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A BRONX TALE ANNA KARENINA THE WHISTLEBLOWER LAST NIGHT AND THE NIGHT BEFORE
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SIGHTLINE BY JANICE SINDEN
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Welcome to a new year filled with returning favorites, exciting debuts and never-before-seen-but-soon-to-be hits. In February, we welcome both local guests and industry peers to join us for our annual Colorado New Play Summit. This is an opportunity to hear actors read plays that are currently in development. First, we receive hundreds of script submissions. Then, we select several to rehearse with a director, a dramaturg who serves as the literary editor and a professional cast. Finally, our actors “read” the play for a live audience. This is the really exciting part — you experience the play without benefit of lighting, costumes, music and scenery. You simply hear the words and the stage directions while your mind fills in the blanks. The playwright takes in your reactions to help inform minor changes to a scene or major changes to the play. At no other time is the audience’s reaction quite as crucial as in the development of the script. As part of this year’s Summit, we are delighted to offer: • In the Upper Room by Beaufield Berry (reading) • Wally World by Isaac Gomez (reading) • You Lost Me by Bonnie Metzgar (reading) • twenty50 by Tony Meneses (reading and DCPA commission) • Rattlesnake Kate with music and lyrics of Neyla Pekarek and book by Karen Hartman (concert reading and DCPA commission) • Finalists in our High School playwriting competition (readings) • Last Night and the Night Before by Donnetta Lavinia Grays (world premiere production) • The Whistleblower by Itamar Moses (world premiere production) These works are at the beginning of their journeys while other current productions are well established in the American theatre — Anna Karenina, Rock of Ages and A Bronx Tale (read Chazz Palminteri’s determination to bring his real-life story to the stage on page 10). Every aspiring actor, playwright, director and designer needs support and encouragement to foster their abilities. Fortunately, DCPA Education cultivates that talent through a variety of programs. And those programs are made possible in part through proceeds from our annual Saturday Night Alive gala coming up March 2. This year, we honor former DCPA Chairman Daniel L. Ritchie, feature entertainment by Vanessa Williams and showcase students in our Education program. Whether you enjoy established playwrights, glittering fundraisers, continuing education, or new diverse works, winter at the DCPA is filled with opportunity. We hope you’ll be part of our journey. Warm regards,
Janice Sinden President & CEO 4
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EDITOR: Suzanne Yoe ASSOCIATE EDITOR: John Moore ART DIRECTOR: Kyle Malone APPLAUSE DESIGNER: Brenda Elliott CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: Sylvie Drake, Brittany Gutierrez, Cheyenne Michaels, John Moore, Savannah Nichols Applause is published eight times a year by Denver Center for the Performing Arts in conjunction with The Publishing House, Westminster, CO. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. Call 303.893.4000 regarding editorial content.
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BOARD OF TRUSTEES Martin Semple, Chairman William Dean Singleton, Secretary/Treasurer Robert Slosky, Vice Chairman Dr. Patricia Baca Joy S. Burns Fred Churbuck Isabelle Clark Navin Dimond L. Roger Hutson Robert C. Newman Roberta Robinette Manny Rodriguez Alan Salazar Hassan Salem Richard M. Sapkin June Travis Ken Tuchman Tina Walls Dr. Reginald L. Washington Judi Wolf Sylvia Young
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Xanadu Now – Apr 28 A Bronx Tale Now – Jan 20 Last Night and the Night Before Jan 18 – Feb 24 Rock of Ages Jan 25 – 27 Anna Karenina Jan 25 – Feb 24
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The Whistleblower Feb 8 – Mar 10
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Powered by Off-Center Mar – Apr The Play That Goes Wrong Mar 5 – 17 Hello, Dolly! Mar 27 – Apr 7 The Illusionists Apr 12 – 14
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Cats Apr 24 – 28
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Sweat Apr 26 – May 26 Wicked May 8 – Jun 9
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Photos by Libby Neder Photography, Emily Lozow and John Moore
Fiddler on the Roof Jun 11 – 16
1. DCPA OFF-CENTER offered tiny morsels of plays at its recent show entitled Bite-Size: An Evening of Micro Theatre at BookBar. 2. DCPA BROADWAY welcomed nearly 70,000 guests to the North American tour launch of Dear Evan Hansen. 3. DCPA Trustee Bob Newman and his wife Judi honored the DCPA’s late President by naming a theatre in his honor. The Randy Weeks Conservatory Theatre will welcome Education students of all ages. The Newmans (l) were joined by Randy’s family at the dedication. 4. DCPA EDUCATION and UCHealth welcomed families to a special performance of Corduroy. As part of an effort to encourage family time after Thanksgiving, Denver Broncos alum David Bruton Jr. read Corduroy and A Pocket for Corduroy to delighted children before the play. 5. DCPA CABARET kicked off its six-month run of Xanadu, that roller skating, hair feathering, sweat band wearing cult classic of the 1980s.
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Rain – A Tribute to the Beatles Jun 23 Roald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Jul 9 – 28 Anastasia Aug 7 – 18
FOR A COMPLETE LIST, VISIT DENVERCENTER.ORG Tickets for some shows are currently unavailable.
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denvercenter.org/ News-Center
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BY JOHN MOORE
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When Chazz Palminteri was in Denver back in 2009 to promote his one-man play A Bronx Tale, he finished the interview with a daring aside: “A Bronx Tale is a great movie, and it’s a great play,” he said. “And I will tell you something else: One day it’ll be a great musical, too. You watch.” Seven years later, Palminteri was proven right. Again. “I just knew,” Palminteri says now of the fully fleshed 1950s musical that played exactly 700 performances on Broadway before hitting the road on its Denver-bound national tour. “It had everything a musical needs. First off, it had a great story. It’s a classic. The characters I wrote are archetypes. If I could get great music, I knew it would click. And it did. It’s poetic.” But it took a decade, starting back in 2006, for Palminteri to pull it off. “I would say out of all the things I’ve tried — writing, directing, acting and producing — musicals are the hardest by far, because there are just so many things that could go wrong,” Palminteri said. “You could have a great book, but if the music’s not great, you’re sunk. If you don’t cast it right, you’re done. The wrong director could destroy it. It’s like a circus with a thousand moving parts that you’ve really got to put together just right. It’s hard. But when you hit it like we did, there is nothing like it. People are just going bananas over this show.”
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Palminteri did it by surrounding himself with the most talented people he could find: Four-time Tony winner Jerry Zaks and film legend Robert De Niro as co-directors. Music mogul Tommy Mottola producing. And, after some fits and starts, he landed eight-time Academy Award winner Alan Menken and three-time Tony nominee Glenn Slater to write the music. (Palminteri wrote the book himself.) “Look it, that doesn’t guarantee it’s going to come out great,” Palminteri said. “But we put a lot of great minds together, and a great musical came out of it.” Palminteri has been telling his story in one form or another for 30 years. A Bronx Tale is the “semiautobiographical” story of young Calogero (Palminteri’s given name), who at age nine sees local mobster Sonny LoSpecchio commit a murder but won’t give him up to the police. When Sonny takes the boy in, it sets up a clash between his father — a hard-working bus driver — and his new gangster father figure. Ultimately, it’s a story about trying to do what’s right when what’s right isn’t always obvious. “Look, this is not a gangster story. This is a family story,” Palminteri said. “This is about the triumph of the spirit. This is about a young boy whose father taught him the saddest thing in life is wasted talent. “Don’t waste your life.”
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Joe Barbara (Sonny, left) and Joey Barreiro (Calogero, center), with the Touring Company of A Bronx Tale. Photo: Joan Marcus
PERSISTENCE PAID OFF FOR PALMINTERI’S
“Look, this is not a gangster story. This is a family story. This is about the triumph of the spirit.”
Lauren Shealy in XANADU Photo By Emily Lozow
Palminteri’s life changed in 1989 when he debuted his play on a Hollywood stage, portraying all 18 characters himself. And from there, he didn’t waste a minute. “My whole career just blew up,” he said. The film rights, he says, became the most sought after property since Rocky. What happened next is now movie lore: Palminteri wanted to play Sonny. The studio wanted a star. Palminteri was down to $200 in the bank but even when the offer grew to $1 million for Palminteri to hand over his script and walk away, he said no. Until De Niro came to see the play. He told Palminteri: “Look. I’ll play your father. I’ll direct it. You play Sonny. You’ll write. We’ll be partners.” Palminteri had to wait another three years for De Niro’s schedule to clear, but it was clearly worth the wait. Critics loved the movie. The next year, Palminteri was nominated for an Oscar for Bullets over Broadway — and never again had only $200 in the bank. Palminteri said he keeps bringing A Bronx Tale back in new forms because there is always a new crop of nine year olds who don’t know the story. “Some people who never saw the one-man show and never saw the movie, they see the musical for the first time and then go back and revisit the movie,” Palminteri said. “So one feeds off the other.” But the musical could not work without great music. And the score brings another level of realism to the story, Palminteri says. “It starts out with four guys on the corner singing doo-wop under a street light,” he said. “That’s what it was like back then. All the different kids had their own kind of music. The music was clashing just like the people were. Alan Menken is from that time, and so am I, so we were able to really nail it in the story.” But the musical was ultimately a hit, he said, because it passes the Alfred Hitchcock test. “Hitchcock said, ‘There are only three things you can do to an audience: You can make them laugh, you can make them cry or you can scare them. That’s it. And if you do two out of three, you’ve got a hit,’” Palminteri said. “In A Bronx Tale, we make you laugh, we make you cry and we scare you. We do all three. “I guarantee you the people who come see it in Denver will come again because it’s just that powerful. People cannot get enough of it because they learn something new every time. And I encourage people to bring their families. It’s a really great piece for young people to see. Boys, girls, from 11 years old to 90. I guarantee they will like it.” And at the end of this latest interview, Palminteri had one more full-circle prediction to make. “I’ll leave you with one thing,” he said. “Remember this: One day, there will be a movie of the musical. You mark my words.” Marked.
NOW – APR 28 GARNER GALLERIA THEATRE
— CHAZZ PALMINTERI
A BRONX TALE JAN 8 – 20 • BUELL THEATRE ASL Interpreted, Audio-described, Open Captioned performance: Jan 20, 2pm
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HATTITUDE LUNCHEON
Join us for a whimsical celebration of personality and style where fabulous theatre lovers from across the state don incredible headwear and applaud the artistry of women. Strut your stuff, enjoy a delicious meal and drinks, and help our theatre community embrace even more female directors and playwrights through the Women’s Voices Fund. THE WOMEN’S VOICES FUND enables our Theatre Company to commission, workshop and produce new plays by women, ensuring all stages (and roles) are shared equally. Thanks to the support of our members and Hattitude attendees, our fund continues to be one of the largest of its kind.
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Is it possible to squeeze a roughly thousand-page novel into less than three hours on stage? Not easily. Ask anyone who’s tried and failed. Or do as I did: ask Chris Coleman, the DCPA Theatre Company’s Artistic Director, who recognized that the huge but complicated potential of Leo Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina might be worth the effort — and did something about it. Early in this century, Coleman had helped Kevin McKeon, a member of Seattle’s Book-It Repertory Theatre, with an adaptation of David Guterson’s Snow Falling on Cedars that Coleman was mounting in a second production at Portland Center Stage, where he was the Artistic Director at the time. “Kevin managed to take a very complex — and long — story and condense it into something that felt taut, suspenseful, muscular and poetic,” Coleman said in a recent exchange of emails. “I loved how he boiled things down. It was impressive.” So impressive that Coleman suggested to McKeon that he might like to consider tackling an adaption of Anna Karenina. McKeon hadn’t even read the novel. But, as he told an interviewer at the time, “it loomed as a challenge and that’s what hooked me.” The project took roughly two years to complete, emerging as a hit with Portland audiences when Center Stage held its world premiere in 2012. “Thinking about the flow of my first season in Denver,” Coleman wrote, “I wanted a big, classic story in The Stage Theatre. I considered Shakespeare, but felt it might be a bit obvious. I also noted that adaptations of literature had resonated well with [Denver] audiences. “I’ve been involved in several conversions from page to stage. I love the challenge of translating between mediums. I’ve directed several Chekhov productions, and two Dostoyevskys over the years — and love the wild world of pre-revolutionary Russia. I also knew that, besides being a multilayered love story, Anna K would offer a sweeping epic treatment that could be very dynamic.” It was Oprah Winfrey, Coleman said, who introduced him to “the beautiful translation of Anna Karenina by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky that came out about a decade ago. “I was surprised by what a page-turner it was. So layered and complex. A feast. Definitely on my list of all time greats.” Shaping the introspection and sheer volume of Anna Karenina into a functional play, however, forced adapter McKeon to seek and find a looser approach with the writing. That never meant playing around with the central story — that of Anna, a St. Petersburg socialite, married to a prominent government official and swept off her feet by Count Vronsky, a handsome, well-to-do Cavalry Officer. Their passionate affair drastically altered their lives and ended badly. That remains unchanged. So does a parallel plot involving Constantin Levin, a liberal landowner
and old friend of Anna’s brother. Levin’s well-meaning but lame efforts at a back-to-the-land existence include clumsy attempts at democratizing the handling of serfs on his estate. Aside from counterbalancing the love story, his tale makes room for Tolstoy to offer some of his own complex views on nothing less than faith, politics and the meaning of life. “Levin and Anna... That is a huge one isn’t it,” Coleman volunteered. “My first impulse is that they might somehow express two different aspects of Tolstoy’s own psyche. He had a very robust and adventurous sex life when he was a young man. The tension that created with the philosopher/social change agent within him likely fueled much of his writing in some way.” The stage adaptation of Anna that McKeon finally achieved doesn’t attempt to replicate Tolstoy’s dense, detailed and emotional language. Too novelistic. He needed to find a way to interweave the parallel stories concisely, and he eventually settled on a technique created by Paul Sills in the 1970s called Story Theatre, wherein the characters on stage take on the speaking of the narrative as well as the dialogue.
COSTUME COLUMN With the lavish grandeur of Imperial Russian fashion as his inspiration, Anna Karenina Costume Designer Jeff Cone had his work cut out for him. “Period costumes, while more intricate and time-intensive, are also much more fun and interesting to design,” says Cone in an interview with Portland Center Stage. Intricate and time-intensive, indeed. Late-19th century fashions in Saint Petersburg were embellished with fur, embroidery, and ornate decorations such as pearls and jewels. At least, that’s what the upper class was wearing. A parallel story to Anna’s tragic romance is that of Konstantin Levin, a wealthy country landowner who wrestles internally with the class disparities he witnesses around him. “The people who we spend the most time with in this production are in the top .5% of the economic ladder of that world,” says Chris Coleman, Theatre Company Artistic Director and director of Anna Karenina. “So when we see the more humble people in that world, it’s a sharp contrast.” As for how to fit 83 costumes into a two-act play with 17 actors that moves at a cinematic clip, Cone hopes you won’t notice at all. “When the actors become their characters, their dress becomes a part of them and their performance. A great costume shouldn’t draw attention away from that performance. If the costumes aren’t noticed, we’ve done our job.”
It was revolutionary that [Tolstoy] took this very complex love story, and used it as a motor around which he could take on all the major debates and boiling points of the day. — CHRIS COLEMAN, DIRECTOR OF ANNA KARENINA AND DCPA THEATRE COMPANY ARTISTIC DIRECTOR This greatly tightens the connective tissue, allowing scenes to flow smoothly one into the next. By using such “theatrical shorthand,” McKeon, who’s an actor and director as well as a writer, compressed long stretches of narrative into fewer lines, while retaining a bracing vitality. “What is interesting about Tolstoy’s journey with the story,” Coleman pointed out, “is what he thought he was setting out to write, and what he ended up writing. As someone born to enormous privilege, who spent his life trying to upend the social and spiritual status quo, it seems he began thinking he would be condemning the infidelity that leads to Anna’s downfall. “But the farther he walked on the journey, the deeper his personal involvement in the individual psyches involved, and the poet in him took over. The facets are so various, it’s hard to decide where he landed or if he landed in one place, morally. It was revolutionary that he took this very complex love story and used it as a motor around which he could take on all the major debates and boiling points of the day.” Denver’s Karenina has a cast of 17 actors, all of them new to the play and to this entirely new production. “There is no way to replicate the intimacy of the experience of actually reading a novel when you translate it to the stage,” Coleman acquiesced in parting, “but you do gain visual style, tension, action and forward momentum. The trick is making place for the narrative voice and not letting that voice deflate the forward motion. “It’s a dance.”
ANNA KARENINA JAN 25 – FEB 24 • STAGE THEATRE
ASL Interpreted and Audio-Described performance: Feb 17, 6:30pm Spanish audio translated performance: Feb 2, 1:30pm
Costume designs by Jeff Cone
Sylvie Drake is a translator, writer, and a former theatre critic and columnist for the Los Angeles Times. She is an occasional contributor to American Theatre magazine and the Los Angeles Times, and regular contributor to culturalweekly.com. She also served for several years as Director of Publications for the DCPA.
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ROCK OF AGES
CAST
(in order of appearance) Lonny ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� JOHN-MICHAEL BREEN Justice ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������KENYA HAMILTON Dennis ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� RYAN M. HUNT Drew ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ANTHONY NUCCIO Sherrie ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� KATIE LaMARK Regina ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� KRISTINA WALZ Mayor ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� DARRELL PURCELL JR. Hertz ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ANDREW TEBO Franz ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������CHRIS RENALDS Stacee Jaxx ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������SAM HARVEY Waitress #1 ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� BRENNA WAHL Constance �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������EMILY CROFT Ja’Keith Gill ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ DARRELL PURCELL JR. Young Groupie ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������CARLINA PARKER Joey Primo ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� MARK LaDUKE THE ENSEMBLE MICHAEL BOJTOS, EMILY CROFT, KYLE JURASSIC, MARK LaDUKE, CARLINA PARKER, DARRELL PURCELL JR., STEPHEN ROCHET, ZOE UNKOVICH, BRENNA WAHL UNDERSTUDIES Understudies never substitute for listed players unless a specific announcement is made at the time of the performance. for Drew/Stacee Jaxx—MARK LaDUKE, STEPHEN ROCHET for Lonny/Hertz—MICHAEL BOJTOS, KYLE JURASSIC for Dennis—MICHAEL BOJTOS, DARRELL PURCELL JR. for Franz—KYLE JURASSIC for Sherrie—EMILY CROFT, BRENNA WAHL for Regina/Justice—EMILY CROFT, CARLINA PARKER for Joey Primo—KYLE JURASSIC, STEPHEN ROCHET for Mayor/Ja’Keith—MICHAEL BOJTOS, KYLE JURASSIC for Waitress #1/Constance—ZOE UNKOVICH for Young Groupie—ZOE UNKOVICH Please be advised that strobe lights and theatrical haze/fog effects are used in this production. ROCK OF AGES BAND Conductor/Piano—MARSHALL KEATING Guitar 1—ZACH “AttAkk” HENNIG Guitar 2—MADDOX Drums—CHRIS MOORE Bass—OLIVER HOFER MUSIC STAFF Music Supervisor—BRANDON ETHRIDGE Music Director—MARSHALL KEATING Music Contractor—MADDOX Keyboard Programmer—DAVID WEISER
The use of any recording device, either audio or video, and the taking of photographs, either with or without flash, is strictly prohibited. Please turn off all electronic devices such as cellular pones, beepers and watches.
ROCK OF AGES
CAST
CAST
ANTHONY NUCCIO
KATIE LaMARK
JOHN-MICHAEL BREEN
SAM HARVEY
CHRIS RENALDS
RYAN M. HUNT
KENYA HAMILTON
ANDREW TEBO
KRISTINA WALZ
MICHAEL BOJTOS
EMILY CROFT
KYLE JURASSIC
MARK LaDUKE
CARLINA PARKER
DARRELL PURCELL JR.
STEPHEN ROCHET
ZOE UNKOVICH
BRENNA WAHL
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ROCK OF AGES
WHO’S WHO IN THE CAST ANTHONY NUCCIO (Drew). Past credits: We Will Rock You and Songs for a New World. Infinite thanks to Wojcik/ Seay and The Roster for their trust and work. “Endless love to Mom and Dad for never missing a show, and to Val, my wife, my rock \m/.” Follow at anthonynuccio.com and neonangels. rocks! And Dan. KATIE LaMARK (Sherrie) is from Boston, Mass. B.F.A. Syracuse University. Nat’l tour: RENT 20th anniversary tour (Maureen Johnson). Off-B’way: 50 Shades! The Musical Parody (Anastasia Steele). Regional: Chasing Rainbows (Flatrock Playhouse), MAMMA MIA! (ACT Connecticut), RENT (Syracuse Stage). TV: “Mr. Robot” (USA Network). @katielamark. katielamark.com. JOHN-MICHAEL BREEN (Lonny). National tour debut! International: The Great Gatsby (Edinburgh Fringe 2014). Regional: The Graduate (Benjamin), Red (Ken), The Rocky Horror Show (Riff Raff), Spring Awakening (Hanschen), The Burnt Part Boys (Pete). For Mom, Dad, Cara and JF, with love. Endless thanks to W/S Casting and the entire team. B.F.A. Point Park University. @whoismrbreen. johnmichaelbreen.com. SAM HARVEY (Stacee Jaxx) is ecstatic to be making his national tour debut in the best show ever and is grateful to be a part of such an amazing team. He sends all of his love to his supportive family and a huge shoutout to his beautiful wife Katie who is his hero. samjharvey.com. @samiamharvey. CHRIS RENALDS (Franz). National tour debut! Off-Broadway: Polkadots (Atlantic). Selected credits: Newsies (Crutchie, ACCC), Spring Awakening (Gloucester Stage), as well as many shows on Disney Cruise Line. B.F.A. musical theater from Emerson College. Thanks to the team, love to his family, twin and the Jag Nation. Follow him @chrisrenalds. RYAN M. HUNT (Dennis) is honored to be running Dupree’s Bourbon Room on this incredible tour! National tours: R&H’s Cinderella (Sebastian), MAMMA MIA! (Bill Austin), The Simon & Garfunkel Story (Art Garfunkel). Regional: Matilda (Doctor/Trunchbull u/s), …Spelling Bee (Panch). B.F.A. University of Evans-
ville. Thanks to Todd, ATB, Nathan, Martha and Janet for this opportunity. @ryan_m_hunt. KENYA HAMILTON (Justice) is excited to be a part of the 10th anniversary tour! Regional theater: Rock of Ages (Justice), Ghost (Oda Mae), Sister Act (Tina/Nun Ensemble), Barnum (Joyce Heth), Ain’t Misbehavin’ (Armelia), RENT (Joanne), A Catered Affair (Myra). B.F.A. Ithaca College. “Thanks to Doodle, my family and friends. Love to my village!” ANDREW TEBO (Hertz) is stoked to be rockin’ out with Rock of Ages! National tours: MAMMA MIA! (Harry), A Christmas Carol (Present), The Fantasticks (Hucklebee). He’s worked regionally from South Florida to Alaska. B.F.A. acting/directing, Southeast Missouri State University. Follow him @andrew_tebo/andrewtebo.net. KRISTINA WALZ (Regina) couldn’t be more excited to be making her Rock of Ages debut as Regina. Some of her favorite credits include Katherine in Newsies (Forestburgh Playhouse), Lead Soloist (Aida Cruise Line) and Cindy Lou in The Marvelous Wonderettes (Millbrook Playhouse). She wants to thank her parents for always supporting her! MICHAEL BOJTOS (Ensemble/Swing, u/s Lonny, u/s Dennis, u/s Hertz). Tenth national tour! Others include The Wedding Singer, Jesus Christ Superstar, Almost Heaven, Thomas and Friends Live!, Dora’s Pirate Adventure (Swiper). Michael is also an award-winning filmmaker (DickinsonAvenueMovie. com). East Carolina University alum! Szeretlek, Jordan. EMILY CROFT (Ensemble, u/s Sherrie, u/s Regina, u/s Justice) is ready to rock with this incredible cast! Credits include We Have Apples, Hairspray and Disney Cruise Line. Thanks to the creative team, Wojcik/Seay, The Roster. “Love to my family and my Josh.” KYLE JURASSIC (Ensemble, Swing, u/s Lonny, u/s Franz, u/s Hertz, u/s Joey Primo) is from New Baltimore, Mich. Regional: Million Dollar Quartet, The Buddy Holly Story, Forever Plaid, Spamalot, Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson, Catch Me If You Can. Thanks to Hudson
Artists, Wojcik/Seay and always, Ginny. @kylejurassic. MARK LaDUKE (Joey Primo/Ensemble, u/s Drew, u/s Stacee Jaxx) is from Jacksonville, Fla. B.F.A. from Berklee College of Music. Top 50 contestant on “American Idol” (2013). Credits: Legally Blonde: The Musical international tour. The Little Mermaid: The Musical at Fireside Theatre. Instagram: @markladuke. CARLINA PARKER (Ensemble, u/s Justice, u/s Regina) is so excited to be back on The Sunset Strip. Belmont University alum. Credits include MAMMA MIA!, Rock of Ages (Justice). “To my amazing family and friends, thanks for all the love!” Instagram: @carlina_parker. Twitter: @CarlinaParker. DARRELL PURCELL JR. (Ja’Keith/ Mayor, u/s Dennis). Recently seen in The Scottsboro Boys at Signature Theatre. Regional: Ragtime, Hairspray (New Hampshire Theatre Award nomination), Gypsy, West Side Story. Education: East Carolina University/New York Film Academy. Thanks to Wojcik/ Seay Casting and RKS Management. @WayneBomb. STEPHEN ROCHET (Swing, u/s Drew, u/s Stacee Jaxx, u/s Joey Primo) is thrilled to be a part of the 10th anniversary national tour. UCF alum. Favorite credits include Nine, Into the Woods, Rock of Ages. Television: “Billions.” “Thanks to my family and Wojcik/Seay!” Instagram: @StephenRochet. ZOE UNKOVICH (Dance Captain/ Swing) is delighted to be continuing her Rock of Ages journey. Favorite credits include Rock of Ages (NCL), Priscilla Queen of the Desert and Burn the Floor, a touring ballroom theatrical production. BRENNA WAHL (Ensemble, u/s Sherrie) is totally stoked to join the cast of one of her dream shows! Favorite credits include Priscilla Queen of the Desert on Norwegian Cruise Line, and playing her fav princess, Belle, at Hong Kong Disneyland. @brennasworld. MARTHA BANTA (Director) has directed new work in NYC at The Public
JANET ROTHERMEL (Choreographer). MAMMA MIA! Broadway, Argentina, Brazil, Mexico and U.S. national tours; Side Show Broadway; Sister Act Broadway, U.S. national tours, Asia tour; Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat Broadway, Germany and U.S. national tours; “Dancing with the Stars”; “The Today Show”; “The View”; “The Meredith Vieira Show”; “The Tony Awards”; Miss USA and Miss Universe pageants; Beauty and the Beast (Disney 2017); MAMMA MIA! (2008). SAMANTHA TELLA (Assistant Director). Favorite credits: Boeing Boeing and The Graduate (Winnipesaukee Playhouse, winner of NH Best Production 2017), …Spelling Bee, RENT and The Addams Family (Chappell Players Theatre). WordPlay Shakespeare, New Georges and Juilliard. Documentary film credits include Strangers No More and HBO’s Masterclass. Endless thanks to Martha! Endless love to Marc and family! TONY GONZALEZ (Associate Choreographer). Stages St. Louis: MAMMA MIA! (Choreographer), PCLO: MAMMA MIA! (Associate Choreographer), Transcendence Theatre Company Creative Director/Choreographer. Performance: MAMMA MIA! (Broadway, Las Vegas, national tour) nine years, We Will Rock You (Las Vegas), Joseph… (tour), Saturday Night Fever (tour), Disney on Classic (Japanese tour). B.F.A. Otterbein University. Forever grateful to Janet and Martha. DAVID GALLO (Visual Storyteller) creates innovative scenic and media design for television, concerts and events.
He has designed over 30 Broadway shows, garnering him four Tony nominations and one win. He has also won two Emmy Awards for Best Production Designer for “Sesame Street.” He is creative director for Phish’s New Year’s Eve extravaganzas, his Blue Man Group work has been seen by millions and the Illusionarium he created for Norwegian Cruise Line was a pioneer in immersive entertainment. His work is seen daily in a dozen cities worldwide. The Smithsonian Institution and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame both own samples of his work. davidgallo.com. CYNTHIA NORDSTROM (Costume Design). Fashion-based designer and stylist with a love for the ’80s. Credits: Broadway: Rocktopia; OffBroadway: This One’s for the Girls, Evil Dead the Musical, Property Known as Garland, Jewtopia, Silent Laughter. While NYC-based, Cynthia’s designs can be seen in worldwide tours and shows on stage, ice and in air for Marvel Live, Disney Live, Universal Studios Japan and Stage Entertainment. @cynthianordstromdesigner on instagram. MIKE BALDASSARI (Lighting Design). Tony- and Emmy-nominated designer whose work has been seen live in 25+ countries. Broadway: Cabaret (1998/2014), Children of a Lesser God, First Date, Holler If Ya Hear Me. Films: Ghostbusters, Nine, Rock of Ages, Joyful Noise, Sex and the City 2, Neil Young Trunk Show. Television: The (RED) Concert/Broadcast from Times Square with U2 and Bruce Springsteen, U2’s Top of The Rock for “The Tonight Show,” “Documentary Now!,” pre-tapes for “SNL,” Seth Meyers. Netflix: Ray Romano, Joe Rogan, Dana Carvey, John Mulaney. Multiple NYEs with Phish at MSG. Televised concerts: Mary J. Blige, Tim McGraw, Sam Smith, Garth Brooks. mike-o-matic.com. CODY SPENCER (Sound Design). Cody Spencer’s work as Sound Designer includes Joan of Arc: Into the Fire, Here Lies Love (Lortel Award) and The Pee Wee Herman Show. Some of his work as Associate Sound Designer includes Mean Girls; Terms of My Surrender; War Paint; Oh, Hello; Lazarus; Beautiful; If/ Then; The Book of Mormon; Bring It On: The Musical; and Annie. MONICA SABEDRA (Hair and Wig Design). Television: “Days of Our Lives”
(NBC, Emmy win), “Victorious” (Nickelodeon, Key Hair Stylist, Emmy nom.), “iCarly,” “Jane the Virgin” (Key/third Hair Stylist, CW), “How to Get Away with Murder” (Key, ABC), “Anger Management” (Key, FX), “Glee” (Addl. Hair, (Fox). National tours: Jesus Christ Superstar (Wig/Hair Designer/Supervisor), Peter Pan (Wig/M.U./Hair Designer, Nederlander/McCoy/Rigby Ent.). Regional theater: Great Expectations, Blithe Spirit, Noises Off, Oliver Twist, The Rehearsal (A Noise Within, Wig/ Hair Designer). Many more productions than there is room to list. So excited and grateful to be working on RoA. RAY WETMORE (Production Props Supervisor). RoA is co-supervised by Vicki Ayers. Recent Broadway credits: To Kill a Mockingbird, The Waverly Gallery, The Boys in the Band, 1984, Carousel, Farinelli and the King. Off-B’way: Sweeney Todd. National tours: The Humans, Eclipsed, Movin’ Out, Gypsy, Grease, The 101 Dalmatians Musical, Legally Blonde. Cirque du Soleil: Michael Jackson ONE, Zarkana, Paramour, One Night for One Drop. BRANDON ETHRIDGE (Music Supervisor) has been a part of Rock of Ages since 2010 when he was the musical director of the first national tour. He is currently the music director and keyboardist of the Ultimate Queen Celebration (Queen tribute), associate conductor of School of Rock (Broadway) and plays keyboards for Japanese rockstar, Tsuyoshi Nagabuchi. MARSHALL KEATING (Music Director/ Conductor) is thrilled to be rocking out with Rock of Ages once again. Previous national/international tours include Camelot and Rock of Ages. In NYC, Marshall has music directed numerous cabarets and musicals. Together with his writing partner, he is currently developing two new works. Marshall has been a proud faculty member of the CAP21 conservatory since 2006 and The Performing Arts Project since 2015. Love and gratitude to this wonderful creative team, cast, band, crew and to his amazing students, friends, family and husband. MADDOX (Music Contractor/Band Gear Coordinator) is proud to continue his Rock of Ages journey with the second national touring production. Maddox has worked with bands such as Kill Hannah, Smashing Pumpkins, Jet
ROCK OF AGES
Theater, New York Theatre Workshop, Rattlestick Theater, Ensemble Studio Theatre, New Georges, Lamb’s Theater, Clark Theater/Lincoln Center, Urban Stages. Regionally: The Ordway, Portland Center Stage, Cincinnati Playhouse, Pittsburgh Public Theater, St. Louis Rep, Westport Playhouse, Merrimack Repertory, Capital Repertory, Vineyard Arts, Berkshire Theatre Festival. Founding Artistic Director of the Adirondack Theatre Festival; Artistic Associate at New York Theatre Workshop; resident director for the original production of Rent—supervised London, Broadway, tour productions, directed RENT in Germany and Japan; Associate Director for MAMMA MIA! on Broadway and the national tour.
ROCK OF AGES
and Papa Roach, in addition to producing his own solo music. Maddox would like to thank his family for their support over the years. WOJCIK|SEAY CASTING (Casting) is Scott Wojcik and Gayle Seay. Along with Holly Buczek and Kevin MetzgerTimson, they cast all mediums. National and international tours: Something Rotten!, Rent, Kinky Boots, Motown: The Musical, Vocalosity, Flashdance, Dreamgirls, Nice Work If You Can Get It, Jekyll & Hyde, Joseph…Dreamcoat and A Chorus Line. Off-Broadway includes Othello: The Remix, Church & State The Play, The Portal, Tennessee Williams’ The Two-Character Play, Handle with Care, Triassic Parq and more. Regional: Multiple seasons/shows for Riverside Theatre, Fla.; Arvada Center, Colo.; John W. Engeman Theater, N.Y.; Theatre Raleigh, N.C.; Stages St. Louis, Mo.; Theatre Aspen, Colo.; Tuacahn Performing Arts Center, Utah. wscasting. com. @WScasting. FIFTH ESTATE ENTERTAINMENT (Producer) is a new production and management company based in New York City that specializes in producing and managing tours and productions in North America and around the globe. President Nathan Gehan has over 20 years of management experience on Broadway and touring productions, including The Boys in the Band, The Play That Goes Wrong, The Audience, Something Rotten!, Cirque du Soleil Paramour and Motown: The Musical. The company’s inaugural production, Rock of Ages, will play over 100 cities across North America in 2018–19. Additionally, 5EE is the general manager for Looking for Christmas, the new Clint Black musical set for fall 2019, as well as various projects in development. 5ee.nyc. DAVID BENKEN (Technical Supervisor). Celebrating 20 years on Broadway and 50 U.S. international and touring productions. Credits include The Play That Goes Wrong, Paramour, Misery, The Lion King, Motown: The Musical, El Rey Leon (Madrid), Annie, Mary Poppins, Peter and the Starcatcher, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, The Boy from Oz, The Seafarer, The Phantom… (Las Vegas). TRAVIS HARTY (Production Stage Manager) graduated from Otterbein University with a B.A. in theater and music. National tours: Once, Memphis,
The Illusionists: Live from Broadway, Flashdance, 42nd Street. NYC: Clinton! (NYMF). Regional: Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, Dracula, multiple Humana Festival plays (Actors Theatre of Louisville). “Yes, RUSH is the greatest band of all time.” WILL BRANDSTETTER (Company Manager). Broadway/national tour: Alton Brown: Eat Your Science, Brain Candy Live, Mythbusters: Behind the Myths, Fela!, Kids in the Hall, Mannheim Steamroller. Regional: Idaho Shakespeare Festival, Great Lakes Theater Festival, Marriott Lincolnshire. Proud graduate of Baldwin Wallace University’s music theater program, where he recently directed Bring It On. “Para mi padre, por todos los dias.” ALLIED TOURING (Tour Press) is a full-service engagement management agency representing Broadway tours and other live touring events across North America. Current tours: An American in Paris, The Book of Mormon, Bright Star, Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella, Elf The Musical, The Humans, Kinky Boots, Motown: The Musical, Rent, School of Rock, Something Rotten! and Irving Berlin’s White Christmas. Upcoming tours: Bandstand; Bat Out of Hell; Roald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory; Hello, Dolly!; The Lightning Thief; Mean Girls; The Play that Goes Wrong; and SpongeBob SquarePants. THE ROAD COMPANY (Tour Direction). Founded in 1997 by Stephen Lindsay and Brett Sirota. In addition to Rock of Ages, current representation includes Wicked, Ain’t Too Proud, The Prom, Beetlejuice, The Band’s Visit, Moulin Rouge, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The SpongeBob Musical, The Choir of Man and The Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical. The Road Company is made possible by Magaly Barone, Shawn Willett, Jenny Kirlin, Justine Spingler, Joe Reed and Michelle Shine. CHRIS D’ARIENZO (Book) adapted and directed the motion picture Barry Munday starring Patrick Wilson, Judy Greer, Chloë Sevigny, Jean Smart, Malcolm McDowell, Cybill Shepherd and Billy Dee Williams (barrymundayfilm.com). Chris also recently completed the adaptation of Rock of Ages for New Line Cinema and his band, Saint America, is releasing their self-titled debut album this
fall. Chris would like to thank his family for supporting his love of theater…and also thank those three stoners in high school who threw his Trapper Keeper in the urinal for introducing him to Guns N’ Roses. Peace! ETHAN POPP (Orchestrations/Arrangements). 2013 “Best Orchestrations” Tony Award nomination for Motown: The Musical and 2014 Grammy nomination as producer of the original cast recording of Motown: The Musical. Television: “Smash” (music supervisor, music producer, arranger, orchestrator), “A Capitol Fourth” (PBS), The 2013 Tony Awards (CBS), The 64th Primetime Emmy Awards (FOX), “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno” (NBC), The 2009 Tony Awards (CBS), “Late Night with Conan O’Brien” (NBC). Broadway/theater: Hedwig and the Angry Inch starring Neil Patrick Harris, Rock of Ages (Broadway, U.S. tour, Toronto, Australia and London productions as music supervisor, arranger and orchestrator), Disney’s Tarzan (Broadway), Glory Days (Broadway), We Will Rock You (German premiere), Disney’s Aida (German premiere/European tour), MAMMA MIA! (German premiere), Disney’s The Lion King (German premiere), Forever Plaid (U.S. tour), The Radio City Christmas Spectacular (Mexico City), Fame! (U.S. tour), amongst countless others. He has also orchestrated for the National Symphony Orchestra. Much love to his wife Vanessa and his entire family for their endless support.
PRODUCER FIFTH ESTATE ENTERTAINMENT GENERAL MANAGEMENT FIFTH ESTATE ENTERTAINMENT Nathan Gehan Michael Fiske Caleigh Holmes COMPANY MANAGER Will Brandstetter PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT David Benken Rose Palombo TOUR PRESS REPRESENTATIVES ALLIED TOURING Marya K. Peters Andrew Damer Meghan Kastenholz Sarah Dahlberg Jennifer Gallagher Anne Dailey Meyer Scott Praefke Jacqueline Smith Anne Waisanen MARKETING/SOCIAL MEDIA/DESIGN/WEBSITE THE PEKOE GROUP Amanda Pekoe Christopher Lueck Jessica Ferreira Jenny Dorso Connor Santos Vanessa Gordillo Jason K. Murray Briana Lynch Ryan Meitzler CASTING WOJCIK/SEAY CASTING Scott Wojcik Gayle Seay LEGAL COUNSEL FRANKLIN, WEINRIB, RUDELL & VASSALLO, P.C. Julie Angell Production Stage Manager................................... Travis Harty Assistant Stage Manager.....................................Rachel Heine Assistant Director...............................................Samantha Tella Associate Choreographer.................................Tony Gonzalez Dance Captain........................................................ Zoe Unkovich Associate Scenic Designer............................Viveca Gardiner Assistant Costume Designer...........................Ryan Rossetto Associate Lighting Designer..........................Mitchell Fenton Assistant Lighting Designer.......................... Gertjan Houben Moving Light Programmer......................................Colin Scott Associate Sound Designer................................. Thomas Ford Hair and Makeup Consultant........................ Brandon Bolton Production Carpenter................................. Mackenzie Kovaka Assistant Carpenter....................................................... Nick Ray Production Audio Engineer.................................Chad Parsley Head Sound.............................................................Michelle Reiss Assistant Sound...................................................... Thomas Ford Production Props..........................Ray Wetmore, Vicki Ayers Head Props.......................................................Brian Gustaveson Assistant Props.......................................................Becca Nipper Production Electrician................................... Brendan Quigley Head Electrician.......................................... Lionel “Train” Riley Assistant Electrician............................................Joel Schulman Wardrobe Supervisor........................................Felicia Genther Wardrobe Assistant..................................... Stephanie Ebeling Hair Supervisor...................................................... Felicia Wilson Musical Contractor/Band Gear Coordinator..................Maddox Keyboard Programmer........................................ David Weiser Production Assistant........................................Riley Hutchison Production Photography................................... Jeremy Daniel Advertising & Marketing.............................. The Pekoe Group Accountant....................................Withum Smith + Brown PC Anthony Moore Controller................................................................. Heather Allen 321 Theatrical Management Banking........................... Signature Bank/Margaret Monigan Insurance.............. AON Albert G. Ruben/Claudia Kaufman Payroll................................................. Checks and Balances Inc. Transportation and Accommodations...............Road Rebel Entertainment Travel, Elizabeth Helke/ABA Merchandising..................................................The Araca Group rockofagesmusicaltour.com CREDITS Scenery built by TTS STUDIOS. Lighting equipment from CHRISTIE LIGHTS. Sound equipment from SOUND ASSOCIATES. Make-up provided by M·A·C. TICKETING AND ANALYTICS TANNA, INC./GREGG ARST SPECIAL THANKS Matthew DiCarlo, Mike East, Kate Egan, Shawn Pennington, Matthew Jerome Sycle, Townsend Teague, Matt Weaver, Hillary Weaver VENDORS Q1 Lighting & Scenic, Thom Rubino Illusions, Claire Rufiange for Ray Wetmore Productions LLC.
MUSIC CREDITS “Anyway You Want It” written by Steve Perry and Neal Schon. © Published by Lacey Boulevard Music and Weed High Nightmare Music. “Beaver Hunt” written by David Gibbs and Chris Hardwick. © Published by Feed the Pony Songs and Fish Ladder, Inc. (BMI). “Can’t Fight This Feeling” written by Kevin Cronin. © Published by Fate Music (ASCAP). “Cum On Feel the Noise” written by Neville Holder and James Lea. © Barn Publishing (Slade), Ltd. “Don’t Stop Believin’” written by Jonathan Cain, Stephen Ray Perry, Neal J. Schon. © Published by Weed High Nightmare Music and Lacey Boulevard Music. “Every Rose Has Its Thorn” written by Bobby Dall, Bruce Anthony Johannesson, Bret Michaels, Rikki Rocket. © All rights owned or administered by Universal Music-Z Songs on behalf of Cyanide Publ./BMI. Used by permission. “The Final Countdown” written by Joey Tempest. © Screen Gems-EMI Music, Inc. “Harden My Heart” written by Marvin Webster Ross. © 1980 WB Music Corp (ASCAP), Narrow Dude Music (ASCAP) and Bonnie Bee Good Music. All rights administered by WB Music Corp. All rights reserved. Used by permission. “Heat of the Moment” written by Geoffrey Downes and John K. Wetton. © 1982 WB Music Corp (ASCAP), Almond Legg Music Corp (ASCAP) and Pallan Music. All rights on behalf of itself and Almond Legg Music Corp administered by WB Music Corp. All rights reserved. Used by permission. “Heaven” written by Jani Lane, Erik Turner, Jerry Dixon, Steven Sweet and Joey Allen ©. “Here I Go Again” written by David Coverdale and Bernard Marsden. © 1982 C.C. Songs, Ltd. (PRS) and Seabreeze Music Ltd. Administered by WB Music Corp. (ASCAP). All rights reserved. Used by permission. “High Enough” written by Jack Blades, Ted Nugent and Tommy R. Shaw. © Published by Bicycle Music Company, Broadhead Music and Wixen Music. “Hit Me with Your Best Shot” written by E. Schwartz. © Sony/ATV Tunes LLC/ASCAP. “I Hate Myself for Loving You” written by Desmond Child and Joan Jett. © All rights owned or administered by Universal-PolyGram Int. Publ. Inc./ASCAP. Used by permission. “I Wanna Rock” written by Daniel Dee Snyder. © All rights owned or administered by Universal Music-Z Melodies on behalf of Snidest Music/SESAC. Used by permission. “I Want to Know What Love Is” written by Michael Leslie Jones. © Published by Somerset Songs Publishing, Inc. “Just Like Paradise” written by David Lee Roth and Brett Tuggle. © Diamond Dave Music c/o RS Plane Music. “Keep on Lovin’ You” written by Kevin Cronin. © Published by Fate Music (ASCAP). “Kiss Me Deadly” written by Mick Smiley. © Published by The Twin Towers Co. and Mike Chapman Publishing Enterprises. “More Than Words” written by Nuno Bettencourt and Gary F. Cherone. © All rights owned or administered by Almo Music Corp. on behalf of Color Me Blind Music/ ASCAP. Used by permission. “Nothin’ But a Good Time” written by Bobby Dall, Bruce Anthony Johannesson, Bret Michaels, Rikki Rocket. © All rights owned or administered by Universal Music-Z Songs on behalf of Cyanide Publ./BMI. Used by permission. “Oh Sherrie” written by Steve Perry, Randy Goodrum, Bill Cuomo, Craig Krampf. © Published by Street Talk Tunes, April Music Inc. & Random Notes, Pants Down Music and Phosphene Music. “Renegade” written by Tommy Shaw. © All rights owned or administered by Almo Music Corp. on behalf of itself and Stygian Songs/ASCAP. Used by permission. “The Search Is Over” written by James Peterik and Frankie Sullivan. © 1984 Kohaw Music (ASCAP) and Easy Action Music (ASCAP) and Rude Music, Inc. (BMI). All rights administered by Kohaw Music (ASCAP) obo itself and Easy Action Music (ASCAP), c/o The Bicycle Music Company and Three Wise Boys Music (BMI) on behalf of itself and Rude Music (BMI). All rights reserved. Used by permission. “Shadows of the Night” written by D.L. Byron. © Zen.Archer/ASCAP. “Sister Christian” written by Kelly Keagy. © Published by Bicycle Music Company. “To Be with You” written by David Grahame and Eric Martin. © EMI April Music, Inc., obo itself, Dog Turner Music and Eric Martin Songs (ASCAP). “Too Much Time on My Hands” written by Tommy Shaw. © Stygian Songs/ ASCAP. “Waiting for a Girl Like You” written by Michael Leslie Jones and Louis Gramattico. © Published by Somerset Songs Publishing, Inc. “Wanted Dead or Alive” written by Jon Bon Jovi and Richard S. Sambora. © All rights owned or administered by Universal-PolyGram Int. Publ. Inc. on behalf of itself and Bon Jovi Publishing/ ASCAP. Used by permission. “We Built This City” written by Dennis Lambert, Martin George Page, Bernie Taupin and Peter Wolf. © All rights owned or administered by Universal-PolyGram Int. Publ. Inc. on behalf of Little Mole Music/ASCAP. Used by permission. “We’re Not Gonna Take It” written by Daniel Dee Snyder. © All rights owned or administered by Universal Music-Z Melodies on behalf of Snidest Music/SESAC. Used by permission.
United Scenic Artists å the designers and scenic painters for the American Theatre. All stage work performed by employees represented by the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (or I.A.T.S.E.). The Theatre Managers, The Press Agents, and Company Managers employed in this production are represented by the Association of Theatrical Press Agents & Managers.
DENVER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS GRATEFULLY ACKNOWLEDGES THE FOLLOWING SUPPORT IN ITS 2018/19 BROADWAY SEASON
PLEASE BE ADVISED • LATECOMERS and those exiting the theatre are seated at predetermined breaks in designated areas. • PHOTOS, RECORDING & CELL PHONE USE are prohibited. • CHILDREN 6+ are welcome in our theatres and must be ticketed. • DRINKS are allowed in provided containers. • ASSISTIVE LISTENING DEVICES, LARGE PRINT PROGRAMS & BOOSTER SEATS are available in most theatres. Ask an usher to direct you. • BRAILLE PROGRAMS are available with 2 weeks’ notice to ckrueger@dcpa.org or 303.893.4836. Members of Denver Theatrical Wardrobe, Wigs, Hair and Make-up, Union 719 Linda Ackerschott Carrie Breidenbach Vonnie Clough Janel Clough Craig Cory Cyndie Cory Laura Cotugno Steve Davies Anne Davis Carolyn Dore Deborah Guess
AnnSue Gunter Judy Holabird Leslie Lambert Sharon Millikan-Hale Callie Morrow Yolanda Pollock Dave Poole Liz Spadi Amy Tepel Marybeth Tscherpel Barb Wilson
DPAC House Crew Mark Anthony Tanya M. Rist Perry Elliot Albert Sainz, Sr James R. Gralian Jay Schenk EJ Posselius David A. Wilson
THE BUELL THEATRE is part of the Denver Performing Arts Complex, owned and operated by the City and County of Denver, Arts and Venues. CITY & COUNTY OF DENVER Michael Hancock, Mayor ARTS AND VENUES Ginger White-Brunetti, Interim Executive Director For information call: 720.865.4220
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T Through its community outreach program, Ameristar Cares, team members help those who need it most by volunteering time and making financial contributions.
This year, Ameristar Casino Resort Spa again joins the Denver Center for the Performing Arts as a proud sponsor. Through its world class productions, the DCPA has been entertaining audiences in the Denver community for decades. Also being in the business to entertain, it’s only natural that Ameristar would find a partner in DCPA. This mission to thrill and to create memorable moments for their guests is one that Ameristar takes seriously. “Beyond fostering great entertainment,” said Sean Demeule, General Manager of Ameristar Casino Resort Spa, “Ameristar recognizes that all responsible organizations have an obligation to make a meaningful difference in their communities. Through our community outreach program, Ameristar Cares, team members help those who need it most by volunteering time and making financial contributions. Whether it is serving at a food bank or financially supporting one of many community health organizations, our team members have a passion to give back to Denver.” It’s for this reason that Ameristar has continued year after year to partner with DCPA. It’s about having a passion not only to entertain, but also to change lives. To foster a vibrant community of giving and to contribute to causes which seek to create a better tomorrow. When the curtain falls, Ameristar will be standing with DCPA.
— SEAN DEMEULE, GENERAL MANAGER OF AMERISTAR CASINO RESORT SPA
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APPLAUSE • JAN – MAR 2019 • 303.893.4100 • DENVERCENTER.ORG
Where Montessori philosophy and the Reggio Emilia approach come together in a unique community-focused school for young children. Children’s Garden Montessori School serves children Toddler to Kindergarten.
Register for a Parent Information Open House www.cgmontessori.com/admissions 303-322-0972 Discover how we inspire a life-long love of learning!
CASA VALENTINA
January 11 – February 3, 2019
February 15 – March 17, 2019 presented by Vita Littleton
2450 West Main Street Littleton Tickets: TownHallArtsCenter.org 303.794.2787
SATURDAYS • 8PM JANUARY 5 - F EBRUARY 9
ITAMAR MOSES ON SPEAKING YOUR TRUTH IN
BY JOHN MOORE
Illustration by Kyle Malone
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Acclaimed playwright Itamar Moses was working on a new play when he had a wild thought: How funny would it be if he wrote a character who walked into every single scene and just dropped a verbal grenade? Think about it: “What if someone approached the most important people in his life and told them the one unspoken thing that no one is ever supposed to say, and no one ever wants to hear?” said Moses. You know…the truth? “That struck me as very funny and also very dramatic, like a high-wire moment,” said Moses, winner of the most recent Tony Award for writing the book to the Broadway musical The Band’s Visit. “It felt to me like firing a character out of a cannon and watching as the wind resistance from everything he encounters gradually pushes that cannonball back to earth.” The idea wasn’t right for the play Moses was working on. It worked instead as the tantalizing premise for his new dark comedy, The Whistleblower, the DCPA Theatre Company’s 134th world premiere in its 40-year history. The play follows a screenwriter named Eli who has been able to carve out a reasonably stable career writing for television in Hollywood. In the opening scene, he realizes his dream when a studio exec gives him the green light to create his own TV drama called, yes, “The Whistleblower.” It would be about a vagabond journalist who travels the globe infiltrating places of power to ferret out corruption. But before Eli even gets out of the pitch meeting, he starts to question why making this or any other TV show was ever his dream in the first place. “Eli is coming into his late 30s, which is the age when you start to think, ‘Well, I guess this is it. This is who I am
and this is the life I have,’” said Moses, 41. “Now of course that’s an illusion. It’s never too late to make a change. But I think that physiologically and psychologically, all of the complacency and the tiredness and the responsibilities that you accumulate over your lifetime start to make it feel like it would be very hard to change. So Eli has this moment where he decides to change everything in his life as quickly as possible.” Armed with a new sense of spiritual clarity, Eli sets out on a quest to serve up some hard truths to co-workers, family, exes and friends. Not to tell them what’s wrong with their lives, Moses said — although that’s how some of the other characters interpret it. “I think what he sets out to do is something closer to just speaking his own truth,” Moses said. “Essentially what he is saying is: ‘I can’t continue to participate in this relationship in the way I have been because there’s some lie or compromise lurking inside of it. So I’m going to say what I have to say, and maybe that blows this relationship up completely. Or maybe it just means we have to change. But either way, I’m not going to continue allowing this unspoken lie to undergird this relationship.’” When told the premise sounds a bit like a mashup of Jim Carrey’s character in the film Liar Liar and Siddhartha, Moses said with a laugh: “That’s not actually a terrible comparison.” The irony of Eli’s quest is that he unconsciously sets out to do exactly in his life what he pitched for his proposed TV protagonist in the world: To expose the dishonesty that lurks just below the surface. And if that all sounds so very serious, DCPA Theatre Company Artistic Director Chris Coleman said, the play is also gut-bustingly funny. “Itamar is an absolutely brilliant playwright and an exciting voice to have on the season,” said Coleman, who first staged a Moses world premiere back in 2003, when Moses was an unknown playwright and Coleman
APPLAUSE • JAN – MAR 2019 • 303.893.4100 • DENVERCENTER.ORG
Essentially what [Eli, the main character] is saying is:… “I’m going to say what I have to say, and maybe that blows this relationship up completely.” — ITAMAR MOSES, PLAYWRIGHT
was running Portland Center Stage. “This new play is a hilarious and thought-provoking spiritual journey. When Eli begins telling the truth about the relationships in his life, the people around him think he’s lost his mind. But he comes to a place that I think is very hopeful at the end. When I first read it, I was absolutely knocked out.” Moses says what often makes a serious subject funny on a stage is simply speed. “People say if you do tragedy fast enough it becomes comedy,” he said with a laugh. “I could slow this play way down and make an entire play out of just about any of these encounters Eli has. But there’s something about the speed and the matter-of-factness with which he goes about all of it that plays, I think, as comedy. As the play goes on, there are darker and sharper edges, and an underlying kind of despair. But I think, especially for a while, the play is wanting to be very, very funny.” Moses, who was also an Executive Story Editor on the landmark HBO series “Boardwalk Empire,” is confident Denver audiences will one day soon see his breakout Broadway musical The Band’s Visit, which recently announced its first national touring production. Based on the 2007 Israeli film of the same name, it’s the story of a stranded Egyptian police orchestra that arrives by mistake in a small village in Israel’s Negev Desert and are taken in by the locals. In the meantime, The Whistleblower will be a featured presentation at this year’s Colorado New Play Summit in February. While Moses has not yet seen the play fully staged before a live audience, he hopes they find The Whistleblower to be “fast, fun and, by the end, a moving and thought-provoking ride.” Asked what he hopes audiences walk away with after seeing the play, Moses couldn’t resist blowing the comedy whistle: “I want them to walk away with tickets to see it again,” he said with a laugh.
THE WHISTLEBLOWER FEB 8 – MAR 10 • SPACE THEATRE ASL Interpreted and Audio-described performance: Mar 3, 1:30pm
ll people A are equal Moments are shared Differences are valued Discussion is encouraged We respect that everyone experiences our stories differently.
PROUD CORPORATE MEMBER OF THE DENVER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
At AT&T, we remain dedicated to uplifting creative initiatives that bring people together… — ROBERTA ROBINETTE, PRESIDENT, AT&T COLORADO
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At AT&T, we’re all about connections. We believe art and cultural programs are powerful bridges between diverse communities and across different generations. In that spirit, we are committed to supporting initiatives that help create and preserve opportunities that introduce people to new perspectives and spark thought-provoking conversations. We believe in these values. That is why AT&T is proud to collaborate with the Denver Center for the Performing Arts. Throughout its 142-year history of innovation, AT&T has collaborated with leaders and institutions to meet their unique academic, cultural and community needs. In Colorado, our employees mentored nearly 4,000 students through the Aspire Mentoring Academy from 2012 to 2017. And we are eager to do more. Diverse programming presents a unique opportunity to help foster inclusive artistic landscapes and create new connections Through our entertainment division, WarnerMedia, we plan to tell stories about issues that matter and create content that reflects the reality of our vibrant, global societies. “Having served Colorado over the last 114 years,” said AT&T Colorado President and DCPA Trustee Roberta Robinette, “AT&T is honored to support the DCPA. At AT&T, we remain dedicated to uplifting creative initiatives that bring people together and — like us — value connections.”
APPLAUSE • JAN – MAR 2019 • 303.893.4100 • DENVERCENTER.ORG
JANUARY
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix™ in Concert HalfNotes JAN 4-6 FRI-SAT 7:30 SUN 1:00 ■
MPAA RATING: PG13 HARRY POTTER characters, names and related indicia are © & ™ Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. J.K. ROWLING`S WIZARDING WORLD™ J.K. Rowling and Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. Publishing Rights © JKR. (s18)
Itzhak Perlman with the Colorado Symphony JAN 10 THU 7:30 A Tribute to Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops JAN 12 SAT 7:30 Dvořák Symphony No. 9 JAN 18-20 FRI-SAT 7:30 SUN 1:00 Movie at the Symphony: Amadeus Live JAN 25-26 FRI-SAT 7:30
FEBRUARY
MARCH
Mendelssohn Double Concerto featuring Yumi Hwang-Williams FEB 1-3 FRI-SAT 7:30 SUN 1:00 Symphonic Tribute to Comic Con — V HalfNotes FEB 8 FRI 7:30 Sondheim & Lloyd Webber Showcase FEB 9 SAT 7:30 A Classical Romance FEB 14, 16-17 THU, SAT 7:30 SUN 1:00 Nat King Cole & Me — An Evening with Gregory Porter FEB 23 SAT 7:30
Beethoven Symphony No. 7 MAR 1-3 FRI-SAT 7:30 SUN 1:00 Face Vocal Band with the Colorado Symphony MAR 9 SAT 7:30 Peter and the Wolf Featuring Magic Circle Mime Co. HalfNotes MAR 10 SUN 2:30
■
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HalfNotes Please join us for family-friendly activities 1
hour before the concert.
These performances include FULL SCREENING OF THE FEATURE FILM!
MPAA RATING: R Amadeus Live is a production of Avex Classics International
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THE EVERYDAYNESS IN
Illustration by Kyle Malone
BY JOHN MOORE
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APPLAUSE • JAN – MAR 2019 • 303.893.4100
F
For Donnetta Lavinia Grays, Last Night and the Night Before is a play you probably think you know going in — but you don’t. “And that’s the whole point,” the breakthrough playwright and actor said on the eve of the play’s highly anticipated world premiere this month by the DCPA Theatre Company. “It looks like a simple family drama, and it looks like you might already know all of the players in that drama,” said Grays, who was born in Panama and raised in South Carolina. “But what I tried to do is play on the expectations of what people think they might know and turn that a little bit in order to complicate the storytelling.” Truth is, most theatregoers have never seen a story, or its players, quite like what Grays is now putting on The Ricketson Theatre stage. Monique is a lost soul on the run from deep trouble in the Deep South, and when she shows up with her 10-year-old daughter, Sam, on the doorstep of her sister’s Brooklyn brownstone, it shakes up Rachel and her partner Nadima’s orderly New York lifestyle. When we meet Sam’s father, he is loving to a fault. These are characters, Grays says, who defy all expectations and stereotypes. But all of them, it seems, have a secret, which makes Last Night and the Night Before, more than anything, a mystery. “And it is important to me to have that mystery unfold the way it does because the play moves with memory and surprise and poetry,” said Grays, whose title was inspired by a children’s hand game. The central mystery revolves around young Sam, who has been through some unknown traumatic event, “and that puts her in the unfortunate position of being at the mercy of the adults who are trying to safeguard her,” Grays said. “Trauma manifests itself in different ways,” she continued. “And in all black bodies in America right now, I think there is this quiet trauma happening. I know there is for me. When you are confronted with violence or abuse or mistreatment on an ongoing slow roll, the question becomes: How do you deal with that? I think we see in Sam a kid who knows more than she should. And she has to somehow manage that. But eventually that also presents her with a roadmap to healing and joy.” There has long been an institutional disparity in the American theatre in terms of the gender and race of our storytellers. For decades, as long as a company was presenting at least one story by an African-American playwright, the “black experience” box was checked for the year. “But that’s such a tricky thing, because how does one fully express ‘the black experience’?” Grays said. “My argument is that there are many, many black experiences. And if you only present, say, the plays of August Wilson, then that becomes the only perspective you get. And the only style of language you get. Over time, you are going to start thinking that is the only experience black people have. So you have to diversify within a culture. “The audience is going to come into my play with whatever preconceived notions they have and what they are going to discover is, ‘Oh, this is actually a story about a black family that is very different from other black families. This is just this one family’s story.’”
COMING UP FROM THEATRE COMPANY
Many performing arts centers are now proactively trying to offer a wider variety of playwriting voices. This season, for example, the DCPA Theatre Company’s Vietgone, an African-American Oklahoma! and Last Night and the Night Before all have one thing in common: They are, as Grays puts it, “devoid of the white gaze.” That doesn’t mean those stories aren’t for white audiences. The point is rather the opposite: Every story is for all audiences. “I think a lot of these ‘slot’ plays do manage to teach white audiences about blackness and how to get along with black people. But I’m not interested in that,” she said. “I feel like the burden of talking about race in the American theatre has always been on minorities, and from my perspective, it’s exhausting. For me, it’s more compelling to tell a story that is uniquely and unapologetically black, as opposed to saying this is blackness in relief of whiteness. I think that opens up a completely different way of diversity storytelling.”
SWEAT COSTUME COLUMN
Written by playwright Lynn Nottage, Sweat won the 2017 Pulitzer Prize for drama. It is a moving portrayal of today’s working-class America in decline, set in 2000 and 2008 in the city of Reading, Pennsylvania. The workers in Reading’s central factory form a community where lifelong friendships are made, love blossoms and family members work side-by-side. However with the struggles of layoffs and the threat of a cheaper workforce, the threads of that community begin to fray. Nottage began working on the play in 2011 by interviewing the residents of Reading, which, at the time, had a poverty rate of 40%. Nottage exposes how deindustrialization and the shifting ethnic composition of a community impacts identity, race relations and the economy. “I very much wanted the play to be a conversation starter,” said Nottage. “I feel my role as an artist isn’t to come up with solutions, but to ask the right questions at the right moment.” Experience this Tony-nominated play on the stage of The Space Theatre this spring (April 26 May 26).
The audience is going to come into my play with whatever preconceived notions they have and what they are going to discover is, “Oh, this is actually a story about a black family that is very different from other black families. This is just this one family’s story.” — DONNETTA LAVINIA GRAYS, PLAYWRIGHT
LAST NIGHT AND THE NIGHT BEFORE JAN 18 – FEB 24 • RICKETSON THEATRE ASL Interpreted and Audio-Described performance: Feb 10, 1:30pm
Illustration by Kyle Malone
In Last Night and the Night Before, Grays presents the loving same-sex relationship between Rachel and Nadima not as the point of the story but simply as part of the fabric of the story. “Simply put, they’re there because we’re here. We exist,” Grays said. “Rachel and Nadima are not in the play as a lesson for straight people. As a storyteller, I’m most interested in exploring how does family operate? How do love relations operate? Who takes out the trash? I think it’s a really radical thing to simply show the everydayness of who we are.” Last Night and the Night Before was a featured reading at the DCPA Theatre Company’s 2017 Colorado New Play Summit, making it the first play ever to be selected for the Summit by one Artistic Director (Kent Thompson) and put on the mainstage season by another (Chris Coleman). In announcing the pick, Coleman called the play “a beautiful and a deeply human story.” “What I feel about Denver is overwhelming,” Grays said deliberately. “It’s a really humbling thing when you have this whole community telling you: ‘This play works. This play is worthy not only of the financial investment but of the artistic and institutional investment. That’s no small thing. The Denver Center has been buoying the stories of women playwrights [through the Women’s Voices Fund] for years, and for me to be added to that legacy is really pretty cool.” And the reason Grays believes her legacy play is for all audiences, she said, “is that it is has love at its center.” Her advice to theatregoers: “Just sit back and allow these people into your heart.”
PROUD RESTAURANT PARTNER OF THE DENVER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
LARIMER SQUARE: WHERE DENVER SHINES
L Larimer Square has found the perfect partner in the DCPA. The combination of world-class theater, music, nightlife, dining and shopping, located just two blocks from one another, provides an amazing and immersive cultural experience.
Larimer Square, downtown Denver’s most beautiful block and beloved shopping district, has a strong commitment to the arts. So it’s no surprise that block owner and award-winning place-maker and entrepreneur, Jeff Hermanson, has made a long-term commitment to partner with the Denver Center for the Performing Arts (DCPA). Home to more than 20 independently owned boutiques and beauty/wellness service providers, as well as a collection of Denver’s top, chef-owned restaurants, Larimer Square is where the city of Denver truly shines. The historic block’s signature canopy of lights, historic architecture, charming storefronts and beautiful views of the Rocky Mountains combine to make Larimer Square one of the most treasured places in Colorado. Larimer Square provides a unique experience that compliments the DCPA’s unmatched cultural offerings. “The combination of Larimer Square’s world-class dining and unrivaled shopping is a perfect match for the theater, music, and immersive performances offered through the DCPA,” said Hermanson, who’s owned and overseen development of Larimer Square for the last 25 years. “Located just two blocks from one another, culture-loving residents and visitors know that the two destinations provide an amazing, only-in-Denver experience.” The block hosts some of the top festivals and events each year including the annual Denver Chalk Art Festival, a free, two-day street-painting festival where hundreds of artists from around the world spend hours turning the streets of Larimer Square into a walkable gallery exhibit of chalk art over the first weekend in June. Larimer Square also hosts signature Dining Al Fresco evening events under the lights on select summer dates and will once again host the international food festival, Slow Food Nations, in July. For more information on Larimer Square, please visit www.larimersquare.com
— JEFF HERMANSON, CEO OF LARIMER ASSOCIATES
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APPLAUSE • JAN – MAR 2019 • 303.893.4100 • DENVERCENTER.ORG
Open Space 2018-19 SEASON HIGHLIGHTS • MAR 23—Pixar in • JAN 19, Macky & JAN 20, Pinnacle PAC— Concert Pianist Garrick Ohlsson • APR 27—Dvořák’s plays Rachmaninoff New World Symphony and Ellis Island: The • FEB 9—Mahler Dream of America Symphony No. 4 with with actors & soprano Mary Wilson projected images • MAR 2—Elgar Cello • MAY 4—The Music Concerto with Astrid of David Bowie Schween
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For me it was important to make sure that the songs transitioned seamlessly with the book so that they really acted as dialogue instead of, “Hey, let’s take a time out to sing an ’80s pop song.” – CHRIS D’ARIENZO, WRITER
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When writer Chris D’Arienzo’s agent let him know that a musical based on ’80s heavy-metal hits was being produced in Los Angeles he knew he was the man to write the book. You might say he couldn’t “fight this feeling any longer,” but D’Arienzo knew he could do justice to some of the biggest hits of his youth by weaving them into a Broadway musical with real heart. To win the gig, however, he had to impress the producing team. “It was probably the ballsiest pitch of my life,” he says. When he arrived for the pitch meeting, he saw the writer who had just finished pitching shuffle out of the room with deflated energy, and it lit a spark of inspiration. “I walked to the conference room where all the producers were sitting and kicked in the door, threw my bag in, took my shirt off (revealing an authentic sleeveless Journey concert T-shirt) and sauntered in like I was some kind of David Lee Roth character.” In a move that very easily could have gotten D’Arienzo kicked out of the building, he managed to impress the team of neophyte Broadway producers with his guts. They hired him immediately. D’Arienzo got to work. His gargantuan task was to identify pop and rock songs of the ’80s that he wanted to use, secure the rights, then interlace them to tell a story. “For me it was important to make sure that the songs transitioned seamlessly with the book so that they really acted as dialogue instead of, ‘Hey, let’s take a time out to sing an ’80s pop song’,” he says. Some bands were understandably resistant to having their most famous rock anthems turned into a Broadway musical. “I get it,” says D’Arienzo. “If I was a hard rocker and someone told me they wanted to make a Broadway show out of my heavy-metal tunes, I would be very leery. But luckily a lot of them saw what we were trying to do.”
APPLAUSE • JAN – MAR 2019 • 303.893.4100 • DENVERCENTER.ORG
Rock of Ages National Tour - Jeremy Daniel, 2018
ROCK OF AGES IS
ROCK OF AGES JAN 25 – 27 • BUELL THEATRE ASL Interpreted, Audio-Described & Open Captioned performance: Jan 26, 2pm
COMING UP FROM BROADWAY
THE PLAY COSTUME COLUMN THAT GOES WRONG
The Mischief Theatre Company’s show The Play That Goes Wrong has certainly come a long way from its humble beginning in 2012. It premiered in a pub theatre as a one-act play with only four paying members of the public in the audience. No one in the cast or crew ever imagined the show would experience the great success that it has since then. With an excellent, growing reputation, an extended version of The Play That Goes Wrong opened in London’s West End in 2014. J.J. Abrams saw the show on a whim while in London filming The Force Awakens and was impressed with the company’s Monty-Pythonmeets-Buster-Keaton sense of humor. He decided to bring the show to New York and made his Broadway debut by co-producing the play in 2016. The Play That Goes Wrong (Mar 5 - 17) is about the opening night of an amateur theatre troupe’s 1920s murder mystery. With falling set pieces, sticking doors, missed cues and an unconscious leading lady, nothing seems to be going right for them! This play’s self-deprecating, slapstick humor is enough to make people of all ages roar with laughter.
The Play That Goes Wrong National Tour. Photo by Jeremy Daniel
When asked if there was one song that got away, D’Arienzo says, “I always dreamt of starting the show with [Guns N’ Roses’] ‘Welcome to the Jungle’. I was really bummed when they wouldn’t give it to us, but then I started playing with the opening and re-listened to David Lee Roth’s ‘Livin’ In Paradise’ and I realized that Roth’s song worked so much better…. Although I think ‘Jungle’ is one of the greatest rock songs ever written, I do believe it was a happy accident and a real gift from Diamond Dave!” With a portfolio of awesome ’80s tunes in hand, D’Arienzo created a plotline that spoke to the spirit of the era. Sherrie (as in ‘Oh Sherrie’) is an aspiring actress just off the bus seeking fame in LA. She lands a job at a bar on the Sunset Strip and meets aspiring rocker Drew, who’s bussing tables waiting to make the big time. Along with other kooky denizens of the Strip, the two set out to save the bar (and the rock’n’roll lifestyle it represents) from greedy developers plotting to tear it down. D’Arienzo knew two of the songs he had in hand would inform the plot — Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin’” and Starship’s “We Built This City.” “The other songs really informed character more….I always tried to avoid songs that were really literal,” D’Arienzo says of his process. So as our hero and heroine fall in love, we rock out to Foreigner’s “Waiting for a Girl Like You,” and as the characters set out to follow their hearts we hear, “Here I Go Again on My Own” by White Snake, and as the crew protests against the developers, we chant, “We’re Not Gonna Take It.” In 2006, once the script was crafted, the creative team took the show to a bar in LA, where the reception was enormously positive. “[The bar] was packed every night,” says D’Arienzo. “Then we went to Vegas for ten days; that was soul-sucking and horrible….There is nothing worse than trying to do theatre for a room full of really drunk gamblers coming in on Rascal scooters with Margaritas-by-the-Yard hanging around their necks.” The production moved to off-Broadway in 2008, where it enjoyed a hugely successful run, and in 2009 transferred to Broadway. D’Arienzo spent five months working with the cast and crew to make the transition. “I can say without question [those were] the best five months of my professional life.” On the other hand, the team was not sure how audiences in New York, that mecca of high art, would receive such a cheeky, low-brow kind of show. “But people really dug it,” D’Arienzo recalls. “I was relieved, only because we were told from the beginning that New York would absolutely hate us. But we always believed in our show and the majority of people in the Broadway community really embraced [it].” Note to theatregoers over the age of 35: while the music will leave you dancing nostalgic for a bygone era, the costumes may hit a bit close to home. “There were some really bad looks back then,” acknowledges D’Arienzo, “and I think I tried them all.” Pegged pants, layered tops, polo shirt upon polo shirt (collar up of course), with a button-up on top and a t-shirt underneath, the styles, in retrospect, were not kind. D’Arienzo has stayed actively involved in the life of the show. In Manhattan he watched over the setting up of the re-opening of Rock of Ages on Broadway. He also adapted the screen play for the feature film based on the musical starring Tom Cruise, Paul Giamatti, Mary J. Blige and Alec Baldwin. In addition to the Broadway and New York runs, the film and the ongoing national tour, the show has enjoyed hit productions in Australia, Asia and England. The world over, Rock of Ages has proved to be a light-hearted, joyful rock musical and a nostalgic trip down memory lane for audiences. Never underestimate the power of rock anthems, garish outfits — and a good bit of hairspray.
PROUD PRINTING SPONSOR OF THE DENVER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
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Sprint Press Denver, Inc. is a privately-held company and the Rocky Mountain region’s premier printer for offset, large format, digital and single piece mailing. We proudly support the Broadway, Theatre Company and Off-Center performances that the Denver Center for the Performing Arts presents and produces each year. We also support Saturday Night Alive and the Bobby G Awards High School Musical Theatre Awards, which recognizes our area’s talented students. Both of these programs benefit DCPA’s Education programs. We encourage our employees to attend DCPA performances to enrich their cultural experiences and gain insight into thoughtprovoking and entertaining subjects that can be targeted to an adult audience or appropriate for an entire family. Many of our employees have come to work after attending a performance and shared what a wonderful experience they had going to the theatre. Since printing is also a custom manufacturing business, we are encouraged every day to use our creativity to produce beautiful printed pieces that range from being digitally produced to large offset direct mail acquisitions. Since 1984, we have partnered to produce many non-profit and corporate printed projects to showcase the state’s diverse and thriving cultural and corporate organizations. It is an honor to be a part of printing their opportunities that arrive in the mail to your homes each and every day.
(Photos - above) Collateral printed for DCPA by Sprint Press, (right) 8-color Komori Perfector Press.
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APPLAUSE • JAN – MAR 2019 • 303.893.4100 • DENVERCENTER.ORG
OVEN-TOASTED SANDWICHES SALADS & SOUPS GLUTEN-FREE & VEGGIE OPTIONS ICE CREAM RECEIVE $2 OFF WHEN YOU BRING IN THIS AD
FREE PARKING + DRINK Show your DCPA ticket for complimentary valet parking and a glass of wine, draft beer, or cocktail with entrée purchase. 1455 CALIFORNIA STREET ■ 3 BLOCKS FROM DCPA CorinneRestaurant.com
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• $7 Valet Parking • Free Cocktail, Social Beer or House Wine • 2 Blocks from DCPA
Just 3 blocks from the theater complex 909 17th Street at Champa Call 303.296.3525 for reservations
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Enjoy a meal with us before the show - when you show your tickets, receive a FREE cocktail, Social Beer or house wine with entree purchase. Parking is just $7 when you use our valet parking.
• Free Theatre Parking at Independence Plaza • $29.95 3-Course Dinner or 10% Off Your Bill • Located 2 Blocks from DCPA
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The day includes breakfast, on-course beverages, games at select holes with giveaways, lunch, a silent auction and an awards ceremony.
FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 2019 COMMONGROUND GOLF COURSE
YOUR GENEROSITY IS A HOLE-IN-ONE FOR STUDENTS Support theatre in schools with every swing while enjoying a day on the green. All of the proceeds from our 16th annual fundraiser benefit The Bobby G Awards, which encourage, celebrate and reward outstanding achievements in high school musical theatre throughout Colorado.
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DCPA TEAM
DCPA
Madison Stout .....................Reception/Security Dawn Williams................................Director, Event Janice Sinden.............................President & CEO Sales & Marketing Maggie Lamb.......................Executive Assistant Cesar Carillo, Juan Loya, Carmen Molina, to the CEO Blanca Primero, Judith Primero, Angeles Reyes Soto............................Custodians BROADWAY & CABARET MARKETING, SALES & John Ekeberg......................... Executive Director PATRON SERVICES Alicia Bruce ................................ General Manager Ashley Brown..........................Business Manager Lisa Mallory........................................Vice President Abel Becerra........Technical Director, Cabaret Patrick Berger............Audience Development Manager Heidi Bosk ................................Associate Director, DEVELOPMENT PR & Integrated Marketing Casey Eickhoff, Shelley Thompson ........................Vice President Brenda Elliott .........Senior Graphic Designers Shawn Bayer .........................Director, Corporate Brianna Firestone .........Director of Marketing, Partnerships Insights & Strategy Rebecca Clark ......................................Coordinator Rachel Garn .................................Email Developer Megan Fevurly.......................Associate Director, Brittany Gutierrez................... Communications Individual Philanthropy Coordinator Alicia Higginbotham..............Manager, Special Donna Hendricks...............Executive Assistant Events Jeff Hovorka ........ Director, Sales & Marketing Ariel Keener ........Coordinator, Special Events Emily Kent...............................Director, Marketing Marc Ravenhill ...................Director, Individual & Institutional Philanthropy David Lenk......................................Video Producer Emily Lozow .....Marketing & Digital Manager Adam Lundeen..........Marketing Technologist EDUCATION Kyle Malone............................................Art Director Allison Watrous .................... Executive Director Helen Masvikeni.........................Project Manager Patrick Elkins-Zeglarski....Associate Director, Carolyn Michaels...................................Copywriter Education & Curriculum Management Cheyenne Michaels ...Marketing Coordinator Stuart Barr .................................Technical Director John Moore ...................... Senior Arts Journalist Claudia Carson....Teaching Artist & Program Joseph Schurwonn ................Financial Analyst Manager – Playwriting & Bobby G Austin Walker...................... Marketing Assistant Leslie Channell ..Senior Business Operations Suzanne Yoe..........Director, Communications Manager & Cultural Affairs Linda Eller........................................................Librarian TICKETING & AUDIENCE SERVICES Tim McCracken .............................Head of Acting Andre Rodriguez .....................Teaching Artist & Jennifer Lopez ...................Director, Ticketing & Audience Services Program Manager – Shakespeare David Saphier ......Teaching Artist & Program Ticketing Services Manager – In School Programming Kirk Petersen ..........................Associate Director, Patron Relations Elizabeth Schmit.........................Office Manager Melissa Sumner...........................................Registrar Micah White............................Associate Director, Subscription Services Rachel Taylor..............................Teaching Artist & Program Manager – Literacy Engagement Billy Dutton...Associate Director, Operations and Resiliency Programming Katie Clow........................Subscription Manager Meagan Traver.........................Evening Registrar Amanda Gomez..........VIP Ticketing Manager Justin Walvoord .......................Teaching Artist & Román Anaya, Malcolm Brown, Program Manager – Teacher Christina Gesford, Professional Development Tristan Jungferman ......Box Office Managers Chloe McLeod, Maggy Stacy, D.J. Dennis, Edmund Gurule, Roger Haak, Robyn Yamada ...........................Teaching Artists Rebecca Hibbert, Hayley Solano, Mariah Thompson.............................Show Leads Kirsten Anderson, Keenan Coke, FACILITIES & EVENT SERVICES Scott Lix, Brad Steinmeyer, Clay Courter......................................Vice President Gregory Swan....................Subscription Agents Rena Bugg, Adam Busch, Dwight Barela, John Buxton, Kelcee Covert, Jennifer Gray, Clint Flinchpaugh, Michael Kimbrough............................... Engineers Kristina Guarriello, Noah Jungferman, Timothy Courson....................Director, Facilities Cecillia Kim, Gustavo Márquez, Management Frank Millington III, Clayton Nickell, Hayley Obremski, Gunnar Reinig, Quentin Crump......................Security Specialist Becca Saunders, Liz Sieroslawski, Jane Deegan ............................... Office Manager Andrew Sullivan, Tomáš Waples, Tom Duffin..........Manager, Event Technology Emmalaine Wright.........................Ticket Agents Colin Dieck, Stori Heleen, Theatre Services Jaymes Kimbrough, Will Stowe, Carol Krueger............................................... Manager Ian Wells ............Event Technology Specialists Ethan Aumann, Nora Caley, Dan Havens ...............................Security Manager Samantha Egle, Jahnice Jones, Clint King ................................Security Supervisor LeiLani Lynch, Aaron McMullen, Stacey Renee Norwood, Margaret Danielle Bell, Savanna Campbell, Matt Leaver ................................Events Managers Ohlander, Dylan Phibbs, Brian McClain ....................Custodial Supervisor Valerie Schaefer, Elizabeth Schreffler, Tara Miller..................................................Sr Manager Elliot Shields, Lauren Veselak, Mica Ward.................................Theatre Company Brook Nichols .....Director, Event Technology House Managers Maggi Quinn .............Director, Capital Projects Volunteer Ushers ...............................................305+ Peter Sifter......Facilities Operations Manager
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Group Sales Jessica Bergin...............Groups Sales Manager Jonalyn Bradshaw ............................Coordinator, Education Sales Patrick Naughton ..Group Sales Coordinator SHARED SERVICES Vicky Miles .......................Chief Financial Officer Jennifer Jeffrey.......................Director, Financial Planning & Analysis Julie Schumaker.................Executive Assistant to the CFO & Board Liaison ACCOUNTING Jennifer Siemers ..........................................Director Sara Brandenburg......... Accounting Manager Michaele Davidson, Linda Erickson....................Senior Accountants Valerie Lingbloom..................Staff Accountant HUMAN RESOURCES Brian Carter............................................Director, HR Jamie Hawkins .............................HR Coordinator Karen Jewell...........................................Director, HR Paul Johnson..............................Payroll Specialist Monica Robles..................Mailroom Supervisor INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY Yovani Pina ........................................Vice President Rick Bennett...................................................Director Eric Boone ............................Software Developer Vincent Bridgers ...Ticketing System Analyst Simone Gordon .....................Program Manager Christopher Hoge.................................IT Manager Phillip Johnson ................IT Analyst; Help Desk David Tschan..................................................Director THEATRE COMPANY ADMINISTRATION Charles Varin ..........................Managing Director Allison Taylor Brinkhoff......Company Manager Katie Grayson.... Assistant Company Manager Ann Marshall.............................. General Manager ARTISTIC Chris Coleman ............................. Artistic Director Charlie Miller ........Associate Artistic Director/ Off-Center Curator Douglas Langworthy ...........Literary Director/ Director of New Play Development Melissa Cashion ........................Artistic Producer Grady Soapes ....................Associate Producer/ Director of Casting Lynde Rosario............................Literary Manager PRODUCTION Jeff Gifford .....................Director of Production Kate Coltun .........................Production Manager Matthew Campbell...... Associate Production Manager Julie Brou.............................Production & Artistic Office Manager Scenic Design Lisa M. Orzolek...... Director of Scenic Design Kevin Nelson, Nicholas Renaud....Scenic Design Assistants Lighting Design Charles R. MacLeod .........Director of Lighting Lily Bradford...........Lighting Design Assistant Reid Tennis+.....................Production Electrician
APPLAUSE • JAN – MAR 2019 • 303.893.4100 • DENVERCENTER.ORG
Multimedia Gregory W. Towle.........Projection Supervisor Sound Design Craig Breitenbach .................Director of Sound Alex Billman+, Frank Haas+, Tyler Nelson+...........................Sound Technicians Stage Management Kurt Van Raden ....Production Stage Manager Christoper C. Ewing...Senior Stage Manager Heidi Echtenkamp, Corin Ferris, Rick Mireles, Michael Morales, Kristen O’Connor, D. Lynn Reiland ..........................Stage Managers Scene Shop Eric J. Moore.............................Technical Director Josh Prues, Robert L. Orzolek.........Associate Technical Directors Albert “Stub” Allison ...............................Assistant Technical Director Louis Fernandez III ................Master Carpenter Brian “Marco” Markiewicz ... Lead Technician Tyler Clark, Amy “Wynn” Pastor, Kyle Scoggins, Mara Zimmerman................Scenic Technicians Prop Shop Robin Lu Payne ...................Properties Director Eileen S. Garcia ..................Assistant Properties Director Jamie Stewart Curl, Tobias Harding, Georgina Kayes, Tony Nguyen, Katie Webster.................................Props Artisans Paint Shop Jana L. Mitchell..................Charge Scenic Artist Melanie Rentschler ..............Lead Scenic Artist Kristin Hamer MacFarlane ...........Scenic Artist Costume Shop Janet S. MacLeod................Costume Director/ Costume Design Associate Meghan Anderson Doyle .....................Costume Design Associate Carolyn Plemitscher, Jackie Scott..... Drapers Cathie Gagnon.........................................First Hand Sheila P. Morris .................................................... Tailor Costume Crafts Kevin Copenhaver....Costume Crafts Director Chris Campbell.......Costume Crafts Assistant Wigs Diana Ben-Kiki.......................................Wig Master House Crew Doug Taylor+ ................Supervising Stagehand Jim Berman+, Jennifer Guethlein+, Stephen D. Mazzeno+, Miles Stasica+, Tyler Stauffer+, Matt Wagner+.....Stagehands Kyle Moore+ ........................Assistant Stagehand Wardrobe Brenda Lawson.............. Director of Wardrobe Taylor Malott^, Jessica A. Rayburn^...................Wig Assistants Robin Appleton^, Amber Donner^, Anthony Mattivi^, Tim Nelson^, Lisa Parsons Wagner^, Alan Richards^ .............................................Dressers + Member, I.A.T.S.E. Local 7 ^Member, I.A.T.S.E. Local 719
As of 12/17/18