms. Susan Basile+ Richard and Eileen Bazelon+ Mr. Ralph Bean+ Mr. and Ms. Charles Benshetler+ Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Bernard Lo and Tom Betley+ Mr. and Ms. Barry Bevacqua+ Ann and Tom Blackburn+ Mr. Stanley Bodeen+ Libby Cone and Tom Borawski+ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bornemann+ Mr. Brad Bowen and Ms. Karen Knox+ Ms. Susan H. Bray Joseph and Mary Lou Breidenstine+ Mr. Norman Brumberg Mr. and Ms. David Brownlee Mr. James Bryson Mr. John Burns Barbara and Bruce Byrne+ Ms. Lee Canter Anne and Thomas Caramanico+ Mr. Edward Carrington Debbie and Alan Casnoff Mrs. Carol Caswell+ Mr. Darrell J. Cira+ Paul Coff and Susan Odessy Mr. Robert Conner Mr. and Ms. Robert Corlies+ Norman D. Cotterell and Tuesday Vanstory Tony and Harriet Crane+ Mr. Jerry Cross+ Granville Crothers Mr. Chester T. Cyzio+ Dr. Christopher D'Amanda Mr. David J. Dotzert Mr. Daniel C. Drecksage and Ms. Leslie Sudock+ Maxine Dubin Robert DuPlessis and Rachel Blau DuPlessis Sheryl and Steve Durham+ John T. Durkin and Rebecca L. Stanley+ Dr. and Ms. Joel K. Edelstein* Ms. Susan J. Ellis+ Mr. Howard Emerson Mr. Stephen Falchek+ Paul and Judith Farber+ Dr. Charles Farthing Ms. Helen F. Faust+ Jill K. Fenton Janet and Edward Fielding Mr. and Ms. Robert J. Fleming Ralph and Carol Flood+ Alan Folsom and Kathryn Ruch Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Ford+ Ms. Ashley Frazier Robert Freeman and Beverly Caplan-Freeman W. Roderick & Pamela Gagne Charles M. and Ellen Gallagher+ Harry and Jeanne Gelman+ Ms. Deborah E. Glass Dr. Steven and Mrs. Susan Glauser+ Glenn Goldberg Michele Goldfarb and Tony Rostain John and Elizabeth Gontarz+ Ms. Criswell Gonzalez Drs. Mark and Vivan Greenberg Ms. Susan V. Greene Michael and Anne Greenwald+ Ms. Margaret Grip+ Ira and Jane Grushow+ Vahe Hadajian Mr. Mark H. Haller+ Robert and Dianne Harnish+ Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Harrison+ Peter and Donna Hasselmo Ms. Marion V. Heacock+ Ms. Patricia Henriques+ Mr. and Mrs. William Hensinger+ Sally Steffen and Geoffrey Herrera Ms. Elizabeth Higginbotham Matthew and Cindy Hirsch Mr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Hirshorn+ Ms. Terry Hirshorn Mr. Thomas Holland+ Michael Hozik and Margaret Rea+ Ms. Kathleen Hutchins Paul H. Kahn and Janet Alden Kahn+ Mr. Ross Kardon+ Caroline R. Kemmerer Mr. John S. Kiley Donald and Gay Kimelman Mr. Robert Kirkwood+ Ms. Kaori Kitao+ Mr. and Ms. Craig Knauer Drs. Alfred Knudson and Anna Meadows+ Mr. Jeff Koopman Mr. Kenneth D. Kopple+ Peg and Michael Kramer+ Mr. and Ms. Clive Landa Charles and Lucinda Landreth+ Nancy Lanham Rachelle and Wayne Leese+ Mr. Eric Leichter Chris and Becky Leise Joe and Ginny Leonard+ Mr. David Lerman and Ms. Shelly Wallock+ Clifford and Elizabeth Levine+ Dr. Rafael and Nancy Levites+ Mr. and Mrs. Howard H. Lewis+ Joseph and Dorritt Linsk+ Mr. William A. Loeb+ Ann T. Loftus, Esquire and Eileen Talone+ Mr. Michael Lord Mr. Robert Macbeth Frank and Sally Mallory Mr. and Ms. James Marks Gordon and Louise Marshall+ Fran Martin Ms. Lynne Maxwell Ms. Rachel Mazzagatti Mr. James McCaffery+ Dot and Joe McGrew+ Mr. Donald McKay+ Laura and Marc McKenna Mr. and Mrs. Jay K. Meadway Lawrence Meehan and Susan Tomita+ Mr. and Ms. David Miller+ Megan and Lou Minella+ Mr. and Mrs. David Mintzer Fredaricka and Douglas Moffitt+ Ms. Jonni Moore Christiaan Morssink and Shirika Kumanyika+ Mr. and Ms. Kenneth Mumma Frank and Fiona Murray+ Dr. and Ms. Andrew Newman+ Quan A. Nguyen and Jessica Lynn Geyer+ Gene and Sally Nicholls+ Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Ockman+ Ms. Barbara Oldenhoff+ Hugh O'Neill and Fay Shah Mr. and Mrs. Paul Orleman Ms. Catherine Ormerod+ Mr. and Ms. Robert Panaccio Mr. Arthur Panfile+ Milton and Ruth Parnes+ Mr. and Ms. Philip Paul+ Mr. and Ms. John Peakes Ruth Perlmutter Ms. Christina Peterson Mr. and Mrs. John A. Philbrick III+ Marcelle Pick Elizabeth and Jerome Pontillo+ Dr. and Mrs. Joel S. Porter+ Ms. Harriet Potashnick Daniel Promislo Charles and April Regan Mr. and Mrs. Kurt W. Reiss+ Dr. Ken Richman+ Ms. Jean Ridgway Debi Rochelle Mr. and Mrs. Guadalupe and Dorothy Romanko Rojo Ms. Suzanne Rommel+ Gordon and Karen Rose+ Mr. and Ms. Michael Rosen Barbara and Daniel Rottenberg Ms. Cheryl Rusten Carol and George Sabochick+ David and Romayne Sachs+ Andrew Sacksteder and Colleen Murphy+ Lynn and Anthony C. Salvo Ms. Nora Salzman+ Mr. John F. Sanford+ Mr. and Ms. David Sautter+ Karen Scholnick Mr. Gino Segre and Ms. Bettina Hoerlin Gerald and Linda Senker+ Ms. Christine J. Shamborsky Sharon and Irv Shapiro+ Mr. James Sisneros Elizabeth and Richard Soltan Dr. Edward J. Speedling and Jane Isaacs Lowe+ Ms. Louisa Spottswood+ Mr. Peter Stambler Harold and Emily Starr+ Jonathan and Judith Stein Mark Stein and Carol Baker+ Mark Steinberger and Ann Lebowitz+ Mr. and Ms. John Stiklorius+ Mr. and Mrs. Norman Stuessy+ Mr. Stephen A. Stumpf+ Dr. Daniel B. Szyld Ms. Nina E. Tafel+ Bruce and Christina Tarkoff+ Louis Thompson and Sherryl Kuhlman Tonto II Carol DePrisco and Walter Uhler+ United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania Philip and Betty Varner+ Daniel and Marilyn Veber+ Barbara Ventresco+ Hella and Lewis Volgenau+ Eddie Wallace Ms. Marion M. Walter Sallie & James Warden+ Ms. Wendy Warner John Weidman and Ebony Staton Bob Weinberg and Eleanor Wilner+ Ms. Margie Weingarten Barbara and Peter Westergaard+ Wendy and Miriam White+ Bob Weinberg and Eleanor Wilner Ms. Wendy E. Wilson+ Bernhard and Elizabeth Witter+ Ms. Mary Ann Woodcock+ Barbara and Richard Woods+ Thomas and Jacqueline Zemaitis Peter Zutter and Tom Murphy+ Partnering Businesses Barristers Bar and Grille 1832 Sansom St. 215.496.0786 Bistro Romano 120 Lombard St. 215.925.8880 Cafe Spice 35 S. 2nd St. 215.627.6273 Caribou Cafe 1126 Walnut St. 215.625.9535 Cebu* 123 Chestnut St. 215.629.1100 citygrange at The Westin Philadelphia 99 S. 17th St. 215.575.6930 Cork* 90 Haddon Ave., Westmont, NJ 856.833.9800 Ecco Qui* 3200 Chestnut St. 215.222.3226 Ernesto’s 1521 Cafe 1521 Spruce St. 215.546.1521 Estia Restaurant 1405 Locust St. 215.735.7700 Fork Restaurant 306 Market St. 215.625.9425 Independence Brew Pub 1150 Filbert St. 215.922.4292 Italian Bistro of Center City 211 S. Broad St. 215.731.0700 Locust Rendezvous Bar & Grill 1415 Locust St. 215.985.1163 London Grill 2301 Fairmount Ave. 215.978.4545 Mantra* 122 S. 18th St. 215.988.1211 Marigold Kitchen BYOB* 501 S. 45th St. 215.222.3699 Mercato Restaurant & BYOB 1216 Spruce St. 215.985.2962 Meritage Restaurant 500 S. 20th St. 215.985.1922 Mission Grill* 1835 Arch St. 215.636.9550 Moriarty’s Restaurant 1116 Walnut St. 215.627.7676 Naked Chocolate Café 1317 Walnut St. 215.735.7310 Nineteen (XIX) Park Hyatt Philadelphia at the Bellevue (19th Floor) Broad and Walnut Sts. 215.790.1919 Philadelphia Fish and Co.* 207 Chestnut St. 215.625.8605 Portofino Restaurant 1227 Walnut St. 215.923.8208 Ristorante La Buca 711 Locust St. 215.928.0556 Ruth’s Chris Steak House 260 S. Broad St. 215.790.1515 Sotto Varalli 231 S. Broad St. 215.546.6800 The Capital Grille 1338 Chestnut St. 215.545.9588 The Melting Pot 1219 Filbert St., Center City 215.922.7002 8229 Germantown Ave., Chestnut Hill 215.242.3003 150 Allendale Rd., King of Prussia 610.265.7195 The Prime Rib* 1701 Locust St. 215.772.1701 Upstairs at Varalli 1345 Locust St. 215.546.4200 Valanni Restaurant & Lounge 1229 Spruce St. 215.790.9494 Warsaw Cafe 306 S. 16th Street 215.546.0204 World Cafe Live* 3025 Walnut St. 215.222.1400 Xochitl* 408 S. 2nd St. 215.238.7280 *Client of The Restaurant Collection: www.therestaurantcollection.com The Wilma Theater would like to thank the following audience members for their participation in the Audience Advisory Committee: Mary Ellen Byrne, Richard Drucker, Ilene Lefko, Karlyn Messinger, John Piston, Leslie Ryan, Karen Scholnick, Jim Shaw, John Shirley, Lewis Silverman, Patricia Sollimo, Joseph Waldo, Frank Zampiello Venture Inn SCENE 1: Pre-Theater Dinner Specials starting at $15 SCENE 2: Eurydice @ the Wilma SCENE 3: After-Show Nightcaps 255 S. CAMAC ST. 215.545.8731 WWW.VIPHILLY.COM 3D3@G09.*;,S;@ <332A/09.*;TS+9*9@ B63<3E>/@9E/G13<B@/:( 56>+<ST-S50S5:7S9*;S65 \Se^O`YeOgQS\b`OZ]`U ##$%%% Revolutionize the way you plan and hold meetings. Your Meeting Just Got Better Designed to meet even your most exacting needs, our innovative new meeting center is an ideal venue for groups from 10 to 60. Call us today to learn more about making your next meeting a successful and enjoyable experience for everyone. • 4,200 sq. ft. of stylish, easy-to-book space • Ergonomic, full-service, hi-tech surrounds • Catering Plus • Friendly, attentive professional events staff • Multiple meeting package options, one simple bill • And of course, our warm Chocolate Chip Cookies by Doubletree! Broad & Locust Streets Philadelphia, PA 19107 215-893-1679 www.philadelphia.doubletree.com All meeting centers are not created equal. SM 17 villanova university —————— Master of Arts in————— theatre Villanova’s M.A. program combines both scholarly and practical approaches to theatre. Learn from faculty and staff involved in the region’s professional theatre industry. Gain knowledge and experience in: • Acting • Directing • Dramaturgy • Script Analysis • Theory and Criticism • Playwriting Villanova Theatre has received 50 nominations and six Barrymore Awards since 1995! For more information call 610.519.4760 or visit www.theatre.villanova.edu Tom Stoppard's Exclusive Appearance at the Wilma In case you missed it, the Wilma was honored to have Tom Stoppard make a rare appearance to discuss his latest play, Rock 'n' Roll, which will open the Wilma's upcoming 30th Anniversary Season. Audience members were enthralled as he discussed with co-Artistic Director Blanka Zizka his life in former Czechoslovakia and what inspired him in writing this play. Look for more exciting news about the Wilma’s production of Rock ’n’ Roll very soon! 19 Introducing Pre-Theater Dinner Above the Avenue of the Arts Experience the flavors of XIX with a three course prix fixe menu M O N D AY – T H U R S D AY 5:30-7PM $35 PER PERSON Park Hyatt Philadelphia at the Bellevue. 19th Floor. Broad and Walnut Streets. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania 19102 T E L E P H O N E 215.790.1919 FA C S I M I L E 215.732.8518 parkhyattphiladelphia.com 30Anniversary th ROCK ‘N’ ROLL by Tom Stoppard 2008/09 directed by Blanka Zizka September 17 – October 19, 2008 “Triumphant…Rock ‘n’ Roll is arguably Stoppard’s finest play…he is a magician, and this is a passionate, decades-spanning tale of love, revolution, and music!” -The New York Times This extraordinary theatrical event from Academy Award winner and four-time Tony® Award winner Tom Stoppard (The Invention of Love) was a recent hit on Broadway following a record-breaking run in London's West End. In August 1968, Russian tanks are rolling into Prague; Jan, the Czech student, lives for rock music; Max, the English professor, lives for Communism; and Esme, the flower child, lives for a high. By 1990, the tanks are rolling out, the Stones are rolling in, and idealism has hit the wall. Stoppard's sweeping and passionate play spans two countries, three generations, and 22 turbulent years, at the end of which, love remains — and so does rock 'n' roll. SCHMUCKS by Roy Smiles directed by Jiri Zizka December 3, 2008 – January 4, 2009 “An evening of total comic virtuosity…another success for the prolific and aptly named Roy Smiles!” -The Evening Standard Fasten your seatbelts ‘cause all hell’s about to break loose! It’s 1965, and the great Northeast Blackout covers New York City in a state of panic and disorder. Isolated in a small diner, a young stand-up comic with an upcoming gig on The Ed Sullivan Show encounters comic icons Groucho Marx and Lenny Bruce and implores them for comedic guidance. What results is an exhilarating and unpredictable debate of the nature and purpose of comedy. From one of London’s funniest playwrights comes a play that had audience members laughing out loud during a reading at the Wilma earlier this season. by Wajdi Mouawad SCORCHED translated by Linda Gaboriau February 25 – March 29, 2009 directed by Blanka Zizka “Scorched introduces a playwright with an important voice to the English language theater!” -Variety A tour-de-force epic mystery depicting one woman’s moral conviction to interrupt the cycle of war and revenge, Scorched is an intensely dramatic play from an internationally acclaimed Lebanese-born playwright. After the death of their mother, twins Janine and Simon receive a surprising request in her will to deliver letters to a father they thought was dead and a brother they never knew existed. These tasks lead them on a journey to the heart of their mother’s war-torn Middle Eastern homeland. In the course of their search, they learn about their mother's long-concealed history and uncover shocking secrets about their own origins. HYSTERIA by Terry Johnson directed by Jiri Zizka May 13 – June 14, 2009 “Hysteria is an exuberant surprise…as unexpectedly resonant as a crazy sonnet!” -The New York Times Winner of an Olivier Award for Best New Comedy, Hysteria is a madcap comedy based on an historical meeting between two of the world’s greatest and most eccentric men – Sigmund Freud and Salvador Dalí. Set in London in 1938, this wild comedy showcases Freud as he deals with several unexpected encounters with his physician, a persistent young woman who delves into his past, and his biggest fan, surrealist Salvador Dalí. Soon Dalí’s surreal imagery begins to take over both Freud’s consciousness and his study in this explosive comedy full of mix-ups, misunderstandings, Under-35 scantily clad women, and Freudian slips. Subscriptions as Student Back By Popular Demand: Flex Subscriptions low as $82! Subscriptions as Perfect for those with busy schedules, low as $32! Flex Subscriptions allow you to choose performance Subscribe to all 4 plays for as little Educator Subscriptions as as $116! low as $87! Box Office: 215.546.7824 wilmatheater.org dates closer to the start of the productions. For more details, please call the Box Office at 215.546.7824 Call today or subscribe easily and securely online! 265 S Broad St, Philadelphia, PA 19107 Fax: 215.893.0895