Cleveland’s Classic Company at the Hanna Theatre presents October 21 – November 6, 2022
CHINA BEFORE COMMUNISM “A Must See!” —Broadway World Presented by Ohio Falun Dafa Association ShenYun.com 216.241.6000 February 4-5 ALL-NEW PROGRAM WITH LIVE ORCHESTRA
3 GreatLakesTheater.org Disclosure - Securities offered through Avantax Investment ServicesSM, Member FINRA, SIPC. Investment Management Solutions (IMS) Platform fee-based asset management accounts offered through Avantax Advisory ServicesSM. All other financial planning services are offered through The Wealth Center at Meaden & Moore. The Wealth Center at Meaden & Moore is not affiliated with Avantax Investment ServicesSM. Insurance services offered through an Avantax affiliated insurance agency. We build relationships with our clients to deliver comprehensive and personalized wealth management solutions. To meet an advisor who can help you achieve your financial goals, please contact us at (216) 928-5402 Meaden & Moore Wealth Management Team: Lois Gregory, A. Michael Nuzzo, John Nicklas, Saul A. Stephens, Mary Balazy, Brent Silver, E. Bo Pettegrew TABLE OF CONTENTS Welcome..................................................................................................................... 4 About Great Lakes Theater ........................................................................................... 5 Romeo and Juliet 7 Cast of Characters ....................................................................................................... 8 Spotlight on Romeo and Juliet 9 The Artistic Company ................................................................................................ 18 Donor Appreciation 26 Trustees .................................................................................................................... 30 Staff......................................................................................................................... 31
Dear Friends,
On
behalf of our artists, staff and Board of Trustees, welcome to Great Lakes Theater’s 61st season!
Our mission, “to bring the pleasure, power and relevance of classic theater to the widest possi ble audience,” guides our mainstage produc tions and our educational programming. We believe theater holds the capacity to illuminate truth and enduring values, celebrate and challenge human nature and actions, and provide our student audiences a glimpse of a broader world and the wellspring of learning made possible through the arts.
The second production in our 2022-23 season is the incomparable Romeo and Juliet, directed by Great Lakes Theater’s Associate Artistic Director, Sara Bruner. Ms. Bruner’s deft direction immerses audiences in the romance, passion and heartbreak of this endur ing classic. The intimate Hanna Theatre is the perfect space to revel in this tragic love story as the actors expertly draw you into the action and emotion as they perform mere feet from the audience.
We are proud to announce that Romeo and Juliet is part of Shakespeare in American Communities, a program of the National Endowment for the Arts in partnership with Arts Midwest. This program provides a generous grant in support of our work to make Shakespeare accessible to area school students through our Student Matinee Series and School Residency Program.
As we continue our 61st season, we offer our deepest gratitude to Arthur L. Thomas for his generous support of this production. TRG Multimedia also receives special thanks for their production media sponsorship of Romeo and Juliet. As you read your program and look around the theater tonight, you will see the names of many friends, partners, corporations and foundations whose support makes all of this possible. We encourage you to join these donors by becoming a member of the Great Lakes Theater family with your gift. We extend our sincere gratitude to all of our sponsors and Annual Fund donors/members, with contin ued appreciation to our partners of more than 40 years at Playhouse Square, and the tireless efforts of our Board of Trustees, dedicated administrative staff, gifted artists and the tremen dous generosity of this community.
We hope to see you in our audience again soon.
Charles Fee Producing Artistic Director
Bob Taylor Executive Director
4 at Playhouse Square WELCOME
ABOUT GREAT LAKES THEATER
The mission of Great Lakes Theater (GLT), through its mainstage productions and its education programs, is to bring the plea sure, power and relevance of classic theater to the widest possible audience.
Since the company’s inception in 1962, programming has been rooted in Shakespeare, but GLT’s commitment to great plays spans the breadth of all cultures, forms of theater and time periods –– including the 20th cen tury –– and provides for the occasional mounting of new works that complement the classical repertoire.
Classic theater holds the capacity to illumi nate truth and enduring values, celebrate and challenge human nature and actions, revel in eloquent language, preserve the traditions of diverse cultures and generate communal spirit. On its mainstage and through its educa tion programs, GLT seeks to create visceral, immediate experiences for participants, asserting theater’s historic role as a vehicle for advancing the common good and helping peo ple make joyful and meaningful connections between classic plays and their own lives.
The company’s commitment to classic theater is magnified in the educational pro gramming surrounding its productions. Since its inception, GLT has had a strong presence in area schools, bringing students to the the ater for matinee performances and sending specially trained actor-teachers to the schools for weeklong residencies developed to explore classic drama from a theatrical point of view. GLT is equally dedicated to enhancing the theater experience for adult audiences. To this end, GLT regularly serves as the catalyst for community events and programs in the arts and humanities that illuminate the plays on its stage.
Great Lakes Theater is one of only a hand ful of American theaters that have stayed the course as a classic theater. As GLT celebrates more than a decade in its permanent home at the Hanna Theatre, the company reaffirms its belief in the power of partnership, its deter mination to make this community a better place in which to live, and its commitment to ensure the legacy of classic theater in Cleveland.
5 GreatLakesTheater.org
By William Shakespeare
By Charles
Freedman
By Kate
William
SUBSCRIBE & SAVE BIG! 216.453.4458 | GreatLakesTheater.org/Subscribe 2022-23 SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE NOW. Northeast Ohio’s Favorite Holiday Tradition A CHRISTMAS CAROL November 25 - December 23, 2022 / Mimi Ohio Theatre
Dickens / Adapted and originally directed by Gerald
The World’s Most Enduring Love Story ROMEO & JULIET October 21 - November 6, 2022 / Hanna Theatre
Directed by Sara Bruner A Delightfully Austen-tatious Romantic Comedy February 10 - March 5, 2023 / Hanna Theatre SENSE & SENSIBILITY
Hamill / Based on the novel by Jane Austen Directed by Sara Bruner and Jaclyn Miller An Enchanting Shakespearean Romantic Comedy March 24 - April 8, 2023 / Hanna Theatre AS YOU LIKE IT By
Shakespeare Directed by Charles Fee A Jazzy Musical Celebration of Fats Waller AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’ April 28 - May 21, 2023 / Hanna Theatre Conceived by Richard Maltby, Jr. and Murray Horwitz / Created and Originally Directed by Richard Maltby Jr. / Original Choreography and Musical Staging by Arthur Faria / Musical Adaptations, Orchestrations, and Arrangements by Luther Henderson / Vocal and Musical Concepts by Jeffrey Gutcheon / Musical Arrangements by Jeffrey Gutcheon and William Elliott Directed by Gerry McIntyre
With generous support from:
Charles Fee Producing Artistic Director
Presents
Arthur L. Thomas
DIRECTED BY SARA BRUNER BY WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
Lynn Robert Berg* Danny Bó Benjamin Bonenfant* Michael Burns
Aamar Malik Culbreth Aled Davies*
Scenic Designer
Efren Delgadillo Jr.
Sound Designer
Company
Maggie Kettering* Jeffrey King* Jessie Cope Miller* Kate Mulligan* Jaime Nebeker
Avery LaMar Pope J.T. Snow
Costume Designer
Mieka van der Ploeg
André Pluess Movement Director
Wig and Hair Designer
Iran Micheal Leon
Jaclyn Miller
Production Stage Manager
Nicki Cathro*
Stephen Michael Spencer* Nick Steen* Alex Syiek* M.A. Taylor*
Ángela Utrera* Joe Wegner*
Lighting Designer
Rick Martin
Fight Director Chris DuVal
Assistant Stage Manager
Sarah Kelso*
*Members of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States
This project is part of Shakespeare in American Communities, a program of the National Endowment for the Arts in partnership with Arts Midwest.
Great Lakes Theater Youth Savings subscriptions are subsidized by a generous gift from Eaton.
There will be one fifteen-minute intermission.
The videotaping or other video or audio recording of this production is strictly prohibited.
7 GreatLakesTheater.org Hanna Theatre | October 21 – November 6, 2022
CAST OF
Alex Syiek*
Stephen Michael Spencer*
Nick Steen*‡
J.T. Snow
Aled Davies*
Jessie Cope Miller*†
Benjamin Bonenfant*
Aamar Malik Culbreth
Jaime Nebeker
Michael Burns
Maggie Kettering*
Ángela Utrera*
Joe Wegner*
Kate Mulligan*
M.A. Taylor*
Danny Bó
Avery LaMar Pope
Jeffrey King*
Lynn Robert Berg*
Stephen Michael Spencer*
Culbreth, Jaime Nebeker, Danny Bó, Avery LaMar Pope, Jessie Cope Miller*, J.T. Snow
Stage
8 at Playhouse Square Prince Escalus
Mercutio ................................................................................
Paris
Page to Paris ..................................................................................................
Montague ...................................................................................................
Lady Montague
Romeo...........................................................................................
Benvolio
Abram .....................................................................................................
Balthazar
Capulet ..............................................................................................
Juliet.......................................................................................................
Tybalt
Nurse .....................................................................................................
Peter
Sampson ........................................................................................................
Gregory
Friar Laurence............................................................................................
Friar John ..........................................................................................
Apothecary
Ensemble ................. Lynn Robert Berg* Aamar-Malik
† Dance Captain ‡ Fight Captain *Members of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and
Managers in the United States
CHARACTERS
spotlight an insider’s guide to
by: Stacy Mallardi-StajcaR, Casual Images Graphic Design
Generous support for Spotlight was provided by Donald F. and Anne T. Palmer
Researched
and written by: Margaret Lynch
Design
Spotlight on romeo and juliet
From the Director
Sara Bruner
Shakespeare’s version of Romeo and Juliet has the distinction of being one of the single most recognizable stories in our collective culture. The title alone is likely to summon some type of memory for almost everyone sitting in this audience —which is a double-edged sword. On one hand, it’s really useful to have a hold on a Shakespeare piece before we see it because it allows us to sit back a bit more and watch how this particular version unfolds. Since we are not experiencing a new story, we don’t have to track characters and plot points the same way that we would if we were coming to see a story that had never been told. On the flip side, our curiosity can be dulled if we come in with a rigid set of assumptions, preferences and opinions.
I invite you to hear and watch this play as if it were a new piece of work. Even those of us who have a long and deep history with Romeo and Juliet are still making discoveries — lines that we’ve never heard, moments that are landing in a new way. One of the most striking elements of this show for me this time around is the way that the plague is featured in the story — though as theatergoers we often take this plot point for granted. Let me remind you how it all falls out — you may have forgotten or never noticed: When Mercutio is killed, he curses both the Capulets and Montagues, feeling that their feud is responsible for his untimely end. In his final moments, he repeats the phrase “a plague o’ both your houses” and is essentially using his last moments to curse, or jinx, these families.
Now, let’s fast-forward a bit. Friar Laurence devises a plan with Juliet in which she will drink a “distilled liquor” that will make her appear dead, causing Juliet’s family to mourn her death and inter her in the family tomb. Meanwhile, the Friar will write a letter to Romeo letting him know that Juliet is feigning death. The letter further asks that Romeo meet the Friar in Capulet’s tomb to witness Juliet’s waking — the final step being, of course, that Romeo and Juliet will secretly be reunited and live out their days in Mantua together.
Most of you remember that the letter the Friar writes never makes it into Romeo’s hands. But do you remember why?
Mercutio’s “plague” moves from figurative to literal and seals the fate of the star-crossed lovers. The messenger that Friar Laurence employs to carry the letter from Verona to Mantua is not allowed to leave the city walls because he has recently visited the sick and was exposed to the plague. They fear he is infectious, and so, he is quarantined. Mercutio’s “a plague o’ both your houses” is made manifest, and Romeo and Juliet both die in the tomb that very night.
All of this is to say, we both do and do not know these plays. In some cases, our memories are not serving us. In other instances, we just miss things because the language is so dense that it’s impossible to hear everything that is packed into the text, or our lives happen to us and our ears get tuned in new ways. Suddenly, something pops in a way that it never has before — like the plague plot did for me.
If you allow yourself to, you can always hear these plays anew. So with that, I challenge you to lean in and see what Romeo and Juliet has in store for you this time.
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Playnotes: Romeo and Juliet by William Shakepeare
The first printing of Romeo and Juliet in 1597 was probably “pirated” without the involvement of the playwright. Mistakes and gaps in the text abound. One or more actors may have helped to reconstruct the script. The title page features the name of the theater company rather than the writer’s.
In early 1595, Shakespeare was hitting his stride as a playwright. His credits at that time included a slew of history plays, a handful of romantic comedies — The Comedy of Errors, The Taming of the Shrew and The Two Gentlemen of Verona — and a gory revenge drama, Titus Andronicus. He was in the public eye. In 1592, he’d been attacked in print by a more established, and jealous, writer named Robert Greene. He had a long narrative poem, Venus and Adonis, published in 1593, followed soon after by several plays.
By 1595, Shakespeare was a principal mem ber of the Lord Chamberlain’s Company. Along
The second printing, issued in 1599 by a reputable bookseller, was proclaimed to be “Newly corrected, augmented, and amended.” Romeo and Juliet had three printings during the playwright’s lifetime and was one of only 18 of Shakespeare’s verified 38 plays to be published during that timeframe.
with leading actor Richard Burbage and come dian Will Kempe, he was mentioned in a court document as handling logistics for the theater company’s performances at court that year. Two years later, he had earned enough money to pur chase the second-largest house in his native town of Stratford.
The plays that Shakespeare wrote circa 1595
— Love’s Labour’s Lost, Romeo and Juliet, Rich ard II and A Midsummer Night’s Dream — only enhanced his reputation. Even during that pro ductive stretch, Romeo and Juliet was a standout. A pirated edition was rushed into print in 1597, with an assist from actors who reconstructed the script. A “corrected” edition, possibly based on Shakespeare’s rough draft, came out two years
Spotlight on romeo and juliet
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Playnotes (continued)
Spotlight on romeo and juliet
In the second “quarto” edition of Romeo and Juliet, based on a manuscript more directly associated with Shakespeare, the character of Peter, a messenger, was identified as “Will Kempe.” A celebrated comedian, Kempe was a shareholder in the Lord Chamberlain’s Men. He left the company in 1599, publishing an account, with frontispiece, of his traveling solo act, “Kempe’s Nine Days Wonder,” in 1600.
later under the auspices of a prominent book seller, Cuthbert Burby, who shopped some of the most fashionable writers of the day. The title pages of both editions claimed that Romeo and Juliet had been presented “publiquely” — “often (with great applause)” insisted the 1597 edition, “sundry times” boasted the 1599 quarto. Romeo and Juliet was noticed. It was men tioned in two widely shared reviews of English writers of the day — one published by Cam bridge student John Weever in 1598, and the other by schoolteacher Francis Meres in 1599. So-called “commonplace” books were popular at the time, consisting of excerpts from admired plays, poems or works of prose. Of all Shake speare’s plays, Romeo and Juliet was one of the most quoted in commonplace books during the writer’s lifetime.
The play made such an impression that one of the leading satirists of the day, John Marston, mocked the character of Romeo in his 1598 an thology, “The Scourge of Villainy.” Marston was famously engaged in the so-called “Poetoma chia,” or “war of the poets,” with Ben Johnson and others at the time. Shakespeare’s balcony scene was parodied by Thomas Dekker, another of the poet-warriors, in his 1607 comedy, Blurt, Master Constable.
Although Romeo and Juliet represented an
The London theaters in Shakespeare’s day ran through content quickly. It was common practice to update and recycle older stories. Shakespeare based his play on a 1562 poem by Arthur Brooke, which itself recycled a French translation of an Italian “novelle.”
early foray into tragedy, it shares literary DNA with the comedies written at about the same time — The Two Gentlemen of Verona and Love’s Labour’s Lost (both from 1594-1595), as well as A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1595-1596) — and later romantic comedies such as Much Ado About Nothing. The comedies and this early trag edy share young lovers vying with out-of-touch parents or other authority figures over who con trols matchmaking.
Romeo and Juliet balances on a razor’s edge be tween the conceits of comedy — such as disguis es and secret assignations — and the missteps of tragedy. A pair of bumbling adults — Friar Law rence and the Nurse — do try to help the young lovers. Despite and because of their bungling efforts, up until the last moment it seems pos sible that a comic reversal could overturn all the misunderstandings and cross-purposes. Commentators have often drawn a distinc tion between Shakespeare’ s early tragedy and his “mature” tragedies of the next decade. The
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Shakespeare’s growing stature during his lifetime can be tracked in part by the ways in which contemporary writers took notice of him. John Marston (left) and Thomas Dekker (right), who, along with Ben Johnson, were prominent participants in the witty “war of the theaters” that took place in London between 1599 and 1602. Marston and Dekker mocked and parodied elements of Romeo and Juliet.
heartbreaking events of Romeo and Juliet do not stem from a tragic character flaw — unless the impulsive naivete of youth could itself be considered a flaw. Shakespearean critic Ber trand Evans would term the play a “tragedy of unawareness” in which the juxtaposition of un foreseen and unfortunate events plays a greater role than character.
While Romeo and Juliet may not match the later tragedies for depth of character explo ration, the earlier play already demonstrates Shakespeare’s considerable skills. The basic sto ry of Romeo and Juliet can be found in a variety of sources — first in several Italian “novelles” of the 15th century and then in French and English adaptations made a century later. While Shake speare may have had access to several of the ver sions, he relied most heavily on a narrative poem translated from the French by English writer Ar thur Brooke in 1562 under the title “The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet.”
Shakespeare compressed Brooke’s timeline significantly. Action that takes place over the course of nine months in Brooke’s poem now takes place during a few feverish days. While Brooke’s Juliet wondered aloud to herself about how suddenly she fell for Romeo at the ball, Shakespeare invents a way for his Romeo to overhear Juliet’s confession of love. The play wright’s device allows the lovers to skip several stages of conventional courtship, contributing to the sense of haste in the play — and its inten sity. Shakespeare reinforces this compression with vivid language about time and love that “too swift arrives.”
Any supposed “deficiencies” in tragic struc ture have never diminished the appeal of Romeo and Juliet. Its elemental conflict between par ents and children, breathless pace, suspension between comedy and tragedy, and its stunning imagery and lyrical language have always struck a chord.
Throughout Shakespeare’s career as a writer, outbreaks of the plague intermittently forced the London theaters to close. A plague epidemic forms the backdrop for the action in Romeo and Juliet. The plague also figures in pamphlets and plays written by Thomas Dekker. This striking woodcut illustrated his God’s Tokens: A Rod for Run-awayes (1625).
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Romeo and Juliet Through the Ages
Romeo and Juliet has always been one of Shakespeare’s most popular plays — in his lifetime and beyond:
After Charles II was restored to the English throne in 1660 and permitted theaters to reopen, theater manager William Davenant presented a produc tion of Romeo and Juliet starring Mary Saunderson, one of the first women to play the role of Juliet pro fessionally. A granddaughter of Shakespeare’s lead actor, Richard Burbage, Saunderson was married to Davenant’s lead actor, Thomas Betterton, who took the role of Mercutio rather than Romeo.
Spotlight on romeo and juliet
Mary Saunderson — granddaughter to one famous actor (Richard Burbage), wife of another (Thomas Betterton) — was one of the first women to act professionally on the English stage. She played Juliet in a production presented by William Davenant after the theaters reopened in England in 1663.
Some 18th-century theater managers, such as Da vid Garrick, catered to the tastes of the day by soft ening the stark endings of Shakespeare’s tragedies. For nearly a century, theatergoers saw versions of Romeo and Juliet that allowed the lovers to live.
The emotional and changeable character of Romeo opened the door for women to play the role in the 18th century. The best known was Charlotte Cush man, an American who restored Shakespeare’s original tragic ending and developed a production that served as a vehicle for herself and her sister Su san in the roles of Romeo and Juliet.
This miniature painting of David Garrick as Romeo and George Anne Bellamy as Juliet recreates the moment in Garrick’s influential 18th century adaptation of the play when Juliet wakes up in the “nick of time” to prevent Romeo’s suicide.
In the mid-1840s, American actress Charlotte Cushman and her sister Susan toured a production of Romeo and Juliet across the US and Great Britain. Charlotte, who engaged in liaisons with women artists and writers along the way, played Romeo while her younger sister played Juliet.
In 1869, Edwin Booth launched his own theater in New York with an inaugural production of Romeo and Juliet. A lithographic advertisement in the elaborate playbill commemorated Booth and his wife-to-be, Mary McVicker, in the play’s starring roles.
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Images of Fanny Kemble playing Juliet were often featured in the 1830s in contemporary newspapers and periodicals.
Even with its poignancy restored, the play’s popularity was such that it was often chosen as the ideal production for launching a new theater. The American tragedian Ed win Booth opened his theater in New York in 1869 with a production starring himself and his soon-to-be wife Mary McVicker.
Leading actors and actresses of the 18th- and 19th-centu ries looked for plays that would showcase their particular talents, and some became identified with specific roles. Fanny Kemble — the daughter of actor Charles Kemble and niece of John Philip Kemble and Sarah Siddons — de buted in the role of Juliet on October 26, 1829, at the age of 20, and immediately became a fan favorite in the role. It was remarked at the time that her popular performances as Juliet helped to keep her father’s theater afloat despite his poor management skills.
By the late 19th-century, theatergoers expected stars — and elaborate scenery. Theater manager Henry Irving teamed up with leading lady Ellen Terry at London’s well-appointed Lyceum Theater to deliver a sumptuous production of Romeo and Juliet in 1882.
In 1935, John Gielgud began assembling a cast for a production of Ro meo and Juliet at the New Theatre in London. Conflicted about whether to play Romeo or Mercutio, he approached the younger and up-andcoming Laurence Olivier about rotating with him in both roles. Their approaches to the roles were at odds. Gielgud was known for his lyrical speaking voice, while Olivier embraced what he would later term “earth, blood, humanity ... I was trying to sell realism in Shakespeare.”
Laurence Olivier (pictured here) and John Gielgud traded the roles of Romeo and Mercutio in a high profile 1935 production.
George Cukor’s 1936 film, starring Nor ma Shearer and Leslie Howard at ages 34 and 43, represented the culmination of a centuries-long tradition of actors playing these parts at the heights of their careers. Two later 20th-century film adaptations overturned that tradition, and each in turn became the best-selling Shakespeare film of the day. In 1968, Franco Zefferel li tapped two unknown teenagers, Olivia Hussey and Leonard Whiting, to play Shakespeare’s young lovers, while Baz Luhrmann chose the better-known Leon ardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes. Zefferelli’s lush and sensuous production didn’t shy away from the story’s sexual heat, while Luhrmann’s tapped into its vein of violence.
Franco Zefferelli rejected the long tradition of casting experienced (and older) actors in the roles by casting two unknown teenagers in his sensuous film production in 1968. Still fairly young, but better known when they were cast, Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes were tapped by Baz Lurhmann for his violent and intense screen production in 1996.
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Romeo and Juliet from page to stage
Spotlight on romeo and juliet
One of scenic designer Efren Delgadillo Jr.’s renderings shows how the same space, lit in a different way, can be transformed into a garden at night.
As an actor and director with Great Lakes Theater, Idaho Shakespeare Festival and Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Sara Bruner says she has “been on a journey with Romeo and Juliet throughout most of my profes sional career.” She’s performed in the play, directed it and adapted it for an outreach touring program. Romeo and Juliet has also threaded through the history of Great Lakes Theater. It’s been per formed during each artistic director’s tenure, six times in all. The current production marks the seventh.
Each new artistic team that engages with the play sees it through a different lens. Thinking about the play this time around, in the waning days of a global pandemic, Sara Bruner was struck by the fact that the play’s action takes place against
The work of Spanish architect Xavier Corberó provided scenic designer Efren Delgadillo Jr. with an exemplar for combining modern materials and ancient shapes and for juxtaposing open with more intimate spaces.
the backdrop of a plague outbreak that prevents a crucial message from reaching Romeo. She began to reflect on how “the plague” becomes a meta phor in the play for the strife infecting the world the lovers struggle against.
Mid-process, Bruner shared these observa tions: “We live in a polarized world right now, and Romeo and Juliet is a story about polarization — between the Capulets and the Montagues, be tween life and death, between comedy and trag edy. What happens to a young person who is ‘in between,’ who strays from a society’s hardened, polarized belief systems?”
While the play has often been presented and discussed as a great, though tragic, love story,
Pre-set lighting for this production of Romeo and Juliet — captured here on stage this summer at the Idaho Shakespeare Festival — conveys the intensity of the theatrical experience to come.
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A decision was made to dress the Capulets in more business-like attire. For Lady Capulet, who combines the roles of both father and mother in this production, costume designer Mieka van der Ploeg provided an interpretation of navy pinstriped trousers that balances contemporary and period influences.
Layering a skirt-like “over-robe” with pants accommodates the gender-bending casting of a woman playing one of Romeo’s retainers.
A rustic color palette of greens and russets—and less business-like silhouettes—distinguish the Montague family and their retainers in this production.
it can also be viewed, Bruner insists, “as a story about how communities fail their young people.” Romeo and Juliet are teenagers caught up in im pulse and naïve hope, trapped by the pressures of societal expectations. Unable to communicate with their parents, they rely on secret and desper ate schemes that lead them to take their own lives.
“In a world where ‘violent delights have violent ends,’ Bruner adds, “these two young people pay the ultimate price.”
Finding resonances between Shakespeare’s play and today’s world is always one of Bruner’s priori ties. Casting choices are one tool. Bruner decided to make Lady Capulet a “single parent,” collapsing the roles of Juliet’s father and mother into one role. This choice allowed director and cast to explore how Lord Capulet’s controlling rage — a shocking element of Shakespeare’s script — translates when grounded in the pressures of single motherhood.
Clothing is another tool. When Bruner asked costume designer Mieka van der Ploeg to meld period and contemporary influences, the design er came up with a look that she laughingly calls “Gothic Medieval.” Modern takes on Tudor sil houettes — such as “over-robes” — also enabled the designer to create a layering effect that accom modated several gender-bending casting choices.
Bruner also immediately thinks of a play in
physical terms. As scenic designer Efren Delga dillo observes, “There’s a lot of action in the way she describes a play.” Romeo and Juliet offers the particular challenge of embodying the dynamics of youth vs age. Sword fighting, climbing, and hid ing are among the physical expressions of youth in the play. The fabrics chosen for clothing had to be light and breathable enough to support sudden movement comfortably.
The scenic world of the play also had to provide open spaces for the many public confrontations that erupt throughout the course of the play while also providing spaces for intimate encounters. Sce nic designer Delgadillo quips, “Solve the balcony, the bed, and the tomb, and you’ve solved the play.”
Delgadillo found in the work of Spanish archi tect Xavier Corberó an exemplar and inspiration for using a contemporary material — stark, white concrete — to render intriguing juxtapositions of such traditional spaces as open plazas, arched colonnades, and flying buttresses. In TYVEK, a lightweight, breathable synthetic fabric, Delga dillo found an appropriate material for creating such spaces on stage. He and lighting designer Rick Martin worked closely together to illumi nate the fabric from within. Together they creat ed a visual translation of the passion that pulses through the play.
Spotlight on romeo and juliet
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ARTISTIC COMPANY
Acting Company
Lynn Robert Berg*
Friar John/Ensemble
Twenty-one seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Credits include Scrooge (A Christmas Carol), Brutus (Julius Caesar), the title roles of Macbeth and Richard III, Don Pedro (Much Ado About Nothing), Charlie Cowell (The Music Man), The Ghost and Player King (Hamlet), Zoltan Karpathy (My Fair Lady), Gremio (The Taming of the Shrew), Malvolio (Twelfth Night) and Frank Ford (Merry Wives of Windsor). Other credits: Bill Austin (Mamma Mia), Don Armado (Love’s Labour’s Lost), Watson (The Hound of the Baskervilles), and Complete Works of William Shakespeare Abridged at Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival; Hucklebee (The Fantasticks), Mayhew (Witness for the Prosecution), Friar Laurence (Romeo and Juliet), Jonas Fogg (Sweeney Todd) and Polixenes (The Winter’s Tale) at Idaho Shakespeare Festival; Short Shakespeare MacBeth, Romeo and Juliet and Twelfth Night at Chicago Shakespeare Theater.
Danny Bó Sampson/Ensemble Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Danny Bó is a junior musi cal theater major at Baldwin Wallace University. He was recently seen as Friedrich in The Sound of Music at Blossom Music Center. Other cred its include Into the Woods (Jack), B.A.R.S. (Bobo) and The Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical (Percy). He would like to thank his family and mentors for their ongo ing love and support.
Benjamin Bonenfant* Romeo Debut season with Great Lakes Theater Benjamin is grateful to
make his Great Lakes Theater debut. Based in New York, credits include Theatre For A New Audience (Julius Caesar) and the Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival (Heart of Robin Hood, Richard II). He has per formed at Shakespeare festivals nationwide, including Alabama (Macbeth), Orlando (Henry IV, Three Musketeers), two seasons at Oregon (Great Expectations, Hamlet, Julius Caesar, The Odyssey), and five seasons at Colorado (Henry V, Prince Hal, Romeo). Other CO credits: Denver Center, Arvada Center, TheatreWorks, FAC, Curious, BETC, and local theater. Film/TV: The Good Fight and Bull (CBS). He received his BA from University of Colorado at Colorado Springs.
Michael Burns
Balthazaar/Ensemble
Two seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Michael Burns is absolutely thrilled to be returning to GLT, and making his debut with the acting company! Regional: ISF Credits: Ensemble in Witness for the Prosecution, Romeo in Romeo and Juliet (Shakesperience Educational Tour). Other credits include Octavius Caesar in Antony and Cleopatra (Boise Bard Players), Lysander in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Jaxton in The Thanksgiving Play, Ensemble in Sweeny Todd, Film Student in Heddatron and Broughton in Journey’s End (Boise State University). Michael received his BA in the ater arts from Boise State University. He is thankful for every opportunity that has led him to this moment, and the support he has received along the way! For Coachie!
Aamar Malik Culbreth
Benvolio
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Favorite roles include Tiny in Kill Move Paradise, Everybody in Everybody, Walter Lee Younger in Raisin in the Sun, Will Rogers in Will Rogers Follies, Roger in Rent
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THE
and Anthony Hope in Sweeney Todd. Aamar is a rising sophomore in musical theater at Baldwin Wallace University. Thank you to everyone in the cast, crew and creative team for making this season happen, and thank you to everyone for coming out and support ing! Hey Mom! Thanks for everything! Love you! Instagram - @aamarmc
Aled Davies*
Montague/Ensemble
Twenty-two seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Roles include Mr. Mushnik in Little Shop of Horrors, Father Antonio in Much Ado About Nothing, Mr. Fezziwig in A Christmas Carol, Prospero in The Tempest, Sir Wilfrid Robarts QC in Witness for the Prosecution, Seyton the Porter in Macbeth, The Gravedigger in Hamlet, Colonel Pickering in My Fair Lady, The Old Actor in The Fantasticks, Scrooge/Samuels in A Christmas Carol, King Lear in King Lear, John Falstaff in The Merry Wives of Windsor, Oberon/ Theseus in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Your Chairman in The Mystery of Edwin Drood, Dorn in The Seagull, Deputy Governor Danforth in The Crucible and Lady Bracknell in The Importance of Being Earnest. A proud and appreciative member of Actors’ Equity since 1984. GO BROWNS!
Maggie Kettering*
Lady Capulet
Five seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Previous shows include The 39 Steps, The Taming of the Shrew, A Christmas Carol, Love’s Labour’s Lost, And Then There Were None, Blithe Spirit and Much Ado about Nothing. Additionally, she has worked with Peninsula Players (Miss Holmes, Outside Mullingar, Lend Me a Tenor), Milwaukee Repertory Theatre (Holmes and Watson), House Theatre (Season on the Line - Joseph Jefferson Nomination), Shakespeare Theatre Company (Henry IV, parts 1 and 2), TimeLine Theatre (My Kind of Town) and Northlight Theatre (Season’s Greetings - Jack Springer Award). Maggie is a proud member of
Actors’ Equity, a resident of Chicago and an Ironman finisher.
Jeffrey King*
Friar Laurence
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Jeffrey is appearing for the first time at GLT. He was a member of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival acting company for 20 seasons, where he appeared in more than 50 productions. Other theaters include Yale Rep, Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, Berkeley Repertory Theater, California Shakespeare Festival, Magic Theater, The Empty Space in Seattle, Hippodrome Theatre and Asolo Theatre in Florida. He originated the role of Joe Pitt in Angels in America, first per formed at the Eureka Theatre in San Francisco and the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles. Jeffrey has also appeared in televi sion, film and radio. He is a graduate of the FSU/Asolo Conservatory MFA program.
Jessie Cope Miller* Lady Montague/Ensemble Nine seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Recent shows include Ain’t Misbehavin’ and Romeo and Juliet at ISF, A Christmas Carol, Chaining Zero, The Tempest, The Music Man and Julius Caesar. She also played the Witch in Into the Woods during Great Lakes Theater’s inaugural season at the Hanna Theatre, and has been at The Idaho Shakespeare Festival and Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival for four seasons. Other credits include The Taming of the Shrew, Macbeth, Love’s Labour’s Lost, In The Heights, Monty Python’s Spamalot, Hello Dolly! and Pippin. She is a proud alum of the Baldwin Wallace musical theater pro gram and now an even prouder member of the acting faculty of the Baldwin Wallace University School of Theatre and Dance. She’s been an Actors’ Equity member since 2005. Much love and thanks to the entire company! For family and friends and for Dougfred, Always.
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Kate Mulligan* Nurse
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Credits include Oregon Shakespeare Festival 12 seasons, Actors’ Gang mem ber 17 years, The Kennedy Center, The Public Theatre, New York Stage and Film, Yale Repertory Theatre, Arena Stage, Mark Taper Forum, South Coast Repertory and Artists Repertory Theater. Partial List of TV/ Film credits: Embedded (Dir. Tim Robbins), Olga Dies Dreaming (Pilot HULU), Chicago Med, It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Seinfeld, The Practice, Crossing Jordan, ER, NYPD Blue. Kate is a member of SAG/ AFTRA AEA.
Jaime Nebeker
Abram/Ensemble
Two seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Happily returning to the GLT stage as Abram in Romeo and Juliet, Jaime is an actor, puppeteer, puppet maker, fight chore ographer and movement director. As a woman, Jaime is fortunate to be working in a time where gender is fluid and the future is female. Directors like Sara Bruner, who choose to create these models of possibility in the world, have given Jaime the opportu nity to speak the speech of both Hamlet and Julius Caesar. Other standout roles have included Nurse in Romeo and Juliet, Gibbons in Rabbit/Moon, William Dunn in Men on Boats and Quincy/Lisa in Mr. Burns, a post-electric play.
Avery LaMar Pope Gregory/Ensemble
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Avery LaMar Pope is a story teller from Cleveland. His roles include Gregory in Romeo and Juliet, Jimmy in 12,000 Steps, Malcolm in The Tragedy of Macbeth and Shederick in Objects in the Mirror. As a playwright, his play A World Apart was a 2021 New South Young Playwrights Festival
selection at Horizon Theater, and his play Stand Trial was a 2022-2023 Catapult final ist at Cleveland Public Theatre. He gradu ated cum laude with his Bachelor of Fine Arts in acting from Ohio University. His work can be read on New Play Exchange or seen on YouTube.
J.T. Snow Paris’ Page/Ensemble Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
JT Snow is happy to be making his debut with Great Lakes Theater. He will be a junior this fall, majoring in musical theater at Baldwin Wallace University. JT has been in Baldwin Wallace’s Into the Woods, as well as worked with the Beck Center in a 15-min ute musical, White Man’s Burden. JT would like to thank Vicky Bussert and his family for constantly supporting him in making this dream a reality. Go Dawgs!!
Stephen Michael Spencer* Mercutio/Apothecary Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Credits include four seasons at Oregon Shakespeare Festival: Loves Labour’s Lost, Othello, Julius Caesar, Hamlet, The Winter’s Tale and Timon of Athens. Stephen originated the role of Jason in Lynn Nottage’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Sweat. In NYC, Stephen performed as understudy in Clydes at Second Stage on Broadway and Julius Caesar at TFANA. International credits include The Heart of Robin Hood with Mirvish Productions. Regional credits include The A.R.T., Cleveland Play House, The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, Arena Stage, Hudson Valley Shakespeare, Triad Stage and Chautauqua Theatre Company. Film/TV: FBI: Most Wanted, This Wild Abyss Stephen holds a BFA from UNC Greensboro and an MFA from Case Western/Cleveland Play House. Stream his original music under stephenspencer on all platforms! www.stephenmichaelspencer.com
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Nick Steen*
Paris
Ten seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Previous roles include Mark Antony in Julius Caesar, Mr. Darcy in Pride & Prejudice, Macduff in Macbeth, Caliban in The Tempest, Laertes in Hamlet, Bob Cratchit in A Christmas Carol, Lombard in And Then There Were None, Orestes in Elektra and Clifford in Deathtrap. Nick holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the University of Evansville, and a Master of Fine Arts degree from the American Conservatory Theater. He’s also a voice actor whose work can be heard on Hulu and Spotify. He has endless gratitude for his family and for his love, Nicki. www.NickSteen.com
Alex Syiek*
Prince
Eight seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Previous GLT credits include Harold Hill in The Music Man , Casca/Messala in Julius Caesar, Inspector Hearne in Witness for the Prosecution, Bill in Mamma Mia! and Clopin in The Hunchback of Notre Dame Other recent credits include Phil Connors in Groundhog Day at the Paramount Theatre and Jimmy Sales in The Show on the Roof at Boise Contemporary Theater. Alex has a Bachelor of Music from Baldwin Wallace University, and an MFA in musical theater writing from Tisch School of the Arts at NYU. Proud member of Actors’ Equity Association. Thanks to the theater spirits for allowing art to happen again! www.alexsyiek.com
M.A. Taylor*
Peter
Eighteen seasons with Great Lakes Theater Loving the Autumn in Northeast Ohio. He was pre viously seen in Much Ado About Nothing (Verges), A Christmas Carol (Charity Man, Old Joe), Julius Caesar (Calphurnius), Macbeth (Murderer) and The Fantasticks (Old Actor). His favorite roles
include My Fair Lady (Doolittle), A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Puck), Witness for the Prosecution (Carter/Dr. Wyatt), Complete Works (3rd Actor) and Dracula (Count Dracula). Other Companies include Resident Ensemble Theater, Boise Contemporary Theater and Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival. He holds an MFA in theater from the University of Delaware/ Professional Theater Training Program. Special thanks to his Families (Genetic & Professional). Forever Dougfred and Kathryn.
Ángela Utrera* Juliet
Two seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Originally from Asturias, Spain, Ángela was last seen on GLT’s stage as Miranda in The Tempest and is so excited to come back this fall. She has assistant-directed City of Altar and Teen Dad at the Sin Muros play festival at Stages Theatre in Houston, and earned her acting/directing BFA from Sam Houston State University.
Joe Wegner* Tybalt Three seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Off-Broadway credits include Judgement Day (world premiere, Park Avenue Armory). Regional theater: Much Ado about Nothing, The Tempest and The Taming of the Shrew (Great Lakes Theater, Idaho Shakespeare Festival and Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival), Archduke world pre miere, Center Theater Group), Guys and Dolls, A Wrinkle in Time (world premiere), A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Taming of the Shrew, Very Merry Wives of Winsor Iowa, Secret Love in Peach Blossom Land and Romeo and Juliet (Oregon Shakespeare Festival), Guys and Dolls (Wallis Annenberg Center), The School for Lies (Arkansas Repertory Theatre) and In the Blood (Mixed Blood Theatre). TV/Film: Tales of the City (Netflix). Education: BFA, Southern Oregon University www.joewegner.net
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Understudies
Lynn Robert Berg*, Mike Binderman, Danny Bo, Michael Burns, Avery Elledge, Jessie Cope Miller*, Richard Morgan, Jaime Nebeker, Avery LaMar Pope, Dan Rice, J.T. Snow, Hanako Walrath
Directors
Sara Bruner Director
Seventeen seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Directing credits include Oregon Shakespeare Festival Alice in Wonderland; Repertory Theatre of St. Louis The Cake; Arizona Theatre Company Cabaret; Great Lakes Theater/Idaho Shakespeare Festival The Tempest, Julius Caesar, The Taming of the Shrew and A Christmas Carol (4 years); Idaho Shakespeare Festival directed/adapted educational tours of Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet, Othello, Much Ado about Nothing, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Julius Caesar, Twelfth Night and The Taming of the Shrew. Other theaters: Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival, Baltimore Center Stage, Drop Dance Collective, Baldwin Wallace University. Acting: Norma McCorvey in Roe (world premiere) at Arena Stage and Berkeley Repertory Theatre; Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet, Viola and Sebastian in Twelfth Night, Sue Trinder in Fingersmith (world premiere), LeFou in Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, Charles Wallace in A Wrinkle in Time (world premiere) at Oregon Shakespeare Festival; company member at Great Lakes Theater for 10 years, Idaho Shakespeare Festival for 19 years, Oregon Shakespeare Festival for 5 years. Education: Executive MBA, Boise State University. Awards: 2018 Princess Grace Award for directing.
Charles Fee
Producing Artistic Director
Twenty-one seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Directing credits at GLT: Much Ado About Nothing, Sleuth, Witness for the Prosecution, A Christmas Carol, Misery, Macbeth, Hamlet, And Then There Were None, Dial “M” for Murder, Deathtrap, Blithe Spirit, Romeo and
Juliet, The Two Gentlemen of Verona, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Twelfth Night, The Comedy of Errors, Macbeth, All’s Well That Ends Well, Hay Fever, The Importance of Being Earnest, Arms and the Man and The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged). Charles holds a unique position in the American theater as producing artistic director of three independently operated, professional theater companies: Great Lakes Theater in Cleveland, Ohio (since 2002); Idaho Shakespeare Festival in Boise, Idaho (since 1991) and Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival in Incline Village, Nevada (since 2010). His appointments have resulted in a dynamic and groundbreaking producing model for the companies, in which more than 60 plays have been shared since 2002. In 2009, Charles was honored to receive recognition for his leadership by the Cleveland Arts Prize as a recipient of the Martha Joseph Award. Other awards include The Mayor’s and Governor’s awards for Excellence in the Arts, Idaho. From 1988 to 1992, he held the position of artistic direc tor at the Sierra Repertory Theatre in California. He has also worked with The Old Globe, La Jolla Playhouse, the Milwaukee and Missouri repertory theaters, Actor’s Theatre of Phoenix and the Los Angeles Shakespeare Festival. In addition to his work with the companies in Ohio, Idaho and Nevada, Charles is active within the commu nity. He has served as a member of the strategic planning committee for the Morrison Center, as producer of the FUNDSY Award Gala (’96, ’98 and 2000), and as producer of the 1996 Idaho Governor’s Awards in the Arts. Charles has served on the board of the Boise Metro Chamber of Commerce and as a member of the Downtown Rotary Club. He received his BA from the University of the Pacific and Master of Fine Arts from the University of California, San Diego. Along with his wife, Lidia and daughter, Alexa, Charles resides in Boise, Cleveland and Lake Tahoe — a feat that is only possible because of the incredible love and support of his family, and the generous communities he serves!
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Artistic Staff and Designers
Efren Delgadillo Jr.
Scenic Designer
Two seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Credits include New York: The Three Musketeers (The Acting Company); Mycenaean (BAM, Brooklyn Academy of Music). Notable regional theater productions include American Mariachi (South Coast Rep.), (Arizona Theatre Company) Romeo and Juliet (Oregon Shakespeare Company); BLKS (Woolly Mammoth); Bordertown Now (Pasadena Playhouse); Smart People and Indecent (Denver Center for the Performing Arts); Othello (Hartford Stage); Mojada: A Medea in Los Angeles (The Getty Villa/ Boston Court); and Prometheus Bound (The Getty Villa/Center for New Performance).
MFA: California Institute of the Arts. BFA in studio arts from University of California, Irvine. Efren is an assistant professor of scenic design at UC Irvine. www.efrendelgadillojr.com
Chris DuVal
Fight Choreographer
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Chris has worked extensively in regional theaters across the country at venues that include Dallas Theater Center, Denver Center Theatre Company, Syracuse Stage, South Coast Repertory, Sacramento Theatre Company, Pioneer Theatre Company, Utah Opera, and at Shakespeare Festivals in Utah, Montana, Colorado and Orange County. Additionally, Chris was an actor, fight director or teacher at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival for 18 years. He is the author of Stage Combat Arts, published by Bloomsbury Methuen, and is recognized as a certified teacher/fight director/theatrical firearms instructor with the SAFD, a master teacher with Dueling Arts International, holds a second-degree blackbelt in Aikido and is an associate teacher of Fitzmaurice Voicework. In the Spring of 2023, he will be appearing at the Asolo Repertory Theatre in a production of The Three Musketeers.
Rick Martin
Lighting Designer
Twenty seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Many productions with GLT include Julius Caesar, The Tempest and Hamlet. Opera: Le nozze di Figaro, Don Giovanni, Così fan tutte (La Monnaie, Brussels – scenery), Mitridate, Re di Ponto (La Monnaie, Brussels – scenery and lighting), Le Diable dans le beffroi, La Chute de la Maison Usher (Opéra national de Paris – scenery and lighting) and
BUTTERFLY - d’après Madama Butterfly de Puccini (Opera de Limoges and Opera de Rouen, France - lighting). Concerts: Harawi (Opèra Comique, Paris – scenery and light ing), Le martyre de Saint Sèbastien (Citè de la Musique, Paris). Coming up: Serse (Rouen, France – lighting) Member: United Scenic Artists, Local USA 829, IATSE.
Jaclyn Miller Movement Director
Five seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Director credit for GLT: The 39 Steps; Choreography/Movement credits for GLT: Little Shop of Horrors, Much Ado About Nothing, The Tempest, The Music Man, Julius Caesar, Mamma Mia!, The Taming of the Shrew, Pride and Prejudice and The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Regional: Oregon Shakespeare Festival (It’s Christmas, Carol!, Hairspray, Alice in Wonderland, Book of Will, Shakespeare in Love, Twelfth Night, Yeoman of Guard, Fingersmith (world pre miere), The Cocoanuts and My Fair Lady); South Coast Rep (She Loves Me); Arizona Theatre Company (Cabaret, The Music Man); Guthrie Theatre (The Cocoanuts); Baltimore Center Stage (Fun Home); and Asolo Repertory Theater (Roe).
André Pluess
Sound Designer
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Projects include the Broadway productions of The Minutes, 33 Variations, I Am My Own Wife and Metamorphoses, as well as the Lincoln Center production of The Clean House. His designs/compositions have been featured at regional theaters throughout the country, including Oregon Shakespeare Festival (10 seasons), McCarter Theatre,
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Center Theatre Group, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Yale Repertory Theatre, Arena Stage, Steppenwolf Theatre Company, the Goodman Theatre, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Berkeley Repertory Theatre, Williamstown Theatre Festival, La Jolla Playhouse, Huntington Theatre Company, South Coast Repertory, Denver Center and Playwrights Horizons. He has received numerous awards for composition and sound design, including multiple Joseph Jefferson Awards, an Ovation Award, a Barrymore Award, a Helen Hayes Award and Lucille Lortel and Drama Critics Circle Award nomi nations. Based in Chicago, André is an ensemble member of Lookingglass Theatre Company.
Mieka van der Ploeg
Costume Designer
Debut season with Great Lakes Theater
Credits include designs with Goodman Theatre, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Steppenwolf Theatre Company, Milwaukee Repertory Theater, American Players Theatre, Court Theatre, Writers Theatre, Lyric Opera of Chicago (Lyric Unlimited), Lookingglass Theatre, Paramount Theatre, Marriott Theatre, Remy Bumppo Theatre Company, Second City, Redmoon Theater, The Hypocrites, Chicago Children’s Theatre, Children’s Theatre of Charlotte, About Face Theatre, Steep Theatre, Theater Wit, Albany Park Theater Project, Manual Cinema and the Under the Radar Festival at The Public Theater. She won a Joseph Jefferson Award in 2020 for First Love is the Revolution, at Steep Theatre. She is proud to be a member of USA829.
Stage Management
Nicki Cathro*
Production Stage Manager
Seven seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Nicki is previously the production stage manager for Little Shop of Horrors, Much Ado About Nothing, A Christmas Carol, The Tempest and Julius Caesar; the assistant stage manager for Sleuth, The Music Man, Witness for the Prosecution, Misery, Macbeth and Pride and Prejudice; produc tion assistant for Hamlet, The Hunchback of Notre Dame and A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Other theater work: ASM for Every Brilliant Thing at Actor’s Theatre of Louisville. Nicki earned her BFA in radio, television and film from the University of North Texas; and is a proud member of AEA. She is overjoyed to be back in the theater with her husband and friends.
Sarah Kelso*
Assistant Stage Manager
Six seasons with Great Lakes Theater
Previous shows: Much Ado About Nothing, The 39 Steps, Sleuth, Million Dollar Quartet, Beehive the 60’s Musical, A Christmas Carol and Romeo and Juliet. Twelve seasons with Idaho Shakespeare Festival: Ain’t Misbehavin’, The 39 Steps, Sleuth, The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged), Million Dollar Quartet, Beehive the 60’s Musical, The Hound of the Baskervilles, Forever Plaid, The Fantasticks and Steel Magnolias. Ten seasons with Boise Contemporary Theater: The Wolves, With Love and a Major Organ, Good Bitch Goes Down, Hedwig and the Angry Inch and A Skull in Connemara. Sarah is a graduate of Boise State University’s Department of Theatre Arts.
Theater
25 GreatLakesTheater.org Stay Connected with Great Lakes
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DONOR APPRECIATION
The trustees, staff, and artistic company of Great Lakes Theater express our deepest gratitude to the hundreds of supporters of Cleveland’s Classic Company. The donors listed below and on the following pages made generous gifts to our Annual Fund between July 1, 2021 and June 30, 2022. “I can no other answer make but thanks.” Twelfth Night, Act III, Scene iii
Help Make a Difference
Great Lakes Theater serves more than 100,000 students, adults, and artists annually through our Hanna and Mimi Ohio Theatre mainstage productions and education programs throughout Northeast Ohio. Please consider joining the Great Lakes Theater family by mak ing a gift today!
To learn more about Donor Membership and other gift-giving opportunities, visit us online at GreatLakesTheater.org/Support, or contact Jeremy Lewis, Development & Donor Relations Manager at (216) 453-4457 or jlewis@greatlakestheater.org.
$100,000 and above
Cuyahoga Arts & Culture
Ohio Arts Council
$50,000 to $99,999
The Cleveland Foundation
The George Gund Foundation
John P. Murphy Foundation
The Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation
David and Inez Myers Foundation, a supporting foundation of the Jewish Federation of Cleveland
$25,000 to $49,999
The Community Foundation of Lorain County Kulas Foundation
John & Barbara Schubert
The Reinberger Foundation
Arthur L. Thomas
“Intermission” Ticket Donors
Over 800 patrons generously donated the value of their tickets back to support Great Lakes Theater during pandemic-related disruptions during our 2019-20, 2020-21, and 2021-22 seasons. This vital “intermission” support has enabled us to raise our curtain once again. We are truly grate ful! Check out the full list of donors online.
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THE SHAKESPEARE SOCIETY
Annual Fund donors of $1,000 and above are members of Great Lakes Theater’s “Shakespeare Society” and are entitled to exclusive benefits, including access to special services, events, and opportunities to connect deeply with Cleveland’s Classic Company. To learn more, contact Jeremy Lewis at (216) 453-4457.
$10,000 to $24,999
The Eva L. and Joseph M. Bruening Foundation
Gail Cudak
Carol Dolan & Greggory Hill
Eaton
Fifth Third Bank
Martha Holden Jennings Foundation
Robert° & Janet E. Neary
The Nord Family Foundation
Nordson Corporation Foundation
Donald F. & Anne T. Palmer
Georgianna T. Roberts
Ms. Ana G. Rodriguez
The Shubert Foundation
Thomas G. & Ruth M. Stafford
The Stocker Foundation
The Family of Jill Hearey
The Treu-Mart Fund, a supporting organization of the The Cleveland Foundation and the Jewish Federation of Cleveland
U.S. Bank
The Thomas H. White Foundation, a KeyBank Trust
Robert C. & Emily C. Williams
$5,000 to $9,999
Dalia & Robert Baker
Carol A. Barnak
Fred & Mary Behm
Mr. Todd M. Burger & Ms. Kristie Beck
Bill & Judie Caster
Evelyn Dolejs
Natalie Epstein
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The Harry K. and Emma R. Fox Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Hartwell
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Donna M. Koler
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$2,500 to $4,999
Anonymous
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Kim & Bart Bixenstine
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Homer Chisholm° & Gertrude Kalnow
Chisholm Fund
George A. M. & Heather Currall
Timothy J. Downing & Ken Press Charles, Lidia & Alexa Fee
Dianne V. Foley
Lynn M. Gattozzi & Glenn Myers
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur C. Hall III
Katie Kennedy & Doug White
Faisal Khan & Angela DiCorleto Ms. Catherine M. Kilbane & Mr. Donald H. Bullock
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$1,000 to $2,499
Anonymous
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Chisholm Memorial Fund
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Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Inc. James & Rosemary Koehler
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Mr. & Mrs. Wilmer M. Piper John & Norine Prim Linda Schlageter
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Anita Stoll & Pete Clapham
Diana & Eugene Stromberg
Mr. Frederick & Mrs. Elizabeth G. Stueber
James L. Wagner Nancy-Anne Wargo Mary C. Warren
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$750 to $999
Robyn & David Barrie
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Mr. & Mrs. Brian Lawler
Jeff & Nancy Reinhart
Otmar & Rota Sackerlotzky
Randall & Sara Shaner
Dr. & Mrs. Lynn A. Smith
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$500 to $749
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Jim & Berni Cockey
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Jennifer Dowdell Armstrong Michael Dunn
Evans Charitable Foundation
Dr. & Mrs. Robert L. Fairchild
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Mrs. Edith Hirsch
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The Music and Drama Club Barbara B. O’Connor
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$250 to $499
Anonymous
The Thomas and Joann Adler Family Donor Advised Fund of the Jewish Federation of Cleveland
Judie & Bruce Amsel
Joel & Teresa Andreani
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The Mersol Family Bill & Marilyn Miller Steve Z. & Mary Gibbs Mitchell Glenn & Susan Morley Ms. Barbara H. Nahra
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Mr. & Mrs. James L. Wamsley III Dr. & Mrs. Gregory A. Watts Jerry & Carolyn Webb Ms. Jean Wingate Juliet Zavesky
Zilber Family Foundation, a sup porting foundation of the Jewish Federation of Cleveland
$125 to $249
Anonymous (4)
Cheryl Barnes Pam & Scott Benson
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Mr. & Mrs. David R. Knowles Mike Kupiec & Pat Murphy
Ms. Leslie Lahr
Jeremy Lewis & Daniel Napolitano Gregory & Vickie Leyes Brian & Renee Lowery Antoinette Miller Tim Miller Tom & Mary Neff Ms. Brenda Norton
Mr. Gerald Norton Joan M. Oravec Brian Perry & Ka Pi Hoh Mr. David Porter Bette Prendergast James & Susan Prince John & Betsy Quinn Dr. James E. Racic Frank Rausche Ms. Jacqueline Y. Rhodes Robinson Family Philanthropic Fund of the Jewish Federation of Cleveland
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Rosen Doris A. Schultz
Mr. Richard Shirey William E. Spatz Susan St. John Mr. Glenn S. Steffens Sean & Tabitha Swick Jeffrey Tasse
Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. Tatman
The Edward & Katherine Thomas Family
Dr. & Mrs. Ken Tomecki Dr. Joanne M. Uniatowski Mary Velotta Christine & Daniel Vento Kimberly Vivolo
Mr. & Ms. Michael Wagner Ms. Kathleen Waits Mr. David Wildermuth Thomas M. & Barbara A. Wladyka
James & Sandra Wood John & Dianne Young
$75 to $124
Anonymous (2) Lori Adler
Thomas & Joan Baker
Ms. Carol Barasha
Ms. Kimberley Barton
Mr. Thomas D. Basco
Tom & Dorothy Bier
Amelia & Heather Blonsky
Dr. & Mrs. Dieter F. Bloser
Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Bolton
Richard & Mary Ann Brockett Kathy Caldwell
Ms. Patricia Campbell
Mr. & Mrs. Frank Cercone
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Charlick
Mr. Edward A. Chuhna
David & Carol Consolo
Dr. & Mrs. Dale H. Cowan
Ms. Linda Cowie
George & Mary Crehore
Judith Darus
Mr. Brad Dawson
Chris & Mary Ann Deibel
Mr. Alex Derkaschenko
Mrs. Mary Helen Doherty
The Eldridge Family
Dr. J. Robert & Carol A. Fowler Kurt & Barbara Fretthold
Mr. Gregory Fritz
Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Gabb
Jeffrey M. Gamso
Ms. Pamela S. Goetsch
Virginia T. Goetz
Marian Hancy
Iris & Tom Harvie
Debra & Tom Hayes Jean Heller
Mr. Steven M. Izen & Mrs. Susannah Muskovitz Ron & Mary Ann Janke
Dr. Kalish R. Kedia
Ms. Kerry King
Albert & Karen Kirby Bill & Susan Kirchner
Benjamin R. Kirkpatrick
Ms. Amanda Kost
Richard B. Kotila
Ms. Margaret K. Krall Jacob Kronenberg & Barbara Belovich Charles Kruger
James & Tayna Lewan
Timothy Liston
David & Cheryl Lundgren
Susan E. Lust Robert MacDougall
Kenneth & Joan MacGillivray Paul S. Malchesky
Ms. Anne Martin
Ms. Shari Mathisen
Ms. Constance May Lynda & Charlie Mayer
Mr. John A. Mazzella
Cathy J. McCall
28 at Playhouse Square
Ms. Allison E. McCallum
Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. McDonald
Jeanette McGovern
Jean McQuillan
Elizabeth Meister
Ms. Cheryl A. Moskwa
Mr. John M. Moss &
Mrs. Karen J. Moss
Mr. & Mrs. Oliver° & Mary Emerson
Joseph M. & Meribeth A. Pannitto
Lou M. Papes
Christa Petryszyn
Mr. & Mrs. Harold I. Pittaway III
Chandana A. Reddy
Judy & Clifford Reeves
Kathryn & Heath Reinhardt
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald P. Rencehausen
William Robak
Carolyn Rufo
Stephen Ruscher
Bryan Salisbury
Cindie Carroll-Pankhurst & Mark Salling
Schaum Family
Ms. Meredith M. &
Mr. Oliver E. Seikel
Donna Sheridan
Dr. Dave & Faye Sholiton
Mr. & Mrs. Vernon C. Sponseller
Todd & Patty Standen
Betsy Sullivan
Laura Lee Sutera
Ian & Kara Suzelis
Marcia J. Terstage
Ms. Leslie N. Thomas
Anne Unverzagt & Richard Goddard
Natalie & James Vloedman
Thomas Wagner & Malinda Smyth
Rev. & Mrs. David M. Walker
William Wallis
Mr. Raymond Washio
Lance Whitson & Terry Juhn
Dr. Thomas Zarlingo
Patrick M. Zohn
Endowment Fund
Gifts to the Great Lakes Theater Endowment Fund were received from the following donors between July 1, 2021 and June 30, 2022.
Edward Godleski
Gifts were received in honor of:
Melanie Bordelois by: Sylvia Bordelois
Jack & Janice Campbell by: Holly & Bruce Tomasch
Carol Dolan by: Mary Dolan & David Haracz
Great Lakes Shakespeare Festival Interns 1977-78 (A Merry Band of Players) by: Mary Beidler Gearen
Natalie G. Epstein by: Marilyn Bedol
Chad & Andrea Deal
Mr. Gene DiVincenzo
Dr. Lauren Goldman
Mr. & Mrs. Henry Goodman Rabbi Eddie & Dr. Roxanne Sukol
Wulf & Moira Utian
Mr. David I. & Mrs. Ann K. Warren
Mr. & Mrs. Philip Wasserstrom Mr. Adam Weinsein Mr. & Mrs. Steven Wiesenberger
Catherine Tanner by: Christie Lucco & Michael Devlin
Gifts were received in memory of:
Charles “Chuck” Dickson by: Georgianna T. Roberts
Elsie Glassford by: Angela Kovacs
Carole Nicolosi by: Ms. Joyce L. Adams
Dr. James Sheridan by: Donna Sheridan
James Weiss by: Holly McTernan
William Jacobs by: Ms. Deborah Glosserman
Samantha Jacobs & Aubrey Wynne
Matching Gift Corporations
Many companies, like the ones listed below, match all or a por tion of their employees’ charita ble giving. Is your employer a matching gift company? Find out by contacting your employer or the Great Lakes Theater Development Office at (216) 453-4457.
The Albert M. Higley Co. Dominion Foundation Eaton GlaxoSmithKline Foundation The Lubrizol Foundation Nordson Corporation Foundation
The Perkins Charitable Foundation
PNC Foundation
Progressive Insurance Foundation
Schneider Electric North America Foundation
The Women’s Committee
Formed in 1961, the committee is Great Lakes Theater’s longest standing volunteer support group. Members act as hosts for our actors, provide support in our administrative office and at events, and cheer us on throughout the season. If you would like to become a member, call Joanne Hulec at (216) 2528717 for more information.
Officers
Janice Campbell, President Barbara Chernus, Recording Secretary Bernice Bolek, Corresponding Secretary Nanci Kirkpatrick, Treasurer
Thank you to our donors! Every effort is made to ensure that our donor records are current and correct. Please contact the Great Lakes Theater Development Office at (216) 453-4457 to share an update or request a revision.
°Deceased: The legacy of these generous donors lives on for future generations.
By Charles Dickens
29 GreatLakesTheater.org
Adapted and Originally Directed By Gerald Freedman TICKETS START AT $35 • PATRONS 25 & UNDER PAY $30 Northeast Ohio’s Favorite Holiday Tradition NOV. 25 - DEC. 23, 2022 MIMI OHIO THEATRE, PLAYHOUSE SQUARE 216.241.6000 | GreatLakesTheater.org
TRUSTEES
Chair
Samuel Hartwell*
President
Kim Bixenstine*
Secretary
Elizabeth A. Grove*
Treasurer
Kathleen Kennedy*
Trustees
Beth A. Adams
Michelle Arendt
Jennifer Dowdell
Armstrong* Walter Avdey*
Dalia Baker
Gary D. Benz
Kip T. Bollin
Todd M. Burger*
William Caster*
Gail L. Cudak
George A. M. Currall
Anthea Daniels
Carolyn Dickson† Barry Doggett† Carol Dolan*
Timothy J. Downing*
Dr. Howard G. Epstein* Natalie Epstein† Dianne V. Foley*
Lynn M. Gattozzi
Arthur C. Hall III* David M. Hopkins
Mary Elizabeth Huber
Diane Kathleen Hupp
Faisal A. Khan*
John W. Lebold*
Andrea S. Lyons
William MacDonald III† Charles Maimbourg*
David M. Maiorana
Ellen Stirn Mavec†
John E. McGrath† Katie McVoy*
Ingrid A. Minott*
Janet E. Neary† Michael Novak Michael J. Peterman† Timothy K. Pistell† David P. Porter† Gregory Pribulsky*
STRATEGIC ALLIANCE
Uma M. Rajeshwar
Georgianna T. Roberts† Ana G. Rodriguez
John D. Schubert† Peter Shimrak† Thomas G. Stafford*† Sally J. Staley
Diana W. Stromberg
Catherine Tanner* Kristine M. Tesar* Arthur L. Thomas Nancy Wellener
* Executive Committee
† Life Trustee
In 2002, Great Lakes Theater (Cleveland, Ohio) and Idaho Shakespeare Festival (Boise, Idaho) conceived a unique, strategic producing alliance designed to maximize return on organizational investments, increase production efficiencies, create long term work opportu nities for artists and share best practices. In 2010, Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival (Incline Village, Nevada) joined the collaborative — further contributing to the momentum of the revolutionary producing prototype’s success. The long term results have been remarkable. The alliance’s three independent, 501c3 regional theaters have shared over 60 jointly-created productions — each featuring long term, multi-city employment opportunities for artistic company members. This revolutionary producing model has realized its vision and exceeded expectations while simultaneously resulting in notable audience growth for each company.
30 at Playhouse Square
SETTING THE STAGE
We believe that all Cleveland youth should have access to high-quality arts education. Through the generosity of our donors, we are investing to scale up neighborhoodbased programs that now serve 3,000 youth year-round in music, dance, theater, photography, literary arts and curatorial mastery. That’s setting the stage for success. Find your passion, and partner with the Cleveland Foundation to make your greatest charitable impact.
(877) 554-5054 www.ClevelandFoundation.org/Success for Success Tri-C Creative Arts Dance Academy