Meet Victoria Medina & One Nation, One Mission, One Promise

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Name: Victoria Medina

What is your current project? One Nation, One Mission, One Promise

Where are you performing your show and why is it a good fit for your production?

The Steve and Marie Sgouros Theatre, under The Players Theatre Artist in Residence program. The Team at The Players Theatre are just amazing. Everyone is supportive and caring about the work that is being produced. The location is amazing, right in the heart of Greenwich Village, surrounded by the most beautiful and historic buildings and landmarks. One Nation, One Mission, One Promise brings the best of our history alive and the neighborhood around the theatre breathes life into our history and creates new memories everyday.

What’s next for you?

One Nation, One Mission, One Promise opens on July 8, 2017. We are excited to hear from the audience after the show during our talk back. The next step will be to re-stage the show based on our audience at The Steve and Marie Sgouros Theatre. In 2018 we look forward to growing into the main stage theatre, so stay tuned, because each performance will be its own unique experience.

What is the name of the last show you saw?

Groundhog Day

Any advice for your peers?

Read Sam Mendes 25 Steps to be a director. Many of his suggestions I think apply to all positions in theater production.

Want More?

Website: http://www.onenationonemissiononepromise.com/ and http://www.victoriamedina.com/

Facebook: https://https://www.facebook.com/onenationonemissiononepromise/ and www.facebook.com/victoriamedina001

Twitter:  @vmedinatweets

Instagram: @onenationonemissiononepromise

You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWFUyddc1BVk8Iodh6equtQ

Victoria Medina, Playwright, Director, Producer

Victoria has been invited to participate in The Players Theatre Artist In Residence Program. For over twenty years she has dedicated her life to her three passions: photography, writing and performing. This theatrical journey, One Nation, One Mission, One Promise, represents the climactic 3rd stage of this project which includes all three disciplines along with speaking engagements. She is so excited to see her trifecta of photos, writing and theater come to full fruition!

It began life as the photographic art exhibit, American Spirit, and was then developed into an Amazon best-selling book entitled One Nation, One Mission, One Promise, featuring exhibit images alongside her original poetry and prose plus quotes from famous and not-so famous Americans. Images from the American Spirit exhibit were also featured in the debut stage production of the award-winning show, Zuccotti Park – The Musical.

Victoria is also delighted to have joined the Song of Solomon: A New Musical producing team. She has also produced Latinos and the Business of Acting at the Public Theatre, and has been on the production team of several independent films in Los Angeles.


Show Information:

When: July 8, 2017 @7:00 pm
Where: Steve and Marie Sgouros Theatre
115 MacDougal Street
1 block from West 4th Street Subway
212-475-1449

http://www.theplayerstheatre.com/home.html
https://web.ovationtix.com/trs/pr/974663

Meet Jonathan Bruce King & The Gallery Players

Jonathan and I have been chatting about this past season at The Gallery Players. This season has been a great representation of American theatre.  Here it is:

Malini: The Gallery Players celebrates 50 years this year with you as their season producer. The season reflects many genres of theatre (Gypsy, The 39 Steps, A Few Good Men, Marry Me a Little, You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown, Sweet Bird of Youth, Ragtime, and the upcoming Black Box New Play Festival). How did you and your team decide on the shows?

Jonathan: This season is indeed quite varied. We tried to pick shows that were fitting of a 50th season. As a result, we chose very challenging pieces for a 99-seat theatre to perform. Each show presented a unique challenge and one that gave us a chance to explore new things such as the intricate sets for Sweet Bird of Youth, the many locations of Gypsy to the 35 person cast of Ragtime. The desire was to have the season reflect Gallery’s roots but also show where we want to go with more intricate and audience delighting design, cast and production elements. We wanted to find shows that could wow our audience and how them where we want to take the theater and push the limits of what 99-seat theater can be for the audience.

Malini: The company has a rich history. Harvey Feinstein’s Torch Song Trilogy has its roots there. Seth Rudetsky and many other Broadway folks have performed there. What drew you to this theatre company?

Jonathan: It is actually! I’m a huge fan of both Harvey and Seth, and when I heard that they got their start in our theatre, it further solidified my desire to work there. I think what I have loved is coming into an environment that is there to help artists train and develop their craft. It’s been such a great place to learn producing. I’m so grateful to our Artistic Director, Mark Harborth, and the president of the board, Dominic Cuskern, for the amount of support they’ve given me and the leeway to learn.

Malini: What is your goals as an artist?

Jonathan: First, aesthetically, I try to make art that can only be done in a theater, live. Whether this be some kind of improv, immersive elements, or even just surrounding the audience with singers, I try to make sure that this is something you have to attend to understand. I love live performance and I want my audience to have a reason to see my work rather than watching a streaming video. In a more philosophically, my goal as an artist is to create art that has what it needs to succeed. I’m a big believer in creating a piece that is both sustainable, economically and artistically, that gets exactly what it needs but doesn’t have to get what it wants to tell its story and reach its audience.

Malini: What’s next for the company?

Jonathan: We have big plans! The week after we close ragtime we are presenting a workshopped production of a new musical by Cristina and Robert Farruggia, On the Air. It’s a great new piece and is a first for both Gallery Players and its Overtures reading program. Next season should be a great one as for the first time we’re doing four musicals. I can’t tell you what they are just yet, as our announcement has been held until May 9th at our theater’s 50th Birthday party in Park Slope.

Jonathan-Bruce King hails from the beautiful and slightly foggy, Oakland, CA. Originally trained as an actor at Washington University in St. Louis, he now works as the season producer at Gallery Players in Park Slope. Producing select off-off broadway credits include Bottled Up (DCTV), A Doll’s House (Access Theatre), In the Heights (Gallery Players) and Ragtime (Gallery Players). Outside of his work in theatre and the consulting world he enjoys escaping New York for the sunny wonderland that is the west coast, attending lunches at the Coffee House Club, and reading his favorite points and miles blogs. Artistically he tries to be involved with theatre that is immersive and shows off all the amazing opportunities afforded by live performance.

Review by Hayden Field: Performeteria

CaptureAt the bar, a bright yellow skirt, pink sash and wide eyes greet us. Next to them is a man giving off distinctly pirate vibes, with a scarf wrapped around his head, a gray vest and… black-and-white Vans. Nearby, a woman with a partly shaved head grips a plastic knife. These are off-duty artists participating in Performeteria, the Theatre Development Fund’s first-ever immersive festival — featuring Off-Off-Broadway theatre and dance companies and presented at the Baruch Performing Arts Center.

The evening kicks off with an immersive piece by Kinesis Project Dance Theatre, figures in orange moving in unison — creeping, flowing, shaking. A smiling guide beckons his group forward — everyone will be led through the building to see three different 10-minute pieces, and afterwards, they can depart, join another group or simply wander about.

Through a pair of double doors and down the stairs into a cavernous space, Rady & Bloom Collective Playmaking is performing in front of an audience that is seated on the stage. An actress approaches the piano, begins to play and sinks down in confusion and pain. Her company lines up to lean upon her, creating together an animal that sighs as one. Different parts of the beast call out about struggles their ancestors went through, like a grandfather who fought in World War II, and as they do, the piano continues to sing, and large paintings are unrolled and flashed to the audience. But these things don’t all go together — they’re a little unsettling, much like the stories they’re meant to illustrate. The piano’s music grows steadily louder, like a carnival ride you can’t retire from, before it fades away. One actor asks, “What do you wish for?”

Back by the bar, a man dressed in a Santa suit — complete with attached reindeer — and a brunette with a reluctant face are staring at their pizza in the midst of a millennial breakup that only gets realer as the minutes wear on. This is Lesser America, a pop theatre ensemble. The two ruminate over meeting at another, happier SantaCon — and the complications of breaking up, like the fact that they own things together and their parents are friends on Facebook. “I’m your person. You text me that all the time; how can it not be true?” he asks. She tells him that when she wakes up in the middle of the night and he’s not holding her, she can’t breathe, and “when you’re still holding me just as tight, it’s somehow even worse.”

Through two more sets of double doors and on the right — you could almost miss it — experimental physical theatre ensemble Blessed Unrest is moving through a dark, energetically charged space. Through their bodies, manmade sounds and select words, they seem to tell the story of a woman moving through the forest, looking for her friend, the one she loves. She’s sidetracked by a group of wild wanderers, one of whom saves her life by designating her her playmate. After a mad dance of abandon with their hands at each other’s throats in only the most intimate way, the two lie down to the sound of pigeons cooing. A revelation sparks the woman to leave her newfound friend in search of her old one — and to give the audience a childlike view of love in its simplicity but also its complications. Her friend tells her, “If you leave now, I can keep you just as you are.”

Performeteria runs through Friday, March 24 at the Baruch Performing Arts Center and features site-specific pieces from 15 Off-Off-Broadway companies.

Click HERE for tickets.

Meet Tony Torn and Ben Beckley & Latter Days

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Names: Tony Torn & Ben Beckley

What is your current project?

Latter Days

Where are you performing it and why is it the right fit for your piece?

Ben: Tony Torn and Will Dagger are performing the show (my first full-length play) as an Ars Nova Fling, with Dutch Kills producing. Ars Nova’s an ideal space for the production, not only because it’s an intimate and flexible space, but because it draws energy and resonance from the dozens of hyper-inventive premieres that have passed through it. I’m thrilled to be there.

Tony: Ars Nova is an intimate space that works well for an intimate play.

What’s next for you?

Tony:  I’m appearing in the upcoming Signature Theater revival of Suzan-Lori Parks’ VENUS.

Ben: I’ll be appearing opposite two-time Tony-winner Christian Borle in a reading of Brecht’s RESISTIBLE RISE OF ARTURO UI and in The Assembly’s critically acclaimed HOME/SICK, a play I co-wrote and perform in that chronicles the rise and fall of a group of would-be American revolutionaries in the 1960s.

Who is your biggest inspiration right at this moment and why?

Tony: My wife, poet Lee Ann Brown

Ben: I’ve been thinking a lot about DON QUIXOTE lately, especially in the wake of the election and in the midst of a new administration apparently determined to forcefully divorce themselves and their supporters from demonstrable realities.

Want More?

Ben’s Website: http://www.benbeckley.com

Tony’s Twitter: @tonytorn
Tony Torn is an actor and director known for his extensive work with Reza Abdoh and Richard Foreman, and for being a founding director of Reverend Billy and The Church of Stop Shopping. He recently played the title role in Ubu Sings Ubu, a rock opera adaptation of Alfred Jarry’s Ubu Roi which he created and co-directed with Dan Safer of Witness Relocation. He can currently be seen in Ben Beckley’s Latter Days at Ars Nova. He manages Torn Page, a salon space and classroom in Chelsea which is dedicated to the artistic legacy of his parents, Rip Torn and Geraldine Page.
As a writer, Ben has premiered work with The Assembly, F*It Club, and Blue Box Productions. As an actor, he appeared in Dying For It with Atlantic Theater Company and in the first national Broadway tour of Peter and the Starcatcher. Other credits include Berkshire Theatre Group, TACT, New Georges, Human Head, Joe’s Pub, Temporary Distortion (four international tours) and The Flea, where he premiered work with Adam Rapp and Christopher Durang. As a member of The Assembly, he has co-created five original productions. His on-screen credits include The Onion, The Jew of Malta, and The Revolution. Upcoming: The Assembly’s HOME/SICK at JACK.


Show information (venue, dates, ticket info)

LATTER DAYS runs February 13 – March 11 at 7:00pm.
Theater 511
511 West 54thStreet at 10th Avenue — accessible from the C & E trains at 50th Street.
Tickets are $25.
To purchase tickets, call 212-352-3101 or visit http://www.dutchkillstheater.com.

Meet Felix Rojas & Growing Up Gonzales

Name: Felix Rojas

What is your current project?

My current project is a one person, two act play called Growing Up Gonzales. Gonzales is a comedy with drama that tells the story of two brothers, Johnny and Cisco, who are brought together by death. It is Johnny’s job to clean out the apartment of the deceased Cisco. While cleaning he finds Cisco’s memoirs and discovers a brother he never really new. It’s a play about love, communication and forgiveness. It opens at The Medicine Show Theater on 52nd Street between 10th and 11th Avenues on Friday March 17th and runs through April 9th.

Where are you performing it and why is it the right fit for your piece?

The Medicine Show Theater is a nice intimate venue, the play works well in this setting, and the location is smack dab in the theater district. If we want theater people to see the show this is where it needs to be. This run of Gonzales is a showcase with the goal to attract some movers and shakers who can help move and shake the show to a bigger and more permanent venue. We have a small group of investors who believe in the project. I think their excitement is contagious. We’re hoping it rubs of on a few people.

What’s next for you?

I have a couple of projects in development. I have a comedy show called The National Improv League, I have two pilots for TV, a film script, a play with music (that should be traveling soon) and a musical. I think it’s important as a content creator to always have a thing or three in your back pocket. I think the musical will be up next. It’s a big, beautiful and haunting Caribbean spectacular. I’m hoping Gonzales helps connect me to the right people.

Who is your biggest inspiration right at this moment and why?

It’s not so much who but what. I am most inspired by people who have a dream that they refuse to give up on, I’m inspired by disabled people who accomplish more than able people, People who are kind, like my better half Saida, inspire me, great music that touches my soul inspires me, spiritual food, from any source, that helps me to understand myself a little better inspires me, words from Chekhov, Marquez and Hemingway inspire me, my kids inspire me…all of these things inspire me to create. Inspiration for me is active, it’s engaged…it reaches in a grabs a hold of my soul…sometimes gently and sometimes not. Gifted and brilliant inactive beings are still gifted and brilliant, they’re just not inspiring. I hope I never have to rely on any one person to inspire me.

Want More?

Website: http://www.papispromise.com

Felix Rojas is a writer, producer and director of theater, film and television in that order. After taking a 17 year hiatus from the entertainment business Rojas returned in 2010 with a string of hits that has earned him a top spot on NYC’S hottest writers list and has garnered several awards and nominations. Rojas writes about life from the inside out in a way that crosses all social, political, gender and cultural boundaries. With work that is difficult to place into a specific genre Rojas states that “I try to capture life not a genre…life has no genre”. Rojas has several projects for the stage, film and television that he calls “ground breaking”. He hopes to meet the right producer or show-runner that will help bring his work to the forefront.


Show information (venue, dates, ticket info)

MARCH 17th thru APRIL 9TH
AT
THE MEDICINE SHOW THEATER
549 W. 52ND STREET
(BETWEEN 10TH AND 11TH AVE.)

http://www.growingupgonzales.com

Review: Love Alone

My journey to Enfield, NH led me to the Shaker Bridge Theatre where they produced Deborah Salem-Smith’s Love Alone. Nestled in this quiet and sweet town, a story of death and grief and how the parties involved navigate their lives unfolds.

The play opens with Dr. Becca Neal, an anesthesiologist, breaking the news of the death of Helen’s partner of twenty years during a routine operation. The play delves into the lives of these two women and how they try to manage through the malpractice suit, their families, and moving forward. These two strong leads, Qurrat Kadwani, and Suzanne Dudley-Schon, open the play with high stakes but sadly never interact again. Regardless, they lead their story lines with command and emotional gravitas. Kadwani dances the fine line of balancing the loss of her first patient and the ramifications of that onto her personal interactions. Dudley-Schon’s performance is a truthful portrayal of the stages of grief allowing us to feel it with her. Supported by a strong ensemble, Jaime Schwarz’s Clementine (Helen’s daughter) brings light to a dark situation. Ben Roberts plays the distraught husband of Becca whose own needs aren’t being met. Leah Romano covers three roles – each with their own distinct character. Mike Blackman’s plays the attorney who rigorously fights for the deceased and her family.

Set in the thrust playing space, the action takes place in various locations (two living rooms, a waiting room, parking lot, etc.) which all encompass the space at the same time. A complicated play that was brilliantly staged by director, Richard Waterhouse, the scenes weave in out of each other and at times simultaneously occur. The transitions therefore were seamless allowing the story to move quickly and keep the audience’s focus.

The show has two more performances. If you’re in Enfield or in a neighboring town, be sure to see it before it closes.


Saturday, February 4th at 7:30pm; Sunday, February 5th at 2:30pm

23 Main Street, Enfield, NH

http://www.shakerbridgetheatre.org

 

 

 

Meet Paul Williams (Marry Me a Little & You’re a Good Man…)

Name: Paul Williams

What is your current project?

Currently I am playing Man in Marry Me A Little and Charlie Brown in You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown.

Where are you performing it and why is it the right fit for your piece?

Both of these musicals are being performed in repertory at The Gallery Players in Brooklyn. This theatre is absolutely perfect for both shows, but especially for Marry Me A Little. This space provides the actors an opportunity to be intimate with the audience and it feels great to have them right there with us while we are telling this story.

What’s next for you?

I hope more opportunities, like this one, come along where I get to perform with a great cast and work with an amazing creative team!

Who is your biggest inspiration right at this moment and why?

I’m inspired by people who are passionate about what they do and who pour their hearts and souls into their work. The Marry Me A Little cast and creative team are prime examples of this. We have taken a show and applied a completely new concept that is going to affect so many people in such a positive way. I’ve learned something from every single actor I share this show with and I do not know what I would do without them. Each day I walk into the theatre I am inspired to be better and for that I thank them!

Want More?

Twitter: @_paultwilliams
Instagram: @_paultwilliams

Paul Williams is making his debut NYC performance at The Gallery Players. He received his masters degree from Oklahoma City University in music theater and his bachelor’s degree from The University of Southern Mississippi in music education. Some of his previous roles include Tom Collins (Rent), Smokey Joe’s Cafe (Adrian), Coalhouse Walker Jr. (Ragtime), and Jim (Big River).


Show information (venue, dates, ticket info)

The Gallery Players

199 14th St. Brooklyn, NY 11215

January 26th – February 18th

Tickets can be purchased at http://www.galleryplayers.com

More info: http://galleryplayers.com/news/marry-me-a-little-youre-a-good-man-charlie-brown/

Interview with Barrie Gelles, Director of Marry Me a Little at The Gallery Players

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Barrie Gelles stages revivals in unexpected ways. That’s what she said to me when we were chatting about her upcoming revival of Sondheim’s Marry Me a Little. The musical premiered Off-Off Broadway in 1980 for a two month run and then ran again for a in 1981 at The Actors Playhouse. After that, Marry Me… enjoyed runs around the world though it’s never been produced on Broadway. Gelles felt that this was a musical that best reflects her aesthetic. She knew her concept of a two character play performed by three casts would be ambitious and a great challange. However, she knew she had her vision and the support of the historic,The Gallery Players, to make it happen. A woman after my own heart.

When I heard about your concept for Marry Me a Little, I was intrigued. This is a two character musical by Stephen Sondheim and your concept of a rotating cast (2 couples: a man and a woman; two men; and two women) is a fresh and new approach. It’s clever and ambitious. How did the concept present itself and how did you go about bringing it to fruition?

Barrie: I am going to cheat a little here and answer by way of the “director’s note” that I wrote for our audiences.  When I started working on this show, months before casting, it became clear to me that the appeal of this show was its central thesis on love. With that thought, it seemed obvious that this production could and should subvert the typical gender-normative casting and hetero-normative narratives of most musical theatre. The premise of Marry Me a Little is that of two strangers, living in New York City, in the same apartment building, one floor apart.  The story is about love lost and love yet to be found.  It seemed a perfect opportunity to be more inclusive and rethink the casting of the lovelorn duo. I decided to cast three separate duos (one male/female, one male/male, and one female/female) because I believed that the distinctly different interpretations of the same piece of art would create a unique musical theatre experience.

I appreciate you saying it was clever, and I acknowledge that it certainly was ambitious, because we didn’t have any more time that we would usually have to create a musical.  An equity showcase production allots five weeks of rehearsal, regardless of how many casts you may have.  On top of that, we are doing Marry Me a Little in repertory with You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown, so we had even less time.  We had to budget our time wisely and create a system in order to block the show with three sets of actors.  We spent each rehearsal tagging-in to the blocking session.  So we’d begin blocking our opening number “If You Can Find Me, I’m Here” and one duo would start the work.  About a third of the way through the song, they would step down and the second duo would get on their feet for the blocking session, then the third duo would follow.  Once the entire number was blocked, each duo would have a chance to run through it in its entirety.  It was as strange as it sounds and more marvelous than you can imagine.  

What are some of the challenges and breakthroughs during the rehearsal process?

Barrie: As you can imagine, it was very challenging to block in the way I have described.  However, many of our breakthroughs happened because the actors had a chance to watch someone else play their part.  By having three actors all creating the same character, they could be inspired by the adjacent interpretations.  

In order to keep the show cohesive, I insisted that all three duos commit to following one clear and consistent narrative.  In that sense, I was very much the dramaturg of the show as well as the director.  During the months leading up to rehearsal, I worked on the show a great deal.  It has no libretto, it is a sung through musical and it is made up of songs that were originally written to be part of other musicals.  Because these songs have been uprooted from their original context, they carry with them their ghosted meanings.  In order to direct this show, I had to strip the songs of their original narratives and reconsider them anew.  I had to create a given circumstances for the show and a narrative arc that we could all latch onto in order to ensure the coherency of the piece.  Because we had three casts, I had to go into the first day of rehearsal with this story already fully formed so that the actors would have a tether to keep them grounded in a very emotional musical that has no traditional plot.  I believe that this process allowed the actors to move into the more delicious realm of character development and intricate song work.  I think that the breakthroughs that they had (individually and collectively) about the songs were so rich because we hit the ground running with the narrative of the piece.

For practicality reasons, most of the blocking of the show is the same between the duos. But there are distinct differences in the physical interpretations of each of the characters.  No two actors play the characters exactly the same way, nor do they take up the stage space in the same manner.  One of the most challenging rehearsals was also the most delightful: I had to choreograph three different dances for “A Moment With You” in order to suit the actors’ bodies and to honor each duo’s particular story.  What other circumstance would yield such a crazy exploration?  

Did the script and score need to be adjusted to fit your vision?

We did not change a single word of the score – the music and lyrics have all remained the same.  In fact, there is a female actor singing the “Man” role and a male actor singing the “Woman” role and we didn’t even change the key of the music for them, we simply cast actors who could sing it (and can they ever!). Through the magic of musical theatre, where we are so willing to suspend disbelief while acknowledging the overt theatricality of people bursting into song, the pronouns and gender specific words just seem to blend into the narrative seamlessly.  This is a huge credit to the actors who are playing the roles.  

Why did you choose this show?

Stephen Sondheim’s music is so lush and so heartbreakingly complex.  It is a pleasure to work with his material.  But I mostly chose this show because it is a unique character study within a musical.  It has the trappings of a realistic, contemporary drama: it is the small world of an apartment, on a single Saturday night, where the action of the play is steeped in everyday life tasks such as reading the paper and pouring a drink.  But along with this “real life” simplicity comes an overwhelmingly emotional journey for the characters, told entirely through song.  Furthermore, because the two characters live in two separate apartments, they spend a great deal of the show without interacting with a scene partner.  The show presents one of the strangest and most intoxicating acting challenges in musical theatre: realism within a musical; unity while being alone; and a story about love that is of the past or the future, but not the present.


SHOW INFO

This is a charming and bittersweet musical featuring rarely heard songs by Stephen Sondheim. Two urban singles live through a Saturday night of deep yearning and sweet fantasies while never leaving the confines of their solitary New York City apartments. Together they breathe new life and meaning into a collection of trunk songs that were culled from the original Broadway productions of shows such as Follies, Company, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, and A Little Night Music. A must for Sondheim aficionados and any New Yorker who ever found themselves alone on a Saturday night, thinking about love that was lost and love to be found.

By special permission from Mr. Sondheim, Gallery will be presenting this two character musical with male/female, male/male and female/female pairings.]

THE CASTS OF MARRY ME A LITTLE

[A first for this show, there will be three rotating casts performing each weekend.]

Female/Female pairing

Laura Cetti

Cassandra Dupler

Male/Female pairing

Jesse Manocherian*

Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld*

Male/Male pairing

Adrian Rifat

Paul Williams


SCHEDULE

Thurs, Jan 26 @ 8:00pm (Jesse Manocherian & Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld) M/F pairing

Fri, Jan 27 @ 8:00pm (Adrian Rifat and Paul Williams) M/M pairing

Sat, Jan 28 @ 8:00pm (GalleryTalks) (Laura Cetti and Cassandra Dupler) F/F pairing

Thurs, Feb 2 @ 8:00pm (Adrian Rifat and Paul Williams) M/M pairing

Fri, Feb 3 @ 8:00pm (Laura Cetti and Cassandra Dupler) F/F pairing

Sat, Feb 4 @ 8:00pm (Jesse Manocherian and Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld) M/F pairing

Thurs, Feb 9 @ 8:00pm (Laura Cetti and Cassandra Dupler) F/F pairing

Fri, Feb 10 @ 8:00pm (Jesse Manocherian and Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld) M/F pairing

Sat, Feb 11 @ 8:00pm (Adrian Rifat and Paul Williams) M/M pairing

Thurs, Feb 16 @ 8:00pm (Adrian Rifat and Paul Williams) M/M pairing

Fri, Feb 17 @ 8:00pm (Jesse Manocherian and Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld) M/F pairing

Sat, Feb 18 @ 8:00pm (Laura Cetti and Cassandra Dupler) F/F pairing\

*appearing courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association


THE STAFF OF MARRY ME A LITTLE

Producer – Jonathan King

Director and Choreographer – Barrie Gelles

Lighting Designer – Scott Cally

Costume Designer – Hayley Zimmerman

Set Designer – Paul Radassao

Production Stage Manager – Jillian Christensen

Assistant Stage Manager – Emily LaRosa

marry-me-casey-and-lauramarry-me-aly-and-jessemarry-me-adrian-and-paul

Join Ghostlight Project TONIGHT!

IMG_8693.PNGTONIGHT, January 19 at 5:30 PM

On January 19, 2017 at 5:30 pm in each time zone across the country, members of the theatre community (from Broadway to regional theatres to high schools and colleges and community theatres) will gather in front of theatres and art spaces to launch The Ghostlight Project. This collective action will signify an ongoing commitment to social justice in the coming years, taking a variety of forms and actions for individual artists and institutions.

Inspired by the tradition of leaving a “ghost light” on in a darkened theater, artists and communities will make or renew a pledge to stand for and protect the values of inclusion, participation, and compassion for everyone—regardless of race, class, religion, country of origin, immigration status, (dis)ability, gender identity, or sexual orientation.

Many of you already serve as models for people newer to community engagement. We need not be uniform, but should be united as a field in championing our values. Continue to work daily/weekly/monthly for social justice in your world.

CLICK HERE to see Ghostlight Project’s website for host theaters around the country.

Here’s an incomplete list of New York City “hubs” you are welcome to join tonight at 5:30pm:

Midtown Manhattan
Times Square (on the red steps) and the ART/New York Theatres, 53rd Street/10th Avenue

Downtown Manhattan
The Public Theater and HERE Arts Center

Uptown Manhattan
The National Black Theatre

Downtown Brooklyn
The steps of the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM)

Bushwick, Brooklyn
Bushwick Starr

The Ghostlight Project is: Claudia Alick, Saheem Ali, Daniel Beaty, Alexandra Billings, Sammi Cannold, P. Carl, Rachel Chavkin, Lear deBessonet, Sarah Flamm, Rachel Hauck, David Henry Hwang, Christine Jones, Moisés Kaufman, Mia Katigbak, Jenny Koons, Lisa Kron, Tina Landau, Lorin Latarro, Zhailon Livingston, Rebecca Martinez, Jennifer McGrath, Okieriete Onaodowan, Lisa Peterson, Sam Pinkleton, Clint Ramos, Randy Reyes, Leigh Silverman, Kristyn Smith, Jeanine Tesori, Liesl Tommy, Stephanie Ybarra, David Zinn, and YOU.

For more information and to sign up
to participate, please visit:
http://www.theghostlightproject.com  

 

Meet Jean Goto & No Man’s Land

Name: Jean Goto

What is your current project?

No Man’s Land

Where are you performing it and why is it the right fit for your piece?

I’m performing it because it expresses so many things that I’m thinking about it my daily life. I also think this piece poses questions about our culture and society that are worth asking.

What’s next for you?

I’m shooting the first episode of a web series I wrote! Log-line: Amelia and Clark- optometrists by day, environmental crime fighters by night!

Who is your biggest inspiration right at this moment and why?

Cheryl Strayed. She is so wise and speaks from the heart.

Want More?

Website: www. jeangoto.com
Twitter: @JeanGoto

I’m a native New Yorker, hapa, actress. I graduated from NYU’s Tisch school of the Arts and The Maggie Flanigan Studio. I became a founding member of The Anthropologists way back in 2008. Currently I’m acting in whatever I can get my hands on and am writing/producing/directing up a storm! I am also a passionate environmentalist.


Show information (venue, dates, ticket info)

NO MAN’S LAND
November 17 – December 11
Thu – Sat at 7:30 pm | Sun at 5pm
No performances November 24 & 25
Tickets: $15 in advance online HERE, $20 at the door
Opening Night Benefit for The People’ Institute for Survival and Beyond.
November 18th – $35.
Click HERE for tickets.
Preview: November 17th – Pay What You Can