43 minute read
Rosencrantz and __________ escort Hamlet to England.
from Hamlet
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Hamlet
by William Shakespeare Directed by Vivienne Benesch
Co-Scenic Designer Amber Meadows
Costume Designer McKay Coble
Sound Designer Michael Anthony Betts, II Choreographer Tracy Bersley
Associate Director JaMeeka Holloway
Text & Vocal Coach Deborah Hecht
Stage Manager Sarah Smiley
Co-Scenic Designer Lawrence E. Moten, III
Lighting Designer Tyler Micoleau
Composer Peter Vitale Fight Director Jeff A.R. Jones
Intimacy Consultant Lormarev Jones
Dramaturg Adam Versényi
Assistant Stage Manager Aspen Jackson
January 25 – February 12, 2023
The video or audio recording of this performance by any means is strictly prohibited.
A special thank you to Mike Morse of Morse Brass Instrument Repair and Todd Rodrigue of The Tuba Exchange for supplying instrument parts for this production.
The Professional Theatre of the Department of Dramatic Art Kathryn Hunter-Williams, Chair Vivienne Benesch, Producing Artistic Director Produced in association with the College of Arts and Sciences The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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ABOUT THE PLAY
By Adam Versényi
"Hamlet" is perhaps the ultimate “classic” play in English dramatic literature. Widely anthologized and taught worldwide, many of us regard "Hamlet", at least to some extent, as our own. Shaped by classroom discussion to independent reading to popular film adaptations, we approach a new production of the play carting with us a host of preconceptions as to interpretation regarding both meaning and performance. Even those who have never read or seen "Hamlet" have some conception of its subject matter. Any production of the play is bound to frustrate the expectations of some in the audience. Why then attempt to realize a play that is so much, as it were, in the air?
Perhaps the best answer to these questions lies within Shakespeare's text itself when Hamlet proclaims to the players " . . . the purpose of playing, whose end, both at the first and now, was and is, to hold, as 'twere, the mirror up to nature, to show virtue her own feature, scorn her own image, and the very age and body of the time his form and pressure." Hamlet is a human being brought up in a particular world, carefully prepared to adopt a clearly defined role in that world, who suddenly discovers that role stripped from. The world they thought they knew is now unrecognizable. Hamlet's Denmark is one of darkness, danger, and confusion. Some undiagnosed disease threatens the health of the body politic and this dis-ease is reflected in a restless and even rebellious populace.
Not only Hamlet, but everyone in Shakespeare's Denmark faces an inchoate world where no one and no thing can be trusted. The world of the play mirrors
the inner turmoil its people are experiencing. As has been well documented, the world of Hamlet was Shakespeare's world as well. Political propaganda emanating from Elizabeth I’s court depicted her as the supreme sovereign who, skillfully steering the ship of state. Yet beneath that “spin” there was bitter political infighting, and plots and counter-plots. Her reign began against the backdrop of recent warfare and was marked by religious factionalism and murderous persecution.
"Hamlet" begins with both personal and societal grief and loss, one quite like our own where, post-Covid, we are slowly and stutteringly learning to trust each other again as events from mass shootings to the January 6th insurrection to extra-judicial police killings of civilians to Russia’s war in Ukraine seem bent on frustrating our desire for trust. Civil war grinds on in Syria and Yemen, Lebanon and Sri Lanka struggle to remain economically afloat. Calls for racial equity and justice here in the U.S. are met by violent backlash. LGBTQ+ communities are demonized, migrants seeking asylum are used as political tools, and Christian Nationalism makes inroads throughout the land.
"Hamlet" is a mirror that reflects all of these worlds: Denmark, Elizabethan England, our own. The play has often been seen as a Shakespearian re-working of the tragedy of revenge, perhaps best defined by the plays of Thomas Kyde and Cyril Tourneur, in which a family member exacts bloody retribution for crimes committed, thereby avenging the
family's honor. While the Ghost certainly demands that those responsible for his "most foul murder" suffer their just deserts, "Hamlet" as Shakespeare wrote it, and as this production attempts to realize it, is a play about much more than revenge. The kind of Old Testament attitude that the Ghost exorts Hamlet to adopt--"an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth"--is much too simplistic to encompass the world that confronts Hamlet.
William Hazlitt wrote “It is we who are Hamlet.” This production builds upon the hundreds of women who have played Hamlet over the centuries demonstrating moral dilemmas shared by all regardless of gender and introducing potential new connections by means of women’s voices. "Hamlet" is filled with references to acting, contains a play-within-a-play, and investigates the nature of playing. Our production casts women as Horatio and Laertes as well, and all of these women must negotiate a world where they confront attempts by others to play them and must learn to instrumentalize their actions in order to play others themselves. As a play "Hamlet" contains an unusually large number of soliloquies indicating that a great swath of the play takes place inside the mind of our title character.. Consequently, we have placed the play in a kind of “retrofuture”, encompassing both the past and what is to come, where the physical location of Denmark is akin to the interior of a musical instrument, and the intimate relations of family life mirror the tensions inherent in the state.
In this context, Hamlet’s much commented upon indecisiveness is not a mark of weakness, but a willed attempt to forge a system of value by which to operate in a world that has itself gone mad. Of all of Shakespeare's plays "Hamlet" may strike us as the most modern. Its multiplicity of possible meanings, its musical motifs, reflect "the time and pressure of the age," and Hamlet's noble negotiation of the swirling currents of this world while searching for value is, ultimately, a model for us all.
William Shakespeare's origins are obscure but the little evidence that we have suggests that he was christened in Stratford-onAvon, April 26, 1564. Tradition holds that Shakespeare was born on April 23rd. The eldest of six children, Shakespeare came from the merchant class. His father was a tradesman who was elected Bailiff, or Mayor, of Stratford in 1568, his mother from a small landowning family. His father's position afforded the young Shakespeare the possibility of a formal education in the town school. By 1582, Shakespeare had married Ann Hathaway, and by 1585 fathered three children. Shakespeare's family having fallen upon hard times, he was forced to seek employment outside of Stratford.
While it is quite possible that Shakespeare saw medieval pageants and traveling players as a boy in Stratford, only in the years after he left his hometown did he immerse himself in the theater, becoming both an actor and a playwright. By 1592 he was established in London, and by 1594 had joined the prominent company the Chamberlain's Men (which in 1603 changed its name to the King's Men), linked in most people's minds to the Globe Theatre built on the banks of the Thames in 1599. Shakespeare was a joint owner of the Globe and as such shared in its profits and losses. One of his great strengths as a writer came from his ability to gain both popular and critical praise. He wrote his plays considering every aspect of them through the eyes of an actor, a playwright, a businessman, a tradesman's son, and possibly an ex-soldier, evaluating their success or failure utilizing all the facets of his professional life as well. By 1611 Shakespeare had become prosperous enough to retire to Stratford. He died in 1616 on the date of his birth, April 23. He was buried in the same Stratford church where he had been christened.
Hamlet ................................ Tia James* Claudius/Ghost ......................Sekou Laidlow* Gertrude ................... Kathryn Hunter-Williams* Polonius/Gravedigger .............Jeffrey Blair Cornell* Ophelia ............................Sanjana Taskar* Laertes/Player Queen ..................Rasool Jahan* Horatio ............................ Hayley Cartee* Rosencrantz ........................ Adam Valentine Guildenstern ....................... Heinley Gaspard Bernardo/Priest. .............. Thomas Nash Tetterton Marcellus ......................... Saleemah Sharpe Player King. ........................ Jeffrey Meanza* Osric/Lucianus. ........................ Jamar Jones Musician of the Court .................... Peter Vitale Ensemble ..............................Kira Cornell Ensemble. .............................Kenny Ortiz Ensemble. ........................... Grace Wissink
Stage Managers Sarah Smiley* Aspen Jackson*
*Indicates members of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.
There will be a 15-minute intermission.
Jeffrey Blair Cornell Polonius / Gravedigger
PlayMakers: This marks Jeff’s 28th season with PlayMakers. Recently: Frank in “Native Gardens,” Mr. Weston/Mr. Woodhouse in “Emma,” Brutus in “Julius Caesar,” Father in “Ragtime,” Uncle Peck in “How I Learned to Drive,” Sipos in “She Loves Me,” and Darren (the Woodchuck) in “Bewilderness.” Some favorites: Henry Higgins in “My Fair Lady,” Caliban in “The Tempest,” Colonel Brandon in “Sense and Sensibility,” Roy Cohn in “Angels in America” and Herr Schultz in “Cabaret.” New York: “Two by Two,” “Down to Earth,” “Serious Business.” Regional: Guthrie Theater, Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, Pittsburgh Public Theater, Paper Mill Playhouse, Geva Theatre Center, among others. Education/Other: Carbonell Award nominations for Best Actor – “Someone Who’ll Watch Over Me” and “Falsettoland” (Caldwell Theatre – FL). Studied at HB Studios in New York with Uta Hagen, Austin Pendleton, and Elizabeth Wilson and received his MFA from the PATP/ UNC-Chapel Hill. Serves as Teaching Professor/Associate Chair in UNC’s Department of Dramatic Art. Hayley Cartee Horatio PlayMakers: Company member in their second year of UNC’s Professional Actor Training Program. “Emma," “The Skin of Our Teeth”. “Den of Thieves,” “A Doll's House, Part 2,” “Gloria” (PlayMakers Ground Floor). A Durham native, Hayley almost made her PlayMakers debut when her mother went into labor in the Paul Green Theatre in the mid-90s. New York: “All’s Well that Ends Well,” “The Tempest.” University: “Titus Andronicus,” “Othello,” “Julius Caesar,” “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead.” Education: NYU-Tisch School of the Arts; Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. www.HayleyCartee.com Kira Cornell Ensemble PlayMakers: Debut. Kira is a sophomore at UNC Chapel Hill. She is an Advanced Actor Combatant with the Society of American Fight Directors, holding certifications in all 8 weapons. University: She recently choreographed “Fight Girl Battle World” (UNCW Theatre Company), “Urinetown” (Kenan Theatre Company), and is looking forward to choreographing the “Complete Works of Shakespeare”this spring for the Kenan Theatre Company. They most recently appeared as Connie in “Dance Nation”with the Kenan Theatre Company and has participated in readings with Theatre Raleigh as well. 21
Heinley Gaspard Guildenstern PlayMakers: Company member in their second year of UNC’s Professional Actor Training Program. “Blues for an Alabama Sky,” “How I Learned What I Learned,” “The Skin of Our Teeth”. Regional: “House of the Negro Insane” (Contemporary American Theatre Festival 2022). Selected New York: “Macbeth” (Hudson Theatre Works), “A Midsummers Night’s Dream” (Villagers), “Edward II” (Teatro Latea), “Ariadne’s Revenge: A Killer App” (TADA!), “Glass” (JACK). Off-Broadway: “The Bellagio Fountain has been known to make me cry” (HERE). Off-Off Broadway: “Macbeth,” “Antigone” (124 Bank Street), “Split Second” (IATI). Selected Film/TV: “Omniboat, a Fast Boat Fantasia” (Sundance Film Festival); “Coney Island Queen” (Cannes Film Festival) “Steps” (Amazon) / “Wutang: An American Saga” (Hulu); “For Life” (ABC); “The Sinner” (USA). Education/Other: Mason Gross School of the Arts, The William Esper Studio, Upright Citizens Brigade (member). B.S. Biology/Molecular Cellular Physiology.
Kathryn Hunter-Williams Gertrude PlayMakers: Company member for 21 seasons. Recent highlights include directing “Stick Fly,” “No Fear & Blues Long Gone,” “Count,” plus acting in “A Wrinkle in Time,” “The Skin of Our Teeth,” “Edges of Time,” “Julius Caesar,” “Everybody,” “Life of Galileo,” “Skeleton Crew,” “Leaving Eden,” “Tartuffe,” “Dot,” “Intimate Apparel,” “The Crucible,” “Trouble in Mind,” “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” “A Raisin in the Sun,” “Imaginary Invalid,” “The Parchman Hour,” “Angels in America,” “Fences,” “Doubt,” among others. New York/Regional: Living Stage, The Negro Ensemble Company, Manhattan Class Company, New Dramatists, Archipelago Theater. Education/ Other: BFA, UNC School of the Arts; MFA, UNC-Chapel Hill. Kathryn is chair of the Department of Dramatic Art at UNC-Chapel Hill and Associate Director of HiddenVoices, a non-profit organization dedicated to bringing life-changing stories into a public forum.
Rasool Jahan Laertes / Player Queen
PlayMakers: Mrs. Weston in “Emma,” Shelly in “Dot,” Esther in “Intimate Apparel,” Jory in “Disgraced,” MiMi Real in “The Parchman Hour.” She was also the Assistant Director for “Count“ at PRC2.Regional: Other favorite theatrical roles include Puck in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” (WriteAct Rep); Vivian Bearing, Ph.D in “Wit“ (Justice Theatre Project). TV/Film: “Hallmarks,” “A Nashville Christmas Carol,” “The Resident,” “House of Cards,” “Cold Mountain,” and “I Know What You Did Last Summer.” She can also be seen on Hulu’s soon-to-be-released mini-series, “Class of 09’” with Brian Tyree Henry and Kate Mara. Education/Other: Rasool is a proud graduate of North Carolina’s oldest HBCU. Rasool lives in Durham, serves on the Social Justice Board, Hidden Voices and dedicates her performance to her father, AbdurRaheem Rasool. Tia James Hamlet PlayMakers: Company member for three seasons. Actor: “Blues for an Alabama Sky,” “A Wrinkle in Time”, “Julius Caesar,” “Native Son.” Vocal coaching includes “Stick Fly”, “Ragtime,” “How I Learned to Drive,” “Life of Galileo,” “Bewilderness,” “She Loves Me,” “Skeleton Crew,” “Sherwood,” “Jump,” “Your Healing is Killing Me.” Director: “How I Learned What I Learned”, “As You Like It,” “Macbeth” (PlayMakers Mobile) and “Constellations” (PlayMakers Ground Floor). Broadway: “The Merchant of Venice.” Off-Broadway/New York: “The Winter’s Tale,” “The Merchant of Venice” (Shakespeare in the Park). Regional: "Much Ado About Nothing" (Commonwealth Shakespeare Company); “Richard III” (Allentown Shakespeare); “Loving and Loving” (Stella Adler Studios); “Much Ado About Nothing” (Two River Theatre); “Civilization [All You Can Eat]” (Woolly Mammoth Theater). Television: “Nurse Jackie,” “Treme.” Teaching/Coaching/Directing: UNC-Chapel Hill, NYU Graduate Acting, NYU Dance, Atlantic Acting School, Montclair University. Education/Awards: MFA NYU Tisch Graduate Acting Program, BFA Virginia Commonwealth University; Miller Voice Method Teacher Certification. Recipient of the 2014 NYU Graduate Acting Diversity Mentorship Scholarship, 2003 Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival, Irene Ryan Acting Scholarship winner for Best Actor; 2019 Michael Chekhov/Zelda Fichandler Scholarship.
Jamar Jones Osric / Lucianus
PlayMakers: Company member in their second year of UNC’s Professional Actor Training Program. “Emma," Blues for an Alabama Sky,” “A Wrinkle in Time,” “Stick Fly” (U/S performed), “The Skin of Our Teeth”. “Den of Thieves,” “The Brothers Size” (PlayMakers Ground Floor). Assistant Director: “How I Learned What I Learned”. Regional: “Black Like Me” (Chautauqua Theater Company); “Everybody” (Cadence/Virginia Rep); “Fires in the Mirror,” “Passing Strange” (Firehouse Theatre); “Fences,” “Akeelah and the Bee” (Virginia Repertory Theatre); “Red Velvet” (Quill Theatre); “An Octoroon,” “Topdog/Underdog” (TheatreLab); “Free Man of Color” (The Heritage Ensemble Theatre Company); and “Choir Boy” (Richmond Triangle Players/ THETC). Education/Awards: The College of William and Mary, B.A. Sociology and Theatre. 2022 RTCC Award, Best Lead Performance- Play for “Fires in the Mirror,” 2020 RTCC Award, Ernie McClintock Best Ensemble Acting for "Passing Strange," 2019 Richmond Theatre Critics Circle Award, Best Actor in a Leading Role – Play for “An Octoroon”. Sekou Laidlow Claudius / Ghost PlayMakers: Debut. Broadway: “Airline Highway,” “Boys in the Band.” Select Regional: “Succession,” “Toni Stone,” “Skeleton Crew,” “A Doll’s House,” “Father Comes Home from the Wars,” “The Mountaintop,” “Civil War Christmas,” “Seven Guitars,” “Of Mice and Men,” “Stonewall Country & Runaway Home.” TV: Bobby Purcell in FOX’s “The Resident,” Leon Payne in NBC’s “Ordinary Joe”; recurring guest star in ABC’s “Women of the Movement,” Harrison Carter in the BET+ episodic “Kingdom Business.” Other TV credits include: “The Breaks,” The Good Wife,” “Person of Interest,” “Carrie Diaries,” “SMASH,” “The Wire,” and “Law & Order.” Film: “Black Adam,” “The Mend,” “Better Off Single,” “Alieu the Dreamer.” Education: Juilliard School of Drama.
Jeffrey Meanza Player King See PlayMakers Leadership page.
Kenny Ortiz Ensemble PlayMakers: Debut. TV: “Ordinary Joe,” “American Rust” with Jeff Daniels and directed by John Dahl, “Ozark” with Jason Bateman, “Both Sides of the Line” (Web Series), “NCPD” (Web Series), “Esperanza” (Web Series). Education/ Other: Kenny is an undergraduate student at UNC. Professional Scene Study, Sense Memory Work and Mask Work at Moonlight Stage Company by Estes Tarver. Kenny served in the USMC and was born and raised in Puerto Rico. Producer and Editor at Moonlight Arts & Entertainment. @Mucho_Kenny. Saleemah Sharpe Marcellus PlayMakers: Company member in second year of UNC’s Professional Actor Training Program. “Blues for an Alabama Sky," "The Skin of Our Teeth”. “A Doll's House, Part 2,” "Gloria" (PlayMakers Ground Floor). New York: “King Lear” (NY Classical). Regional: “Dontrell, Who Kissed the Sea” (Rhinoleap Production NC). University: “As You Like It” (Stella Adler Studio of Acting); “King Lear,” “Soon Again Not Yet,” “Sopita” (Royal Social Distance Company); “Sins of the Father” (Eden Theater Company); “Significant Other” (The Theatre Project); “The Block” (Lakai Dance Theatre); “Ubu Roi,” “Straight Outta Kansas,” “Antigone” (Montclair State University). Film: “The Girl With the Eyes” (Independent film), “Remission Accomplished” (Student film). TV: “iCarly” (Nickelodeon), “The Electric Company” (PBS Kids). Education: Montclair State University B.A. Theatre Studies & a doubleminor in Myth Studies & Business. Sanjana Taskar Ophelia PlayMakers: Company member in their second year of UNC’s Professional Actor Training Program. "Emma," "A Wrinkle in Time," "The Skin of Our Teeth". “Den of Thieves”, “Gloria” (PlayMakers Ground Floor). Regional: “White Pearl” (Studio Theatre); “Little Women” (Virginia Theatre Festival); “Three Women Walk Into Bar” (Charm City Theatre Festival). Education/Other: B.F.A. Acting, B.A. Sociology; University of Maryland, Baltimore County. Assistant Faculty member for Theatrical Intimacy Education (TIE).
Thomas Nash Tetterton Bernardo / Priest PlayMakers: Debut. Regional: “Silent Sky,” “The Life of Galileo” (Burning Coal Theatre); “Richard III” (Sweet Tea Shakespeare); “A Christmas Carol,” “Love’s Labor’s Lost” (Annapolis Shakespeare Company); “Romeo & Juliet,” “Cymbeline” (Virginia Shakespeare Festival); “Inherit the Wind” (Compass Rose Theater); “MacBheatha” (Capital Fringe Festival). Film: “Have A Nice Life” (2021). Education: BFA in Acting from Shenandoah Conservatory. Adam Valentine Rosencrantz PlayMakers: Company member in their second year of UNC's Professional Actor Training Program. "Emma," "A Wrinkle in Time," "The Skin of our Teeth". "Den Of Thieves," "Gloria" (PlayMakers Ground Floor). Regional: "Small Mouth Sounds" (Cadence Theatre); "The Tempest," "The Heir Apparent" (Richmond Shakespeare); "The Curious Incident..." (Virginia Rep); "Hand To God," "LEVEL 4," "Heathers: The Musical" (TheatreLAB); "Maple & Vine," "Stupid Kid" (Firehouse Theatre). Education/Awards: Virginia Commonwealth University, B.A. 2021 RTCC Ernie McClintock Best Ensemble Acting for "Small Mouth Sounds". Grace Wissink Ensemble PlayMakers: Debut. Grace is a senior undergraduate student at UNC Chapel Hill. University: "Nia,” “Dance Nation” (Kenan Theatre Company); “The Birthday Party” (LAB! Theatre); “Fun Home,” “Grounded,” “Angels in America” (Company Carolina).
Vivienne Benesch Director See PlayMakers Leadership page. Amber Meadows Co-Scenic Designer PlayMakers: Debut. Regional: “Solace” World Premier (Emergent Theatre Company). University: ”Empty Plate at the Cafe du Grand Boeuf,” “Sense and Sensibility,” “A Gentleman’s Guide to Love an Murder” (CCSU); ”Pericles,” “Prince of Tyre,” “Antigone,” “The Little Shop of Horrors” (UConn). @ambermdwsdesign. Lawrence E. Moten, III Co-Scenic Designer PlayMakers: "How I Learned What I Learned," "Native Son". Broadway: "Chicken & Biscuits" (Circle In The Square); "What The Constitution Means to Me" (Broadway & Tour Associate). Regional: "Christmas in Connecticut" (Goodspeed Musicals); "This Little Light of Mine" (Santa Fe Opera); "Requiem" (INSeries Opera); "Patience" (2ST Uptown); "The Last Supper" (SOPAC); "Much Ado About Nothing" (Commonwealth Shakespeare); "The Brothers Size" (American Players); "it’s not a trip, it’s a journey," "We Declare You A Terrorist…" (Round House); "Gem of The Ocean" (Portland Center Stage); "Trouble In Mind" (The Old Globe); "The West End" (Cincinnati Playhouse); "Hype Man" (ART & Company One); "Gloria" (ACT); "STEW (Page 73), Hi, Are You Single?" (Woolly Mammoth); "House of Joy" (CalShakes); "The Royale" (Capital Rep); "Behind The Sheet" (Ensemble Studio Theatre). Lecturer: Princeton University & Queens College. Member: USA 829 & Wingspace Theatrical Design. www.motendesigns.com @motendesigns. McKay Coble Costume Designer PlayMakers: Company member for over 30 years. “The Skin of Our Teeth,” “Everybody,” “Bewilderness,” “Sherwood,” “Leaving Eden,” “Dot,” “My Fair Lady,” “Peter and the Starcatcher,” “An Enemy of the People,” “The Tempest / Metamorphoses,” “It’s a Wonderful Life,” “Red,” “Noises Off,” “The Parchman Hour,” “Big River,” “Nicholas Nickleby,” “Amadeus,” “The Little Prince,” “The Illusion,” “Cyrano,” “Not About Heroes,” “Playboy of the Western World,” “A Streetcar Named Desire,” “The Nutcracker,” and many others. Broadway: Production Coordinator, Barbara Matera, Ltd.; “La Cage Aux Folles,” “Big River,” “Sunday in the Park with George,” “Singin’ in the Rain,” “Merlin,” “Private Lives.” Regional: Alley Theatre, Clarence Brown Theatre, Guthrie 29
Theater, Hartford Stage, Utah Shakespearean Festival, Virginia Stage Company. Film: “The Cotton Club,” “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom,” “Ghostbusters,” “Silkwood,” “Places in the Heart.” Member of United Scenic Artists Local 829; NYC. Tyler Micoleau Lighting Designer PlayMakers: “Shipwrecked!,”“Nicholas Nickleby.”Broadway: “Into The Woods,”“American Buffalo,”“Be More Chill,”“The Band’s Visit.”West End/ International: “Be More Chill”(London, Japan). Recent Off-Broadway/ New York: “Camp Siegfried”(2ST); “A Case For The Existence Of God”(Signature). Regional: La Jolla Playhouse, Dallas Theater Center, Pig Iron Theatre, Chautauqua Theatre Company, Long Wharf Theatre, among many others. Awards: Tony Award for Best Lighting Design of a Musical (The Band’s Visit), OBIE, Lucille Lortel, Henry Hewes, Knight of Illumination. Michael Betts II Sound Designer PlayMakers: “Stick Fly”. Regional: “The Miraculous and the Mundane” (Howard Craft); “The Talk,” “Haunted” (Sonny Kelly); “My Mother Is Busy Getting Ready To Die” (Dr. LeRhonda S. Manigualt-Bryant). Film: “death. everything.nothing” (Dr. LeRhonda S. Manigualt-Bryant). Education/Other: Media Production, UNC-Chapel Hill; MFA in Experimental and Documentary Arts, Duke University. Professorship in Sound Design at UNCWilmington. www.michaelbettsii.com. @kidSweater @mbetts2. Peter Vitale Composer / Musician of the Court PlayMakers: Debut. Regional: Guthrie Theater, Public Theater Mobile Unit, Delaware Shakespeare Festival, California Shakespeare Theater. Twin Cities: Jungle Theater, Theater Latte Da, Park Square Theater, Ordway Theater, Frank Theater, Minnesota Jewish Theater, Minnesota Opera, Minnesota Orchestra. Film/Television: “Liberty Falls, 54321” (Theme song), Web series produced by The Moving Company. Education: Duke University, University of North Carolina Greensboro, University of North Wales, UK. Other: Resident Music Director and Composer for Ten Thousand Things Theater in Minneapolis where he has contributed to over fifty productions. Since 1993, Ten Thousand Things Theater has brought lively, professional theater to people with little access to the wealth of the arts and is recognized nationally for its work in expanding the reach of quality theater beyond the boundaries of traditional stages. @TTTMusicGuy.
Tracy Bersley Choreographer
PlayMakers: Movement coach and resident choreographer in her sixth season. Off-Broadway/New York: As director/choreographer— Lincoln Center, The Public Theater, BAM (Brooklyn Academy of Music), The Lortel Theatre, Primary Stages, and many award-winning Off-Broadway companies, such as The Civilians and Red Bull Theatre. Regional: As director/choreographer— Carolina Performing Arts, McCarter Theatre, Williamstown Theatre Festival. Eduction/Other: Served as professor or guest artist at Yale School of Drama, Princeton University, New York University, Purchase College, Columbia University/Barnard College, and The Juilliard School. Tracy received her MFA in Directing from Syracuse University and is currently co-head of the Professional Actor Training Program in the Department of Dramatic Art at UNC-Chapel Hill, a member of Stage Directors and Choreographers Society, and a Drama League Fellow. Jeff A.R. Jones Fight Director PlayMakers: “Native Gardens,” “Wrinkle in Time,” “Stick Fly,” “Skin of Our Teeth,” “Leaving Eden”. Regional: "Beauty Queen of Lenane" (Virginia Stage); "Romeo & Juliet," "Macbeth," "Don Quixote," "Dracula " (Carolina Ballet); "Carmen," "Cold Mountain" (NCOpera); "Otello," "Pagliacci," "Romeo et Juliette" (Virginia Opera); “West Side Story” (Illinois Opera); Nearly 200 credits including favorites “Macbeth,” “King Lear,” “Titus Andronicus,” “Pericles,” “Henry IV, Part 1,” “The Rover,” “She Kills Monsters,” “Marian: The True Tale of Robin Hood,” “Sweeney Todd,” “Ragtime,” “Spring Awakening,” “Wild Party,” “Mr. Burns,” “a great big woolly mammoth thawing from the ice,” “Vinegar Tom,” ”Cry Havoc,” “Hookman." Other: Certified Teacher, Fight Director, and Theatrical Firearms Instructor with the Society of American Fight Directors Certified Intimacy Director with IDC. Owner/ instructor: Collaborative Combat Movement Arts, with weekly classes. Head Facilitator: Triangle Intimacy Lab. @jarjones @stagecombatacademync. JaMeeka Holloway Associate Director PlayMakers: “Detroit ’67” (Assistant Director). Regional: LaMAMA Experimental Theatre Club and Classic Stage in New York; Northern Stage; Shakespeare in Detroit; Oregon Shakespeare (Asst. Director, Merry Wives of Windsor) and the National Black Theatre Festival. Local: Durham Performing Arts Center; Manbites Dog Theater; Bulldog Ensemble Theatre; Black Ops. 31
Academia: The Department of Theatre at Dartmouth; Duke University’s
Department of Theatre Studies; Tantrum Theatre at Ohio University; The
Professional Actor Training program at UNC-Chapel Hill and was the 2021-22 ROE GREEN Visiting Director at Kent State University. Other:
Alumnus of The Lark Play Development Center Apprenticeship program;
Founder of Blk Girls Luv The Bard; she has been honored by the African
American Heritage Commission and Governor Roy Cooper for her contributions to the arts and culture landscape of North Carolina and is a published contributor in the 2018 Routledge Companion to African American
Theatre and Performance. Lormarev Jones Intimacy Consultant PlayMakers: “Stick Fly,” “Edges of Time”. Regional: “My Geriatric Uterus” (Cincinnati Fringe Festival, Winner of the David C. Herriman Artists’ Pick of the Fringe Award). Education/Other: Lormarev Jones is a Director,
Choreographer, and Educator currently based in Raleigh. She received her MFA in Theatre from Sarah Lawrence College. Lormarev has served as a director and choreographer at many theatres and high schools in the
Triangle, including North Carolina State, Meredith College, Raleigh Charter
High School, Raleigh Little Theatre and many others. She is also a deviser, playwright, and solo performer. Lormarev currently teaches at NCSU while continuing to freelance in all her areas of expertise. lormarevjones.com @ladyjonesbury @ladyjonesbury Deborah Hecht Text & Vocal Coach PlayMakers: Deborah received her M.F.A in Acting from the Professional
Actor Training Program at UNC-Chapel Hill. Broadway: Over 95 productions, including "How I Learned to Drive," "The Collaboration" and
Martin McDonagh’s "Hangmen." Upcoming productions: "Sweeney Todd" with Josh Groban. Recent productions include: "Angels in America" (both original and recent Broadway productions), "The Ferryman." The full list can be seen at IBdb.com. Off-Broadway: hundreds of productions at Playwrights
Horizons, MCC, MTC, Signature, the Vineyard, Laura Pels, others. Regional/ International: Seattle Rep, Yale Rep, Long Wharf, Huntington, others. Royal
National Theatre, RSC. Film: "All the Money in the World," "Under the Skin" and others. TV: "Tokyo Vice," "We Were the Lucky Ones" (upcoming), "The
Fall of the House of Usher," "Law and Order" (Jeffrey Donovan), others. Adam Versényi Dramaturg PlayMakers: Resident Dramaturg, 1988–present. Recently: "The Skin of Our
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Teeth," "Julius Caesar," "Native Son," "Life of Galileo," "Skeleton Crew," "Tartuffe". 7 Stages; NEA Playwrighting Fellows Program; Theatre Previews at Duke; Critics Panel, IV Hispanic Theatre Festival (Teatro Avante); Florida Studio Theatre; Yale Repertory Theatre; La MaMa E.T.C.; Festival Latino (New York Shakespeare Festival). Directing: "The Nutcracker" (PlayMakers); "The Agony of Ecstasy," "El Día Que Me Quieras," "The Black American Dream," "Hughie; The Indians Were Angry; Bitter Blood; The Lesson; No Exit. Publications: Ramón Griffero: Your Desires in Fragments and Other Plays.; The Theater of Sabina Berman: The Agony of Ecstasy and Other Plays; El Teatro en América Latina; Theatre in Latin America: Religion, Politics, and Culture from Cortes to the 1980s. Other: Fulbright Senior Lecturer, Colombia, South America. Member, Literary Managers and Dramaturgs of the Americas. Faculty: UNC-Chapel Hill; Deep Springs College; Escuela de Bellas Artes, Universidad de Caldas, Manizales, Colombia; Escuela Nacional de Arte Dramático, Bogotá, Colombia. Education: DFA, Yale School of Drama. Sarah Smiley Stage Manager After a seven-year hiatus in her home state of Florida, Sarah returns to PlayMakers as resident stage manager, having held that position from 2005 – 2015. In the interim, Sarah has been the resident stage manager at freeFall Theatre in St. Petersburg, FL. She has worked with theatres, theme parks, and road houses in eight states and the U.K., including Tampa Playmakers, Virginia Stage Company, Busch Gardens Tampa, the Alliance Theatre Company, 7 Stages, Gulfshore Playhouse, Shadowland Theatre, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Sherman Theatre in Cardiff, Wales, and the West Yorkshire Playhouse in Leeds. She is a member of Actors’ Equity Association, and has been active in USITT and the Stage Managers’ Association. She received her M.F.A. from the University of Iowa. Aspen Jackson Assistant Stage Manager PlayMakers: "Native Gardens." "The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee" (Summer Youth Conservatory). Aspen graduated in May of 2019 with a BA in Vocal Performance and Dramatic Arts from UNC-Chapel Hill. During her undergraduate career, she was stage manager for shows such as “Cendrillon,”“Dido and Aeneas” and “The Pillowman.” After graduating, Aspen completed an internship with the Walt Disney World Company and she worked as a production assistant for PlayMakers Repertory Company during their 19/20 and 21/22 seasons. Aspen is thrilled to be returning to PlayMakers Repertory Company this season for her debut as Resident Stage Manager. 33
Vivienne Benesch Producing Artistic Director
Vivienne is in her seventh full season as a company member and Producing Artistic Director at PlayMakers, where she has helmed productions of "The Skin of Our Teeth," “The Storyteller,” “Dairyland,” “Life of Galileo,” “Leaving Eden,” “The May Queen,” “Three Sisters,” “Love Alone,” “RED” and “In The Next Room.” In her seven seasons with the theatre, she is particularly proud to have produced 11 world-premieres and launched PlayMakers Mobile, a touring production aimed at reaching underserved audiences around the Triangle. For 12 seasons, she served as Artistic Director of the renowned Chautauqua Theater Company and Conservatory, presiding over the company’s transformation into one of the best summer theatres and most competitive summer training programs in the country. Vivienne directed both the world premiere of Noah Haidle’s “Birthday Candles” for Detroit Public Theatre and, in 2022, its Broadway production starring Debra Messing. She has also directed for the Folger Shakespeare Theatre (Helen Hayes nomination for best direction 2019), The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, Trinity Repertory Company, NY Stage & Film, and Red Bull Theatre, among others. As an actress, Vivienne has worked on and off-Broadway, in film and television, at many of the country’s most celebrated theatres, and received an Obie Award for her performance in Lee Blessing’s “Going to St. Ives.” Vivienne is a graduate of Brown University and NYU’s Graduate Acting Program. As an educator, she has directed for and served on the faculty of some of the nation’s foremost actor training programs, including The Juilliard School, UNCChapel Hill’s Professional Actor Training Program, Brown/Trinity Rep MFA Program, and at her alma mater, NYU’s Graduate Acting Program. She is the 2017 recipient of the Zelda Fichandler Award given by the Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation.
Maura Murphy General Manager
Maura is here for her seventh full season, returning after a 23-year hiatus. In that time, she honed her administrative skills at Duke, NCSU and of course, Carolina. She was production stage manager for PlayMakers from 1993-1996 and general manager from 1996-1999. Education: EdD and MS in Higher Education Administration, NCSU; BA in Drama, Muhlenberg College
Jeffrey Meanza Associate Artistic Director
An actor, director and educator, Jeffrey Meanza has spent the last 15 years working at two of the country’s most celebrated regional theatres overseeing the artistic, educational and community engagement efforts of the organizations. As a member of PlayMakers’ resident acting company, he has appeared in "Angels in America, "Into the Woods," Lisa Kron's "Well," "Amadeus," "Assasins," and "The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby" among others. Since 2015, he served as the Guthrie Theater’s associate artistic director, overseeing the theater’s education and community engagement initiatives, the literary team, casting, and the theater’s professional training programs, as well as helping to guide the work on the Guthrie’s three stages. During his tenure, Meanza managed the expansion of educational programming to serve over 35,000 students annually, including the creation of an artist residency program that put full-time teaching artists in high school classrooms throughout the state of Minnesota. In addition, under his leadership, the Guthrie piloted a new Fellowship program that offers paid training opportunities for emerging leaders to experience work at one of the nation’s leading regional theaters. In 2021, Meanza returned to PlayMakers Repertory Company as Associate Artistic Director, charged with overseeing the artistic, educational and engagement operations of the theater. He holds an M.F.A in Acting from the Professional Actor Training Program at UNC-Chapel Hill and a B.A. in Theater and Performance Studies from the University of California, Berkeley. Michael Rolleri Production Manager Michael is in his 36th season with PlayMakers Repertory Company. He has been Technical Director, Project Manager, Exhibition Technician, and Lighting Designer for industrial shows in the Southeast region, as well as lead carpenter for films, the U.S. Olympic Festival, and scenic studios. He has also been a rigger in the Southeast region and has served on the executive board and as President of IATSE Local 417. Michael is a 30 year Gold Pin member of IATSE. An active member of United States Institute For Theatre Technology (USITT), he is a three-time winner at USITT's Tech Expo. He is a full Professor/Head of the Technical Production Program at UNC-Chapel Hill and was an instructor at High Point University and Tufts University. Education: MFA in Design and Technical Production, UNC-Greensboro.
Joan H. Gillings Center for Dramatic Art CB# 3235, UNC-Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3235
Box Office: 919.962.7529 Website: www.playmakersrep.org
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playmakersrep.org/blog What Will Shows Look Like This Year?
The 22/23 season features six productions on the Paul Green Theatre stage, which will be transformed into the heart of the Harlem Renaissance, a usurper King’s court in Denmark, a neighborhood backyard battleground, a queen’s playground in Florida, a meddlesome English matchmaker’s drawing room, and, finally, familiar ground in the South for a young man’s journey of creative self-discovery. Health and Safety
PlayMakers Repertory Company is committed to the safety and well-being of our patrons, artists and staff. We will be following state, industry and University safety guidelines in the 22/23 season. All patrons are encouraged to wear masks while inside the Joan H. Gillings Center for Dramatic Art. We have increased sanitation measures throughout the building and put some new protocols in place to improve safety including: • Touch free electronic ticketing • Hand sanitizers throughout the Center for Dramatic Art • More frequent cleaning of high-touch surfaces • HEPA filtration units
Box Office Hours
Tuesday-Friday, 12:00p.m.-5:00p.m. and 90 minutes before each performance. What If I Have to Miss My Performance Date?
For the safety of all our artists, patrons, and staff, if you feel unwell, please stay home. You may call our Box Office and ask to be reseated for another performance, or request a refund up to 48 hour before your ticketed performance.
If you know you will miss a performance date, we can exchange your ticket for you, based on availability. Please call our Box Office at least 48 hours before your scheduled performance, and please be aware that all exchanges are based on availability and a fee or additional cost may apply. Subscribers may exchange their tickets with no additional fee, but additional cost may apply with a change in performance or section. Use of Cell Phones and Other Electronics
Texting and using cell phones, laptops, smart watches, and other devices light- or sound-emitting devices are strictly prohibited during the performance. Please turn all electronic devices to silent, theatre mode, or off during the show. Cameras or Recording Devices
Taking photographs or videotaping inside the theatre is strictly prohibited during performances. However, before the show, during intermission, and after the show, you are invited to take and share your photos of the stage and scenery. Parking
There are several paid and free parking options available near PlayMakers. We recommend arriving 30 minutes before the show so that you have time to park and pay (Monday-Thursday evenings only) and find your seat. For more information and an interactive map of nearby parking options, please visit
www.playmakersrep.org/parking
Policy on Young Children
As a courtesy to our patrons, it is the policy of PlayMakers not to admit children under the age of 5. All of our shows have content ratings for each production (for example: Rated PG-13). If you are considering bringing your child, please refer to website or contact our Box Office for further information. All patrons, regardless of age, must have a ticket. Headsets for Hearing Impaired Patrons
Our theatres are equipped with sound systems that amplify the sound from the stage. Patrons who wish to use the system may obtain headsets on a first-come, first-served basis from the coat check. Headsets must be returned immediately after the performance. Late Seating and Leaving Your Seat During the Show
To minimize disruptions to the actors and other patrons, late seating will be provided at the discretion of the house manager at an appropriate break in the action on stage. Patrons who need to be seated late must be escorted by house staff to seats at the rear entrance of the auditorium, which entails climbing a flight of stairs. Patrons can take their regular seat at intermission.
PlayMakers’ 2022/23 Season is Made Possible in Part by Grants from
Foundation Support National Endowment for the Arts, North Carolina Arts Council, The Shubert Foundation, Fidelity Foundation, Truist Foundation, The Educational Foundation of America
Additional Funding for Guest Artists is Provided by Robert Boyer and Margaret Boyer Fund, Louise Lamont Fund, Emeriti Professors Charles and Shirley Weiss Fund
Producing Council Mebane Lumber, Residence Inn Chapel Hill, Spoonflower, Larry's Coffee, The Siena Hotel/Il Palio Restaurant
Corporate Council De Maison Selections, Aloft
Associates Cambria Suites
PlayMakers Repertory Company is a program of the Department of Dramatic Art, The College of Arts and Sciences, and The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The North Carolina Arts Council, a division of the Department of Cultural Resources, recognizes PlayMakers as a professional theatre organization and provides grant assistance to this organization from funds appropriated by the North Carolina General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts. PlayMakers is a beneficiary of the Elizabeth Price Kenan Endowment and the Lillian Hughes Prince Endowment.
PlayMakers Repertory Company is a Member of Theatre Communications Group (TCG), the national organization for the American theatre.
This 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.
The scenic, costume, lighting and sound designers in LORT Theatres are represented by United Scenic Artists, Local USA-829 of the IATSE.
The Director and Choreographer are members of the Stage Directors and Choreographers Society, a national theatrical labor union.
Administration
Vivienne Benesch, Producing Artistic Director
Artistic
Tracy Bersley, Movement Coach/Choreographer Kathryn Brown, Education & Engagment Coordinator Chelsea James, Producing Associate Tia James, Vocal Coach Gregory Kable, Dramaturg Jacqueline E. Lawton, Dramaturg
Jeffrey Meanza, Associate Artistic Director
Mark Perry, Dramaturg Gwendolyn Schwinke, Vocal Coach Sarah Tackett, Assistant to Producing Artistic Director Adam Versényi, Dramaturg Nathaniel Kareis, Artistic Assistant
Development
Kymberly Burkhead-Dalton, Director of Development
Kyle Kostenko, Assistant Director of Annual Giving
Administration
Kate Jones, Associate General Manager Lisa Geeslin, Accountant Maura Murphy, General Manager Nijal Morgan, UndergraduateAssistant
Marketing & Audience Services
Hannah LaMarlowe, Marketing Communications Specialist Thomas Porter, Box Office Manager Rosalie Preston, Associate Director of Marketing Lauren Van Hemert, Marketing Consultant Kori Yelverton, Audience Services Associate Jenna Zottoli, Audience Services Associate Connor Sule, Lucy Albanil-Rangel, Marketing Undergraduate Assistants Albert Carlson, Eli Dietrich, Tygia Drewhowell, Tina Lin, Ava Lytle, Olivia Morse, Alicia Norman, Krystal Rivera, Faith Robisch, Naomi Smith, Katherine Stevens, Lily Vance, Cora Willis, Kevin Zhang, Box Office and Front of House Undergraduate Assistants
Johanna Ashwell, Administration Assistant Matara Hitchcock, Company Manager
Department of Dramatic Art
Kathryn Hunter-Williams, Chair and Associate Professor
Faculty
Milly Barranger, Professor Emerita Vivienne Benesch, Professor of the Practice Tracy Bersley, Associate Professor Pamela Bond, Visiting Teaching Assistant Professor Jan Chambers, Professor McKay Coble, Professor
Jeffrey Blair Cornell, Associate Chair, Teaching Prof.
Ray Dooley, Professor Emeritus Samuel Ray Gates, Assistant Professor Julia Gibson, Associate Professor David Hammond, Professor Emeritus Letitia James, Assistant Professor Gregory Kable, Teaching Professor Jacqueline E. Lawton, Associate Professor Adam Maxfield, Teaching Professor Triffin Morris, Professor of the Practice David Navalinsky, Professor Bobbi Owen, Distinguished Professor Emerita Laura Pates, Teaching Assistant Professor Kathy Perkins, Professor Emerita Mark Perry, Teaching Associate Professor Rachel E. Pollock, Teaching Assistant Professor Michael Rolleri, Professor Gwendolyn Schwinke, Assistant Professor Aubrey Snowden, Teaching Assistant Professor Craig Turner, Professor Emeritus Adam Versényi, Professor Tao Wang, Assistant Professor
Staff
Lisa Geeslin, Accounting Technician Taylor McDaniel, Student Services Manager Karen Rolleri, Business Coordinator Jamie Strickland, University Manager
Production
Michael Rolleri, Production Manager
Costumes
Amy Evans, Costume Shop Manager Marissa Lupkas, Wardrobe Supervisor Matthew Mallard, Assistant Costume Director
Triffin Morris, Costume Director Rachel Pollock, Costume Craftsperson
Costume Production Graduate Students: Matty Blatt, Jocelyn Chatman, Emma Holyst, Zachary Morrison, Lou Pires, Sally Rath, Athene Wright
Lighting
Benjamin Bosch, Electrics Supervisor
Props
Emma Anderson, Props Artisan Lauren Reinhartsen, Properties Supervisor Lydia McRoy, Undergraduate Assistant Stage Management
Aspen Jackson, Stage Manager Sarah Smiley, Stage Manager Zoe Lord, Production Assistant
Sound
David Bost, Sound Supervisor
Scenic
Anthony Cacchione, Production Carpenter
Adam Maxfield, Technical Director Laura Pates, Assistant Technical Director
Jessica Secrest, Scenic Artist Technical Production Graduate Students: Brock Burton, Joel Ernst, Luke Robinson, Rachel Van Namen, Garrett Weeda Will Peele, Undergraduate Assistant-Scene Shop Danielle Mou, Alex Rhinehalt, Carpenter Work Studies Faith Wang, Cori Lavergne, Paint Work Studies Holly Turner, Paint Undergraduate Assistant
PlayMakers’ Resident Acting Company
Jeffrey Blair Cornell Kathryn Hunter-Williams Samuel Ray Gates Tia James
Julia Gibson Gwendolyn Schwinke
Professional Actor Training Program: Hayley Cartee, Heinley Gaspard, Jamar Jones, Saleemah Sharpe, Sanjana Taskar, Adam Valentine
For this Production
Kate Jones, Assistant Director Jacob Sikorski, Associate Scenic Designer Brock Burton, Production Technical Director Joel Ernst, Shop Lead Zachary Morrison, Assistant to the Costume Designer Athene Wright, Jocelyn Chatman, Drapers Sally Rath, Lou Pires, First Hands Emma Holyst, Stitcher Matty Blatt, Crafts Assistant Angella Fraser, Wigs Rebecca Bossen, Candance Hescock, School Residency Teaching Artists
THERE HAS NEVER BEEN A MORE IMPORTANT TIME TO SUPPORT PLAYMAKERS AND THE ARTS
As a nonprofit professional theatre, ticket sales traditionally cover only half of our annual operating costs. We must rely on the generosity of our community to help close the gap and keep our stages alive.
You can help support and sustain all our work, both on stage and off, by making a tax-deductible gift which enables us to: • Bring innovative, entertaining, and relevant theatre to the Triangle • Serve students across the state through our award-winning educational programs • Engage with our audiences through artist and community conversations • Remain flexible, safe, and better prepared for the future
Every gift, big or small, makes a huge difference!
Ways to Give
Online playmakersrep.org/givePHOTO OF THE CAST OF TARTUFFE BY HUTHPHOTO
Phone or Email Kymberly Burkhead-Dalton kbdalton@email.unc.edu 919.962.4846
Mail Send your check to: Kymberly Burkhead-Dalton PlayMakers Repertory Company Joan H. Gillings Center for Dramatic Art CB 3235 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3235
PlayMakers is grateful to the members of the Friends of PlayMakers for their generous support. For more information about how to join this dynamic group of supporters, call Director of Development Kymberly BurkheadDalton at 919.962.4846 or visit us at playmakersrep.org.
Director’s Circle ($10,000+)
Anonymous Susan Arrington Betsy Blackwell and John Watson Jr. Thomas and Holly Carr Munroe and Becky Cobey Mr. and Mrs. David G. Frey Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Joanne and Peter Garrett Joan H. Gillings ~ The Charles Goren and Hazen Family
Foundation, Trustees Tom and Lisa
Hazen Kevin and Amy Guskiewicz T. Chandler and Monie Hardwick Brian Hargrove and David Hyde Pierce Mrs. Frank H. Kenan Thomas S. Kenan III John David Ratliff Wyndham Robertson Coleman and Carol Ross Schwab Charitable Shubert Foundation Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program Alan H. Weinhouse Angel ($5,000–9,999)
Anonymous American Endowment Foundation Andrew and Katherine Asaro ^ + Robert and Mary Ann Eubanks Gordon J. Ferguson Drucie French and Steve Cumbie Mr. and Mrs. Matt Hapgood Kim Kwok Mr. and Mrs. William O. McCoy Paul and Linda Naylor Bobbi Owen Amy and Nick Penwarden The Prentice Foundation Paul McNeill Sconyers The Educational Foundation of America
Theatre Projects John D. Watson Jr. and Lelia E. Blackwell Mr. and Mrs. H. Edward Wright III Jim and Bonnie Yankaskas Investor ($2,500–4,999)
Anonymous Richard and Deirdre Arnold ^ Andrew and Katherine Asaro ^ + Vivienne Benesch Stephen S. Birdsall Ed and Eleanor Burke Jennifer Cannizzaro Cindy and Thomas Cook Cindy K. Cook Joanne and Peter Garrett Susan E. Hartley Dr. Lyle V. Jones Susan J. Kelly Dr. Catherine M. Kuhn and Glenn J.
Tortorici Robert and Kathryn Kyle Jennifer Stuart Mark & Bette Morris Family Foundation Sandy and Ned McClurg ^ Mark and Julie Morris Amy Penwarden Raymond James Charitable Endowment
Fund Jean and Joseph Ritok Carol Blackman Smithwick Dr. and Mrs. Edward Smithwick Triangle Community Foundation David and Heather Yeowell Page to Stage ($1,500–2,499)
David and Judy Adamson Ayco Charitable Foundation Steve Benezra ^
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Dr. Stephen Shaw Birdsall Edmund S. Burke Capital Group Company Charitable
Foundation Matching Gifts Jeffrey Blair Cornell and Maria Savage Julie R. Daniels Dr. Carrie L. Donley and W. Patrick Gale John and Diane Formy-Duval Imre and Aniko Gaal Dustin and Susan Gillings Gross Carol Hazard and Winston Liao David Howell IBM Corporation Matching Gifts Jacobs Preyer Family Foundation Hannelore and Konrad Jarausch Joanna Karwowska & Hugon
Karwowski ^ Howard and Sandra Kaufman Kathryn and Robert Kyle Morgan Stanley Global Impact Funding
Trust, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Morris Panter Foundation Dr. Abigail T. Panter and Dr. George Huba Rich and Marilyn Jacobs Preyer Lauren Rivers Perry Branin Silver Dr. and Mrs. William Stewart The Rev. Wendy R. and W. Riley Waugh Roger and Marlene Werner YourCause, LLC Trustee for IBM Matching Gifts Partner ($1,000–1,499)
Anonymous (4) Penny and Howard Aldrich Joan Clendenin Laurence Arthur Cobb Erwin Cohen Dede Corvinus Mr. and Mrs. M. Brian Daniels Julie R. Daniels Jo Anne and Shelley Earp Constance and Robert Eby Dr. and Mrs. John P. Evans Dana R. Greenwood Robert S. Greenwood Joseph and Deirdre Haj Clay and Jane Harrell Ann E. Holloman Dr. Moyra Kileff and Mr. Brian Kileff Lynn Knauff Jack Knight and Margaret Brown ^ Gary and Carolyn Koch Dr. Catherine Kuhn and Glenn Tortorici Shirley and Tom Kunkel Douglas and Nelda Lay Anand and Sandhya Lagoo Scott Levitan and Patrick Francisco Mort and Cheryl Malkin David and Harriet Martin Connie and Vernon Matzen Mr. and Mrs. Ned S. McClurg Holly and Ross McKinney Dr. Laurie E. McNeil and Patrick W.
Wallace James and Susan Moeser Paul and Sherrie Norton Bettina Patterson Lee and Barbara Pedersen Isaac and Sabrina Presnell-Rockoff Vikram Rao and Susan Henning Alec Rhodes Rif Riddick Rufus M. Riddick Carole Lynne Shelby David Sontag * Sarah West and Thomas Dominick Jesse L. White, Jr. Julian D. Wiles Jr. Paul and Sally Wright Sidney P. Wright Backer ($500–999)
Anonymous (3) Anonymous friends of Ben Kahn, In memory of Charles Kahn Akin Akinli Virginia M. Aldige Howard and Penny Aldrich Pete and Hannah Andrews Dr. Thomas C. Apostle and Sharon E.
Lawrence-Apostle Evelyn Barrow John W. Becton and Nancy B. Tannenbaum Shula and Steve Bernard Dr. Stanley Warren Black, III Stanley W. Black Professor and Mrs. Kenneth S. Broun Julia A. Borbely-Brown Jackson Davis Breaks II and Carolyn Snyder Breaks Drs. Maurice and Mary Hughes Brookhart Jennifer and Robert Buckmire Keith Burridge and Patricia Saling Ann and John Campbell Philip and Linda Carl Clara Cazzulino Laurence A. Cobb Adrienne and John Cox* Rafael O. DeJesus and Laura Koshel Brooks de Wetter-Smith and Mary Lou Leiser Smith David A. Doll Alexander M. and Georgia Cobb Donaldson Dr. Carrie Donley Drs. H. Shelton and Jo Anne L. Earp Bob and Connie Eby Glen H. and Sandy T. Elder Eli Lilly & Company Foundation Matching
Gifts Program Mr. and Mrs. Christopher S. Exton Drs. Richard E. and Donna R. Falvo Thorsten A. Fjellstedt Sr. Thorsten Fjellstedt Stephen Mark Cumbie and Dr. Druscilla
French Dr. Jaroslav Thayer Folda III Shayne C. Gad Bill Cobb and Gail Perry W. Patrick Gale ^ Nichole Gantshar Mike and Bonnie Gilliom Ugo Goetzl James P. Gogan Dr. and Mrs. Robert S. Greenwood Priscilla Alden Guild Carolyn and Jim Harris C. Hawkins ^ Mr. and Mrs. David L. Henson Ann Holloman Betty Block James Julie and Robert Keely* Moise Khayrallah Lynn Koss Knauff Laura Koshel and Rafael de Jesus Leonard & Ruth Kreisman Drs. Anand S. and Sandhya Lagoo Randy and Cathy Lambe Douglas M. Lay and Nelda Kilcrease Lay Douglas Maclean and Susan Wolf Dr. and Mrs. Morton D. Malkin Michael Maness and Lois Knauff Elaine Mangrum Janet McCarthy* Ed and Connie McCraw
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Jeanne B. Miller Dr. James C. Moeser Cecilia D. Moore^ Mary Nunn Morrow Jill Muti Nelda K. Lay Revocable Trust Stephen Nelson Linda Williams Norris George D. Norton Paul and Cheryl Norton Liz and Dave Nuechterlein Lois Oliver Jo Ann and Gordon Pitz Mark and Eugenea Pollock Robert and Joyce Anne Porter Jodi and Glenn Preminger David and Lisa Price Elizabeth Raft Drs. M. Vikram Rao and Susan June
Henning Rao Family Foundation Dr. Terry Rhodes Victor and Linda Roggli Jan F. and Anne P. Sassaman Stephanie Ann Schmitt and Kevin Zachary
Kinlaw Martha Scotford* Kyle and Jenn Smith Dr. William W. Smith and Brenda W.
Kirby Dr. and Mrs. Timothy N. Taft Jackie Tanner* The Marconi Hoban Tell Fund of Triangle Community Foundation George Weinhouse Ernest T. Wilkes Alan Young
This list is current as of January 1, 2022. If your name is listed incorrectly or not at all, please contact PlayMakers Development Office at 919.962.2481. We will ensure you are recognized for your thoughtful support.
^ Sustainers Club Member + Women’s Point of View (WPOV) Supporter * PlayMakers Special Event Supporter ~ Deceased
RETURNS!
February 18 - 26, 2023
Need more Shakespeare in your life? Join us on the road for more, featuring our
PlayMakers company members.
Hamlet Crossword Answers
8. Father 9. Noble 11. Yorick 12. Ghost Down: 1. Fortinbras 5. Hamlet 7. Osric 13. Guildenstern 6. Soliloquy 10. Tragedy 12. Gertrude Across: 2. Rotten 3. Madness 4. Ophelia