ALLIANCE THEATRE
FEB 10–MAR 5, 2023
encoreatlanta.com | 1 THE HOT WING KING FROM THE BOLD ASSOCIATE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR Between Us ....................... 5 FEATURE Katori Hall’s The Hot Wing King ..... 6 An Intersectional Portrayal of An American Black Family Story by Mashaun D. Simon Program Highlight ............... 10 Onstage&Off ..................... 13 Program Notes .................. 15 Your Story, Your Stage 26 Synopsis ........................ 28 DEPARTMENTS About the Alliance Theatre 29 Board of Directors ................ 30 Sponsors 32 Annual Fund ..................... 34 Alliance Theatre Staff 40 Page 6 Page 13 Page 26
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The title is a bit of a giveaway. “Hot Wing(s)” will be at the center of this family sitcom, but the food and humor are just the appetizer to a much juicier cultural narrative. A culture is so often defined by its food — its rituals, recipes, and social gatherings demonstrate how culture lives and breathes in every household.
Twenty years ago, I was sitting in an off-Broadway theater waiting to audition for a play. Another actress sitting next to me struck up a conversation about representation and, while getting this job “would be cool,” there are simply not enough stories about the American experience as lived by Black communities. That actress was Katori Hall. Over the years, I have had the great honor to watch my friend’s meteoric rise and critical success celebrating the Black Southern culture. Like many of Katori’s plays, The Hot Wing King is set in her hometown of Memphis. In a conscious attempt to refocus the lens on Black life rather than Black trauma, you are about to experience a joyful, deeply personal, and deliciously complicated portrait of the modern, but often underrepresented, American family. Inspired by Katori’s own family, this Pulitzer Prize-winning play invites us to witness these men surrender to the power of love and indulge in its healing effects. The play’s ability to challenge the composition of the traditional nuclear family and expose audiences to a wider spectrum of masculinity and male intimacy was a driving impulse to bring this story to the Alliance. The fact that Katori wanted to make this her theatrical directing debut was a personal full-circle highlight for both of us. This marks a milestone in our careers devoted to telling untold stories in the American canon.
And Atlanta is primed for this story at this exact time. A nexus for culturally-inspired food and known as the national headquarters of the LGBTQ+ South, Atlanta slays with a vibrant gay community, championing inclusive establishments, iconic events, and a constantly growing artistic scene. I hope that after you experience this play — stewed in the rich ingredients of what defines parenting, stirred up by the unpredictability of family ties, and crackling with the spices of humor so particular to Black, queer, Southern living — you will be enticed to explore all the wondrous beauty of our local Atlanta LGBTQ community. Our community, our culture!
Tinashe Kajese-Bolden BOLD Associate Artistic Director
betweenus | 5
KATORI HALL’S THE HOT WING KING
An Intersectional Portrayal of An American Black Family
STORY BY Mashaun D. Simon
If there is one thing to know about playwright, screenwriter, producer, actress, and director Katori Hall, it’s this — she LOVES Black people.
“I love and care about Black people so much,” she says. “They/we are so deserving of [our] stories being told in a way in which [we] are blown away by our own journeys.”
Every time she “comes to the page,” Hall says, she bleeds a bit. She bleeds because of the costs associated with being an artist who is telling true and authentic stories to and for a community not often represented.
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CONTACT Donna Choate 678-778-1573 donna@encoreatlanta.com
“It costs to be honest,” Hall says. “It costs to be a witness for those who are often misrepresented, including myself. My hope is that when people interact with my work, they understand they are in the room with someone who thinks our lives, our mistakes, [and] our dreams are worthy of an elevated artistic treatment. That’s what I pray is evident.”
This commitment to Black people is evident in Hall’s 2021 Pulitzer Prize-winning “dramedy,” The Hot Wing King. The play starts out on the night before the annual Hot Wang Festival in Memphis, Tennessee (Hall’s official hometown). Cordell has recently moved to the city to be with his partner, Dwayne, and is focused on one thing — taking first place in the competition. With the help of his friends, they spend the night testing one of Cordell’s recipes. Things take a turn when Dwayne’s nephew, EJ, unexpectedly shows up at their home.
The story, Hall has said repeatedly, started out as a love letter for her brother and his partner.
“You know, as someone who grew up as someone who other people considered marginalized, right, as a Black person, as a woman, as someone who was on the the lower end of the socioeconomic totem pole, I grew up wanting to hold space for other voices that weren’t represented — or were often misrepresented — and that has a lot to do with my intersectional identity,” she says. “So anyone can look at me and say, ‘Yeah, she is not a gay, Black man;’ however, I am an artist. However, I am a humanist and I believe we all can hold space for each other, whether it’s just in our everyday lives or if it’s through our work, and I happen to be a storyteller.”
Through A Southern Lens
To be able to use her lived experiences and the lived experiences of the people she knows and loves, she considers herself blessed.
“They are inspiration points. This particular story is based on my brother and his partner’s life. It’s not exact, you know, but to have been a witness to their love and their struggle to love in the American South has been a great blessing to me. I wanted to honor what I saw them go through: These two resilient, Black men who have made such a huge impression on me.”
Through her love for Black people and their stories, Hall takes on the identity of a griot — one responsible for collecting and widely sharing the stories of a tribe or community. She is happy, she says, for Atlanta and for Memphis to see themselves through this specific Southern lens.
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“This particular story is steeped in so much truth. And yet there is invention, and yet there is me inside of it. And there’s other family members inside of it,” she says. “This very specific story, I think, speaks to this very universal experience of love and love in different shades. It’s Platonic love. It’s a familiar love. It’s brotherly love. All the different permutations of it and how it manifests within our community and also within ourselves.”
This play also deconstructs the prevalent portrayal of the American family.
“The American family has been the subject of so many plays, so many sitcoms, so many cinematic dramas. But oftentimes the Black family is left out. And when the Black family is brought into that space of interpretation, often we don’t think of what it means to be Black and gay and all of that intersection,” she says. “What’s so interesting about this play — which is quietly revolutionary — is that it is taking apart this idea of not only the American family but also the Black family and challenging it, deconstructing it and putting forth [the reality] that this is actually a valid American family and a valid Black American family. We don’t ever really get to see that, whether it be on our stage or on our screens.”
In some respects, the Alliance Theatre’s regional premiere of The Hot Wing King can be perceived as a redo — a do-over, of sorts. In March 2020, the Off-Broadway Signature Theatre production was halted prematurely due to the coronavirus pandemic. It opened roughly a month prior on February 12.
With it being her first time directing, she is looking forward to what she calls a “strong cultural presence” in Atlanta.
“ With this particular play, and people kind of knowing about the other things I’m connected to, I’m praying that we’re going to draw crowds that look a little different than the usual Alliance Theatre audience,” she says. “That also means we gotta be good. Everybody wants to do well for this audience because we know it’s an important story and this audience is important.”
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I am an artist. I am a humanist and I believe we all can hold space for each other, whether it’s just in our everyday lives or if it’s through our work, and I happen to be a storyteller.
KATORI HALL
DECODING BLACK QUEER CONFORMITY
STORY BY Myles Chandler, Morehouse College student
James Baldwin famously stated that “To be Black and conscious in America is to live in a constant state of rage.” Now, compound that experience with the added tyranny of existing amidst persecution from those outside of your community as well as those within it.
This is the inherent dilemma of Black queer individuals. The standards and practices of how people are expected to behave and carry themselves as members of a particular racial background is layered on top of the societal expectation for how people are to behave within presently constructed gender norms and ideals. This dichotomy of existing in a society that constantly demands conformity whilst simultaneously doubling your duality of thought and expression is the systemic DNA of what often defines Black queer experiences.
With every day that passes, the structural integrity of our society is altered as we collectively grow to be more aware of those around us. Our social consciousness is starkly impacted by our growing desire to be more accountable for the ways in which we can do better by those around us, despite our many differences. The trouble lies in the fact that, even with our best intentions, we cannot correct that which we do not understand as incorrect. In our growing effort to be more accepting of people and ideals that do not mirror our own, we often search for commonality in order to better help us acclimate to the notion that our perspective may not be the only one of substance. While this is usually well-intentioned in nature, the harmful truth is that this kind of thinking is what often perpetuates the harsh realities that queer people face today.
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We all carry implicit biases about what it means to be a man or a woman, what true love looks like, when and how someone’s identity should or shouldn’t be presented, and the totality of how we should respond to others not like us. These are all responsible in some way or another for how we may unconsciously perpetuate the uncomfortable or even harmful realities of others. The desire or misguided effort to be more accepting is no longer enough. Conscious thought and energy toward properly engaging with queer people is what is needed now more than ever to help us continue to inch closer to a more blissful coexistence with one another.
Rather than spending time trying to discern ways that one’s queerness can make more sense in the grander scheme of heteronormative constructs and ideals, time can be better spent abiding by the principle of “live and let live.” We humans are complex and varied in our personhood, and there are infinite ways we can express the abundance of differences and similarities that make up our existence. We must decide to place more effort in embracing the multitude of ways we define ourselves as opposed to trying to force them to assimilate with one another.
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LEMON PEPPER AND COMMUNITY IN ATLANTA
STORY BY Kay Nilest
“I got that Lemon Pepper Wet. That Lemon Pepper Dry. Dem suicides: that Hot-hot and HOT! Blueberry Birds and even… some Parmesans.” — Cordell, The Hot Wing King
Former Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms once declared, “Lemon pepper wings are Atlanta.” While The Hot Wing King may take place in Memphis, Atlanta has its own special relationship to chicken wings. Here, one flavor reigns supreme: lemon pepper.
What comes to mind when you think of “lemon pepper”? Maybe it’s the iconic scene in Donald Glover’s hit TV show Atlanta when rapper Paper Boi opens his box of “Lemon Pepper Wet” wings from J.R. Crickets to a choir of angels? Maybe it’s Gucci Mane singing “Lemon pepper wings and a freeze cup” in “Lemonade.” It might even be Waka Flocka saying “Lemon Pepper wings in Atlanta — it’s like a peach / It’s like an apple to New York”? Hip hop is one of the most recognized cultural hallmarks of this city; it put Atlanta on the artistic map. And, since lemon pepper wings are Atlanta, hip hop’s love letters to our city are covered with greasy fingerprints.
Wings, like hip hop, are deeply rooted in community. Wing spots are places where connections are made, stories are told, traditions are shared, and culture is created. This is the heart and soul of our city. At the same time, wings are personal. No two people eat them the same way. The truth is that it doesn’t matter how you enjoy your wings. You can smother them in lemon pepper, buffalo or teriyaki. You can eat them at the corner restaurant, a latenight club, or your family backyard BBQ. They can be drums, flats, boneless, or even (dare I mention it?) vegan. There are as many different ways to enjoy wings as there are people.
Maybe that’s why we like them so much here, in a city where all kinds of people — from musicians to teachers to politicians to bus drivers — can gather around the table together. Sharing wings is an act of pride: Pride in oneself and pride in one’s community.
An order of lemon pepper and garlic parmesan wings from American Deli.
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Photo by Kay Nilest.
MIKE SCHLEIFER Managing Director
CHRISTOPHER MOSES
Dan Reardon Director of Education & Associate Artistic Director
TINASHE KAJESE-BOLDEN BOLD Associate Artistic Director
present
WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY KATORI
HALL
SCENIC DESIGN MICHAEL CARNAHAN
COSTUME DESIGN DEDE AYITE
SOUND DESIGN CONNOR WANG
CASTING
JODY FELDMAN BASS/VALLE CASTING
LIGHTING DESIGN MIKE WOOD
INTIMACY AND FIGHTS ROCIO MENDEZ
STAGE MANAGER SHAINA PIERCE*
SPONSORED BY
World Premiere produced by Signature Theatre, New York City
Paige Evans, Artistic Director; Harold Wolpert, Executive Director
THE HOT WING KING is presented by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, Inc., New York.
This production is supported in part by the BOLD Theater Women’s Leadership Circle. Community Tickets provided by Georgia Power.
THE ALLIANCE THEATRE
CAST
*NICCO ANNAN Big Charles
*BJORN DUPATY Cordell
*MYLES ALEXANDER EVANS EJ
*ARMAND FIELDS Isom
*JAY JONES TJ
*CALVIN THOMPSON Dwayne UNDERSTUDIES
JONTAVIOUS JOHNSON
VONDERRICK TAYLOR
BARRY WESTMORELAND
MARKELL WILLIAMS
STAGE MANAGERS
Isom
Dwayne/TJ
*SHAINA PIERCE Stage Manager
*LIZ CAMPBELL Assistant Stage Manager (Jan 10 — Jan 22)
*BARBARA GANTT O’HALEY Assistant Stage Manager (Jan 20 — Mar 5)
*KACIE PIMENTEL Assistant Stage Manager
SAMANTHA HONEYCUTT Stage Management Production Assistant
PRODUCTION AND DESIGN ASSISTANCE
TINASHE KAJESE-BOLDEN
ASSATA AMANKEECHI
JIMMY STUBBS, ANNA GRIGO
ANNIE LE
TONI STERLING
Line Producer
Assistant Line Producer/Casting Assistant
Assistant Scenic Designers
Associate Costume Designer
Lighting Designer
MARINDA ANDERSON Dialect Coach
JAQUELINE SPRINGFIELD Vocal/Diction Coach
MATTHEW HEAD VocalCoach
HAYLEE SCOTT COVID Coordinator
MEREDITH GORDON Juggling Consultant FOR
EMMA MOULEDOUX Sound Mixer
BRYAN PEREZ
SKYLAR BURKS
WILLIE PARKS
JAY JONES
Properties Stagehand
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* Denotes a member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States
The Alliance Theatre operates under an agreement between the League of Resident Theatres (LORT) and Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States, and the Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers, an independent national labor union. The Alliance Theatre at the Woodruff is a member of Theatre Communications Group (TCG), the national organization for the American theatre, and is a member of the League of Resident Theatres (LORT), the International Association of Theatre for Children and Young Audiences (ASSITEJ/USA), The Atlanta Coalition of Theatres, the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, the Atlanta Convention and Visitors Bureau, and the Midtown Alliance.
Photos may be taken in the theater before the performance, during intermission, and following the performance. If you share your photos, please credit the designers.
Photos, videotaping or other video or audio recording of this production is strictly prohibited, is a violation of United States Copyright Law, and is an actionable Federal Offense.
This production is approximately two hours long and has one fifteen-minute intermission.
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Are
NICCO ANNAN (Big Charles) is an immensely talented actor, dancer, and choreographer who, after making his mark in the Off-Broadway and regional theatre communities, has etched his way on the Hollywood scene. Annan stars on Katori Hall’s critically acclaimed drama series, “P-Valley,” for which he received a 2023 and 2021 NAACP Image Award nomination for “Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series” as well as a 2021 Independent Spirit Award Nomination for “Best Male Performance in a New Scripted Series.” Also on television, Annan has been featured in recurring and guest-starring roles on series such as “Shameless,” This is Us, Snowfall, Claws, and Half Sisters. In addition to Annan’s television work as an actor, he and his partner Rhapsody James run their commercial dance training program, Motivating Exrllence, and choreographed for the CW’s All American and spin-off, All American—Homecoming. Annan trained under pillars in the American Theatre such as Isreal Hicks, George Faison, and Marilyn McCormick. He trained and earned his BFA from the Conservatory of Acting at Purchase College. Annan made his Signature Theatre premiere in the original, Pulitzer Prize-winning production of The Hot Wing King by Katori Hall. Annan’s other theatre credits include, Katori Hall’s Pussy Valley (World Premiere), Lady Killer’s Love Story, Smokey Joe’s Café, Five Guys Named Moe, Storyville, and Shakespeare’s Love’s Labour’s Lost.
BJORN DUPATY (Cordell) [he/him/his]
Broadway: Thoughts of a Colored Man (Wisdom/Lust).
Off-Broadway: The Public Theater: A
Raisin in the Sun (Walter Lee/ Bobo), MLIMA’s TALE (Mlima), Two Mile Hollow (Christopher). Regional Theater: Cleveland Playhouse: Fairfield (Daniel/Charles), Pipeline (Xavier). Huntington Theater: The Bluest Eye (Cholly). Studio Theatre (D.C.): Pipeline (Xavier), The Hot Wing King (Big Charles). People’s Light Theater: Mudrow (Davin). Humana Festival: Do You Feel Anger (Jordan). Pittsburgh Public Theater: Clybourne Park (Albert/ Kevin). National tour: The Acting Co.: Julius Caesar (Julius Caesar), The Comedy of Errors. Film: Demolition. TV: Alpha House, Sleepy Hollow, The Blacklist, Person of Interest, Zero Hour, All My Children.MFA from Rutgers’ University, Mason Gross School of the Arts. www.bjorndupaty.com
MYLES ALEXANDER EVANS (EJ), best known for his role as Miles Taylor on Netflix’s Teenage Bounty Hunters and Erasmus the wise and insightful soldier in Apple TV’s Dickinson, is wildly excited to join the cast of The Hot Wing King at Alliance Theatre! As a Metro Atlanta native, Myles is especially honored to be performing at the legendary Alliance Theatre for the very first time, bringing his nearly ten years of film and television experience back to live performance where his journey started.
ARMAND FIELDS (Isom) [they/them] is beyond excited and thankful to be making their Alliance Theatre debut with The Hot Wing King! Favorite theatre credits include Balm in Gilead, Ragtime, The Legend of Georgia McBride, and Philip Dawkins’ Charm (World and West Coast Premiere). A graduate of The School at Steppenwolf Theatre, where they understudied
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Domesticated, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime, and Ms. Blakk for President. TV/Film credits include Work in Progress, The L Word: Generation Q, The Chi (Showtime), Queer as Folk (Peacock), Chicago Fire (NBC) and The Thing About Harry (Freeform). They are eternally grateful to God, The Promises, Katori and the AMAZING cast & crew, and their friends and family (origin & chosen)! Find them on social media: @armandbcfactor
JONTAVIOUS JOHNSON (u/s Big Charles, Cordell) [he/ him] is beyond excited to be back at Alliance Theatre!
Some of his favorite theatre credits include: Rover in The Incredible Book Eating Boy (Alliance Theatre), Buddy Bolden in Jelly’s Last Jam (National Black Theatre Festival 2019), and Ace in Hoodoo Love (Spelman College). Jontavious is an Atlanta native, starting with the Youth Ensemble of Atlanta and later receiving his Bachelors of Arts from Morehouse College where he studied Theatre and Performance. TV and Film credits include: Big Door Prize (Apple TV), Modern Love (Amazon Prime), Outer Banks (Netflix), National Champion$ (2021), and P-Valley (STARZ). He thanks his friends and family for their continuous support! To God be the glory!
JAY JONES (TJ) is honored to be a part of this powerful theatrical production of The Hot Wing King at the Alliance Theatre. Jay was recently seen onstage as Blue in the Horizon Theater’s Square Blues, written by Shay Youngblood. Favorite credits include Levee Green in Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom (Penn Ave Theater;
Pittsburgh, PA) and Walter Lee in A Raisin In the Sun (Studio Theater; Buffalo, NY). Jay is also an award-winning film and television actor who can be seen on such hit shows as P-Valley (STARZ), Sweet Magnolias (NETFLIX), and ATLANTA (F/X). Jay would like to thank his family and friends, as well as the talented team at the Alliance for their support through this beautiful process.
VONDERRICK
TAYLOR (u/s EJ) is a soulful poet who has known rivers ancient as the world and older than the sound of Jazz in the soul of his city, New Orleans… A Boston University Alumni with a BFA in Acting and a Minor in Arts Leadership, who also trained at London Academy of Music & Dramatic Arts, New Orleans Center for Creative Arts, and Southern Rep Theatre. He is a humble spirit who strives to give a voice to the voiceless through storytelling, listening, learning the world, and bringing joy and peace in every room he is blessed to step in. A participant in the Race Prison Justice Arts Project, VonDerrick works towards shining light on stories from exonerated human beings who have had their voice’s forcefully taken away from them. Every day he works towards bringing Umoja, the Black Belt Way, through every door and the passion of life in every conversation. A family man full of faith and a new resident in the Atlanta area, VonDerrick is blessed to be a part of the Alliance Theatre Family and help change the world we live in for the better one day at a time, one brick at a time, one bridge at time. One Love!
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CALVIN THOMPSON
(Dwayne), a native of South Carolina, is an alum of University of South Carolina-Aiken and AMDA. Recent credits: the OffBroadway production of Harlem Hellfighters On A Latin Beat (Pregones PRTT), and Fly (Capital Rep). Mr. Thompson was also a semi-finalist in the 2019 American Black Film Festival Star Project. Gratitude to God for abundant blessings and to my loved ones for support. Off-Broadway: Couriers & Contrabands, Two Roberts, At Buffalo. NY Theatre: A Soldier’s Play, Staged. Regional: The Mountaintop, Esai’s Table, The Bluest Eye, Raisin In The Sun, The Royale, Joe Turner’s Come And Gone, Seven Guitars, The Piano Lesson, Voodoo Macbeth. Film/TV: Ophelia, Ying-Yang, City Of Dreams. IG: @mr.callycal www.calvinmthompson.com
BARRY WESTMORELAND (u/s Isom) [he/him] is thrilled to be a part of the cast of The Hot Wing King at the Alliance Theatre! Favorite credits include Sebastian in The Tempest (The Shakespeare Tavern Playhouse), Caterpillar in Alice in Wonderland (Havoc Movement Co.), and Sharktooth in How I Became a Pirate(Destination Theatre). Barry would love to thank his friends and family for always supporting him. Find him on social media: @_barrywestmoreland
MARKELL WILLIAMS
(u/s Dwayne, TJ) is an award-winning actor, writer, and teaching artist based in Atlanta. He has performed for the Alliance Theatre, 7 Stages, Theatrical Outfit, True Colors, Out of Hand, Horizon
Theatre, Birmingham Children’s Theatre, Weird Sisters, NC Black Repertory Co., The Object Group, Center for Puppetry Arts, Impulse Rep, and Theatre in the Square. Most notable TV/Film credits include a guest star role on the Disney+ series She-Hulk and a guest star role on the FX TV series Atlanta. Follow him on Instagram @Markell.Williams to see what he’s up to next.
KATORI HALL
(Director) Memphis
native Katori Hall is a Pulitzer Prize and Olivier Award-winning playwright, director, and television creator/producer. A two-time Tony Award nominee, she won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for her play, The Hot Wing King. Her other works include The Mountaintop, Our Lady of Kibeho, Saturday Night/Sunday Morning, The Blood Quilt, Tina: The Tina Turner Musical, and Hurt Village, which is being developed into a feature film. She’s also the executive producer, creator, and showrunner of P-VALLEY, the critically acclaimed and groundbreaking Starz drama based on her play Pussy Valley. Katori is an alumna of Columbia University, A.R.T. at Harvard University, and Juilliard. Katori has been published in publications such as The Boston Globe, The Guardian, and The New York Times. Katori’s other awards include the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Literature, the Susan Smith Blackburn Award, Lark Play Development Center Playwrights of New York (PONY) Fellowship, two Lecompte du Nouy Prizes from Lincoln Center, Fellowship of Southern Writers Bryan Family Award in Drama, NYFA Fellowship, the Columbia University John Jay Award for Distinguished Professional Achievement, National Black Theatre’s August Wilson
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Playwriting Award, and the Lorraine Hansberry Playwriting Award. She is a proud member of the Ron Brown Scholar Program and the Coca-Cola Scholar Program.
MICHAEL CARNAHAN (Scenic Design) Recent - Broadway: Skeleton Crew (Tony nomination), Lackawanna Blues. Off-Broadway: The Hot Wing King (Signature Theatre, Pulitzer Prize for Drama), Skeleton Crew (Atlantic Theater Company), I and You (59E59), The Happiest Song Plays Last (Second Stage), The Piano Lesson, The First Breeze of Summer (Signature Theatre). International: Charlie & The Chocolate Factory, Billy Elliot the Musical: Atelier de Cultura, Sao Paulo, Brazil; Tours: Cheers, Live On Stage, A Christmas Story The Musical. Regional: Apollo Theater, Arena Stage, American Conservatory Theater, The Kennedy Center, The Mark Taper Forum, The Geffen Playhouse, McCarter Theatre, Goodspeed Musicals, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Baltimore Center Stage, Cleveland Playhouse, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Pasadena Playhouse, Two River Theater.
www.michaelcarnahandesign.com
IG: @Carnypics, Twitter: @mike_carnahan
DEDE AYITE (Costume Design) is a two-time Tony Award-nominated costume designer working in theater, opera, and film. Her most recent Broadway credits include Topdog Underdog, Ohio State Murders, American Buffalo, How I Learned to Drive, A Soldier’s Play, Slave Play, Chicken & Biscuits, American Son, and Children of a Lesser God. Her select OffBroadway credits include Merry Wives (The Public Theater); Seven Deadly Sins (Tectonic); Secret Life of Bees, Marie and Rosetta, (Atlantic); By The Way, Meet Vera Stark (Signature); Nollywood Dreams, BLKS, School Girls… (MCC); Bella: An American Tall
Tale (Playwrights Horizons); Toni Stone (Roundabout). Regionally, Ayite’s work has appeared at Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Steppenwolf, Arena Stage and more. She has worked in television with Netflix, Comedy Central, and FOX Shortcoms. Ayite earned her MFA at the Yale School of Drama and has received a TDF/ Kitty Leech Young Master Award, Obie, Drama Desk, Henry Hewes, Lucille Lortel, Helen Hayes, Theatre Bay Area, and Jeff Awards.
MIKE WOOD (Lighting Design)
An accomplished designer, educator, and technician, Mike’s work has been seen on countless stages, screens, and in classrooms throughout the United States. Mike has served on the design and technology facilities of Marymount Manhattan College, The Collegiate School NYC, Hillsborough Community College, and Howard W. Blake School of the Arts. MFA: University of Memphis; BA: University of South Florida. He currently works as the Director of Production and Resident Lighting Designer at City Springs Theatre in Atlanta, GA. Mike is a proud member of United Scenic Artists Local USA829.
www.mikewoodld.com // @mikewoodld
CONNOR WANG (Sound Design) [he/him] is an Asian American theatre artist originally from Des Moines, Iowa. Recent credits include Kim’s Convenience (Theatre Squared), Disney Princess: The Concert (US tour), and the world premier of How to Dance in Ohio (Syracuse Stage). Associate/ Assistant designs include Hamilton (US touring companies), Hadestown (Broadway, Korea, US Tour), and Tina: The Tina Turner Musical (US tour). Connor holds a BFA in Sound Design from The Theatre School at DePaul University.
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ROCIO MENDEZ (Fight and Intimacy Director) [they/she]
Member of Unkle Dave’s FightHouse and proud New Yorker committed to building confidence in Brown and Black girls through storytelling. Credits include: Broadway: POTUS, or behind every great dumbass is seven women trying to keep him alive, AIN’T NO MO. The Metropolitan Opera: Fire Shut Up In My Bones, Eurydice, Rigoletto, Rodelinda, Lucia. New York/Regional Theater: The Bandaged Place (Roundabout), Your Own Personal Exegesis (LCT3), Merry Wives, Romeo y Julieta (Public Theater), On Sugarland (NYTW), This Bitter Earth (TheaterWorks), Black No More (The New Group), Vietgone, The Royale (Geva Theater Center), The Wolves (Actors Theater of Louisville), Secret Life of Bees (Atlantic Theater Company). Rocio is also an award-winning actor. www.rociomendez.com
JODY FELDMAN (Producer/Casting Director) began her theater career as an actress in Atlanta before moving into administration as the Assistant General Manager at Frank Wittow’s Academy Theatre. It was at the Academy that Jody realized the importance of theatre to a city’s cultural values and identity. Feldman started her career at the Alliance as casting director in 1991 and added producer to her title and responsibilities in 2001. She has cast and produced more than 250 productions at the Alliance, encompassing a range of world premieres that include The Last Night of Ballyhoo by Alfred Urey, Blues for An Alabama Sky by Pearl Cleage, The Geller Girls by Janece Shaffer, In the Red and Brown Water by Tarell Alvin McCraney, more than 20 years of Kendeda National Graduate Playwriting Competition-winning plays, such world and regional premiere musicals as Aida; The
Color Purple; Sister Act: The Musical; Bring It On: The Musical; Tuck Everlasting; Ghost Brothers of Darkland County; Harmony, A New Musical; The Prom; Trading Places and, finally, exciting new plays developed specifically for children and families, which is integral to the expansion of audience and mission for the Alliance. Jody is most proud of the thriving Alliance community engagement and partnerships that recognize theatrical work as a catalyst for civic conversation and connection.
SHAINA PIERCE (Stage Manager) is overjoyed to be back at the Alliance Theatre and working with her Atlanta theatre family. Previous Alliance credits include Darlin’ Cory, A Christmas Carol, Toni Stone, and Trading Places. Shaina has stage managed across the country. Previous credits include The Wiz (The 5th Avenue Theatre), Dracula (Actors Theatre Louisville) Disney’s The Little Mermaid, The Comedy of Errors, Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Alabama Shakespeare Festival). Shaina received her MFA at The University of Alabama and is a proud Equity Member. She thanks her family and loved ones for their love, support, and continued chicken wings!
LIZ CAMPBELL (Assistant Stage Manager [Jan 10 — Jan 22]) [she/ her] Local credits include: A Christmas Carol, The Incredible Book Eating Boy, Bina’s Six Apples, Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed, Max Makes a Million, The Wizard of Oz, Paige in Full, Winnie the Pooh, The Jungle Book, The Dancing Granny, Cinderella and Fella, Ugly Lies the Bone, Pancakes, Pancakes!, Tiger Style!, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Musical, James and the Giant Peach, Shrek, and Charlotte’s Web (Alliance Theatre); The Drowsy Chaperone, Camelot, The World
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Goes ‘Round, Million Dollar Quartet, Monty Python’s Spamalot, and Ragtime (Atlanta Lyric Theatre); Book of Will and It’s A Wonderful Life (Theatrical Outfit). She has been the Stage Manager for the GHSMTA (Shuler Awards) since 2015. She holds a BFA in Theatre from Niagara University. Member of Actors’ Equity Association. Cofounder of Atlanta Theatre Artists for Justice. Love to Ali and Maggie.
BARBARA GANTT O’HALEY (Assistant Stage Manager [Jan 20 — Mar 5])[she/her] is excited to be back after serving as an ASM for Everybody earlier this season. Previous Alliance credits include: Slur, Tell Me My Dream, Courage, Grimm Lives of the In-Betweens. Other Atlanta credits include: Big Fish, Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill, Simply Simone, In the Heights, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Perfect Arrangement, Indecent, Slow Food, Ms. Bennet: Christmas at Pemberley, The Wickhams, Our Town, 110 in the Shade, Pitmen Painters, An Iliad (Theatrical Outfit); as well as My Fair Lady, Cats, Young Frankenstein (Atlanta Lyric Theatre). Love to Patrick, Elliana, and Keeva! Proud Member AEA.
KACIE PIMENTEL (Assistant Stage Manager) is excited to join the Alliance Theatre this season as the BIPOC SM Fellow. She most recently worked on Everybody and A Christmas Carol at the Alliance Theatre. Previous credits include The Hot Wing King, John Proctor Is the Villain, and White Noise at Studio Theatre. She has also worked in Stage Management at Casa Mañana Theatre, Chautauqua Theatre Company, and Sea World San Antonio. Kacie received her BFA in Theatre — Stage Management at the University of Houston.
SAMANTHA HONEYCUTT (Stage Management Production Assistant) studied Stage Management at
the University of North Carolina at Greensboro before beginning her career working across the country. Her credits include: Year of the Rooster, When January Feels like Summer, and Five Times in One Night (Ensemble Studio Theater). Legally Blonde; Hello, Dolly!; My Fair Lady; and Music Man (Cape Playhouse). Frankenstein, Hairspray, Penny Candy, American Mariachi, Supreme Leader (Dallas Theater Center). Angry, Raucous and Shamelessly Gorgeous (Hartford Stage), and Trading Places, Everybody, and A Gift of Love with Adam L. McKnight (Alliance Theatre).
SIGNATURE THEATRE is an artistic home for storytellers. By producing several plays from each Resident Writer, Signature offers a deep dive into their bodies of work. Founded by James Houghton, Signature is led by Artistic Director Paige Evans and Interim Executive Director Timothy J. McClimon. Signature conducts its unique residency programming at the Frank Gehry-designed Pershing Square Signature Center. Since its founding, Signature has received over 100 awards and in 2014 became the first New York theatre to receive the Regional Tony Award.
TINASHE KAJESE-BOLDEN (BOLD Associate Artistic Director) is the BOLD Associate Artistic Director at the Alliance Theatre in Atlanta. Tinashe is a Princess Grace Award 2019 Winner for Directing, and Map Fund Award recipient to develop her devised new work All Smiles centering the experience of children on the Autism Spectrum. Most recently, she was Co-Director with Susan V. Booth for Everybody. Tinashe held a salaried creative and Director’s Shadow position during the preproduction, pilot and 2nd episode development of the TV Series Our Kind of People (Fox Studios) under
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Lee Daniel’s production company and was Director Shadow on the season finale of BMF. Select directing productions include Toni Stone (co-production Milwaukee Repertory Theater and the Alliance Theatre), School Girls, Or the African Mean Girls Play (Kenny Leon’s True Colors Theatre), Ghost (Alliance Theatre), Native Gardens (Virginia Stage Company), Pipeline (Horizon Theater), Nick’s Flamingo Grill (World Premiere at the Alliance Theatre, Hertz Stage), Eclipsed (Synchronicity Theatre, Best Director Suzi Bass Award). Upcoming projects: The Many Wondrous Realities of Jasmine Starr-Kidd (2022/23 Alliance/ Kendeda National Playwriting Competition Winner/World Premiere Alliance Theatre). As a director and actor, she has worked on + off Broadway, including The Imperial Theatre, Primary Stages, 59E59 Theatre, Classical Theatre of Harlem; and regionally at Yale Rep, Woolly Mammoth Theater Co, Cincinnati Playhouse, The Geva Theatre, CTG’s Kirk Douglas Theatre, among others, as well as recurring roles on TV/Film (Suicide Squad 2, Marvel’s Hawkeye, CW’s Valor, Dynasty, HBO’s Henrietta Lacks, Ava Duverney’s Cherish the Day, among others.) She proudly serves on the ARTS-ATL Artist Advisory Council. “My mission is the pursuit of what connects our different communities and how we create art that serves that.”
CHRISTOPHER MOSES (Dan Reardon Director of Education & Associate Artistic Director) has been working in professional theatre for 20 years. In January of 2011, Chris took on the position of Director of Education at the Alliance Theatre, overseeing the Alliance Theatre Institute (twice recognized as an Arts Model by the Federal Department of Education), Theatre for Youth & Families, and the Acting Program. Since taking over this position,
Chris has expanded the reach and impact by making the Alliance Theatre Education department a vital resource for advancing the civic agenda of Atlanta. This work is accomplished through deep and sustained partnerships with social service organizations throughout the city. Under his leadership, the Alliance launched its Kathy & Ken Bernhardt Theatre for the Very Young program, which provides fully interactive professional theater experiences for children of all abilities from ages newborn through 5 years old, the Alliance Teen Ensemble, which performs world premiere plays commissioned for and about teens, and Alliance@ work, a professional development program designed for the business sector — the latest offering of which uses theatre practice to create a culture of civility in the workplace. In 2014, Chris added the title Associate Artistic Director, and has continued to expand the Alliance’s education offerings. During his tenure in this position, the Alliance has produced over a dozen world premiere plays for young audiences, including Pancakes, Pancakes by Ken Lin, The Dancing Granny by Jireh Breon Holder, Max Makes a Million by Liz Diamond, and The Incredible Book Eating Boy by Madhuri Shekar. Currently, the Alliance serves over 100,000 students pre-k — 12 each season, as well as over 4,000 adults through its extensive education offerings.
MIKE SCHLEIFER (Managing Director) joined the Alliance Theatre in 2014 as the General Manager and in 2016, assumed the role of Managing Director. During his time at the Alliance, Mike has led the administrative and producing team on over 100 productions including bringing Tuck Everlasting and The Prom to Broadway. He was one of the architects of the “On the Road” season while a multi-million dollar
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renovation of the Coca-Cola Stage was underway. Mike is excited to have started the Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Committee at the Alliance and to serve on the board of the League of Resident Theatres and True Colors Theatre Company. Prior to Atlanta, he spent 13 years at Baltimore’s Center Stage working in several roles including Associate Producer, Production Manager and Resident Stage Manager. While in Baltimore, Mike was an adjunct faculty member at Towson University and has guest lectured all over the country. Mike began as a Stage Manager and has dozens of stage management credits between his time in New York and working regionally. Mike is married to theater director and educator Laura Hackman and the proud father of two boys, Jack and Ben.
ACTORS’ EQUITY ASSOCIATION
(AEA) Founded in 1913, AEA is the U.S. labor union that represents more than 51,000 professional Actors and Stage Managers. Equity fosters the art of live theatre as an essential component of society and advances the careers of its members by negotiating wages, improving working conditions and providing a wide range of benefits, including health and pension plans. Actors’ Equity is a member of the AFL-CIO and is affiliated with FIA, an international organization of performing arts unions. www.actorsequity.org
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As I read and engaged with The Hot Wing King, I discovered that I resonated with the way Dwayne, Cordell, Big Charles, Isom, and Everett’s personalities showcased the complexities of their connectivity. The characters complemented each other masterfully, personifying the hot wing recipes in ways that provocatively stirred my heart. These metaphors of love, with their spicy surprises and gut-gripping honesty, caused me to reflect on my own ideologies around what true connection means.
The Hot Wing King reminds me of my own personal connections with other gay/queer men. The way we check and support each other and the shade and shine we throw toward one another — it all reinforces our bonds of brotherhood.
As a Black Gay man, I’ve experienced the theatrical ebbs and flows that come with living in Atlanta. It’s special being a man who loves other men in their entirety, each one of us striving toward our own horizons with various ratios of fear and faith. We find comfort in each other’s chaos while choosing to persevere with love. Similar to Cordell, I’ve learned to trust the people in my found family. We seize each day ferociously hopeful that we’ve made the right choices about the people we live, play and grow with. For me, some days are effortless, feeding off of each other’s energy while striving toward elevation. Sometimes it’s a daily act of forgiveness, pushing through anxieties around not being enough. Sometimes it’s all in my head, and my brothers anchor me a truth: We out here, we see each other, and we got one another’s back!
Truth is, I see them as the medicinal counter to my doubts and selfacceptance issues. They remind me that it’s okay to be authentically me. Our connections keep me alive and thriving.
Those sentiments are also reflected in the work I do with the AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF). “Cutting-edge medicine and advocacy regardless of ability to pay” embodies our commitment to supporting people impacted by HIV/AIDS, regardless of their struggle or circumstance. Similar to Cordell’s commitment to excellence, I am committed to fostering brand excellence by ensuring our services and spaces are accessible and approachable.
As a brand ambassador and director of AHF, I strive to make HIV and the stigma often associated with it less overwhelming by countering the deadly narratives that prevent positive health outcomes. Whether I am designing campaigns, elevating clinic spaces, or creating dynamic
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promotional materials, I always keep my connections close to my heart and use them as motivation. Cordell and I both know that no one is victorious alone. It takes the faith, bravery, trust, and commitment to others to achieve greatness.
Working with AHF has bolstered a sense of courage within me to continue striving for excellence. I’m grateful for the hard-hitting conviction that The Hot Wing King invokes and am honored to continue applying that wisdom in the work I do with AHF and the collective story I’m creating here in Atlanta.
As you experience Cordell’s mastery of his recipes and the metaphors of love they represent, we invite you to join the work of AHF to ensure all are acknowledged, valued, and supported. Please visit www.ahf.org.
Rigness Rush Director of Branding AIDS Healthcare Foundation
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SYNOPSIS
It’s time for Memphis’s annual “Hot Wang Festival,” and Cordell knows he has the wings that’ll make him king. Supported by his beau Dwayne and best friends who serve as his fry crew “The New Wing Order,” the group settles in for a fun night of precompetition prep. But when a family emergency forces Dwayne’s troubled nephew into the mix, it quickly becomes a recipe for disaster. Suddenly, the first-place trophy isn’t the only thing that Cordell risks losing.
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ABOUT THE ALLIANCE THEATRE
Founded in 1968, the Alliance Theatre is the leading producing theatre in the Southeast, reaching more than 165,000 patrons annually. The Alliance is a recipient of the Regional Theatre Tony Award® for sustained excellence in programming, education, and community engagement. In January 2019, the Alliance opened its new, state-of-the-art performance space, The Coca-Cola Stage at Alliance Theatre. Known for its high artistic standards and national role in creating significant theatrical works, the Alliance has premiered more than 116 productions including nine that have transferred to Broadway. The Alliance education department reaches 90,000 students annually through performances, classes, camps, and in-school initiatives designed to support teachers and enhance student learning. The Alliance Theatre values community, curiosity, collaboration, and excellence, and is dedicated to representing Atlanta’s diverse community with the stories we tell, the artists, staff, and leadership we employ, and audiences we serve.
OUR MISSION
To expand hearts and minds onstage and off.
OUR VISION
Making Atlanta more connected, curious, and compassionate through theatre and arts education.
LAND ACKNOWLEDGMENT
In the sincerest efforts to gain further understanding of the history that has brought us to reside on this land and to accept the knowledge that colonialism is a current and ongoing process under which we need to build our mindfulness of our present participation, we hereby acknowledge this native land of the Muscogee Creek Nation.
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OFFICERS
Chair
Jocelyn J. Hunter
Immediate Past Chair
Lila Hertz
Secretary
E. Kendrick Smith
Treasurer
LeighAnn Costley
Ex-Officio
Hala Moddelmog
LIFETIME DIRECTORS
Rita Anderson
Ken Bernhardt
Frank Chew
Ann Cramer
Linda Davidson
Laura Hardman
Hays Mershon
Richard S. Myrick
Helen Smith Price
Helen Regenstein
Bob Reiser
Jane Shivers
Ben White
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Kristin Adams
James Anderson
Kim Ajy
Farideh Azadi
Alba Baylin
Kenny Blank
Brittany Boals Moeller
Terri Bonoff
Jennifer Boutté
Jeffrey Cashdan
Jane Jordan Casavant
Steve Chaddick
Madeline Chadwick
Miles Cook
LeighAnn Costley
Joe Crowley
Alison Danaceau
Fred Ehlers
Reade Fahs
Howard Feinsand
Rick Goerss
Latonda Henderson
Lila Hertz
Jocelyn Hunter
Malvika Jhangiani
Anne Kaiser
John Keller
Andjela Kessler^
Jim Kilberg
Jesse Killings
Mary Jane Kirkpatrick
Carrie Kurlander
Allegra Lawrence-Hardy
Robert Masucci
Jean Ann McCarthy
Alan McKeon
Dori Miller
Hala Moddelmog^
Phil Moïse
Allison O’Kelly
Vicki Palefsky
Paul Pendergrass
Jamal Powell
Ali Rahimi
Asif Ramji
Patty Reid
Margaret Reiser
Matt Richburg
Robyn Roberts
Maurice Rosenbaum
Kerri Sauer
Steve Selig
Kim Sewell
Mital Shah
Bill Sleeper
Bronson Smith
E. Kendrick Smith
Charlita Stephens
Chandra Stephens-Albright
Mark Swinton
Julie Teer
Rosemarie Thurston
Dana Weeks Ugwonali
Benny Varzi
Roxanne Varzi
Rebekah Wasserman
Glenn Weiss
Cynthia Widner Wall
Todd Zeldin
ADVISORY BOARD
Advisory Board Co-Chair
Laura Hardman
Advisory Board Co-Chair
Phil H. Moïse
Joe Alterman
Luis Andino
Jonathan Arogeti
Kelli Bennett
Johanna Brookner
Merry Hunter Caudle
Elizabeth Wiggs Cooper
Candice Dixon
Malaika Dowdell
Anjali Enjeti
Everett Flanigan
Mary Beth Flournoy
Les Flynn
Jennifer Foster
Natalia Garzón Martínez
Lula Gilliam
Lydia Glaize
Meghan Gordon
Tevin Goss
Dr. Eve Graves, Ph.D.
Shauna Grovell
Della Guidry
Elizabeth Hollister
Zenith Houston
Mallika Kallingal
Debby Kelly
Joyce Lewis
Indira Londono
Theo Lowe
Carlton Mackey
Nelly Mauta
Monica McLary
Jamie McQuilkin
Nishant Mehta
Juan Meija
Caroline Moore
Laura Murvartian
Victoria Necessary
Zach Nikonovich Kahn
Amy Norton King
Kathy Palumbo
Aixa Pascual
Kisan Patel
Marion Phillips
Shirley Powell
Nancy Prager
Alexis Rainey
Kristin Ray
Daniel Regenstein
Kirk Rich
Ryan Roemerman
Fred Roselli
Wendy Schmitt
Dr. Shenara Sexton
Beverly Brown Shaw
Dan Silverboard
Maria Storts
Ronald Tomajko
Kathy Tomajko
Robin Triplett
Emily Washburn
Angie Weiss
Stuart Wilkinson
VOLUNTEER LEADERSHIP
President, STARS
Andjela Kessler
Chairman, Theater Advocates
Judy Feldstein
Susan Stiefel
Chairman, Theater Educators
Myra Medlin
Faye Windham
Chairman, Theater Ushers
Edwina Sellan
Chairman, Hospitality
Susan Stiefel
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boardofdirectors
ALLIANCE SPONSORS
Alliance Sponsors are businesses, corporations, and institutions that have supported the work of the Alliance Theatre. We thank them for their generosity and support.
$500,000+
Lettie Pate Evans Foundation
Robert W. Woodruff Foundation
$250,000+ Anonymous
AT&T Foundation
Chick-fil-A Foundation | Rhonda & Dan Cathy
The Coca-Cola Company
Georgia Power
Helen Gurley Brown Foundation
WestRock
$100,000+
Accenture
Delta Air Lines, Inc.
The Home Depot Foundation
Invesco QQQ
John H. and Wilhelmina D. Harland Charitable Fund
Kendeda Fund
Norfolk Southern
PNC
Rich Foundation
Shubert Foundation
Zeist Foundation
$50,000+
Bank of America
City of Atlanta Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs
Google Molly Blank Fund of the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation
National Vision Theatre Forward
$25,000+
The Black Leadership AIDS Crisis Coalition, Powered by AHF
Fulton County Board of Commissioners
Georgia Council for the Arts
Georgia Natural Gas
The Imlay Foundation, Inc.
Johnny Mercer Foundation
National Endowment for the Arts
Newell Brands
Peach State Health Plan
SCANA Energy Southwire
$10,000+
AEC Trust
Alston & Bird
Do a Good Day Foundation
Frances Wood Wilson Foundation
George M. Brown Trust of Atlanta
Georgia-Pacific
Gulfstream
John & Mary Franklin Foundation
Macy’s Northern Trust
South Arts
$5,000+ Anonymous
Camp Younts Foundation
Osiason Educational Foundation
Publix Super Market Charities
Thalia & Michael C. Carlos Foundation
By attending our theater, you have made a powerful statement about how important the arts are to you. Make another statement of support louder than any standing ovation. Visit alliancetheatre.org and click on Donate.
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre | sponsors 32
encoreatlanta.com | 33 government Official Hotel Official Research Partner Major funding for this organization is provided by the Fulton County Board of Commissioners This program is supported in part by the Georgia Council for the Arts through the appropriations of the Georgia General Assembly. GCA also receives support from its partner agencythe National Endowment for the Arts. Major support is provided by the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs.
Alliance Series Sponsor Production Sponsor
Individual, foundation, and corporate donors contribute more than $10 million to the Alliance Theatre so that we are able to present exceptional theater and educational programming to our community. We are deeply grateful for your support. To find out more about the benefits of giving or to make your gift, visit us at alliancetheatre.org/waystogive or call 404-733-5157.
Listed below are pledges and gifts to the Alliance Theatre Annual Fund from June 1, 2021 — January 17, 2023.
PREMIERE SUPPORT
Spotlight $100,000+
The SKK Foundation
Spotlight $50,000+
Ann & Jeff Cramer
Starr Moore & James Starr Moore Memorial Foundation
Barbara & Steve Chaddick
Artistic Director’s Circle $35,000+
Anonymous
Antinori Foundation
David & Carolyn Gould
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Ivester
Mr. & Mrs. E. Kendrick Smith
Rosemarie & David Thurston
Chairman’s Circle
$25,000+
Ken Bernhardt & Cynthia Currence
The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation
Ms. Stephanie Blank & Mr. David Williams
Jane Jordan Casavant
Roxanne & Jeffrey Cashdan
Katie & Reade Fahs
Ellen & Howard Feinsand
Heidi & David Geller
Jocelyn J. Hunter
Mr. Wayne S. Hyatt
Anne & Mark Kaiser
Jane & J. Hicks Lanier
The Naserian Foundation
Allison & Shane O’Kelly
Victoria & Howard Palefsky
Patty & Doug Reid
Patricia & Maurice Rosenbaum
Jane & J. Hicks Lanier
Linda & Steve Selig
Ms. Mital Shah
William & Margarita Sleeper
Tim & Maria Tassopoulos
Benny & Roxanne Varzi
Ramona & Ben White
Amy & Todd Zeldin
Leadership Circle
$15,000+
James Anderson
Farideh & Al Azadi Foundation
Deborah L. Bannworth & Joy Lynn Fields
Brian & Jennifer Boutté
Ezra Cohen Charitable Fund
LeighAnn & Chad Costley
Ms. Alison Danaceau & Mr. Tim McKinley
The Frances & Beverly DuBose Foundation, Inc
Mr. Fredric M. Ehlers & Mr. David Lile
Doris & Matthew Geller
Malvika Jhangiani
John C. Keller
James & Lori Kilberg
Jesse Killings
David & Mary Jane Kirkpatrick
Brian & Carrie Kurlander
Loeb Family Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Barry McCarthy
Phil & Caroline Moïse
Daniel Marks & Keri Powell
Wade Rakes & Nicholas Miller
Mr. & Mrs. Asif Ramji
Bob & Margaret Reiser
Matt Richburg
Dean DuBose & Bronson Smith
Dr. & Mrs. Dennis Lee Spangler
Dana & Obi Ugwonali
Mr. & Mrs. Art Waldrop
Mark & Rebekah Wasserman
Director’s Circle $10,000+
Anonymous
Ms. Kristin Adams
In honor of Carol Jones
Mr.* & Mrs. Thomas J. Asher
The Balloun Family
Alba C. Baylin
Terri Bonoff & Matthew
Knopf
Susan Booth & Max
Leventhal
Judge JoAnn Bowens
Laura Brightwell
Martha & Toby Brooks
Franklin & Dorothy Chandler
Madeline Chadwick
Collective Insights
Miles and Nicole Cook
Ann & Jim Curry
Linda & Gene Davidson
Eve Joy Eckardt
Doug & Lila Hertz
Andjela & Michael Kessler
Mr. & Mrs. David E. Kiefer
Mr. Jim Kieffer
Dr. & Mrs. John Lee
Kristie L. Madara
Ms. Evelyn Ashley & Mr. Alan
B. McKeon
Burrelle Meeks
Dori & Jack Miller
Mr. & Mrs. Angus Morrison
Palmer Lee Foundation
Paul Pendergrass & Margaret Baldwin
Jamal & Tiffany Powell
Mr. & Mrs. Sean Reardon
Robyn Roberts & Kevin Greiner
Mr. George Russell, Jr. & Mrs. Faye Sampson-Russell
Carol & Ramon Tomé Family Fund
Waffle House
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fund
BENEFACTORS
$5,000+
Mr. & Mrs. George Ajy
Liz Armstrong
Ellen Arnovitz
The Asher Family Foundation
Lisa & Joe Bankoff
Mrs. Juanita Baranco
Mr. & Mrs. Roland L. Bates
Natalie & Matthew Bernstein
Lucinda W. Bunnen*
Mr. & Mrs. W. Kent Canipe
Joe Crowley & Phil Mack
Marcia & John Donnell
Diane Durgin
Eureka Foundation
Kathy & Jason Evans
Dr. Cynthia J. Fordyce & Sharon Hulette
The Robert S. Elster
Foundation
Karen & Andrew Ghertner
Marsha & Richard Goerss
Mr. David F. Golden
Dr. & Mrs. Marvin Goldstein
Ariana L. Hargrave
Henry & Etta Raye Hirsch
Heritage Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. J. Michael
Hostinsky
Tad & Janin Hutcheson
Boland & Andrea Lea Jones
Mr. Charles R. Kowal
Lubo Fund
Melanie & S. Alan McKnight, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Nathan Metzger
Hala & Steve Moddelmog
Steve & Tonya Paro
Sam & Barbara Pettway
Mr. & Mrs. Norman J. Radow
Ms. Kristin L. Ray
Paula Rosput Reynolds & Stephen Reynolds
Jane & Rein Saral
Sharon & David Schachter
Alan & Cyndy* Schreihofer
Sam Schwartz & Lynn Goldowski
Brian Shively & Jim Jinhong
Henry N. & Margaret P. Staats
Lynne & Steve Steindel
Chandra Stephens-Albright & Warren Albright
Charlita Stephens & Delores
Stephens
Maria-Ruth Storts
Chuck & Lisa Cannon-Taylor
Julie Teer
Kathy & Ron Tomajko
Ms. Cathy Weil
$2,500
Anonymous
Alex and Betty Smith Foundation, Inc.
Dr. & Mrs. Raymond Allen
Ron & Lisa Brill Charitable Trust
Dr. Aubrey Bush & Dr. Carol Bush
Rita & Ralph Connell
Tim & Tina Eyerly
Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. Flexner
Mr. Mark Fogas
Dr. & Mrs. John B. Hardman
Linda & Richard Hubert
Ashley & Elton James
Jason & Laurie Jeffay
Anna & Hays Mershon
Stacia Minton
Clair & Thomas Muller
Debbie & Lon Neese
John & Helen Parker
Peg Petersen
Don & Rosalinda Ratajczak
Dr. & Mrs. Fredric Rosenberg
Mr. & Mrs. Mark Rosenberg
Ms. Donna Schwartz
Mr. & Mrs.* Charles B. Shelton III
Susan & Alan* Stiefel
Dr. & Mrs. Harry Strothers
G. Scott Thompson
Stan & Velma Tilley
Ms. Avril Vignos
Ms. Kathy Waller & Mr. Kenny Goggins
Kim Boldthen & Carolyn Wheeler
William & Nancy Yang
The Zaban Foundation
$1,500+
Anonymous
Trent Anderson & Leandro
Zaneti
Judith Lyon & Ron Bloom
Candace Carson
Melodie H. Clayton
Susan & Ed Croft
Mr. & Mrs. Erik Curns
Mr. & Mrs. David Felfoldi
Andrew & Wendie Fisher
Andrea and Jerry Freeman
Sandeep Goyal & Taylor
England
Della & Theo Guidry
Mrs. Elaine L. Hentschel
Drs. Cathie & Hugh Hudson
Randy & Connie Jones
Mark Keiser
Mr. & Mrs. Peter G. Kessenich
Sheri & Steve Labovitz
Ms. Margaret Petersen
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Masucci
Raymond & Penelope McPhee
Joan Netzel & John Gronwall
Lynn & Galen Oelkers
Mr. & Mrs. Armond Perkins
Dr. Denise Raynor
Helen M. Regenstein
Lois & Don Reitzes
Deborah W. Royer
Kashi Sehgal
Mr. & Mrs. S. Albert Sherrod
Jane E. Shivers
Ann Starr & Kent Nelson
Starane Shepard
Jim & Janie Stratigos
Judith & Mark Taylor
Wayne & Lee Vason
Mr. & Mrs. Glenn Weiss
Lynne Winship
Adrienne Whitehead
Penn & Sally Wells
PATRONS
$1,000+
Anonymous
John & Lynn Ayers
Mr. George T. Baker
Mr. Robert L. Blondeau and Mrs. Kristen Nantz
Ms. Betty Blondeau*
Margo Brinton & Eldon Park
Michelle Burdick
Mark Callaway
David Cofrin & Christine Tryba-Cofrin
Richard & Grecia Cox
Gail Crowder
Celeste Davis-Lane
Marla Jane Franks, MD
Richard Goodjoin & Kelvin Davis
Louise S. Gunn
Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Kelly
Greg and Gillian Matteson
Denis & Leah Ng
Susan C. Puett
Ryan Roemerman
Mr. Ronald Russell & Mr. Tommy Russell
Jenny Streeter
Andrea Strickland & N. Jerold Cohen
Brooke & Winston Weinmann
encoreatlanta.com | 35
THE WOODRUFF CIRCLE
Woodruff Circle members have contributed more than $250,000 annually to support the arts and education work of the Alliance Theatre, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, and High Museum of Art. We are deeply grateful to these partners who lead our efforts to help create opportunities for enhanced access to the work.
$1MILLION+
A Friend of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
$500,000+
The Antinori Foundation
Bank of America
A Friend of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
$250,000+
Accenture
AT&T Foundation
Farideh & Al Azadi Foundation
The Molly Blank Fund
Helen Gurley Brown Foundation
Chick-fil-A Foundation | Rhonda & Dan Cathy
The Goizueta Foundation
Invesco QQQ
Novelis
PNC
Mr. & Mrs. Shouky Shaheen
The Home Depot Foundation
Sarah and Jim Kennedy
The Rich Foundation, Inc.
Alfred A. Thornton Venable Trust
Truist Trusteed Foundations:
Florence C. and Harry L. English Memorial Fund
Thomas Guy Woolford Charitable Trust
UPS
WestRock
The Zeist Foundation, Inc.
THE LEADERSHIP CIRCLE
Leadership Circle corporations have committed to a contribution of $1,000,000 over one or more years to support the arts and education work of the Alliance Theatre, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, and High Museum of Art.
Accenture
The Coca-Cola Company
Chick-fil-A
Delta Air Lines
Georgia Power
Graphic Packaging
Novelis
UPS
WestRock
THE BENEFACTOR CIRCLE
Benefactor Circle members have contributed more than $100,000 annually to support the arts and education work of the Alliance Theatre, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, and High Museum of Art. We are deeply grateful to these partners who lead our efforts to help create opportunities for enhanced access to the work.
$100,000+
Alston & Bird
Atlantic Station
John Auerbach
Sandra & Dan Baldwin
BlackRock
The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation
City of Atlanta Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs
The Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta
Melinda & Brian Corbett
Sheila L. & Jonathan J. Davies
Barney M. Franklin & Hugh W. Burke Charitable Fund
Georgia-Pacific
Google
Graphic Packaging
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Grien
Louise S. Sams and Jerome Grilhot
The John H. & Wilhelmina D. Harland Charitable Foundation
The Hertz Family Foundation, Inc.
Mr. & Mrs. Hilton H. Howell, Jr.
The Imlay Foundation Institute of Museum & Library Services
Jones Day Foundation & Employees
Kaiser Permanente
Abraham J. and Phyllis Katz Foundation
King & Spalding, Partners & Employees
The Sartain Lanier Family Foundation
Charles Loridans Foundation, Inc.
The Henry Luce Foundation, Inc.
The Marcus Foundation, Inc.
John W. Markham III*
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Morris Manning & Martin LLP
National Endowment for the Arts
Newell Brands
Norfolk Southern Foundation
Amy W. Norman Charitable Foundation
Northside Hospital
Victoria & Howard Palefsky
Patty and Doug Reid
The Shubert Foundation
Carol & Ramon Tomé Family Fund
Dr. Joan H. Weens
Kelly and Rod Westmoreland
Ann Marie and John B. White, Jr.
wish Foundation
The David, Helen & Marian Woodward Fund
*notates deceased
1180 Peachtree ACT Foundation, Inc.
ALLIANCE THEATRE MONTHLY SUSTAINER SOCIETY
We would like to thank our donors who have committed to giving us a recurring monthly donation to the Alliance Theatre Annual Fund. Join today: www.alliancetheatre.org/sustainer
Anonymous
Dr. & Mrs. Marshall Abes
Mr. Faraz Ahmed
Mr. E. Scott Arnold
Dr. Evelyn R. Babey
Mr. & Mrs. John Bauer
Ms. Aparna Bhattacharyya & Mr. Paul Nilsson
Dr. Deloris Bryant-Booker
Jeff Burnham
Mr. Brandon Bush
Karen & Harold Carney
Mr. William Carroll
David Cashman
Ms. Jacquel Chambers
Ms. Sarah K. Chester
Ms. Mishelle Cirillo & Ms. Bryan Suttles
Mr. & Mrs. Joe Colonna
Elizabeth Corrie
Mr. Lawrence R. Cowart
Mr. & Mr. Christopher Cox
Marge & Gray Crouse
Nash Ditmetaroj
Derrick Doose
Whitney Fahner
Edward Feldstein
Judy and Stan Fineman
Eric Fisher
Brenda Fleming
Mr. Ken H. Foskett
Christine & Andrew Fry
Ms. & Ms. Katie S. Goodman
Mr. Bryant D. Gresham & Mr. Alexander Bossert
Shauna Grovell
Lauren & Jonathan Grunberg
Mrs. Jo Ann Haden-Miller & Mr. William Miller
Ms. Joy Hambrick
Ms. Wynette Hammons
Penn Hansa
Ms. Lindsey E. Hardegree
Ms. Linda L. Hare & Mr. Gerald A. Barth
Nancy A. Hatfield
Dr. & Mrs. David M. Hill
Ms. Becca Hogue
Jim Johnson
Ms. Jhazzmyn Joiner
Karen Jones
Kelley J. Jordan-Monne
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Kalista
Mr. Barnabas Kane
Amy & Jeremy King
Ms. Lynne Kuhn
Sarah Latif
Dr. Andrea Lawrence
Mr. Darryl E. Lesure & Mrs. Candice Simon-Lesure
Ms. Karen Lightfoot
Ms. Alison Main
Ms. Jaime McQuilkin
Laurie McLaughlin
Mr. & Mrs. James Michael
Ms. Jeanette M. Morgan
Victoria Necessary
Mr. Steve M. Peck
Chris J. Peterson
Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan K. Peterson
Scan to Give! Scan this QR code to make a one-time or monthly contribution.
Ms. Kendrick Phillips
Mr. & Mrs. Marc B. Pickard
Jacqueline Powe
Ms. Shannon L. Price
Mrs. Brenda Pruitt
Alexis Rainey
M. Corwin Robison
Mrs. Peggy Rogers
Mr. & Mrs. Peter S. Savitz
Barbara Schreiber
Eric Schwartz
Mr. Tom Slovak & Mr. Jeffery Jones
Ms. Carol Smith
Ms. Janet F. Smith
Ms. Lynn Stallings
Jessica Stewart
Laura Stordy
Mrs. Jill Strickland
Charles Thompson
Stephanie Van Parys
Ben Warshaw
Ms. Caitlin Way
Mr. & Mrs. David D. Whitley
Mr. & Mrs. Napoleon A. Williams
Ms. Janice A. Wolf & Mr. M. Barry Etra
Michelle Zinney
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre | encore 38
MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES
Many companies offer a matching gifts program for employees and retirees. You can double, or even triple, your gift at no additional cost to you simply by asking your employer! Think of how much further your donation can go.
We would like to thank the following companies who have matched contributions to the Alliance Theatre Annual Fund. To find out more about matching gifts, contact Toni Friday at toni.friday@alliancetheatre.org.
AIG Corporation
American Express
Aon Risk Solutions
The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation
AT&T
Bank of America/Merrill
BlackRock
Bryan Cave-Powell
Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.
Chubb Charitable Foundation
The Coca-Cola Company
Deloitte
Equifax Inc. Foundation
LEGACY SOCIETY
GE Energy
Georgia Power
Goldman Sachs Matching Gift
Goldstein
Hearst Foundations
Home Depot Foundation
Honda Motor Co.
IBM
JPMorgan Chase
Kimberly-Clark
Lynch
Macy’s Foundation
McDonald’s Corporation
McMaster-Carr Supply
Microsoft Corporation
Norfolk Southern Corporation
Prudential Financial
Publix Super Markets
Salesforce.com, Inc.
Sprint
SunTrust Foundation
Thrivent Financial for Lutherns
Veritiv Corporation
Verizon Corporation
The Walt Disney Company
Wells Fargo
Yahoo!
Celebrating our supporters who have made a legacy gift to the Alliance Theatre.
The Legacy Society celebrates individuals who have made a planned gift to the Alliance Theatre. Making a planned gift is a wonderful way to show your support and appreciation for the Alliance Theatre and its mission, while accommodating your financial, estate planning and philanthropic goals. With smart planning, you may increase the size of your estate and/or reduce the tax burden on your heirs. Just as important, you will know that you have made a meaningful and lasting contribution to the Alliance Theatre.
To learn more about the Legacy Society, please contact Lindsay Ridgeway-Baierl at lindsay.ridgeway-baierl@alliancetheatre.org.
Anonymous
Rita M. Anderson
Roland & Linda Bates
Kathy* and Ken Bernhardt
Anne & Jim Breedlove
Ezra Cohen
Ann & Jeff Cramer
Susan & Edward Croft
Sallie Adams Daniel
Linda & Gene Davidson
Terry and Stacy Dietzler
Diane Durgin
Elizabeth Etoll
Ellen & Howard Feinsand
James Edward Gay*
Laura & John Hardman
Nancy & Glen Hesler
P.J. Younglove Hovey
Lauren & David Kiefer
David Kuniansky
Virginia Vann* & Ken Large
Edith Love*
Lauren & John McColskey
Anna & Hays Mershon
Caroline & Phil Moïse
Winifred B. & Richard S. Myrick
Victoria & Howard L. Palefsky
Armond & Sharon Perkins
Jan Pomerantz
Helen Regenstein
Margaret & Robert Reiser
Betty Blondeau-Russell*
Tricia & Neal Schachtel
Debbie* & Charles B. Shelton III
Jane E. Shivers
Roger Smith & Christopher Jones*
Lee Harper & Wayne Vason
Terri & Rick Western
Ramona & Ben White
* deceased
alliancetheatre.org | @alliancetheatre matchinggifts&legacysociety | 39