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VOLUME XXVIII • NUMBER 5 • JAN – MAR 2017
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The National Tour Company of Fun Hom. Photo by Joan Marcus.
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FUN HOME
Also Playing: The Book of WIll Two Degrees The Christians Motown The Musical Circus 1903 - The Golden Age of Circus
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APPLAUSE
SIGHTLINE
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BY JANICE SINDEN
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VO LU M E X XV I I I • N U M B E R 5 • JA N – M A R 2 0 1 7
EDITOR: Suzanne Yoe CREATIVE DIRECTOR: Rob Silk ASSOCIATE EDITOR: John Moore SENIOR ART DIRECTOR: Adam Obendorf ART DIRECTOR: Kyle Malone DESIGNER: Brenda Elliott CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: Hope Grandon, McKenzie Kielman, Cassie McHale Applause is published seven 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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Welcome to our first shows of 2017 and what a lineup we have in store! We kick off the year with the return of Robert Petkoff — our very own “Sweeney Todd” — in the national tour of Fun Home, followed closely by two brand new productions selected from our 2016 Colorado New Play Summit — The Book of Will and Two Degrees. We’re also delighted to offer our production of The Christians in which a pastor delivers a sermon that may divide his congregation, the Tony Award-winning story of a lovers’ triangle in An American in Paris and the exciting return of Motown The Musical. Just as we welcome shows to our stages, we’d also like to introduce Nataki Garrett, who joins us as DCPA Theatre Company Associate Artistic Director. Cited by American Theatre as one of six “theatre workers you should know,” Nataki joins us from CalArts. Additionally, a big “welcome back” to our local and national peers — playwrights, directors, actors, administrators and guests — who will attend our 12th New Play Summit in February. Just around the corner is our largest fundraiser, Saturday Night Alive, on March 4. The evening will feature the incomparable dance moves of Savion Glover, best known for Bring in ’Da Noise, Bring in ’Da Funk. This marks the event’s 37th anniversary with cumulative proceeds of more than $18 million raised to support our theatre education programs. Finally, as 2017 begins, we’d like to reflect on the past season. Thanks to the passion of our incredibly talented team, the DCPA is wrapping up its most successful season to date. We engaged with more than 1.2 million guests — theatregoers, students, educators, event attendees and social followers — and generated a $150 million economic impact from ticket sales alone. It is through your participation and continued patronage that we remain the largest non-profit theatre organization in the nation. Thank you for sharing unforgettable experiences with us each and every day.
JANICE SINDEN President & CEO Denver Center for the Performing Arts
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APPLAUSE • Jan – Mar 2017 • 303.893.4100 • denvercenter.org
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BOARD OF TRUSTEES Daniel L. Ritchie, Chairman William Dean Singleton, Sec’y/Treasurer Robert Slosky, First Vice Chair Margot Gilbert Frank, Second Vice Chair Dr. Patricia Baca Joy S. Burns Isabelle Clark Navin Dimond L. Roger Hutson Mary Pat Link Robert C. Newman Hassan Salem Richard M. Sapkin Martin Semple Tara Smith Jim Steinberg Ken Tuchman Tina Walls Lester L. Ward Dr. Reginald L. Washington Judi Wolf Sylvia Young
HELEN G. BONFILS FOUNDATION BOARD OF TRUSTEES Martin Semple, President Jim Steinberg, Vice President Judi Wolf, Sec’y/Treasurer Lester L. Ward, President Emeritus David Miller Robert C. Newman Daniel L. Ritchie William Dean Singleton Robert Slosky Dr. Reginald L. Washington
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Good Vibrations
February 11 & 12 • Newman Center for the Performing Arts with 17th Avenue Allstars
Brass & Bagpipes Returns to its Roots March 12 • Bethany Lutheran Church with Celtic Colorado Pipes & Drums, Rick Seaton – Organ
Brass & Bagpipes: Celtic Fling!
March 17, 18, 19 • Newman Center for the Performing Arts with Celtic Colorado Pipes & Drums, Rocky Mountain Highland Dancers, Wick School of Irish Dance, Jillian Lee – Soprano, Erin Newton – Harp
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Sara Esty and Garen Scribner in An American in Paris. Photo by Matthew Murphy.
COMING UP FROM BROADWAY:
AN AMERICAN IN PARIS The romance and intrigue of the City of Lights was not lost on American composer George Gershwin. Following a trip to Paris, George was inspired to pen “An American In Paris,” a jazz-influenced symphonic piece that draws upon the atmosphere, sights and sounds he experienced. Despite making its debut in 1928, it was nearly 25 years later that An American in Paris leapt to the big screen. When MGM producer Arthur Freed (The Wizard of Oz, Babes in Arms, Annie Get Your Gun) heard the composition, he was determined to acquire the rights. He negotiated for months with George’s brother and collaborator, Ira Gershwin, as well as the estate and music producers before being granted permission to use the score as the basis for the 1951 Oscar-winning movie. The movie inspired a new musical in 2015, which won four Tony Awards and introduced a new generation to the story of World War II American soldier-turned-painter Jerry Mulligan. When Jerry becomes infatuated with French ballerina Lise Dassin, he accidentally enters a love triangle with his close friend Henri Baurel. See how the plot unfolds and be swept up in George Gershwin’s lush and beautiful score when An American in Paris visits The Buell Theatre March 8 – 19.
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STICK AROUND AFTER THE SHOW. FOR FIFTEEN YEARS.
NAME A SEAT IN OUR NEW SPACE THEATRE You can be a part of our brand new Space Theatre opening in the fall of 2017. Name a seat after your loved ones, your company or yourself with a simple $1,500 donation payable over time. It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for fans who wish they never had to leave.
For more information, contact Marc Ravenhill at mravenhill@dcpa.org or 303.572.4594.
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At PAA, it’s not just about putting on a great show – although we do that too! It’s about taking it beyond the stage to help our students grow in every way possible.
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Every once in a while a show comes along that surprises, moves and excites in ways only a truly landmark musical can. The “groundbreaking,” (Wall Street Journal) “life-affirming” (Chicago Tribune) and “exquisite” (NY Daily News) new musical Fun Home was the event of the 2015 Broadway season, receiving raves, winning five Tony Awards including Best Musical, and making history along the way. Based on Alison Bechdel’s best-selling graphic memoir, Fun Home introduces us to Alison at three different ages
as she explores and unravels the many mysteries of her childhood. A refreshingly honest musical about seeing your parents through grown-up eyes, “Fun Home is extraordinary, a rare beauty that pumps fresh air into Broadway” (The New York Times).
FUN HOME
JAN 10 - 22 • THE ELLIE ASL, Audio-Described & Open Captioned Performance: Jan 22, 2pm
WOMEN’S VOICES FUND HELPING WOMEN TAKE CENTER STAGE While over half of our fans are female, there are still too few women that are able to share their stories with an audience. The Women’s Voices Fund enables our Theatre Company to commission, workshop and produce new plays by women and is now a national model for female-centric theatre fundraising. In its twelfth year, we have raised more than $1 million that has enabled us to commission 15 female playwrights, hire 18 female directors and contribute to 12 world premiere plays by women.
Meet the artistic women who benefit from the fund at events throughout the season when you join the fund for $300.
BECOME A MEMBER TODAY DENVERCENTER.ORG/WVF 303.572.4593
WEAR A HAT THAT SPEAKS VOLUMES
MAY 4, 2017 • 11AM - 1:30PM Women with Hattitude, our signature fundraiser benefiting the Women’s Voices Fund, starts with wine and networking for up to 600 ladies and gentlemen, followed by an elegant Epicurean-catered lunch. After lunch, guests will enjoy a surprise performance and the exciting Parade of Hats, featuring 50 of the best hats at the event, complete with prizes.
GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY DENVERCENTER.ORG/HATTITUDE • 303.446.4812 12
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THE BOOK OF WILL
PRESERVING SHAKESPEARE’S LEGACY BY JOHN MOORE
Illustration by Kyle Malone
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It’s hard to imagine a world without beloved Shakespeare plays such as Macbeth or Antony and Cleopatra. But if it weren’t for two forgotten men named John Heminges and Henry Condell, we might never have known Macbeth, Antony or Cleopatra. Or Prospero or Pericles, for that matter. “To be or not to be” is not the question. Without Condell and Heminges, we would have lost 18 of Shakespeare’s 38 plays forever. No question. And if it weren’t for playwright Lauren Gunderson, we might never have known Condell and Heminges. Gunderson tells the surprising story of these historical unsung heroes in the DCPA Theatre Company’s world premiere play The Book of Will. You might presume that when Shakespeare died, he surely left dozens of copies of his plays scattered about England. But complete copies of his plays did not largely exist. The actors who performed them were never provided complete manuscripts — rather scrolls that included only those specific lines each actor spoke. When Shakespeare died in 1616, the posthumous fate of his canon was nothing if not precarious. Many of his destined classics were not much more than literary jigsaw puzzles, with many of the pieces missing, bastardized or badly reconstructed from faulty memories. “This is such an important story because Shakespeare’s plays are so important not just to Western audiences, but to every audience around the world,” Gunderson said from her home in San Francisco. “The stakes were simple:
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APPLAUSE • Jan - Mar 2017 • 303.893.4100 • denvercenter.org
We wouldn’t have Shakespeare as we know him today if we didn’t have this book.” We know that book as “The First Folio” — essentially the first complete collection of Shakespeare’s plays. After his death, actors Condell and Heminges set out to find, edit, curate and publish their friend’s collected works. It was a task that took five grueling years, and publishers Edward Blount and Isaac Jaggard would need another two years themselves to release “Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies” in 1623. “The reason this particular collection is so valuable is because the paper, the ink and the binding made it last,” Gunderson said. “And the people who did this had every obstacle thrown at them.” The Book of Will takes great delight in laying out how Shakespeare’s pals managed to preserve a canon that the Bard, interestingly enough, never saw, read or himself authorized, coming seven years after his death. Even today, scholars have no way of knowing exactly what Shakespeare did and did not write. “When Shakespeare died, he hadn’t published anything except for some poems and sonnets,” Gunderson said. “He hadn’t with his own hand stipulated, ‘This is the version of this play that I want published.’ Writers didn’t really do that back then.” Rights for authors to protect their work in those days were non-existent. Anyone could publish just about anything and put their name on it, so there was no way to know who really wrote what.
“Believe me, there are a lot of terrible versions of Hamlet out there that rivals cobbled together while sitting in the stands and watching his shows, or later writing down whatever they could remember,” Gunderson said. Which is why the world should be grateful that Condell and Heminges saw the value in preserving the closest possible proximity to Shakespeare’s works. Not everyone did. “We know how valuable Shakespeare is to the world at large today, but they didn’t at the time,” Gunderson said. “He was known as a great writer, but there were a lot of great writers around.” And yet The Book of Will, she says, endeavors to be more than a play about this little-known real-life publishing drama. It’s about the loves and lives of those who are responsible for producing the folio. “This is really a play, ideally, about friendship and legacy and facing our own mortality when our friends and family start leaving us,” Gunderson said.
“ This is really a play, ideally, about friendship and legacy and facing our own mortality when our friends and family start leaving us.” — LAUREN GUNDERSON, PLAYWRIGHT “It was important to me from the beginning that Book of Will be a play about real people and real friendships, and not putting these people on the pedestal that history tends to do. The play really starts to hone in on questions like, ‘What do we leave behind?’ and ‘What does theatre do for society and culture and civilization?’ But it does so, ideally, with a real and grounded heart.” In a landscape where women make up nearly 60 percent of theatre audiences but only about 25 percent of produced playwrights, Gunderson is the anomaly. She not only will have three different plays produced by three different Colorado theatre companies this season — she is currently the mostproduced playwright in America, ironically, not named Shakespeare. And she’s 34. And has two babies. And she’s getting it done. “This is a pretty amazing moment in my career,” Gunderson said. “I have always dreamed of having a place in a smart, adventurous theatre community like the Denver/Boulder area. I am really honored and excited to have my work be in that soup. Colorado gets me.” Colorado got The Taming from the Catamounts, in the fall. And in April Colorado gets Silent Sky, the story of pioneering astronomer Henrietta Swan Leavitt, from the Boulder Ensemble Theatre Company. But first they get The Book of Will from the DCPA Theatre Company.
THE BOOK OF WILL
JAN 13 - FEB 26 • RICKETSON THEATRE ASL & Audio-Described Performance: Feb 4, 1:30pm
PLAYS THE FIRST FOLIO SAVED All’s Well That Ends Well Antony and Cleopatra As You Like It Comedy of Errors Coriolanus Cymbeline Henry VI, Part 1
Henry VIII Julius Caesar King John Macbeth Measure for Measure The Taming of the Shrew The Tempest
Timon of Athens Twelfth Night Two Gentlemen of Verona The Winter’s Tale
COSTUME COLUMN Last February, audiences had the chance to get the first look at Lauren Gunderson’s The Book of Will at the Colorado New Play Summit. Now, the creative team is hard at work bringing Gunderson’s vision of Elizabethan England to life in the world premiere production of the piece. The costumes of Shakespeare’s closest friends and family have been entrusted to French designer Camille Assaf. While Assaf and the rest of the designers have certainly been inspired by the Elizabethan period and used it as a guidepost, you will see some very purposeful anachronisms. “We’re not being too precious with the period,” Assaf said. “You might see a very historical silhouette paired with combat boots you’d see on the street today.” While these types of pairings might seem contradictory, Assaf contends that if you take time to look at paintings from the 1700s, you will absolutely see ensembles that would fit in perfectly with the style of, say, hipsters on the streets of Brooklyn. You’ll see some gorgeous patterns and luxe fabrics, particularly in the costumes of Richard Burbage. After all, these men were the rock stars of their time. According to Assaf, on more than one occasion director Davis McCallum has likened Richard Burbage to Kurt Cobain. So keep one foot squarely rooted in 2017 while you and your imagination journey back in time to the Elizabethan period in The Book of Will.
TWO DEGREES
HEATS UP GLOBAL WARMING CONVERSATION BY JOHN MOORE
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Two Degrees, the provocative title of Tira Palmquist’s new world premiere play, is meant to both set up her story…and sound an alarm. “There has been an effort to describe where we need to cap the escalating temperature of the Earth in order to forestall a whole host of problems including melting ice caps and rising ocean levels,” Palmquist said. “Two degrees Celsius was the number given. And that number resonated for me. It’s a number that can help people understand this palpably thin margin we are fighting for. Two degrees (or 3.8 degrees Fahrenheit). Two Degrees, Palmquist says, is a proudly political play. But it’s also a human play about a woman in crisis. That’s why, she said, it’s no accident that her story begins with two people engaging in, well…their own kind of global warming. “For me, this is a play about climate change, but it’s also about what it means to be a woman over 40,” Palmquist said. “And you know what? Women over 40 have sex.” “Not only that,” added Two Degrees director Christy Montour-Larson with a laugh, “but we like it. And we’re good at it.”
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APPLAUSE • Jan - Mar 2017 • 303.893.4100 • denvercenter.org
Two Degrees began as a challenge from a friend who encouraged Palmquist to write a play for a female protagonist over 45 — something as rare in the theatre as uncooked steak. It became all the more personal when Palmquist chose to make the story about climate change and grief. Grief for a loved one. And grief for the planet. “When I read about climate change, I actually feel a physical grief in the pit of my stomach,” Palmquist said. “I despair of what will happen if we don’t act. And that became an important catalyst for the play. How do we make this clear to people that climate change is real? And then, what can we do about it?” Two Degrees introduces us to a scientist named Emma who has been called to Washington to testify before a congressional committee on climate legislation. This is a particularly difficult moment for her because it also happens to be the anniversary of her late husband’s death. And did we mention? “I think it’s a pretty funny play,” Palmquist said. Montour-Larson calls it “a beautiful, thought-provoking, human and witty play of today about an important human issue.”
“ It’s true that someone who does not believe in climate science may find their point of view challenged. But I welcome them to come, and then maybe we can have a conversation.”
Illustrations by Kyle Malone
What Two Degrees is not is the same play it was when it was introduced to DCPA audiences last February as a featured reading of the 2016 Colorado New Play Summit. Neither is it the same play it was on November 7, the day before Donald Trump won the presidential election. Palmquist already was planning to make changes to her script based on the victor because the outcome of this particular election would have a drastic impact on what Emma would be doing in Washington — helping to pass a possibly unpopular legislation, or trying to fight a perhaps scientifically unwise legislation, depending on which party controlled Congress. And in November, Americans elected a president whose firmly stated beliefs on climate change are, at best, highly oppositional to Emma’s.
— TIRA PALMQUIST, PLAYWRIGHT
“The election has absolutely changed the urgency of the play,” Palmquist said. “It also has changed the villain of the piece. One of the villains I see are those legislators who are not educated on what the science is saying. I also think apathy and fear are villains. I worry that people will give in to despair. Or worse, that they won’t understand that this is an actual pressing problem. Either eventually will mean that we are dooming future generations.” But Palmquist promises that her play is not unwelcoming of contrary points of view. “One of the main characters in the play, Clay, works in the mineral-exploration industry, and Clay has a point of view,” she said. “It is not necessarily my point of view, but I feel certain that we could get past that to find common ground. It’s true that someone who does not believe in climate science may find their point of view challenged. But I welcome them to come, and then maybe we can have a conversation.” There is a sacred place in theatre for comedies, musicals, romances and adventures. Montour-Larson believes plays that are political in nature are just as essential. “I think it’s important to remember artists are cultural architects,” she said. “The world needs people with reckless imaginations like Tira. We have a passion for the possible, and we have a commitment to creativity, because to create is to be fully human. And we are healers. Through our work, we can heal and give hope.” It has long been said that theatre is supposed to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable. “And if that is true, then I think that it’s also important to try to find the hopefulness in this play,” Palmquist said. “This play ends up not being a tragedy. This is a play about what it means to start having conversations.”
TWO DEGREES
FEB 3 - MAR 12 • THE JONES ASL & Audio-Described Performance: Mar 5, 1:30pm
COMING UP FROM THEATRE COMPANY:
THE SECRET GARDEN It all began at the dawn of the 1900s when Frances Hodgson Burnett wrote the original novel The Secret Garden. The enchanting story revolves around a determined young girl, Mary Lennox, who sees potential beauty in a grim world. Mary isn’t the only one with determination and a powerful vision. The beloved classic has been brought to life by a dynamic collection of women throughout the years. The Secret Garden continued to flourish when Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Marsha Norman and Grammy-winning composer Lucy Simon adapted The Secret Garden into a musical that premiered on Broadway in 1991. The powerful duo created a captivating story of hope, renewal and the power that one young girl has. Jenn Thompson, who previously helmed Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike for the DCPA, will now carry on this timeless message for DCPA Theatre Company. Don’t miss your chance to be a part of the magic created by the inspiring women who have brought this classic story to life. The spirited production blossoms anew Apr 21 - May 28 in The Stage Theatre.
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A PROUD SPONSOR OF DCPA BROADWAY
“ Only through art can we navigate the complex terrain between intellect and feeling.” — BMW OF DENVER DOWNTOWN
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BMW of Denver Downtown is looking forward to another great year for the Denver Center for the Performing Arts — and you can look forward to a more complete car buying experience when its state-of-the-art new facility officially opens this winter. Like any great work of art, every BMW coupe, sedan, or SUV is the perfect fusion of passion and form. BMW of Denver Downtown understands the power of pure performance and how even the smallest details can excite, inspire and move. Just as BMW has always striven to create the Ultimate Driving Machine, BMW of Denver Downtown aspires every day to create the ultimate location for buying, selling and servicing luxury vehicles in Denver. It has doubled the capacity of its new service center, and the new showroom is the largest BMW dealership in Denver. BMW of Denver Downtown will deliver these improvements while maintaining the unique Sonic experience for which it has become known, with transparent pricing and a no pressure sales approach, which are the hallmarks of this unique BMW center. More than this, it understands its role and how important it is to provide support where it’s needed, both in the arts and in the wider community. This is why BMW of Denver Downtown has been active in the community since it first opened its doors as Murray Imports in 1975. Now a member of the Sonic Automotive Group, it has extended its community outreach to encompass every aspect of Colorado society, providing support to charities and non-profit groups engaged in everything from lifesaving medical research and educational support to animal welfare and culture. People choose BMW because they demand the ultimate driving experience. So why compromise on your buying experience? Whether you’re buying, selling or servicing a new, used or Certified Pre-Owned luxury vehicle, look forward to a location that puts you in the driver’s seat. Look forward to the all-new BMW of Denver Downtown – online at BMWofDenverDowntown.com.
APPLAUSE • Jan - Mar 2017 • 303.893.4100 • denvercenter.org
BMW of Denver Downtown
FOX THEATRICALS
BARBARA WHITMAN
CAROLE SHORENSTEIN HAYS TOM CASSERLY LATITUDE LINK TERRY SCHNUCK/JACK LANE SCOTT DELMAN NATHAN VERNON ELIZABETH ARMSTRONG JAM THEATRICALS THE FORSTALLS SPENCER ROSS KEN WHITNEY and KRISTIN CASKEY & MIKE ISAACSON present
The Public Theater Oskar Eustis, Artistic Director
Patrick Willingham, Executive Director production of
Music by
Book & Lyrics by
JEANINE TESORI
LISA KRON
Based on the graphic novel by ALISON BECHDEL starring
ROBERT PETKOFF SUSAN MONIZ KATE SHINDLE ABBY CORRIGAN ALESSANDRA BALDACCHINO CARLY GOLD KAREN EILBACHER ROBERT HAGER LENNON NATE HAMMOND PIERSON SALVADOR
Scenic & Costume Design
Lighting Design
Sound Design
DAVID ZINN
BEN STANTON
KAI HARADA
Orchestrations
Music Director
Music Coordinator
JOHN CLANCY
MICAH YOUNG
ANTOINE SILVERMAN
Hair & Wig Design
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Company Manager
Production Stage Manager
RICK CAROTO
JIM CARNAHAN, CSA JILLIAN CIMINI, CSA
MICHAEL CAMP
SHAWN PENNINGTON
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General Management
THE BOOKING GROUP
BROADWAY BOOKING OFFICE
JUNIPER STREET PRODUCTIONS
321 THEATRICAL MANAGEMENT
Music Supervision
CHRIS FENWICK Choreography by
DANNY MEFFORD Directed by
SAM GOLD The world premiere of FUN HOME was produced by The Public Theater in New York City on October 22, 2013. FUN HOME was developed, in part, at the 2012 Sundance Institute Theatre Lab at White Oak and the 2012 Sundance Institute Theatre Lab at the Sundance Resort.
FUN HOME
AND SEASON SPONSORS
FUN HOME
CAST
(in order of appearance) Alison................................................................................................................................................ KATE SHINDLE Small Alison.....................................................................................................ALESSANDRA BALDACCHINO Small Alison (at certain performances)...................................................................................CARLY GOLD Bruce..........................................................................................................................................ROBERT PETKOFF Medium Alison..........................................................................................................................ABBY CORRIGAN Helen.................................................................................................................................................. SUSAN MONIZ Christian...............................................................................................................................PIERSON SALVADOR John...........................................................................................................................LENNON NATE HAMMOND Joan..........................................................................................................................................KAREN EILBACHER Roy/Mark/Pete/Bobby Jeremy........................................................................................... ROBERT HAGER
UNDERSTUDIES Understudies never substitute for players unless a specific announcement for the appearance is made at the time of the performance.
Standby for Bruce: MICHAEL WINTHER; Standby for Helen, Alison: AMANDA NAUGHTON; for Small Alison, Christian, John: SOFIA TRIMARCHI; for Medium Alison, Joan: CAROLINE MURRAH; for Roy/Mark/Pete/Bobby Jeremy: ANTHONY FORTINO Dance Captain: ANTHONY FORTINO
FUN HOME WILL BE PERFORMED WITHOUT AN INTERMISSION
FUN HOME ORCHESTRA Music Director/Keyboards: MICAH YOUNG Associate Music Director: ALEX HARRINGTON Guitars: JAKOB REINHARDT; Basses: ALAN STEVENS HEWITT; Reeds: PHILIP VARRICCHIO; Drums/Percussion: JOHN DOING; Music Coordinator: ANTOINE SILVERMAN Electronic Music Programming: BILLY JAY STEIN/STRANGE CRANIUM Music Copying: KAYE-HOUSTON MUSIC/ANNE KAYE, DOUG HOUSTON LOCAL MUSICIANS Cello: JEFFREY WATSON; Violin/Viola: BRITT SWENSON Local Musicians Contractor: JAMES HARVEY
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 cell phones and pagers prior to the beginning of the performance.
ROBERT PETKOFF (Bruce). Broadway: All The Way with Bryan Cranston, Anything Goes, Ragtime, Spamalot, Fiddler On The Roof and Epic Proportions. London: The Royal Family with Dame Judi Dench and Tantalus. Regional: Sweeney Todd, Hamlet, Troilus & Cressida, Follies, Romeo & Juliet, Compleat Female Stage Beauty and The Importance Of Being Earnest. Film: Irrational Man, Vice Versa, Milk and Money, Gameday. TV: Elementary, Forever, Law and Order: SVU, The Good Wife and more. Robert is an award-winning audiobook narrator. SUSAN MONIZ (Helen). Broadway: Grease – Sandy & Rizzo. Regional: Follies – Sally (Chicago Shakespeare Theater); October Sky – Elsie (world premier); Peggy Sue Got Married – Peggy (world premier); Kismet (Joseph Jefferson award); Into the Woods, 9 to 5, Carousel, (Marriott Theatre); The Merry Widow, The Sound Of Music, (Chicago Lyric Opera); Hot Mikado (Ford’s Theatre); Phantom, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (Fulton Theatre); Shadowlands, The Spitfire Grill, (Provision Theatre); Evita, BIG, (Drury Lane Theatre). TV: Chicago PD; Romance, Romance (A&E). KATE SHINDLE (Alison). Broadway: Legally Blonde (Vivienne), Cabaret (Sally Bowles), Wonderland (Hatter), Jekyll & Hyde. Elsewhere: Rapture, Blister, Burn (Catherine), After the Fall (Maggie), Restoration, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Gypsy, Into the Woods, The Last Five Years, First Lady Suite, The Mousetrap. Film/TV: Lucky Stiff, SVU, White Collar, Gossip Girl, The Stepford Wives, Capote. Kate is a longtime activist, author of Being Miss America: Behind the Rhinestone Curtain and President of Actors’ Equity Association. twitter.com/AEApresident ABBY CORRIGAN (Middle Alison). Stage: Cabaret, A Chorus Line (TCS); Shrek (Blumey Award), In The Heights, Peter Pan, Rent (NWSA); Next to Normal (QCTC); Film/TV: Headed South For Christmas (Painted Horse), A Smile As Big As The Moon (Hallmark), Homeland (HBO), Rectify (Sundance), Banshee (Cinemax). Thanks Michael, Sam, Jeanine, Lisa and Jim, Mom, Dad and Emma! AbbyCorrigan.com
ALESSANDRA BALDACCHINO (Small Alison) is thrilled to play this beautiful role around the country. She made her Broadway debut in Fun Home as Small Alison. Off-Broadway: originated role of Maya in Song of Solomon and on its Broadway Records concept album. Love and thanks to her Fun Home family, David Doan/CESD, and her family for their endless support. Instagram: @ alessandra_baldacchino CARLY GOLD (Small Alison at certain performances) is thrilled to make her professional debut! Heartfelt thanks and overwhelming gratitude to the Fun Home creative team for this amazing opportunity: Jamie Pillet/Victoria Kress/Bonnie Shumosky - Abrams Artists; Ellyn Marsh, Janine Molinari. Special thanks to Mom, Dad, family and friends for their endless love and support. Dreams are worth dreaming! K AREN EILBACHER (Joan). 1st Broadway National Tour debut. Stage: She Like Girls (GLAAD Awards), Wolf in the River (Adam Rapp Dir.), Usual Girls (Signature), Artaud Artaud (Signature), Uniform Justice (Fringe). Film/TV: Angeline (CATE Official Selection), City of Dogs, Parallels (LA WebFest, Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama), Curfew (Academy Award), Cat Planet. KarenEilbacher.com ROBERT HAGER (Roy/Mark/Pete/ Bobby Jeremy). Broadway: Doctor Zhivago, Spring Awakening (OBC), How To Succeed…, Bye Bye Birdie. Regional/Tour: Bonnie & Clyde (Clyde), Kiss Of The Spider Woman (Molina), Spring Awakening, Next To Normal (Gabe), Parade (Frankie). “Quiero Soñar” original song by Hager and Alex McCabe in film Top Five. Thanks Chris, Cynthia and family. Go AEA! @ robihager LENNON NATE HAMMOND (John) is beyond excited to make his National Tour debut! Gratitude and many thanks to Sam, Chris, Micah, Danny, Jillian and Carnahan Casting, and the entire Fun Home Family. Much love to his twin sister Noelle, Mom, Dad, family, teachers, friends and everyone at Musical Theatre of Anthem.
PIERSON SALVADOR (Christian) is thrilled to join the First National Tour of Fun Home. Regional credits include Les Misérables (Gavroche), A Christmas Carol (Tiny Tim). Much love and thanks to to David Doan and CESD, Jillian Cimini, Jim Carnahan, Denise Simon, Robert Marks, DMO, Mom, Dad, Hudson and the entire Fun Home Family. ANTHONY FORTINO (Understudy Roy/Mark/Pete/Bobby Jeremy). National Tour debut! Favorite Regional: Catch Me If You Can (Frank Abagnale, Jr.), South Pacific (Lt. Cable), The Last Five Years (Jamie), Lord of the Flies (Jack). Proud graduate of Texas Christian University (TCU). All my love to Katie and my family. anthonyfortino.com CAROLINE MURRAH (Understudy Medium Alison, Joan). Regional: Next to Normal (Beck Center), The Secret Garden (Great Lakes); Training: IAA, Baldwin Wallace; Thanks to Michael Rafter, Luedtke Agency, Fun Home Family; Love to my family, teachers, BWMT16, Gabe. AMANDA NAUGHTON (Standby for Helen, Alison). Broadway: Into the Woods (2002), The Secret Garden (also the tour). U mpteen Of fBroadway and Regional appearances. Television: Betty Roberts on AMC’s Remember WENN, Law & Order, Payne, Chappelle’s Show. Film: The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, Mexico City. Personal: wonderful husband, marvelous child, adorable dog. Love to my entire family. Thanks, BRS/Gage. SOFIA TRIMARCHI (Understudy Small Alison, John, Christian) is from upstate NY and is thrilled to be making her National Tour debut! Regional: Les Misérables (Young Cosette), A Charlie Brown Christmas (Frieda), The Sound of Music (Gretl). Love and thanks to Mom, Dad, Chloe, amazing family and supportive friends for helping me live my dream! MICHAEL WINTHER (Standby for Bruce). Broadway: 33 Variations, Mamma Mia!, 1776, Artist Descending a Staircase, Damn Yankees. Off-Bway includes: Songs From An Unmade Bed (NYTW); Laramie Project Cycle (BAM); Hapgood (LCT). Regional:
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WHO’S WHO IN THE CAST
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Lots! Concerts include: Lincoln Center, Carnegie Hall, White House. Recent Film/TV: Blacklist, Mysteries of Laura, Boardwalk Empire, Hostages, Leverage, Jumper. Graduate: Williams College. LISA KRON (Book & Lyrics). 2015 Tony Award winner for Best Book of a Musical and Best Score of a Musical for Fun Home. Other plays include In The Wake, Well and the Obie Award winning 2.5 Minute Ride. Acting credits include Well (Tony nom. - Best Actress) and Good Person of Szechwan (Lortel Award-Outstanding Featured Actress). She has received Guggenheim, Sundance and MacDowell fellowships, Doris Duke Performing Artist, Cal Arts/ Alpert, and Helen Merrill Awards, and grants from the Creative Capital and NYFA. Lisa is a founding member of the OBIE and Bessie Award-winning theater company The Five Lesbian Brothers and serves on the boards of the MacDowell Colony, the Sundance Institute and on the Council of the Dramatists Guild of America. J E ANINE TESORI (Music). For Broadway: Fun Home (2015 Tony Award winner); Violet; Caroline, or Change; Shrek the Musical; Thoroughly Modern Millie; Twelfth Night (LCT); John Guare’s A Free Man of Color. Delacorte: Mother Courage (starring Meryl Streep). Opera: A Blizzard on Marblehead Neck (libretto, Tony Kushner; Glimmerglass); The Lion, the Unicorn and Me (libretto, J.D. McClatchy; Washington National Opera). Her songs will be featured in the upcoming Netflix revival of Gilmore Girls. She is the artistic director/cofounder of A Broader Way, an arts empowerment program for girls from underserved communities; the founding artistic director of Encores! OffCenter; and a lecturer in music at Yale University and Columbia University. Ms. Tesori is a member of the Dramatists Guild. SAM GOLD (Director). Broadway: Fun Home (2015 Tony Award winner), The Real Thing (Roundabout), The Realistic Joneses (Lyceum), Picnic (Roundabout), Seminar (Golden; Ahmanson, L . A .). Recent: John (Signature Theater; Obie Award, Drama Desk Nomination), The Mystery of Love & Sex (Lincoln Center); Fun Home (The Public; Obie Award, Lortel and Drama Desk nominations); The Village
Bike (MCC); The Flick (Playwrights Horizons, Lortel nomination); Uncle Vanya (Soho Rep, Drama Desk nomination); The Realistic Joneses (Yale Rep, CT Critics Circle Award); The Big Meal (Playwrights Horizons, Lortel Award); Look Back in Anger (Roundabout, Lortel nomination); Circle Mirror Transformation (Playwrights Horizons; Drama Desk nomination, Obie Award); The Aliens (Rattlestick, Obie Award). Resident director at Roundabout Theatre Company. Training: Juilliard. ALISON BECHDEL (Author of Graphic Novel) created the comic strip “Dykes to Watch Out For,” which ran in lesbian and gay publications from 1983 to 2008. In 2006 she gained a wider readership with the publication of Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic, a graphic memoir about her relationship with her closeted gay father. She followed this with a second memoir, Are You My Mother? A Comic Drama. She’s currently working on a book about the body and trends in physical fitness, called The Secret to Superhuman Strength. She is the recipient of a 2014 MacArthur Fellowship. DANNY MEFFORD (Choreography). Choreography credits include the Tony Award-winning Best Musical Fun Home (Lortel nomination); the currentlyrunning national tour of The Sound of Music for director Jack O’Brien; Much Ado About Nothing (Delacorte Theatre); The Bridges of Madison County (Broadway); Love’s Labour’s Lost (Drama Desk nomination); Poster Boy (Williamstown Theater Festival); Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson (Public Theater/Broadway - Astaire and Lortel nominations); Dance Dance Revolution for director Alex Timbers; Good Person of Szechwan starring Taylor Mac; February House, Pump Boys and Dinettes (City Center Encores!) and Sarah Ruhl’s Melancholy Play (13P). Upcoming: the Broadway premiere of Dear Evan Hansen after productions at Second Stage Theatre and Arena Stage. Danny graduated summa cum laude from the University of Evansville and holds an M.F.A. from Brown University. DAVID ZINN (Scenic & Costume Design). Broadway: Set Design for The Humans (2016 Tony Award); Set and Costume Design for Fun Home (2015 Tony nomination for Set Design), Airline Highway (2015 Tony nomina-
tion for Costume Design), The Last Ship, Seminar; Sets for The Real Thing, Violet, The Realistic Joneses; Costumes for Good People, Other Desert Cities, Bengal Tiger…, In the Next Room (Tony, Drama Desk noms.), Xanadu. OffBroadway: Set and Costume Design for The Flick, Circle Mirror Transformation (Playwrights Horizons). Additional Set and Costume Designs: The Spongebob Musical, Amelie and other regional work at the Steppenwolf, Guthrie, Berkeley Rep, Yale Rep, Mark Taper Forum, Actors Theater of Louisville and the Intiman and ACT in Seattle. BEN STANTON (Lighting Design). Broadway: Deaf West ’s Spring Awakening (2016 Tony Nomination), Fully Committed, Fun Home (2015 Tony nomination), An Enemy of the People, Seminar. Recent Off-Broadway: Incognito , M urde r B allad , The Whipping Man (MTC); The Christians, Marjorie Prime (Playwrights Horizons); The Legend of Georgia McBride, The Nether (MCC); Fun Home (Public Theater); Piece of My Heart, Our Lady of Kibeho, Kung Fu, Angels in America (Signature Theatre); Belleville (NYTW); Into the Woods (Delacorte). Concert designs (Selected): Regina Spektor, Sufjan Stevens, St. Vincent. Recipient of the 2015 Obie Award for Sustained Excellence in Lighting Design. KAI HARADA (Sound Designer): Broadway: Allegiance; Gigi; Fun Home; On the Town; First Date; Follies (Tony Award & Drama Desk Nominations); and Million Dollar Quartet. Other: Poster Boy (Williamstown); Amélie (Berkeley Rep); Brooklynite (Vineyard); Little Dancer (Kennedy Center); Zorro (Moscow, Atlanta); Hinterm Horizont (Berlin); Sweeney Todd (Portland Opera); Head Over Heels and She Loves Me (Oregon Shakespeare). Associate credits to Tony Meola include Wicked and Kiss Me, Kate. Audio Consultant for Hedwig and the Angry Inch. Education: Yale University. CHRIS FENWICK (Music Supervisor) most recently music directed the Broadway production of Fun Home. Music Director of the original productions of Michael John LaChiusa’s Giant, Los Otros, Queen of the Mist and See What I Wanna See. Public Theater credits include Fun Home, Road Show, and Mother Courage and Her Children, starring Meryl Streep. Music director for Patti LuPone at Carnegie Hall,
JOHN CLANCY (Orchestrations). Broadway: Fun Home (2015 Tony nomination), Tuck Everlasting, Shrek the Musical (Tony and Drama Desk noms. w/Danny Troob), Cats 2016 (Arranger), Seattle 5th Avenue Theatre: Jasper in Deadland. Public Theater: Fortress of Solitude, Fun Home (Drama Desk nom.). String arranger for Rhianna: NBA All-Star Game. Goodspeed: Just So. As a drummer and/or music director, Clancy has worked with Randy Newman, Carly Simon, Corey Glover, Solange Knowles, Dev Hynes, Chrissy Amphlett, Kasim Sulton, Danielia Cotton, Alexa Joel, Constantine Maroulis (“American Idol”), Kidz Bop Live! national tours; and worked with Bono and Edge on Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark. MICAH YOUNG (Music Director). Broadway: White Christmas, Mamma Mia, Spring Awakening, Mary Poppins. Off-Broadway/Regional: Murder Ballad (Studio Theatre), Pageant (Drama Desk nom. Best Revival), A Christmas Memory (Outer Critics Circle nom. Best Musical). Crossing Swords, (Best Music Director, NYMF). Interlochen, MSM, Constance Keene, Maria Asteriadou. micahyoungmusic.com, ontheblogway.com A N TO I N E S I LV E R M A N ( M u s i c Coordinator) has coordinated Fun Home, Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark, Tuck Everlasting, Soul Doctor, Murder Ballad and Love’s Labour’s Lost as well as countless live and recording projects as varied as Foo Fighters, Audra McDonald, Fall Out Boy, Rod Stewart and Idina Menzel. RICK CAROTO (Hair & Wig Design). Broadway Design Team: Fun Home, Rocky. Other Broadway: Lucky Guy (Tom Hanks), Evita (Ricky Martin), A Delicate Balance (Glenn Close), Private Lives (Kim Cattrall) and many others. Film: Glenn Close Personal Hairstylist for Wilde Wedding and Bastards, Romeo and Juliet (Orlando Bloom), NBC’s The Sound of Music Live and Peter Pan Live. JIM CARNAHAN, CSA (Casting). Roundabout’s Director of Artistic Development. Roundabout: The Cherry Orchard, Holiday Inn, She Loves Me, Long Day’s Journey Into Night, Robber
Bridegroom, Noises Off, Therese Raquin, Old Times, On the Twentieth Century, Real Thing, Cabaret, Violet, Dinner with Friends, Machinal, Winslow Boy, Drood, Cyrano, Harvey, Anything Goes, Pajama Game, 12 Angry Men, Assassins, Nine, Big River. Other Broadway: Burn This, Matilda, Fun Home, Constellations, The River, You Can’t Take It With You, Rocky, Once, Peter and the Starcatcher, Jerusalem, Scottsboro Boys, American Idiot, Spring Awakening, Pillowman. Film: Seagull, Home at the End of the World, Flicka. TV: Glee (Emmy nom.) PORTIA KRIEGER (Associate Director) mostly directs new plays, mostly in New York. Recently: The Tomb of King Tot (Clubbed Thumb), Friend Art (2ST Uptown), and The Bachelors (Lesser America). Drama League, Lincoln Center Theater Lab alum. portiakrieger.com M A R Y G I AT T I N O ( A s s o c i a t e C h o r e o g ra p h e r ) . A s s o c . /A s s t . Choreographer credits: Irving Berlin’s White Christmas, Dear Evan Hansen, Billy Elliot, Lady Be Good, No No Nanette, Of Thee I Sing. She has choreographed at several Regional Theaters, performed on Broadway, danced for U.S. Presidents and kicked her heels as a Radio City Rockette. Mary is the proud owner of Stage Door School of Dance, in NY. Thank you Danny! marygiattino.com JUNIPER STREET PRODUCTIONS (Production Management) is Hillary Blanken, Ana Rose Greene, Guy Kwan, Joseph DeLuise, Victoria Bullard and Ross Leonard. Over the last 18 years, JSP has helped create over 60 Broadway and Off-Broadway productions, over 20 national tours and numerous Las Vegas productions. Selected shows include: Dear Evan Hansen, In Transit, Oh Hello, War Paint, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Fully Committed, Waitress, The Color Purple, Fun Home, Something Rotten, Beautiful, SpiderMan, Memphis, The Producers and Fosse. BILLY JAY STEIN (Electronic Music Programmer) is a Grammy Awardwinning music producer, composer, pianist/keyboardist and music director. Credits: Beautiful, 2016 Rio Olympics, Radio City Rockettes NY Spectacular, Tuck Everlasting, Spider-Man, Jekyll & Hyde, Flashdance, Sex and the City.
strangecranium.com, strikeaudio.com SHAWN PENNINGTON (Production Stage Manager). Broadway: Wicked, Next to Normal, Sondheim on Sondheim. National Tours: If/Then, Peter and the Starcatcher, Rock of Ages, Spelling Bee, The Pajama Game, Gypsy, Will Rogers Follies, Smokey Joe’s Café. Regional: Up Here (La Jolla Playhouse), Little Miss Sunshine (Sundance Theatre Lab), Dallas Center for the Performing Arts. Love to Mom, Dad, Mark and Beth! GEOFF MAUS (Stage Manager). First National Tour: Matilda the Musical. Broadway: Matilda the Musical. OffBroadway: The Woodsman, Austin, BARE. Others: The Juilliard School (Guest Artist Production Stage Manager, 2013-2014). Proud member of Actors’ Equity. HEATHER ENGLANDER (Assistant Stage Manager). National Tours: If/ Then. Broadway: Amazing Grace, Finding Neverland, If/Then. OffBroadway: Doctor Faustus (CSC); Dying For It (ATC); Much Ado…(NYSF); Far From Heaven (Playwright’s Horizons); Killers And Other Family (Rattlestick); Talley’s Folly (Roundabout); GIANT, Into The Woods, Love’s Labor’s Lost (NYSF); The Bad Guys (Second Stage). Education: Barnard College. e2. BUIST BICKLEY (Production Properties Super visor). Selec t B roadway: Blackbird, Hughie, The Color Purple, Thérèse Raquin, Sylvia, Old Times, An Act of God, The Visit, The Heidi Chronicles, The Audience, The Elephant Man, It’s Only a Play, The Last Ship, Act One, Machinal, Waiting for Godot, The Nance, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Seminar, Other Desert Cities. BROADWAY BOOKING OFFICE NYC (Press and Marketing) is a leading theatrical tour booking, marketing and press company representing awardwinning musicals and plays. Currently: Jersey Boys, Cameron Mackintosh’s spectacular new production of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s The Phantom of the Opera, Les Misérables, Matilda The Musical, Beautiful – The Carole King Musical, A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder, The Sound of Music, Rodgers & Hammerstein’s The King and I, Fun Home, Love Never Dies, Into The Woods and The Rat Pack is Back!. www.bbonyc.com
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Ravinia Festival and many more. He is the music director of City Center Encores! Off-Center.
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321 THEATRICAL MANAGEMENT (General Management) Nina Essman, Nancy Nagel Gibbs, and Marcia Goldberg’s past and present Broadway, Off-Broadway, and national tour management credits include Wicked (Worldwide); Oh, Hello on Broadway; If/Then; Peter and the Starcatcher; Bring It On; Sister Act; Traces; Next To Normal; The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee; The Vagina Monologues; Man of La Mancha; The Graduate; I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change; Fully Committed; and Bat Boy. Individual productions include The Lion King; Smokey Joe’s Café; The Santaland Diaries; Full Gallop; Smoke on the Mountain; Rent; Guys & Dolls and The Diary of Anne Frank. Ken Silverman joined 321 in 2005. FOX THEATRICALS (Producer). Under the leadership of Kristin Caskey and Mike Isaacson, Broadway credits include The Humans (Tony Award) Fun Home (Tony Award); If/Then; Grace; Bring It On (Tony Award nomination); Red (Tony Award); Thoroughly Modern Millie (Tony Award); Legally Blonde; One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (Tony Award); Death of a Salesman (Tony Award); The Seagull; ‘night, Mother; Caroline, or Change. OffBroadway: Fun Home and Traces. For the Independent Presenters Network: Kinky Boots, Matilda, Spamalot, The Color Purple. Fox Theatricals is a division of Fox Associates, owner and operator of the Fox Theatre in St. Louis; led by president Jack Feivou and owners Mary Strauss, Lisa Baudendistel Suntrup, Julie Baudendistel Noonan. BARBARA WHITMAN (Producer) Currently on Broadway: The Humans (Tony Award, Best Play) and Oh, Hello starring Nick Kroll and John Mulaney. Other Broadway credits: Fun Home (Tony Award, Best Musical), Fully Committed starring Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Hedwig and the Angry Inch (Tony Award, Best Musical Revival), If/ Then starring Idina Menzel, Red (Tony Award, Best Play), Next to Normal (Pulitzer), and Spelling Bee. A native New Yorker, Barbara attended NYU’s Gallatin School and received an MFA in Theatre Management and Producing from Columbia University. She’s on the Board of the Tectonic Theater Project. Her proudest productions are her sons, Daniel and Will.
CAROLE S HOR E N STE IN HAYS (Producer). The San Francisco native is pioneering the redesign of the landmark theatre, the Curran. She is delighted to be a part of the artistic and tech community and is dedicated to the creative disruption and innovation that defines the spirit of the Bay Area. TOM CASSERLY (Producer) is lucky to be a part of Barbara Whitman Productions. He has worked on a range of projects including Oh Hello, Fully Committed, Murder for Two and Peter and the Starcatcher. He’s immensely grateful to be on the FH team — thanks to Barbara, Nathan, friends and family! LATITUDE LINK (Producer) is a fourtime Tony Award-winning production company with shows on stages worldwide. Currently running shows on stage: Fun Home (2015 Tony), Hedwig and the Angry Inch (2014 Tony), Matilda, Jersey Boys (2006 Tony), Come From Away (Broadway 2017). latitudelink.com TE R RY SCH N UCK /JACK L AN E (Producer). Broadway producing credits for Terry include: Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, You Can’t Take It With You, Matilda, Fun Home (Tony), Clybourne Park (Tony), The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess (Tony), Bonnie & Clyde, Hair (Tony) and Spring Awakening (Tony). Off-B’way: Shear Madness. Broadway producing credits for Jack include: Peter and the Starcatcher (Tony nomination), Fun Home (Tony) and The Humans (Tony). Off-B’way: Shear Madness. SCOTT M. DELMAN (Producer) is an inveterate theatre enthusiast and venture capitalist. Over the past decade, he has invested/co-produced and produced over 50 plays and musicals on Broadway, London’s West End and on tour. Scott has earned nine Tony Awards and he’s undoubtedly proudest of the Fun Home team. NATHAN VE RNON (P roducer). Broadway: Fun Home (2015 Tony Award), Peter and the Starcatcher (2012 Tony Award Nomination). Upcoming: Oh, Hello on Broadway. Special thanks to Tom Casserly, Barbara Whitman, Kristin Caskey and Mike Isaacson.
JAM THEATRICALS (Producer) under the direction of founders Arny Granat and Steve Traxler, manages subscription series in 30 cities throughout North America and has produced more than 45 shows on Broadway, winning nine Tony Awards along the way. THE FORSTALLS (Producer) Scott and Molly Forstall won a Tony Award for Fun Home after years of Scott leading the creation of iPhone and iPad software. They share their love of theatre with their children, Freya and Nils. Also Co-Producers, Eclipsed (Broadway). SPENCER ROSS (Producer) is the founder of SBR Productions LLC, www. sbrproductions.com. Broadway: An American in Paris. Upcoming: Amélie, Come From Away, Significant Other. KEN WHITNEY (Producer) is a retired senior managing director of Blackstone. He and his wife Liz, a former actress, are active supporters of the arts. KRISTIN CASKEY (Producer) is President of Fox Theatricals. With partner Mike Isaacson, Broadway credits include The Humans (Tony Award); Fun Home (2015 Tony Award); If/ Then; Bring it On; Red (Tony Award); Legally Blonde (London’s Olivier Award); Thoroughly Modern Millie (Tony Award); One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (Tony Award); Death of a Salesman (Tony Award); The Seagull; ’night, Mother; Caroline, or Change. Off-Broadway/national tour: Traces. For the IPN: The Color Purple, Kinky Boots (Tony Award), Matilda. Kristin also programs the U.S. Bank Broadway Series at the Fabulous Fox Theatre in St. Louis, is a member of the Independent Presenters Network and on the Executive Committee and Board of Governors for the Broadway League. Proud Mom to Miles. MIKE ISAACSON (Producer). Isaacson co heads Fox Theatricals with Kristin Caskey. They have produced more than 20 Broadway musicals and plays, national tours, Off-Broadway plays and London productions. Highlights include The Humans (Tony Award); Fun Home (Tony Award); If/Then; Bring It On: The Musical; Death of a Salesman (1999 Tony Award, Best Revival); Caroline, or Change; Legally Blonde the Musical
THE PUBLIC THEATER is the only theater in New York that produces Shakespeare, plays, musicals, and contemporary pieces in equal measure. The Public continues the work of its founder Joe Papp as an advocate for theater as an essential cultural force, leading and framing dialogue on some of the most important issues of our day. The Public’s wide range of programming includes new work at its flagship home on Astor Place, Free Shakespeare in the Park at the Delacorte, Public Forum, Mobile Unit, Under the Radar, Public Studio, Public Works and nightly music at Joe’s Pub. The Public is the recipient of 59 Tonys, 168 Obies, 53 Drama Desk Awards, 54 Lortel Awards, 32 OCC Awards, 5 Pulitzer Prizes. www.publictheater.org STAFF FOR FUN HOME _________________________________________________ GENERAL MANAGEMENT 321 Theatrical Management Nina Essman Nancy Nagel Gibbs Marcia Goldberg Ken Silverman _________________________________________________ COMPANY MANAGER Michael Camp _________________________________________________ TOUR PRESS AND MARKETING Broadway Booking Office NYC Steven Schnepp Kent McIngvale, Jenny Bates, David Freeland Zach Stevenson, Sean Mackey, Stacey Burns Danny Knaub, Rachel Peterson, Phil Della Noce _________________________________________________ TOUR BOOKING AGENCY The Booking Group Meredith Blair Kara Gebhart www.thebookinggroup.com _________________________________________________ CASTING Jim Carnahan Casting Jim Carnahan, CSA Jillian Cimini, CSA Carrie Gardner, CSA Stephen Kopel, CSA Alexandre Bleau Peter Van Dam Louis DiPaolo _________________________________________________ PRODUCTION MANAGER JUNIPER STREET PRODUCTIONS Hillary Blanken Ana Rose Greene Guy Kwan Joseph DeLuise Victoria Bullard Ross Leonard _________________________________________________ Production Stage Manager....... Shawn Pennington Stage Manager..................................................... Geoff Maus Assistant Stage Manager................Heather Englander Assistant Company Manager.................... Allie Dufford Associate Director.........................................Portia Krieger Assistant Director...................... Ashley Brooke Monroe Associate Choreographer......................... Mary Giattino Associate General Manager.................. Tracy Geltman, Amy Merlino Coey Production Consultant...........................Kevin Bertolacci Executive Assistant, Fox Theatricals....... Sally Lindel
Associate Scenic Designer.......................... Tim McMath Associate Costume Designer....................Abigail Hahn Costume Shopper..................................................Amy Price Costume Studio Assistant............................. Sarah Dixey Associate Lighting Designer............................Ken Elliott Assistant Lighting Designer.Lois Catanzaro Gordon Associate Sound Designer............Stephanie Celustka Production Carpenter................................Erik E. Hansen Production Electrician.....................................Daniel Coey Production Sound Engineer................ Patrick Pummill Production Properties Supervisor..........Buist Bickley Original Broadway Properties.................................... Faye Armon-Tronscoso Moving Light Programmer..............................Alex Fogel Video Content............................................Lucy Mackinnon Head Carpenter...........................................Kevin Hoekstra Flyman....................................................................Jason Edens Assistant Carpenter.................................... Randy Deboer Head Electrician...................................................Oliver Read Followspot Operator.......................................Kevin Zegan Assistant Electrics..............................Lionel “Train” Riley Head Sound..................................................Douglas Graves Assistant Sound.....................................Michael Weferling Head Props.......................................................Lonnie Goertz Assistant Props.......................................... Carlos Wauman Wardrobe Supervisor..................................... Kristina May Assistant Wardrobe Supervisor......... Jason Flanders Legal Counsel..............................................Nan Bases, Esq. Accounting...................................... WithumSmith+Brown, PC – Robert Fried, CPA and Karen Kowgios, CPA Finance and Operations Manager....................................... Danielle Karliner Naish Production Photographer............................Joan Marcus Production Assistant............................ Mackenzie Blade Tutoring...........................................On Location Education Tutor/Child Guardian............................ Carolyn Dunning Insurance......... Owens Group Insurance, Bob Owens Banking.............................................................Signature Bank Payroll...................................................Checks and Balances Merchandising.....................................Max Merchandising _________________________________________________ Rehearsed at Baryshnikov Arts Center and New 42nd Street Studios __________________________________________________ 321 THEATRICAL MANAGEMENT Heather Allen, Deborah Barrigan, Amy Merlino Coey, Mattea Cogliano-Benedict, Marissa Gonzales, Rachel Kaufman, Ellise Lesser, Stuart Levy, Uma McCrosson, Jason Neufeld, Rebecca Peterson, Emily Powell, Steve Quinn, Susan Sampliner, Julia Sattler, Benjamin Simpson __________________________________________________ CREDITS AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Scenery built by Hudson Scenic Studios, Inc. Show Control and Scenic Motion Control featuring Stage Command Systems® by PRG-Scenic Technologies, a division of Production Resource group, L.L.C., New Windsor, NY. Lighting Equipment by Christie Lites. Sound equipment by Masque Sound. Built costumes executed by John Kristiansen New York Inc. Custom Shirts executed by Cego. Specialty props by Prop N Spoon, Ramos Upholstery, Prop & Paint Creative Studio, JP Carrier and Joseph Cairo. __________________________________________________ www.FunHomeMusical.com Facebook, Twitter & Instagram: @FunHomeMusical __________________________________________________ PUBLIC THEATER STAFF Oskar Eustis, Artistic Director Patrick Willingham, Executive Director Mandy Hackett, Associate Artistic Director Maria Manuela Goyanes, Associate Producer Jordan Thaler and Heidi Griffiths, Casting Terry Morello, Chief Advancement Officer Jeanie O’Hare, Director of New Work Development Jeremy Adams, General Manager Mark Russell, Co-Director of the Under the Radar Festival Shanta Thake, Director of Joe’s Pub Stephanie Ybarra, Director of Special Artistic Projects Tom McCann, Senior Director of Marketing Candi Adams, Director of Communications Ruth E. Sternberg, Production Executive
The Actors and Stage Managers employed in this production are members of Actors’ Equity Association, the union of professional actors and stage managers in the United States. All stage work performed by employees represented by IATSE. UNITED SCENIC ARTISTS represents the designers and scenic painters for the American Theatre. The Musicians employed in this production are members of the American Federation of Musicians of the United States and Canada. The Director and Choreographer are members of the Stage Directors and Choreographers Society, an independent national labor union. The Press Agents, Company and House Managers employed in this production are represented by the Association of Theatrical Press Agents & Managers. This production is produced by a member of The Broadway League in collaboration with our professional union-represented employees.
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 4+ 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 AnnSue Gunter Linda Ackerschott Judy Holabird Carrie Breidenbach Leslie Lambert Vonnie Clough Sharon Millikan-Hale Janel Clough Callie Morrow Craig Cory Yolanda Pollock Cyndie Cory Dave Poole Laura Cotugno Liz Spadi Steve Davies Amy Tepel Anne Davis Marybeth Tscherpel Carolyn Dore Barb Wilson Deborah Guess DPAC House Crew Mark Anthony Perry Elliot Randy Mitchell Maximillian Peterson
John Kendrick Tanya M. Rist Albert Sainz, Sr David A. Wilson
THE ELLIE CAULKINS OPERA HOUSE 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 Kent Rice, Director For information call: 720.865.4220
DENVER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS GRATEFULLY ACKNOWLEDGES THE FOLLOWING SUPPORT IN ITS 2016/17 BROADWAY SEASON
FUN HOME
(2011 Olivier Award, Best Musical); Traces; Thoroughly Modern Millie (2002 Tony Award, Best Musical); and Red (2010 Tony Award, Best Play). Isaacson is also the artistic director and executive producer of the MUNY, America’s legendary outdoor theatre in St. Louis, Missouri, now in its 99th season.
TRY ON A NEW PAIR OF SHOWS
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RAYMOND LUKE JR. PHOTO BY JOAN MARCUS. ALL OTHER PHOTOS BY ANDREW ECCLES.
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THE CHRISTIANS:
WHERE ONE’S JOURNEY IS THE CORE BY JOHN MOORE
A
According to the Pew Research Institute, 70 percent of Americans identify themselves as persons of faith. Yet they remain a largely underserved audience group in the American theatre. And when companies do take on stories about religion, Alissa Wilkinson wrote last year for Christianity Today, “The New York theatre scene is not noted for its religious acumen or open-mindedness.” The DCPA Theatre Company has bucked that trend by regularly addressing complex questions of faith in a variety of recent plays spanning Two Things You Don’t Talk About at Dinner, Shadowlands, Benediction, The 12 and now, Lucas Hnath’s The Christians. Producing Artistic Director Kent Thompson doesn’t think of the local trend as overtly serving the faith-based. That’s because any compelling drama must, in some way, question an audience’s core beliefs, he says — whether the subject of the story is religion or not. That’s the cornerstone of good storytelling. “What is intentional for me is that I am always interested in looking at moments in our lives where events happen, and your beliefs are profoundly shaken — and you have to figure out how to move on,” Thompson said. “Maybe that means within your faith. But you don’t only find faith in religion. Faith can be in all kinds of movements, whether you’re talking about civil rights or the environment or otherwise.” Hnath, like Thompson, is a Preacher’s Kid (or “P.K.”). Thompson’s father was a well-known Southern Baptist preacher and, his son says, a mesmerizing storyteller. Hnath’s mother is an evangelical minister and he thought he might follow in her footsteps until playwriting lured him away. Although The Christians didn’t pull him too far from the world he knew.
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APPLAUSE • Jan – Mar 2017 • 303.893.4100 • denvercenter.org
“I was having a very difficult time thinking of other contemporary plays that took on the subject of religion, and specifically Christianity, that did so without satirizing it or prompting us to roll our eyes at ‘those Christians,’” Hnath told The New York Times. “It seemed to me that there was a lack of effort to try to understand what’s at stake in those beliefs.” The Christians takes place in an evangelical megachurch that serves a flock of nearly 20,000 followers. Thompson likens the leaders of these institutions to mayors of small cities. The founder of this church is Pastor Paul, who creates a deep schism among his flock when he announces a ground-shaking epiphany that has changed his personal opinion about a fundamental belief regarding eternal salvation. The theological fallout within his congregation will be enormous.
“ …you don’t only find faith in religion. Faith can be in all kinds of movements, whether you’re talking about civil rights or the environment or otherwise.” — KENT THOMPSON, DIRECTOR In Pastor Paul’s case, his changing beliefs are his own. “But this is how he now perceives God’s word to be,” Thompson said, “and he believes profoundly that this is where he must take this community for the next step in its spiritual development.” In doing so, Thompson insists Hnath is not making a playwriting statement about anyone’s religious beliefs. “That isn’t about pointing the finger at these Christians and judging them in any way,” Thompson said. “It’s about watching these dynamics play out that are intensely personal and very human.” Hnath describes his entire play as “a kind of sermon.” Sometimes it’s a literal sermon, he teases, “and sometimes it’s made up of scenes that use the formal elements of a sermon.” In addition to Pastor Paul, the audience will be introduced to his wife, an associate pastor, a church elder and a younger congregant. Every performance includes an on-stage praise band made up of eight singers and three musicians. Hnath admits his play is made up of intentional ambiguities and contradictory arguments. No single argument “wins.” There’s no resolution. “A church is a place where people go to see something that is very difficult to see,” he said in an interview with Playwrights Horizons. “A church is a place where the invisible is — at least for a moment — made visible. The theatre can be that too.” Thompson had an opportunity to speak with Hnath about the commonalities in their upbringings, and what the playwright thought was most important that Thompson get right. “First, that we present every person on stage as a fully developed and complex human being,” Thompson said. “And to really ensure this is dramatic and emotionally engaging and moving, and not only for what we would call a Christian community, but for any community. Whether that’s theatre-lovers who don’t go to church or those who do, or the public at large. Because the journey here is core to the human endeavor. That makes The Christians a story for everyone.”
THE CHRISTIANS
JAN 27 - FEB 26 • STAGE THEATRE ASL & Audio-Described Performance: Feb 12, 1:30pm
Illustrations by Kyle Malone
“The thing I love about this piece is that we are all human beings, and it’s all so very complex,” Thompson said. “All theatre is about conflict — but then you have to figure out the path forward, either as a group or independently. How do you deal with events that challenge your core beliefs? It’s the hero’s journey, and that has really become my obsession.” Thompson said audiences who do not attend megachurches might by unfamiliar with their institutional structure. These churches are essentially independent businesses and are often not affiliated with traditional denominations. “There might be a series of beliefs that these churches share,” Thompson said, “but each church hires its own pastor. It’s not like the Catholic or Episcopal church where you are appointed by an established religious hierarchy.”
COMING UP FROM THEATRE COMPANY:
DISGRACED
Disgraced comes charging into Denver with incredible momentum. This 2013 Pulitzer Prize-winning play is one of the most-produced plays nationwide for the second season in a row and is sparking conversations across the country. Pakistani American playwright Ayad Akhtar’s work has drawn recognition for its piercing portrayal of American Muslim identity. Disgraced touches on the tensions between modern global cultures. “Disgraced is that rare play that we, as a country, must urgently address,” said DCPA Theatre Company Producing Artistic Director Kent Thompson. “It is a powerful drama that speaks to what place Muslims hold in our society during this time of aggressive Islamic fundamentalism, coupled with domestic Islamophobia.” Called “breathtaking, raw and blistering” (Associated Press), it is a powerful reminder of the complexity of identity for all of us. When interviewed by Newsweek about the significant number of productions this play is receiving, Akhtar responded, “It makes a case that is exciting to theatergoers.… When it’s done well, it’s a play that delivers a lot of laughs, and then a gut-punch.” With just a 90-minute run-time and no intermission, Disgraced is a fast-paced, intense drama with a startling twist. Don’t miss this timely production at The Ricketson Theatre March 31 - May 7.
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“Breathtaking, raw and blistering.” – The Associated Press
PULITZER PRIZE WINNER
MAR 31 MAY 7 TICKETS START AT $35
Illustration Kyle Malone Illustration byby Kyle Malone
Disgraced by Ayad Akhtar
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“ At CBS4, we believe that our cities and towns, our schools and businesses, our neighborhoods and families are all markedly better because of our vibrant and evolving arts community.”
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CBS4 is a long-time, proud partner of the Denver Center for the Performing Arts. At CBS4, we believe that our cities and towns, our schools and businesses, our neighborhoods and families are all markedly better because of our vibrant and evolving arts community – already one of the most successful in the entire nation – led by the DCPA. Look for continuing coverage on myriad performances revolving around both the Broadway series and Theatre Company on CBS4 News. CBS4 features a variety of performances in newscasts and gives viewers “back-stage” access, including exclusive video from performances, interviews and insights with stars and directors. At CBS4 we strive to constantly evolve and innovate. Our region’s reliance on credible, up-to-the-minute weather information has spurred even more news growth at the station. CBS4’s expanded weather capabilities now include the CBS4 Outdoor Weather Lab. The Outdoor Weather Lab joins the ranks of the Chevy Mobile Weather Lab, the CBS4 Weather Watchers and Junior Weather Watchers, and daily weather updates with Denver’s leading radio partner – KOA. All of this provides our growing communities with everything they need to plan their day, their daily commute and even their travel across the country. A couple of key moves to share: An “old friend” of Denver – Ashton Altieri – is back – and now anchors weather for CBS4 weekday mornings, Monday-Friday. CBS4’s Lauren Whitney has moved to evenings and joins Ed Greene to provide expanded weather in the 5, 6 and 10pm newscasts, with Meteorologist Chris Spears directing coverage on the road from the Mobile Weather Lab. CBS4/KCNC TV is part of the CBS Television Group, owned and operated by CBS. In addition to providing local news – CBS4 viewers enjoy national news and news magazine programs such as “60 Minutes,” “CBS This Morning” and “CBS Sunday Morning,” prime time entertainment with hit shows including “Big Bang Theory,” “N.C.I.S.” and “Madam Secretary,” late night talk featuring “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” and “The Late, Late Show with James Corden” and, of course, CBS4 Sports – Denver Broncos and NFL Football, the NFL-AFC Playoffs, March Madness/ the NCAA Tournament, including the 2017 Final Four and National Championship and the biggest PGA Events – including the 2017 Masters and PGA Championship.
The CBS4 Weather Team – Ashton Altieri, Lauren Whitney, Ed Greene, Dave Aguilera and Chris Spears
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APPLAUSE • Jan –- Mar 2017 • 303.893.4100 • denvercenter.org
Jarran Muse as Marvin Gaye & Cast. MOTOWN THE MUSICAL First National Tour. Photo by Joan Marcus.
BERRY GORDY’S MOTOWN MUSIC THAT CHANGED THE WORLD
O
On January 12, 1959, Berry Gordy Jr. obtained a loan of $800 from his family and founded an enterprise he called Motown. He set up his Detroit headquarters in a modest house emblazoned with an immodest sign, “Hitsville U.S.A.” The slogan was premature, but prophetic. Gordy discovered, developed and launched the careers of Smokey Robinson and The Miracles, Diana Ross and The Supremes, The Temptations, Stevie Wonder, Mary Wells, The Jackson 5, Michael Jackson and Marvin Gaye — to name just a few — and Motown became the most successful business owned and operated by an African American in the United States. Now his legacy is celebrated in Motown The Musical. Although Motown was home mostly to black artists, Gordy envisioned the music as “the sound of young America” — and by that he meant Americans of all colors and ethnicities. He started Motown just before the Civil Rights Movement was in full flower, when music by black artists was mostly relegated to black radio stations. Gordy “endeavored to reach across the racial divide with music that could touch all people,” as the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame acknowledged. And so he did. It began, of course, with the sound, a thrilling amalgamation of gospel, blues, jazz, doo wop, and country. “I may not have always known what I was looking for exactly, but when I found it I knew it,” Gordy has said. “Long before there were electronic synthesizers, I was looking for new ways to create different sound effects. We would try anything to get a unique percussion sound: two blocks of wood slapped together, striking little mallets on glass ashtrays, shaking jars of dried peas — anything.
In the early ’60s, when Motown was evolving and beginning to hit its stride, radio play was crucial to a song’s success. Robin Seymour, Detroit’s most popular radio personality of that era, was perhaps the only white disc jockey in the city to feature black music on his shows in the ’50s, prior to the founding of Motown. “When Berry Gordy came along, I started playing his records,” says Seymour. “Some of the sponsors hated the music, but they had kids and their kids thought it was the greatest music ever. The sponsors were getting results, so they were happy. The music really took off.” In those days, according to Seymour, “The record had to be pretty high on the charts before a song was played in New York, regardless of whether the singer was black or white. Later in the ’60s, when Motown had made it big, that changed. Stations would play a new record by a new artist.” Motown gradually became part of the fabric of America. “Music really makes the world vibrate,” says Morris. “And when multi-cultures vibrate together, it’s a great thing. That’s what Berry Gordy made happen. His music changed the world.”
MOTOWN THE MUSICAL
FEB 15-19 • BUELL THEATRE ASL, Audio-described & Open Captioned Performance: Feb 18, 2pm
IN THE
UPCOMING SHOWS
SPOTLIGHT
An Act of God Now – Apr 8 Fun Home Now – Jan 22
Denver Center for the Performing Arts’ biggest stars step into the spotlight — actors, designers, students and you.
The Book of Will Jan 13 – Feb 26 The Christians Jan 27 – Feb 26 Two Degrees Feb 3 – Mar 12 Cult Following Feb 10 – 11 Apr 28 – 29 • May 12 – 13 Colorado New Play Summit Feb 18 – 19 & 24 – 26 Motown The Musical Feb 15 – 19
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Top photo by Amanda Tipton
Circus 1903 — The Golden Age of Circus Feb 21 – 26 Rain — A Tribute to the Beatles Mar 2 & 3 An American In Paris Mar 8 – 19 Travis Wall's Shaping Sound: After the Curtain Mar 18 & 19 Kinky Boots Mar 21 – 26
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1. DCPA THEATRE COMPANY and season sponsor United Airlines recently hosted a packed house for the Student Matinee at A Christmas Carol. 2. DCPA BROADWAY took Matthew Dailey of Jersey Boys back to his old high school stomping ground. Dailey spoke with students of Arapahoe High School about his career and the importance of theatre education. 3. DCPA participated in Denver Arts Week with The Magic of Theatre. This showcase of Theatre Company, Broadway, Cabaret, Off-Center and Education treated guests to demonstrations of special effects — lighting, sound, multimedia, scenic design, painting, costumes and props — cast appearances, a scene from Shakespeare in the Parking Lot and a participatory lesson on how to “walk like a man” with Matthew Dailey of Jersey Boys.
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APPLAUSE • Jan – Mar 2017 • 303.893.4100 • denvercenter.org
Bottom photos by John Moore
Disgraced Mar 31 – May 7 Hal Holbrook: Mark Twain Tonight! Apr 1 MAMMA MIA! Apr 11 – 16 The Secret Garden Apr 21 – May 28 The Illusionists — Live from Broadway May 19 – 21 The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time May 30 – Jun 18 DragOn Jun 1 – 25 Frozen August 17 – Oct 1
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“ …[PwC’s] involvement with DCPA strengthens our commitment to comprehensive education and literacy of young people in our local communities.”
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The Denver Center for the Performing Arts is a powerful driver behind the vibrancy of the arts in Colorado. The arts possess innumerable social and educational benefits and PwC is honored to support DCPA – the arts broaden the horizons of our people and our clients and our involvement with DCPA strengthens our commitment to comprehensive education and literacy of young people in our local communities. In addition to supporting Denver arts, one of PwC’s strongest tenets is service to our communities. Our Rockies market is a firm leader in number of service hours per employee committed to advancing youth education and financial literacy in the US. One of the ongoing volunteer activities that helps us accomplish this is Power Lunch – a partnership with the Denver Public Schools Foundation and Mile High United Way. We are in our fourth year of proudly partnering 40-50 PwC volunteers annually with a classroom of third grade students at Columbian Elementary in Denver. The goal is building relationships through reading and helping each student reach reading proficiency by the end of third grade. We partner two volunteers with each student, alternating weeks while reading to that student every Friday for 45 minutes throughout the entirety of the school year. The philanthropic imperative that is pervasive throughout PwC locally drives our unwavering youth education and financial literacy commitment here. DCPA’s commitment to arts education and training, also giving back to our communities in the areas they know best, is a compelling component of why we choose, and are honored, to partner with them. PwC is proud to support the DCPA as an arts purveyor, teacher, visionary and inspiration in our local community.
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APPLAUSE • Jan - Mar 2017 • 303.893.4100 • denvercenter.org
NEW SHOW ‘CIRCUS 1903’ BRINGS BACK LIVE ELEPHANTS, SORT OF
Photo by Mark Turner
BY M A R K K E N N E DY
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Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus may have retired their iconic elephants but there’s still a way to see the huge beasts onstage. The new touring show Circus 1903 - The Golden Age of Circus, which is making its American debut this year, features two life-size elephants — one baby, one massive mamma — created by the puppeteers and model-makers of Significant Object, who made the lifelike horse featured in the hit play War Horse. “These puppets feel real. They’ve been built in a way, even when they’re just standing there doing nothing, they’re just breathing, they absolutely feel real. That’s what we wanted to capture,” said creative and executive producer Simon Painter. The pachyderms will be part of a show that attempts to capture the magic of circuses at the dawn of the last century, with foot jugglers, contortionists, acrobats, knife throwers, teeterboarders, high-wire performers and a bicycle stuntman. Painter, who has had great success with his magician supergroup franchise The Illusionists, said he’s hoping to revive the panache and bravery of the past, “where showmanship was front and center.” It’s an attempt to jettison the Cirque Du Soleil-led drive for narratives in favor of highlighting the acts themselves, which often tried to outshine the others. “Every single person needs to win the crowd. Every act should be almost the closing act.”
Painter and his team consulted circus historians and picked 1903 because that’s when Barnum & Bailey’s so-called Greatest Show on Earth returned from a fiveyear tour of Europe. It traveled almost daily with a mindboggling 1,200 people, 200 wagons and 700 animals. “The way that they would get you to come — the whole town — was by promising these acts that were beyond anybody’s imagination. And that’s what we’ve tried to do,” said Painter. “We’ve made a massive effort to cast a net as far as possible, just like they did over 100 years ago.” Many of the acts in the show are being performed by members of the same family, who have passed down their skills over generations and so knew what their ancestors did 100 years ago. For other acts, Painter had to teach the performer new skills — and unlearn tricks from 2016. “This is, honestly, the show I’ve wanted to make for 15 years,” he said. In addition to Painter, the producers include Tim Lawson and MagicSpace Entertainment.
CIRCUS 1903 - THE GOLDEN AGE OF CIRCUS
FEB 21 – 26 • BUELL THEATRE ASL, Audio-described and Open Captioned Performance: Feb 25, 2pm Used with permission of The Associated Press. Copyright 2016. All rights reserved.
OUR PARTNERS DESERVE A ROUND OF APPLAUSE Bookend the perfect night out by visiting DCPA’s preferred restaurant partners before or after a show.
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APPLAUSE • Jan - Mar 2017 • 303.893.4100 • denvercenter.org
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APPLAUSE • Jan - Mar 2017 • 303.893.4100 • denvercenter.org
DCPA TEAM DCPA Janice Sinden......................................................President & CEO Julie Schumaker.................Executive Assistant to the CEO
BROADWAY & CABARET John Ekeberg........................... Executive Director Broadway Alicia Bruce......................................................... General Manager Alyssa Chacon............. Operations Business Administrator Abel Becerra.................................. Technical Director, Cabaret
DEVELOPMENT David Zupancic.................................Director of Development Shawn Bayer.................................................... Associate Director Chelley Canales...................................Development Associate Megan Fevurly.....................................Development Associate Melissa Olson........................................Development Assistant Marc Ravenhill................................................. Associate Director Valerie Taron.................................................... Associate Director
EDUCATION Allison Watrous........................................Director of Education Patrick Elkins-Zeglarski.........................Associate Director of Education and Curriculum Manager Jessica Austgen................................................ Teaching Artist & Shakespeare Coordinator Stuart Barr.................................. Education Technical Director Claudia Carson...... Bobby G and Playwriting Coordinator Leslie Channell................................................. Business Manager Melissa Doherty...........................Office Manager & Registrar Linda Eller..............................................................................Librarian Tim McCracken..................................................... Head of Acting Michelle Patrick...................Corporate Training Coordinator David Saphier.......... Teaching Artist & School Coordinator Rachel Taylor...........Teaching Artist & At-Risk Coordinator Chloe McCleod, Heather Hughes, Justin Walvoord, Robyn Yamada.................................................... Teaching Artists
FACILITIES & EVENT SERVICES Clay Courter.....Vice President, Facilities & Event Services James Babcock, Dwight Barela, Clint Flinchpaugh, Michael Kimbrough................ Engineers Quentin Crump...............................................Security Specialist Tom Duffin.....................................Manager, Event Technology Caitlin Glasgo................................................ Events Coordinator Stori Heleen.................................Event Technology Specialist Jaymes Kimbrough..................Event Technology Specialist Clint King.........................................................Security Supervisor Terry Koch........................... Director, Facilities Management John Lower.............................................................. Chief Engineer Brian McClain............................................. Custodial Supervisor Tara Miller, Danielle Porter, Brittany Schoede............................................. Events Managers Brook Nichols................................Director, Event Technology Alyssa Stock....................................Assistant Project Manager Will Stowe.....................................Event Technology Specialist Tara Wenger....Facilities/Event Services Business Manager Dawn Williams.....................................Director, Event Services Juan Loya, Carmen Molina, Blanca Primero, Judith Primero, Angeles Reyes Soto, Francisco Trujillo............................................................Custodians
MARKETING, SALES & PATRON SERVICES Jennifer Nealson..................................Chief Marketing Officer Eric Boone...................................................Front End Developer Heidi Bosk......................... Senior PR & Promotions Manager Nathan Brunetti...................................................Digital Manager Flora Jane DiRienzo...............Director of Strategic Projects Brenda Elliott......................................Senior Graphic Designer Brianna Firestone............Director of Customer Experience & Marketing Simone Gordon...................................................Project Manager Hope Grandon..........................................PR & Events Manager Jeff Hovorka............................. Director of Sales & Marketing Jennifer Kemps........................................Group Sales Manager Emily Kent............................Associate Director of Marketing David Lenk............................................................. Video Producer Emily Lozow........................................... Marketing Coordinator
Adam Lundeen....................................Marketing Technologist Kyle Malone.................................................................... Art Director Cassie McHale......................... Communications Coordinator Carolyn Michaels...........................................................Copywriter Cheyenne Michaels............................. Marketing Coordinator John Moore................................................Senior Arts Journalist Adam Obendorf........................................... Senior Art Director Beth Osolin......................Group Sales Business Coordinator Allison Barber Pasternak..... Executive Assistant to the CMO Joseph Schurwonn......................................... Financial Analyst Jill Schwager...............Education Group Sales Coordinator Rob Silk.........................................Director of Creative Services Suzanne Yoe............................... Director of Communications & Cultural Affairs THEATRE SERVICES Carol Krueger.................................. Theatre Services Manager Adam Alberti, Ethan Aumann, Nora Caley, Samantha Egle, Hadley Kamminga-Peck, LeiLani Lynch, Aaron McMullen, Gregory Melton, Douglas Murphey, Joyce Murphey, Margaret Ohlander, Valerie Schaefer, Mica Ward..................... Theatre Company House Managers TICKETING SERVICES Jennifer Lopez.........................Director of Ticketing Services Kirk Petersen...........................................Assoc. Dir. of Ticketing Services – Patron Relations David Smith.............................................Assoc. Dir. of Ticketing Services – Subscription Services Micah White .............................................Subscription Manager Jessica Bergin, Vincent Bridgers, Katie Clow-Pollard, Tristan Jungferman ................................Box Office Managers Billy Dutton .............................................VIP Ticketing Manager Malcolm Brown, Kevin Dykstra, Molly Dougherty, Amanda Gomez, Edmund Gurule ...........................................................Show Leads Kirsten Anderson, Rebecca Hibbert, Scott Lix, Gregory Swan ......................Subscription Agents Román Anaya, Austin Lee Brown, Rena Bugg, D.J. Dennis, Jennifer Gray, Roger Haak, Noah Jungferman, Alia Kempton, Daniel Lindsey, Gustavo Márquez, Cora Marsh, Noah McDermott, Taylor Schulze, Liz Sieroslawski, Hayley Solano, Brad Steinmeyer, Tomas Waples, Cindy Yeast................................................................ Ticket Agents
SHARED SERVICES Vicky Miles................................................ Chief Financial Officer Jennifer Jeffrey.......................................... Director of Financial Planning & Analysis Julie Schumaker.................Executive Assistant to the CFO ACCOUNTING Jennifer Siemers...................................Director of Accounting Sara Brandenburg, Michaele Davidson.....................................Senior Accountants Juliette Hidahl....................................................Accounting Clerk Kim Stewart........................................................ Staff Accountant HUMAN RESOURCES Regina Matthews......................... Director Human Resources Brian Carter...................................Human Resources Manager Donald Gabenski.............................................................Reception Jamie Hawkins...................................................... HR Coordinator Sandy Hertz.........................................................Payroll Specialist Monica Robles............................................Mailroom Supervisor INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY Yovani Pina.................................... Associate Vice President of Information Technology Chris Calenzo...................................................Help Desk Analyst Jayson Cowley......................................Network Administrator Jim Hipp................................................. Associate Director of IT Christopher Hoge.......................VoIP/System Administrator Bobby Jiminez.........................Senior AudienceView Analyst John H. Voorheis............................ Manager of Infrastructure
THEATRE COMPANY Kent Thompson........................... Producing Artistic Director ADMINISTRATION Charles Varin...................................................Managing Director Ryan Meisheid...........................Associate Managing Director Allison Taylor..................................................Company Manager
Kerri Mirtsching.................................... Business Administrator Alie Quistberg...........................Assistant Company Manager ARTISTIC Nataki Garrett.................................Associate Artistic Director Charlie I. Miller................................Associate Artistic Director Strategy & Innovation Douglas Langworthy ................................... Literary Director/ Director of New Play Development Chad Henry....................................................... Literary Associate Grady Soapes.............................................. Artistic Coordinator PRODUCTION Jeff Gifford...............................................Director of Production Melissa Cashion....................Associate Production Manager Matthew Campbell.............. Assistant Production Manager Julie Brou...................Production & Artistic Office Manager Scenic Design Lisa M. Orzolek................................ Director of Scenic Design Matthew Plamp, Nicholas Renaud..............................Scenic Design Assistants Lighting Design Charles R. MacLeod...................................Director of Lighting Lily Bradford.....................................Lighting Design Assistant Reid Tennis............................................... Production Electrician Multimedia Topher Blair............................Multimedia Assistant/Operator Sound Design Craig Breitenbach...........................................Director of Sound Tyler Nelson.......................................................... Sound Designer Alex Billman, Frank Haas..............................Sound Operators Stage Management Christopher C. Ewing................ Production Stage Manager Rachel Ducat, Heidi Echtenkamp, Corin Ferris, Karen T. Federing, Chris Luebke, Randall Lum, D. Lynn Reiland, Kurt Van Raden...................................................Stage Managers Scene Shop Eric Rouse.......................................................... Technical Director Robert L. Orzolek, Josh Prues.................................Associate Technical Directors Albert “Stub” Allison, Louis Fernandez III.......................................... Lead Technicians Justin Hicks, Brian “Marco” Markiewicz, Wynn Pastor, Kyle Simpson Mike VanAartsen...........................................Scenic Technicians Prop Shop Robin Lu Payne.............................................Properties Director Eileen S. Garcia......................... Assistant Properties Director Jamie Stewart Curl, David Hoth, Georgina Kayes, 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, Louise Powers, Jackie Scott............................................................................Drapers Cathie Gagnon.................................................................First Hand Sheila P. Morris........................................................................... Tailor Kelly Jones.................................................................................Stitcher 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*, Kyle Moore, Miles Stasica*, Tyler Stauffer*, Matt Wagner* (*IATSE Local 7 Stagehands)................................ Stagehands Wardrobe Brenda Lawson........................................Director of Wardrobe Maria Y. Davis, Taylor Malott............................Wig Assistants Robin Appleton, Amber Donner, Anthony Mattivi, Tim Nelson, Lisa Parsons Wagner, Alan Richards....................................................................... Dressers
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HOW MUCH DO YOU KNOW ABOUT THE BOOK OF WILL, THE CHRISTIANS, TWO DEGREES AND FUN HOME? FIND OUT!
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APPLAUSE • Jan –- Mar 2017 • 303.893.4100 • denvercenter.org
ACROSS 3 T he first collected edition of Shakespeare’s plays is the First _______ 5 Shakespeare’s working drafts of a play were called the _______ Papers 7 Home to the world’s largest Shakespeare collection is the _______ Library 8 Alison’s occupation in Fun Home 10 The Christians playwright Lucas _______ 13 Now on tour with Fun Home, he was the DCPA’s Sweeney Todd: Robert _______ 16 He came up with this common temperature scale in 1724 17 One of the nearly lost Shakespeare plays — and a salad: Julius _______ 18 The Fun Home graphic memoir was written by Alison _______ 19 Lyric from the traditional hymn: “Farther along, we’ll understand _______” 20 Two Degrees’ Christy Montour-Larson last directed this C.S. Lewis title at DCPA
DOWN 1 Colorado native nominated for a Fun Home Tony Award: Beth _______ 2 How Shakespeare spelled “Ado” 4 Climate change is largely attributed to increased levels of carbon _______ in the atmosphere 6 Song from The Christians: “God’s _______ Hand” 9 The Christians takes place entirely in one of these 11 Nine of the 10 _______ years on record have occurred since 2000, says NASA 12 A ttitudes that are religious or spiritual in nature 14 I n the title, “Fun” Home is short for _______ 15 T he temperature scale based on 0 for the freezing point of water
For answers please visit denvercenter.org/news-center.
“It was food for my heart and for my soul. It was just excellent.” — Siegfried & Roy of illusionist duo “Siegfried & Roy”
“I will give this production 5 stars. That’s the top.”
“The orchestra is phenomenal. They are very very on top.”
— Richard Connema, critic for Talkin’ Broadway
— Roger Tallman, seven-time Emmy Award–winning composer
“It’s the best of both worlds... I think a lot of this is the historical significance of the music.” — Kenneth Melo, filmmaker
“I feel like it’s touched my life and changed my life in a way that I will never forget.” — Linda Eppinger, music teacher
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a deep foundation of traditional aesthetics. Classical Chinese dance is rich with expressive power. Through expression of bearing and form, beautiful dance movements bring out the inner meaning of intrinsic thoughts and feelings, reflecting the peculiarities of human nature, the standard for human conduct, moral concepts, mental state, one’s value system, and so on.
Stunning Chinese Dance
Classical Chinese dance has a long history of thousands of years, passed down continuously within the imperial palace and ancient Chinese theater and opera. Soaking up profound wisdom from every era and dynasty, it has become a complete system of dance embodying traditional aesthetic principles with its unique dance movements, rhythms, and inner meaning. Dance is part of human culture. Classical Chinese dance is grounded in 5,000 years of divinely inspired culture, and is a dance art form built upon
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signs of traditional attire, ranging from those of emperors, ministers, and generals to the everyday clothing of the common people. They use bright colors to tailor and recreate hundreds of new pieces each season. Every detail is given meticulous attention and is a result of artistic inspiration and careful polishing. The designers stress harmonic balance and contrast. Their objective is an authentic presentation of the attire that comes from China’s divinely inspired traditional culture, and a consummate stage effect. Audiences throughout the world have warmly welcomed Shen Yun. The values Shen Yun portrays belong to all of humanity. Bilingual emcees highlight each number in both English and Chinese.
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