2022-23 SEASON
A sophisticated, yet relaxed, hotel located in the heart of Yale University’s vibrant Arts Campus
Yale University acknowledges that Indigenous peoples and nations, including Mohegan , Mashantucket Pequot , Eastern Pequot , Schaghticoke , Golden Hill Paugussett , Niantic , and the Quinnipiac and other Algonquian speaking peoples , have stewarded through generations the lands and waterways of what is now the state of Connecticut. We honor and respect the enduring and continuing relationship that exists between these peoples and nations and this land.
MASKING
All patrons must wear masks at all times while inside the theater, except when eating or drinking.
FIRE NOTICE
Illuminated signs above each door indicate emergency exits. Please check for the nearest exit. In the event of emergency, you will be notified by theater personnel and assisted
RECORDING AND PHOTO POLICY
The taking of photographs or the use of recording devices of any kind in the theater without the written permission of the management is prohibited.
in
evacuation of
RESTROOMS are located on the lower
of the venue.
the
the building.
level
CONTENTS A Note from the Artistic Director ..............1 Title Page ......................................................... 3 Cast Page 5 From Our Dramaturgs: An Interview with Leah Nanako Winkler and Margot Bordelon .............6 A Peek into the Café ............................. 10 Cast Bios......................................................... 12 Creative Team Bios 13 Production Staff 18 Yale Repertory Theatre Staff ................... 19 Accessibility Services and Team ............ 22 Educational Programs 23 Board 24 Our Donors ................................................... 24
A NOTE FROM THE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR
Welcome to Yale Repertory Theatre!
I am delighted you are here for the world premiere of The Brightest Thing in the World by Leah Nanako Winkler, a playwright hailed as “a distinctive new voice” by The New York Times, and the recipient of numerous accolades including the Steinberg Playwright Award, Peabody Award, and the Yale Drama Series Prize. It is also a pleasure to welcome back director Margot Bordelon, whose work since the 2015 production of peerless at Yale Rep has been seen at Roundabout Theatre Company, Lincoln Center Theater, and the Atlantic Theater Company, among others in New York City and nationally.
Leah delivered the first draft of The Brightest Thing in the World in early March 2020, just before COVID-19 sent us all home for what many of us assumed would be a matter of weeks. Commissioned by Yale Rep with support from Yale’s Binger Center for New Theatre, this is the first play to reach our stage that was substantially developed during the pandemic.
Beginning in the most delicious romantic comedy fashion, The Brightest Thing in the World slowly reveals itself to be much more. The play finds love and light in unexpected places and celebrates our inherently messy and beautiful humanity. Leah, Margot, and their gifted company of actors and artistic collaborators, working with extraordinary grace, humor, and honesty, have created a portrait of three women whose lives are impacted by the disease of addiction.
Our season continues in 2023 beginning March 10: MacArthur Fellow Luis Alfaro will make his Yale Rep debut with Mojada: A Medea in Los Angeles, which unleashes the power of Euripides’ ancient tale through the story of an undocumented Mexican family caught in the grip of the American immigration system. Running through April 1, the play will be directed by Laurie Woolery, whose previous productions in New Haven include Manahatta and El Huracán at Yale Rep and Dream Hou$e at Long Wharf.
And April 28–May 20, we will present the ripple, the wave that carried me home by Christina Anderson, a Tony Award nominee this past year for the Broadway musical Paradise Square. Yale Rep previously presented the world premiere of her play Good Goods in 2012. Her new play, a poignant, transporting, and quietly subversive story of justice, legacy, and forgiveness, will be staged by Resident Director Tamilla Woodard.
In the meantime, as always, I look forward to hearing your thoughts about The Brightest Thing in the World or any of your experiences at Yale Rep. My email address is james.bundy@yale.edu.
I look forward to seeing you back at Yale Rep in the spring!
Sincerely,
James Bundy Artistic Director
1
2 19 4 Yo rk S t ree t ( a c ros s t he st ree t!) O pen 7 d a y s un til 9 p m Forget Me Not F low er Shop www.forgetmenotfloristCT.com3 39 State Street, North Haven CT (203) 248 -7589 Daily Deliveries to the Greater New Haven Area European Style Floral Designs Gourmet Gift Baskets House Plants
NOVEMBER 25–DECEMBER 17, 2022
YALE REPERTORY THEATRE
James Bundy, Artistic Director | Florie Seery, Managing Director
PRESENTS THE WORLD PREMIERE OF
The Brightest Thing in the World
By Leah Nanako Winkler
Directed by Margot Bordelon
Scenic Designer
Cat Raynor
Costume Designer
Travis Chinick
Lighting Designer
Graham Zellers
Sound Designer
Emily Duncan Wilson
Wig Designer
Matthew Armentrout
Production Dramaturgs
Amy Boratko and Lily Haje
Technical Director
Nate Angrick
Vocal Coach
Grace Zandarski
Fight and Intimacy Director
Michael Rossmy
Casting Director
Tara Rubin C.S.A.
Stage Manager
Andrew Petrick
The Brightest Thing in the World was commissioned by Yale Repertory Theatre. Development and production support are provided by Yale’s Binger Center for New Theatre.
Yale Repertory Theatre thanks our 2022–23 season funders:
Season Sponsor: The Study at Yale
3
4 houseofnaan.com 65 HOWE STREET, NEW HAVEN
The Brightest Thing in the World
Cast in alphabetical order:
Steph ........................................................................................... Michele Selene Ang
Della ............................................................................................................... Megan Hill
Lane ................................................................................................ Katherine Romans
Setting
Time: 2016–2019
Place: Lexington, Kentucky
The Brightest Thing in the World is performed without an intermission.
Content Advisory
The Brightest Thing in the World includes content related to and depictions of the disease of addiction and recovery. The play contains profanity, sexual situations, and sexual innuendo.
Understudies
in alphabetical order:
Della ......................................................................................................... Rebecca Kent
Lane ................................................................................................ Maggie McCaffery
Steph ....................................................................................................... Olivia Oguma
Assistant Stage Manager .................................................................Charlie Lovejoy
5
The Beautiful Thing a
An interview with playwright Leah Nanako Winkler and
Leah Nanako Winkler’s The Brightest Thing in the World is Yale Repertory Theatre’s first world premiere play since 2019. The play was commissioned and developed by Yale, with the resources of its robust new-play development program, the Binger Center for New Theatre. Over the past four years, and throughout a global pandemic, Leah has been able to continue writing the piece and begin a rich collaboration with director Margot Bordelon. The production dramaturgs Lily Haje and Amy Boratko sat down with Leah and Margot to talk about bringing this story to life.
Amy Boratko: Leah, you were commissioned by Yale Repertory Theatre in 2018 to write a play. What was the impulse behind writing this particular story?
Leah Nanako Winkler: I wanted to offer a different lens into people struggling with the disease of addiction, in a way that we haven’t seen before. This desire stemmed from a very personal and emotional place, in addition to knowing some very funny, bright, regular people who suffered, or are suffering from, substance abuse disorder. All of them
were, or are, nothing like the typical awards-bait portrayals of “addicts” we have all seen in film, tv, and theater. Going into writing the commission, I had a blueprint in mind to create a group of characters that the audience could hopefully see themselves in. I also knew I wanted to write a play with elements of comedy and knew the type of bakery like the one that ended up in the play would be involved somehow. Another thing I was sure of is that I wanted to go back physically to Kentucky and interview people (some of whom I knew and some I didn’t know) who have been affected by this war. This commission allowed me the time and resources to do that. And though this is a completely original and fictional play authentic to me as a writer—the volume of people who wanted to talk to me, the stories they told, and the insights they gave me quickly affirmed that something has been missing when we tell stories about the disease of addiction.
Lily Haje: The Brightest Thing in the World, like your plays Kentucky and God Said This, is set in Lexington,
6
bout a New Play:
and director Margot Bordelon
Kentucky, one of the places you grew up. Why did you choose to set the story of this play in Lexington?
LNW: I think that it’s become a misconception that I set all my plays in Lexington, Kentucky, because those are mostly the ones that have been produced in New York. I’ve actually written a dozen full-length plays, and only three of them, including this one, are set there. The Brightest Thing in the World is specifically set where it is because I always start writing plays from a personal and/or emotional place. I grew up in Lexington, by way of Japan, and started noticing about a decade or so ago that a lot of people from my hometown were affected by the opioid epidemic. I even remember those pills casually going around in my high school.
There’s also obviously a big divide between blue states and red states, and I think that the theater industry and audiences on the coasts specifically have a tendency to make work that fetishizes places like Kentucky to feel smart. I think people with substance abuse disorders are fetishized in a similar way. I’m honestly sick of watching millionaire movie stars make themselves their version of ugly and poor to play southern or midwestern people who struggle with the disease of addiction. It seems like smug cosplay, and I’m allergic to smug. I like to create underestimated characters who subvert and
exceed expectations—creating a threesome of smart Kentucky women who are more complex, funny, interesting, mainstream, whipsmart than expected seemed like a good fit to hopefully create more understanding and common ground.
AB: Margot, Leah began writing this play, in response to so much of what she was observing and experiencing, in 2018, and much of the development of the play has happened since the Covid-19 pandemic. Can you both talk about if and how the pandemic affected this particular play, in both the writing and making the entire production?
Margot Bordelon: If Covid hadn’t happened, this play could be taking place from 2019 to 2022, in the “present day.” It’s the effect that the pandemic has had on the world that has suddenly made this a contemporary period piece. It’s just
7
become such a milestone for our society that we couldn’t do a piece set “now” that progresses through time and not address that happening. But even with that specificity, Leah’s play has contemporary universality in how it still resonates today.
LNW: Addiction is often referred to as a disease of isolation. Being in recovery during a period of intense added isolation in 2020, when many treatment centers were closed to or limiting in-person visits, is an element that this play’s world doesn’t have. So the shift felt natural. I think that that play is a different play than The Brightest Thing in the World. An important one. I hope someone writes it.
LH: While this play confronts difficult and serious material, it also has a lot of comedy. How do you weave together darkness and humor?
MB: I came into directing working on comedy. I had always felt more compelled to direct comedy than tragedy or drama, but now I like to find the balance of both. To me, so much of comedy is rhythm. It’s music. Leah writes the music so clearly, or at least it’s in a way that I think that I can hear it.
LNW: Even though my plays deal with big issues, they all tend to be comedies or at least have a lot of comedic elements. That’s because I think we are often the most hilarious as human beings—even if it’s just in
retrospect—when we are the most serious and desperate. The play is never punching down, but rather, finding absurdity in the darkness. Humor is a coping mechanism and a tool for comfort, and I wanted the audience to feel comfortable being introduced to these characters. It’s important to note that the script isn’t designed to make audiences laugh at anyone in the play, but to laugh because they see themselves, their mistakes, their potential choices in the characters. This play’s humor isn’t judgmental.
LH: Is there a particular approach you take to working on new plays?
MB: My way in is always text. I had a really emotional response to my first read of The Brightest Thing in the World, and I have never forgotten that feeling. I want a playwright to feel really listened to, to trust that I am reading their play deeply. This is the first time this story’s being told. It’s important to me that the playwright is in agreement with the choices I make with the actors or with the design. It’s a lateral relationship in birthing it together with the playwright.
LNW: That’s so interesting, because that’s where we balance each other out. I’m a firm believer in, “don’t think, just put it out there,” for my early drafts. Then my favorite part of the process is peeling back the text. And you’re so rigorous about observing every word that your process teaches me things about my
8
The Beautiful Thing about a New Play
own play. It reminds me of how great collaboration can be and how we are working toward the same thing.
AB: Given that this is the world premiere of Leah’s play, and that the elements of the production are coming together for the first time, what do you hope audiences will bring to the final part of this process?
LNW: During the time when there was no in-person theater, I felt very empty, like a part of myself was missing, and I felt that both as an audience member and a playwright. We come to the theater for some sort of catharsis, whether that’s to laugh or to feel validated, or even to feel angry and devastated. New plays are very alive, and their audiences are the first people to bring it alive.
MB: I always say to actors that the audience is like their final scene partner. You begin with a play—it’s
a blueprint for performance. The actors embody that play, but it’s not until we have the audience attend that it becomes a full event. What’s so beautiful about new plays is they examine the moment that we live in right now; unlike a revival, a new play is tackling the big questions that are immediate to that writer. So, I hope audiences will come with a spirit of engagement and listening.
LNW: Live theater, unlike TV or movies available to us as finished products, changes night-to-night depending on the audience. I want audiences to come in ready to have whatever reactions that they’re inspired to have because I don’t know what my play is actually doing to people until I see and hear them in the theater. I want them to know that they’re the last piece of the puzzle to bring this specific play, on that specific night, into completion.
9
Watch + Listen: The cast discusses The Brightest Thing in the World Play the interview on yalerep.org
The Brightest Thing in the World begins in 2016 at a fictional in coffee and artisanal treats. Here’s a peek in the kitchen
—Lily Haje and Amy Boratko,
SAMHSA’s National Helpline is a free, confidential, 24/7, 365-day-a-year treatment referral and information service (in English and Spanish) for individuals and families facing mental and/or substance use disorders.
1-800-662-4357 samhsa.gov
café in downtown Lexington, Kentucky, that specializes kitchen where the delicious baking action happens.
Production Dramaturgs
CAST
Steph: Michele Selene Ang* is a Chinese American actor, writer, and filmmaker with Indonesian roots. She was born in Surabaya, raised in San Francisco, educated in New York, and is currently based in Los Angeles. She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in theater performance from Fordham University, and she was chosen as a 2012 YoungArts winner and U.S. Presidential Scholar in the Arts. Her work can be found on Netflix’s hit drama 13 Reasons Why and CBS’s Elementary. She is thrilled to make her Yale Rep debut in this beautiful new play. You can check her out at michelesang.com!
Della: Megan Hill* is delighted to be making her Yale Rep debut and to be in collaboration again with both Leah and Margot. Megan is a Brooklyn-based actor and writer. As an actor, she specializes in new work and has originated roles in the world premieres of Open and Cut (both by Crystal Skillman), Amy Staats’s Eddie And Dave, Mara Nelson Greenberg’s Do You Feel Anger?, Leah Nanako Winkler’s Kentucky, and Rob Askins’ Hand To God, to name a few. As a writer, she has been published in Ms. Magazine and CultureBot; she co-wrote the play Lonesome Winter with Joshua Conkel; and her play The Last Class: A
Jazzercize Play has had acclaimed runs in New York, DC, and Seattle. In 2019, Megan was nominated for a Drama Desk Award for her portrayal of David Lee Roth in Eddie And Dave and was also named one of the Best Comedic Performances of the Year by The New York Times. B.F.A. in acting and original works, Cornish College of the Arts; M.F.A. in acting: ART/ MXAT IATT at Harvard. For more info visit: meganhill.net or follow on Instagram: @meganhillwhat
Lane: Katherine Romans* is excited to be making her Yale Rep debut. Most recently, she played Reality Winner in the international tour of Is This a Room after understudying the role on Broadway. Other theater includes Men on Boats (ACT) and The Importance of Being Earnest (Livermore Shakespeare). Television: The Gilded Age (HBO). Katherine is a graduate of the M.F.A. program at ACT. katherineromans.com
UNDERSTUDIES
Understudy for Della: Rebecca Kent is a fourth-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama, where she was seen in Ghosts, Affinity, She Kills Monsters, and Love’s Labor’s Lost.
12
*Member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.
Understudy for Lane: Maggie McCaffery is a fourth-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama, where she was seen in Affinity, The Cherry Orchard, and She Kills Monsters. She received her B.F.A. from Boston University.
Understudy for Steph: Olivia Oguma* won a CT Critics Circle Award for BFE at Long Wharf Theatre. Broadway: Mamma Mia!, A Christmas Carol, Les Misérables. Off-Broadway: Letters of Suresh (Second Stage), Addressless (Rattlestick), Hello From… (Playwrights Realm), Luce (LCT3), Emotional Creature (Signature), BFE (Playwrights Horizons), The Dispute (NAATCO). Regional: LaJolla Playhouse, Berkeley Rep, Portland Center Stage, Philadelphia Theater Co. Film/Television: This is Where I Leave You, Strangers with Candy, Like Father, Instinct, FBI, Odd Mom Out, Younger, Law & Order, The Good Wife, The Big C, Great News, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. Thanks to Mom, Oliver, Luigi from Lima and EJ (the best reader!). @olioguma
CREATIVE TEAM
Technical Director: Nate Angrick is in his fourth year of the technical design and production program at David Geffen School of Drama, where his credits include She Kills Monsters and Affinity. He also previously served as assistant technical director for The Plot at Yale Rep. He received his B.F.A. in technical theater and design from the University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point. He worked as technical director of Payomet Performing Arts Center in Massachusetts and was a carpenter at The Juilliard School before coming to Yale.
Wig Designer: Matthew Armentrout previously worked at Yale Rep on Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Today Is My Birthday, and Manahatta. Broadway: Birthday Candles, Paradise Square, Flying Over Sunset, and Bernhardt/ Hamlet. Off Broadway: Merrily We Roll Along (Roundabout), Othello (Shakespeare in the Park). Regional: Bliss (The 5th Avenue Theatre), Jitney (National Tour), Paradise Square (Berkeley Repertory Theatre).
Production Dramaturg: Amy Boratko is the Senior Artistic Producer at Yale Rep and has previously served as dramaturg on the Yale Rep productions of The Plot, Girls, Cadillac Crew, Good Faith, Field Guide, Mary Jane, Imogen Says Nothing, peerless, Indecent, War, The
13
*Member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.
Creative Team
Fairytale Lives of Russian Girls, Dear Elizabeth, The Realistic Joneses, Good Goods, Belleville, We Have Always Lived in the Castle, Compulsion, Notes from Underground, and Eurydice, among others. Other credits include dramaturging new play workshops at New Dramatists, the Acting Company, and Voice and Vision’s ENVISION Retreat. She is a lecturer at David Geffen School of Drama at Yale. B.A., Rice University; M.F.A., David Geffen School of Drama.
Director:
Margot Bordelon is a New Yorkbased director who specializes in new work. Yale Rep: peerless by Jiehae Park. Off-Broadway and New York: peerless (Primary Stages); …what the end will be (Roundabout Theatre Company); Do You Feel Anger?
(Vineyard Theatre); Eddie and Dave (Atlantic Theater Company); Plot Points in Our Sexual Development (LCT3); Something Clean, Too Heavy for Your Pocket (Roundabout Underground); The Pen (Premieres NYC); A Delicate Ship (Playwrights Realm); Still (Juilliard); Wilder Gone (Clubbed Thumb); The Last Class: A Jazzercize Play (DODO). Margot has directed productions regionally at ACT Seattle, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Alliance Theatre, American Theater Company, Denver Center, Marin Theater Company, and Steppenwolf. She has developed work at Ars Nova, Berkeley Rep, Cherry Lane, The Lark, Ma-Yi, MTC, New Dramatists, NYTW, P73, Playwrights Horizons, Portland
Center Stage, Primary Stages, The Public, PWC, Rattlestick, the Wilma, and Woolly Mammoth. B.F.A., Cornish College of the Arts; M.F.A., David Geffen School of Drama.
Costume Designer: Travis Chinick (he/him/his) is thrilled to be a part of this team. He is in his final year at the David Geffen School of Drama and works as a freelance designer and painter across the country. His credits at the Geffen School include Bodas de sangre/ Blood Wedding and Love’s Labor’s Lost. Other design highlights include Cinderella (Trollwood Performing Arts), A Dog Story (Seaglass Theatrical), Mysterio! Magic Rocks the Night! (RWS Entertainment Group), That Bachelorette Show (Davenport Theatrical), The Mnemonist of Duchess County (Attic Theatre Company), Strictly Dishonorable (Attic Theatre Company), Les Misérables (Assistant Designer, 2014 Broadway Revival), and others. Travis has also worked at the Metropolitan Opera, The Jim Henson Company, and RWS Entertainment Group. His work can be seen at tchinick.com.
Production Dramaturg: Lily Haje is a theater maker and fourth-year M.F.A. candidate in dramaturgy and dramatic criticism at David Geffen School of Drama, where her credits include Romeo and Juliet directed by Leyla Levi and Swimmers directed by Jackson Gay. Other recent dramaturgical work
14
includes There is a Thing at the End of the Loop written by Dylan Guerra and #4 written by Abigail C. Onwunali at Yale Cabaret. She is the cocurator of Love Songs, a multimedia art and performance project, also at Yale Cabaret, and a former managing editor of Theater magazine. Previously, she worked in producing and production management with companies including Music-Theatre Group, Woodshed Collective, and Iron Bloom Creative Production. She holds a B.A. from Wesleyan University in theater and study of religion.
Assistant Stage Manager: Charlie Lovejoy* is a third-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama. Off-Broadway and NYC: Kimberly Akimbo (Atlantic Theater Company), The Seagull (Elevator Repair Service). Chicago: The Santaland Diaries, Incendiary, graveyard shift (Goodman Theatre); Miracle: A Musical 108 Years in the Making (Royal George Theater); La Ronde (American Theater Company); Corduroy, Fantastic Mr. Fox (Emerald City Theatre); Hooded, Two Mile Hollow, American Hero (First Floor Theater); You on the Moors Now (The Hypocrites). Academic:
BURNBABYBURN: an american dream (Yale Cabaret); Romeo and Juliet, Bodas de sangre (David Geffen School of Drama). B.A., University of Chicago.
Stage Manager: Andrew Petrick* is a fourth-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama, where his credits include Manning and Measure for Measure, both directed by Alex Keegan, and In His Hands, or the gay christian play, directed by Maeli Goren. Other stage management credits include The Blacker the Berry, directed by Stew, and Harmless, directed by Dan Hurlin (Sarah Lawrence College); Pride and Prejudice, directed by Christopher Edwards, and Cry It Out, directed by Marc Masterson (Dorset Theatre Festival); Jack and the Beanstalk, directed by Julie Atlas Muz (Abrons Art Center); and When We Were Young and Unafraid, directed by Spencer Knoll (Downstage Theatre Company). B.A., Sarah Lawrence College.
Scenic Designer: Cat Raynor is a set and production designer for stage and film, and a fourth-year M.F.A. candidate in set design at David Geffen School of Drama. Recent design credits include Affinity, Twelfth Night (David Geffen School of Drama); Iris & Maggie, A Doll’s House, Love Songs (Yale Cabaret); You Don’t Have to Do Anything (IRT Theater), and short films MAJOR directed by Christopher Betts and Good Taste directed by Seonjae Kim. Cat previously worked in the art department of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. She is a Yale Cabaret Advisory Board member for the
15
*Member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.
Creative Team
2022–2023 season Yale Cabaret 55: Parachute. Cat holds a B.A. in fine art from Kenyon College. More of her work can be seen at catraynor.com!
Fight and Intimacy Director: Michael Rossmy is a Resident Fight and Intimacy Director for Yale Rep, a lecturer in acting at David Geffen School of Drama, and the Stage Combat and Intimacy Advisor for Yale College. Broadway credits include A Tale of Two Cities, Cymbeline, and Superior Donuts Regional theater credits include The Public Theater, Westport Country Playhouse, Goodspeed Musicals, Paper Mill Playhouse, Asolo Rep, The Old Globe, TheaterWorks (Hartford), Princeton University, The Acting Company, Soho Rep, the Geffen Playhouse, Long Wharf Theatre, McCarter Theatre, Carnegie Mellon University, and others. He was nominated for a 2017 Drama Desk Award for his work on Troilus and Cressida for The Public Theater’s production in Central Park. Currently Michael’s work can also be seen in the world premiere of Suzan-Lori Parks’s Sally & Tom directed by Steve H. Broadnax III and Jiehae Park’s peerless directed by Margot Bordelon.
Sound Designer: Emily Duncan Wilson returns to Yale Rep, where she was the sound designer for The Plot, associate sound designer for The 1491’s Between Two Knees, and was the assistant sound designer/engineer for El Huracán. Her other credits include Hamlet, YELL,
Trouble in Mind, blues for miss lucille (David Geffen School of Drama); Let’s Go To The Moon, bodyssey, Truck II (Yale Cabaret); Dracula, The Winter’s Tale (Interlochen Arts Academy); and Twin Size Beds (The Public Theater’s Under the Radar Festival). Emily is the producer for Classical Sprouts, a classical music podcast for kids by Interlochen Public Radio. She holds a B.A. in music from Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, and an M.F.A. in sound design from David Geffen School of Drama at Yale. Her M.F.A. thesis, This Nostalgic Earth, explored emotional connections to the natural world through sound and music. emilyduncanwilson.com
Casting Director:
Tara Rubin, C.S.A. has been casting at Yale Rep since 2004. Selected Broadway/National Tours: KPOP, Mr. Saturday Night, Six, Ain’t Too Proud, King Kong, The Band’s Visit, Prince of Broadway, Indecent, Bandstand, Sunset Boulevard, Miss Saigon, Dear Evan Hansen, A Bronx Tale, Cats, Falsettos, School of Rock, Les Misérables, The Heiress, The Phantom of the Opera, Billy Elliot, Shrek, Spamalot, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, The Producers, Mamma Mia!, Jersey Boys. Off-
Broadway: Gloria: A Life, Smokey Joe’s Café, Jersey Boys, Here Lies Love.
Regional: Paper Mill Playhouse, La Jolla Playhouse, The Old Globe, Bucks County Playhouse, Westport Country Playhouse. Film: Billy Crystal’s Here Today. tararubincasting.com
16
Playwright:
Leah Nanako Winkler is a Japanese American playwright from Kamakura, Japan, and Lexington, Kentucky. Her plays include Kentucky (Page 73/ Ensemble Studio Theater), God Said This (Primary Stages/Humana Festival of New American Plays), Death for Sydney Black (terraNova Collective), Two Mile Hollow (simultaneous world premiere: First Floor Theater, Artist’s at Play, Theater Mu/Mixed Blood, Ferocious Lotus), Hot Asian Doctor Husband (Theater Mu), and NevadaTan (Audible), and more. Accolades include the Yale Drama Series Prize, Peabody Award, the Francesca Primus Prize, the Mark O’Donnell Prize, the Jerome New York Fellowship, and most recently a Steinberg Playwright Award. TV: Ramy, New Amsterdam, Love Life. She is a member of Ensemble Studio Theater, Ma Yi Lab, East West Players Writers Group. She serves on the board of Page 73. MFA: Brooklyn College.
Vocal Coach:
Grace Zandarski is Associate Chair of the Acting program and Head of Voice and Text at David Geffen School of Drama, where she has taught Voice since 2002. She has coached numerous productions at Yale Rep and the Geffen School including An Enemy of the People, Hamlet, The Caucasian Chalk Circle, and Between Two Knees. New York coaching credits include Mike
Nichols’s productions of Death of a Salesman and Betrayal (Broadway), The Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide… (The Public Theater), and Homebody/ Kabul (BAM). She was named Associate Teacher of Fitzmaurice Voicework in 1998. Grace is CoArtistic Director of The Actors Center Workshop Company, a company member of Pantheatre (Paris), SAGAFTRA, AEA, and VASTA. Acting credits include McCarter Theatre, OSF Ashland,, Wilma Theatre, and ACT. Directing credits include the Peer Gynt Project and Chekhov Shorts.
M.F.A., American Conservatory Theater; B.A., Princeton University.
Lighting Designer:
Graham Zellers is a fourth-year lighting design student at David Geffen School of Drama, where his credits include Affinity, Bodas de sangre/Blood Wedding, and Hamlet, as well as We are Proud to Present..., and There’s a Thing at the End of the Loop at Yale Cabaret. Other previous positions held include Lighting Director at Gulfshore Playhouse in Naples, FL and Lighting Supervisor at Glimmerglass Festival in Cooperstown, NY.
Graham received his B.A. in theater design and technology from Ball State University. Other work can be found at zellersdesign.com
17
The Brightest Thing in the World
Artistic
Assistant Director: Karen Eskenazi
Assistant Scenic Designer:
Patti Panyakaew
Assistant Costume Designer: Micah Ohno
Assistant Lighting Designers: Ankit Pandey
Yichen Zhou
Associate Sound Designer: Joe Krempetz
Assistant Sound Designer and Engineer:
Minjae Kim
Casting Associate:
Frankie Ramirez
Production
Associate Production Manager:
Twaha Abdul Majeed
Associate Technical Directors: Nicolas Benavides
Alex Theisen
Assistant Properties Supervisor:
Bennet Goldberg
Production Electrician:
Luanne Jubsee
Technical Designer: Ben Clark
Light Board Programmer
Jasmine Moore
Run Crew:
Fanny Abib-Rozenberg
Jacob Basri
Josie Cooper
Mariah Copeland
Hannah Louise Jones
Saida Joshua-Smith
M.L. Roberts
Administration
Associate Managing Director: Sarah Scafidi
Management Assistants:
Fanny Abib-Rozenberg
Jeremy Landes
Roman Sanchez
Maya Louise Shed
Company Manager:
Annabel Guevara
Assistant Company Managers:
Sarah Machiko Haber
Ramona Li
Mikayla Stanley
House Managers:
Ramona Li
Jason Gray
Special Thanks
Arel Studios, Beth Blickers, Jacquie Katz, Kevin Lin, Cara Masline, Ryan Murphy, Rita Natale and the folks at CCAR, Theodore Nicholas, Anna O’Donoghue, Sarah Snider, Ethan Stern, Grace Parker, Portland Center Stage, Mikey Rohrer, Susan Soon He Stanton, Krista Williams
And the playwright also thanks everyone she interviewed for this project (you know who you are) and every actor and creative person who helped in the development of this play.
18
YALE REPERTORY THEATRE STAFF
Artistic Director:
James Bundy
Managing Director:
Florie Seery
Associate Artistic Director, Director of New Play Programs:
Jennifer Kiger
General Manager:
Carla L. Jackson
ARTISTIC
Resident Artists
Playwright in Residence:
Tarell Alvin McCraney
Resident Directors:
Lileana Blain-Cruz
Liz Diamond
Tamilla Woodard
Dramaturgy Advisor:
Amy Boratko
Resident Dramaturg:
Catherine Sheehy
Set Design Advisor:
Riccardo Hernández
Resident Set Designer:
Michael Yeargan
Costume Design Advisors:
Oana Botez
Ilona Somogyi
Resident Costume Designer:
Toni-Leslie James
Lighting Design Advisors:
Alan C. Edwards
Stephen Strawbridge
Sound Design Advisor:
Mikaal Sulaiman
Voice and Text Advisor:
Grace Zandarski
Resident Fight and Intimacy Directors:
Kelsey Rainwater
Michael Rossmy
Stage Management Advisor:
Narda E. Alcorn
Associate Artists:
52nd Street Project
Kama Ginkas
Mark Lamos
MTYZ Theatre/Moscow
New Generation Theatre
Bill Rauch
Sarah Ruhl
Henrietta Yanovskaya
Artistic Management
Production Stage Manager: James Mountcastle
Senior Artistic Producer:
Amy Boratko
Artistic Associate:
Kay Perdue Meadows
Artistic Fellow:
Jisun Kim
Casting: Tara Rubin, C.S.A.
Merri Sugarman, C.S.A.
Claire Burke, C.S.A.
Peter Van Dam, C.S.A.
Felicia Rudolph, C.S.A.
Xavier Rubiano, C.S.A.
Kevin Metzger-Timson, C.S.A.
Spencer Gualdoni
Olivia Paige West
Frankie Ramirez
Senior Administrative Assistant to the Artistic Director and Associate Artistic Director:
Josie Brown
Senior Administrative Assistant for Directing, Dramaturgy and Dramatic Criticism, Playwriting, and Stage Management: Laurie Coppola
Senior Administrative Assistant for Design: Kate Begley Baker
Senior Administrative Assistant for the Acting Program:
Krista DeVellis
Arts Librarian: Tess Colwell
PRODUCTION
Production Management
Director of Production:
Shaminda Amarakoon
Production Manager:
Jonathan Reed
Production Manager for Studio Projects and Special Events:
C. Nikki Mills
Senior Administrative Assistant to Production and Theater Safety:
Grace O’Brien
Scenery
Technical Director for Yale Rep:
Neil Mulligan
Technical Directors for David Geffen School of Drama:
Latiana “LT” Gourzong
Matt Welander
Electro Mechanical Laboratory Supervisor: Eric Lin
Scene Shop Supervisor: Eric Sparks
Senior Lead Carpenter: Matt Gaffney
Lead Carpenters: Ryan Gardner
Kat McCarthey
Sharon Reinhart
Libby JollyStone
Carpenters: Rose Bochansky
Doug Kester
Joel Morain
Painting
Paint Shop Supervisor:
Ru-Jun Wang
Scenic Artists: Lia Akkerhuis
Nathan Jasunas
Scenic Painting Intern: Marcus Fort
19
YALE REPERTORY THEATRE STAFF
Properties
Properties Supervisor:
Jennifer McClure
Properties Craftsperson: David P. Schrader
Properties Associate:
Zach Faber
Properties Stock Manager: Mark Dionne
Properties Intern:
Bennet Goldberg
Costumes
Costume Shop Manager: Christine Szczepanski
Senior Drapers:
Clarissa Wylie Youngberg
Mary Zihal
Senior First Hands:
Deborah Bloch
Patricia Van Horn
Costume Project Coordinator:
Linda Kelley-Dodd
Costume Stock Manager: Jamie Farkas
Additional Costume Staff:
Judianne Wallace
Electrics
Lighting Supervisor:
Donald W. Titus
Senior House Electricians:
Jennifer Carlson
Linda-Cristal Young
Electricians:
Alary Sutherland
Racheal Daigneault
Eitan Acks
Electrics Intern:
Jasmine Moore
Sound Sound Supervisor:
Mike Backhaus
Lead Sound Engineer:
Stephanie Smith
Sound Interns:
Saida Joshua-Smith
Zoey Lin
Projections
Acting Projection Supervisor: Eric Lin
Projection Engineer: Mike Paddock
Projection Intern: Erin Sims
Stage Operations
Stage Carpenter: Janet Cunningham
Lead Wardrobe Supervisor: Elizabeth Bolster
Lead Properties Runner: William Ordynowicz
Lead Light Board Programmer
David Willmore
FOH Mix Engineer:
Abe Joyner-Meyers
ADMINISTRATION
General Management
Associate Managing Directors:
Sarah Scafidi
Matthew Sonnenfeld
Senior Administrative Assistant to the Managing Director and General Manager:
Emalie Mayo
Management Assistants: Andrew Aaron Valdez
Fanny Abib-Rozenberg
Jeremy Landes
Company Manager:
Annabel Guevara
Assistant Company Managers:
Sarah Machiko Haber
Ramona Li
Mikayla Stanley
Development and Alumni Affairs
Director of Development and Alumni Affairs:
Deborah S. Berman
Senior Associate Director of Institutional Giving:
Janice Muirhead
Senior Associate Director of Operations for Development and Alumni Affairs:
Susan C. Clark
Associate Director of Development Communications and Alumni Affairs:
Casey Grambo
Senior Administrative Assistant to Development and Alumni Affairs:
Jennifer E. Alzona
Development Associate:
Delaney Kelley
Development Assistant:
Mikayla Stanley
Finance, Human Resources, and Digital Technology
Finance Consultants:
Regina Bejnerowicz
Katherine D. Burgueño
Denise Zaczek
Director of Human Resources:
Trinh DiNoto
Director, Yale Tessitura Consortium, and Web Technology:
Janna J. Ellis
Manager, Business Operations:
Martha Boateng
Digital Communications Associate:
George Tinari
Interim Business Office Analyst: Win Knowles
Business Office Specialists:
Aditya Agarwal
Moriah Clarke
Andrea Valcourt
Digital Technology Associates:
Edison Dule
Garry Heyward
20
Senior Administrative Assistant to Business Office, Digital and Web Technology, Operations, and Tessitura:
Shainn Reaves
Database Application Consultants:
Ben Silvert
Erich Bolton
Bo Du
Marketing, Communications, and Audience Services
Director of Marketing:
Daniel Cress
Director of Communications:
Steven Padla
Senior Associate Director of Marketing and Communications:
Caitlin Griffin
Assistant Director of Marketing and Communications:
Jacob Santos
Senior Administrative Assistant for Marketing and Communications:
Mishelle Raza
Publications Manager:
Marguerite Elliott
Publications Assistant:
Patrick Ball
Marketing Assistant:
Maya Louise Shed
Production Photographer:
Joan Marcus
Art and Design:
Paul Evan Jeffrey/ Passage Design
Videographer:
David Kane
Director of Audience Services:
Laura Kirk
Assistant Director of Audience Services:
Shane Quinn
Subscriptions Coordinator:
Tracy Baldini
Audience Services Associate:
Molly Leona
Customer Service and Safety Officers
Ralph Black, Jr.
Kevin Delaney
Ed Jooss
John Marquez—on leave
Box Office Assistants:
Sydney Raine Garick
Jordan Graf
Lucy Harvey
Aaron Magloire
Kenneth Murray
a.k. payne
Dominic Sullivan
Jessica Wang
Ushers:
Tracy Bennett
Danielys Batista
Maura Bozeman
Denny Burke
Regina Carson
Amalia Crevani
Gerson Espinoza Campos
Nina Gaither
Madi Garfinkle
Lydia Gompper
Elli Herzog
Şeyma Kaya
Spencer Knoll
Di’Jhon McCoy
Justin Meadows
Keenan Miller
Bonnie Moeller
William Romain
Jana Ross
Joe Webb
Larsson Youngberg
Theater Safety and Occupational Health
Director of Theater Safety and Occupational Health/ COVID Compliance Manager:
Anna Glover
COVID Compliance Coordinator:
Amy Stern
Associate Safety Advisor:
Megan Birdsong
Operations
Director of Facility
Operations:
Nadir Balan
Operations Associate:
Brandon Fuller
Operations Assistant:
Kelvin Essilfie
Arts and Graduate Studies
Superintendents:
Jennifer Draughn
Francisco Eduardo Pimentel
Custodial Team Leaders:
Andrew Mastriano
Sherry Stanley
Facility Stewards:
Ronald Douglas
Marcia Riley
Custodians:
Rodney Heard
Andrew Martino
James Hansberry
Sybil Bell
Jerome Sonia
Willia Grant
Melloney Lucas
Tylon Frost
The Scenic, Costume, Lighting, and Sound Designers in LORT are represented by United Artists Local USA-829, IATSE.
Yale Repertory Theatre operates under an agreement between the League of Resident Theatres (LORT) and Actors’ Equity Association (AEA), the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.
The Brightest Thing in the World, November 25–December 17, 2022, Yale Repertory Theatre, 1120 Chapel Street, New Haven, Connecticut.
ACCESSIBILITY SERVICES AND TEAM
December 10 at 2PM
Audio Description
Pre-show description begins at 1:45PM
A live narration of the play’s action, sets, and costumes for patrons who are blind or have low vision.
December 10 at 8PM
American Sign Language (ASL)
An ASL-interpreted performance for patrons who are deaf or have hearing loss.
December 17 at 2PM
Open Captioning
A digital display of the play’s dialogue as it’s spoken for patrons who are deaf or have hearing loss.
Available at the concierge desk in the theater lobby:
Open Captioner: David Chu/c2inc (caption coalition) is a 501(c)3 nonprofit consultant and the leading provider of professional Live Performance Captioning (sm) for theatrical and cultural presentations. c2 members hold the distinction of being the very first to caption live theater (the Paper Mill Playhouse, NJ), the first to debut on Broadway and Off-Broadway, and have introduced open captioning in prestigious theaters across the country and in London. Captioning in theater has gained momentum and acceptance by theatergoers since its debut in 1996. It addresses the needs of a far larger audience of hard of hearing and deaf people, which includes those who do not use sign language, are late deafened, not self-identified with hearing loss, and those who simply might have missed a punch line.
Audio Describer:
Marydell Merrill is an audio describer for Yale Rep and Hartford Stage and the Artistic Director of Hamden High School’s Mainstage Ensemble. She has participated in Yale Rep’s WILL POWER!; the Connecticut Association for Physical Fitness, Health, Recreation, and Dance; as a Master Teaching Artist for Breakdancing Shakespeare at Hartford Stage; and several regional and national educational theater festivals and conferences.
For more about Yale Rep’s accessibility services, please contact Laura Kirk, Director of Audience Services: 203.432.1522
laura.kirk@yale.edu
Marydell is a national theater performance adjudicator and a member of the national screening team of exemplary high school theatrical productions for the Educational Theatre Association. She is the former State Director of Connecticut Thespians and an Educational Theatre Association affiliate. Awards: Northeast Educational Theatre Festival Hall of Fame, 2014; Inspirational Theatre Educator Award from the International Thespian Society,
22
YOUTH PROGRAMS
2014; Connecticut Theatre Educator of the Year from the Connecticut Chapter of the International Thespian Society, 2017. Her work with middle school students was featured in the fall 2014 issue of Teaching Theatre published by the Educational Theatre Association. She is a member of Actors’ Equity Association and has performed with several companies including Long Wharf Theatre and Connecticut Free Shakespeare.
ASL Interpreters:
Lucy Annett is a queer, BIPOC, San Diego-based ASL interpreter with over 20 years of experience. She has interpreted for multiple shows including Wild Swans (American Repertory Theater), Candide (Huntington Theatre Company), Snow in Midsummer (Oregon Shakespeare Festival), and Cabaret (Cygnet Theatre, San Diego). She has interpreted under the direction of ASL consultants including Sarah Hafer, Kelly Kim, and Mikey Krajnak. She is thrilled and grateful to make her debut at Yale Rep. Many thanks to her loved ones, particularly her kiddo for their incredible support.
Katrina Clark (she/her/they) has interpreted for performances of Titus Andronicus (Faction of Fools) and Gilgamesh (Constellation Theatre) featuring Deaf artists, The Picture of Dorian Gray and Three Men in a Boat (Synetic Theater), and A Guide to Dancing Naked (Capital Fringe), as well as a myriad of post-show discussions and other audience interactions. She was Voice Director for Julius Caesar at Gallaudet University, providing English voiceover access for Shakespearean ASL, and a curriculum builder and cofacilitator for Maryland Theatre Interpreter Training to bolster capacity and equity for performance interpreting teams of DASLs and interpreters.
WILL POWER! is Yale Rep’s annual educational initiative, designed to bring middle and high school students to see live theater. Since our 2003–04 season, WILL POWER! has served more than 20,000 Connecticut students and educators. In 2022–23, we will offer programming centered on Mojada: A Medea in Los Angeles to New Haven Public Schools students and educators. The program has included early school-time matinees, free or heavily subsidized tickets, study guides, and post-performance discussions with actors and members of the creative teams. WILL POWER! is committed to giving teachers curricular support through free workshops and professional development about the content and themes of the plays.
THE DWIGHT/EDGEWOOD PROJECT (D/EP)
is a community engagement program of Yale Rep and David Geffen School of Drama for middle school-aged students from Barnard Environmental Science and Technology Magnet School, a K-8 school located on the edge of the Dwight and Edgewood neighborhoods in New Haven. The students are paired with mentors from the Geffen School to write their own plays. The month-long program begins in late May, culminating in fully produced plays performed by the Yale mentors and presented for the New Haven community in late June.
Yale Rep’s youth programs are supported in part by: NewAlliance Foundation
23
As part of Yale Rep’s commitment to our community, we provide two significant youth programs.
Esme Usdan
DAVID GEFFEN SCHOOL OF DRAMA BOARD OF ADVISORS
John B. Beinecke YC ’69, Chair
Jeremy Smith ’76, Vice Chair
Nina Adams MS ’69, NUR ’77
Rudy Aragon LAW ’79
Amy Aquino ’86
John Badham ’63, YC ’61
Pun Bandhu ’01
Sonja Berggren Special Research Fellow ’13
Frances Black ’09
Carmine Boccuzzi YC ’90, LAW ’94
Lynne Bolton
Clare Brinkley
Sterling B. Brinkley, Jr. YC ’74
Kate Burton ’82
James Chen ’08
Lois Chiles
Patricia Clarkson ’85
Edgar M. Cullman III ’02, YC ’97
Michael David ’68
Michael Diamond ’90
Polly Draper ’80, YC ’77
Charles S. (Roc) Dutton ’83
Sasha Emerson ’84
Lily Fan YC ’01, LAW ’04
Terry Fitzpatrick ’83
Marc Flanagan ’70
Anita Pamintuan Fusco YC ’90
David Marshall Grant ’78
David Alan Grier ’81
Sally Horchow YC ’92
Ellen Iseman YC ’76
David G. Johnson YC ’78
Rolin Jones ’04
Sarah Long ’92, YC ’85
Cathy MacNeil-Hollinger ’86
Brian Mann ’79
Drew McCoy
David Milch YC ’66
Jennifer Harrison Newman ’11
Carol Ostrow ’80
Tracy Chutorian Semler YC ’86
Tony Shalhoub ’80
Michael Sheehan ’76
Anna Deavere Smith HON ’14
Andrew Tisdale
Edward Trach ’58
Esme Usdan YC ’77
Courtney B. Vance ’86
Donald R. Ware YC ’71
Shana C. Waterman YC ’94, LAW ’00
Henry Winkler ’70
Amanda Wallace Woods ’03
you to the generous contributors to David Geffen School of Drama and Yale Repertory Theatre
LEADERSHIP SOCIETY ($50,000+)
Anonymous
John B. Beinecke
Sonja Berggren and Patrick Seaver
Estate of James T. Brown*
Lois Chiles
The Roy Cockrum Foundation
Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development
Estate of Nicholas Diggs*
Estate of Richard Diggs*
Anita Pamintuan Fusco and Dino Fusco
David Geffen Foundation
The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation
David G. Johnson
Victoria B. Mars
Richard Ostreicher
Estate of June M. Rosenblatt
The Shubert Foundation
Jeremy Smith
Stephen Timbers
Nesrin and Andrew Tisdale
Edward Trach
Esme Usdan
GUARANTORS
($25,000–$49,999)
James and Deborah Burrows Foundation
Sarah Long
Neil Mazzella
National Endowment for the Arts
Talia Shire Schwartzman
Estate of Eugene Shewmaker*
The Sir Peter Shaffer
Charitable Foundation
Donald R. Ware
Estate of William Swan*
BENEFACTORS
($10,000–$24,999)
Nina Adams and Moreson Kaplan
Americana Arts Foundation
Rudy Aragon
Carmine Boccuzzi and Bernard Lumpkin
Lynne and Roger Bolton
Burry Fredrik Foundation
Wendy Davies
Michael Diamond
Educational Foundation of America
In honor of Neville and Dorothy Etwaroo
Mabel Burchard Fischer Grant Foundation
Lucille Lortel Foundation
Cathy MacNeil-Hollinger and Mark Hollinger
Tracy Chutorian Semler
Michael and Riki Sheehan
Estate of Merrill L. Sindler*
Carol L. Sirot
Trust for Mutual Understanding
PATRONS
($5,000–$9,999)
Foster Bam
Pun Bandhu
Richard C. Beacham
Santino Blumetti
James Bundy and Anne Tofflemire
Ian Calderon
Janet Ciriello
CT Humanities
Michael S. David
Scott Delman
Robert and Mercedes Eichholz Foundation
Terry Fitzpatrick
Barbara and Richard Franke*
Howard Gilman Foundation
The Jesse & Dorothy Hartman Foundation
Brian Tyree Henry
Sally Horchow
Ellen Iseman in memory of Marjorie
Frankenthaler Iseman
Rolin Jones
Rocco Landesman
Tien-Tsung Ma
Brian Mann
Tarell Alvin McCraney
Roz and Jerry Meyer
David and Leni Moore
Family Foundation
James Munson *deceased
24
Thank
Jason Najjoum
NewAlliance Foundation
Carol Ostrow
Bill and Sharon Reynolds
PRODUCER’S CIRCLE ($2,500–$4,999)
Anonymous
Frances Black
JANA Foundation
Ann Judd and Bennett Pudlin
Fred Gorelick and Cheryl MacLachlan
George Lindsay, Jr.
Abby Roth and R. Lee Stump
DIRECTOR’S CIRCLE ($1,000–$2,499)
Donna Alexander
Anonymous
Debby Applegate and Bruce Tulgan
Amy Aquino and Drew McCoy
Paula Armbruster
Mamoudou N. Athie
Richard and Alice Baxter
John Lee Beatty
Kate Burton
Anne and Guido Calabresi
James Chen
Audrey Conrad
Brett Dalton
Elwood and Catherine Davis
Ramon Delgado
Anne S. Erbe
ERJ Fund
Melanie Ginter
Marc Flanagan
Rob Greenberg
Jane Head
Amy Herzog
Suzanne Jackson
Elizabeth Kaiden
Elizabeth Katz and Reed Hundt
Helen Kauder and Barry Nalebuff
Fran Kumin
The Ethel & Abe Lapides Foundation
Kenneth Lewis
Neil Mulligan
Jim and Eileen Mydosh
Barbara and William Nordhaus
Amy Povich
Kathy and George Priest
Pam and Jeff Rank
Lance Reddick
Dr. Michael Rigsby and Prof. Richard Lalli
Elaine Ring
Douglas and Terri Robinson
Russ Rosensweig
Ben and Laraine Sammler
Slotznick Family Fund, a charitable fund of The Foundation for Enhancing Communities
Shepard and Marlene Stone
Matthew Suttor
John Thomas III
Courtney B. Vance
Carol M. Waaser
Clifford L. Warner
Shana C. Waterman
Carolyn Seely Wiener
Steven Waxler
PARTNERS ($500–$999)
Actors’ Equity Foundation
Shaminda Amarakoon
Ashley Bishop
John Bourdeaux
Joy Carlin
Joan Channick and Ruth Hein Schmitt*
Sarah Bartlo Chaplin
Sean Cullen
Bob and Priscilla Dannies
Rick Davis
Robert Dealy
Aziz Dehkan and Barbara Moss
Kelvin Dinkins, Jr. and Alexis Rodda
Sasha Emerson
Peter Entin
Jon Farley
Glen R. Fasman
Randy Fullerton
Tony Foreman
Geballe Family
Peter Gerwe
LT Gourzong
William J. Grambo
Eduardo Groisman
Regina Guggenheim
William B. Halbert
Andy Hamingson
Judy Hansen
Carl Holvick
Peter Hunt
Pam Jordan
Roger Kenvin
Blair Kohan
Eric Lin
Harvey Kliman and Sandra Stein
Nancy F. Lyon
Virginia (Wendy) Riggs Lyons in memory of Robert W. Lyons
John McAndrew
Susie Medak and Greg Murphy
Jonathan Miller
Janice Muirhead
Janet Oetinger
Arthur Oliner
F. Richard Pappas
Louise Perkins and Jeff Glans
Point Harbor Fund of the Maine Community Foundation
Alec Purves
Howard Rogut
Florie Seery
Anna Deavere Smith
Matthew Specter and Marjan Mashhadi
Dr. and Mrs. Dennis D. Spencer
James Steerman
Kenneth J. Stein
David Sword
Matthew Tanico
Sylvia Van Sinderen and James Sinclair
Paul Walsh
Vera Wells
Ray Werner
Walton Wilson
Steven Wolff
Amanda Wallace Woods
Yaro Yarashevich
Albert Zuckerman
INVESTORS ($250–$499)
Bruce Ackerman and Susan Rose-Ackerman
Narda Alcorn
Alexander Bagnall
Georg’Ann Bona
Susan Brady and Mark Loeffler
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Buckholz
David Budries
Jonathan Busky
Sarah Cain
Lawrence Casey
Paul Cleary
William Connor
Daniel Cooperman and Mariel Harris
Robert Cotnoir
Claire A. Criscuolo
John W. Cunningham
William Curran
F. Mitchell Dana
Laura Davis and David Soper
Dennis Dorn
Dr. Marc Eisenberg
Richard and Barbara Feldman
Joel Fontaine
David Freeman
Eric Gershman and Katie Liberman
Lindy Lee Gold
Linda Greenhouse
Emmy Grinwis
Michael Gross
Barbara Hauptman
Jennifer Hershey
Dale and Stephen Hoffman
Casey Grambo
James Guerry Hood
Chuck Hughes
David Henry Hwang
Joanna and Lee A. Jacobus
Bruce Katzman
Edward Kaye
Alan Kibbe
Amir Kishon
Mitchell Kurtz
Maryanne Lavan and Larry Harris
Bona Lee
Irene Lewis
Jennifer Lindstrom
Jerry Lodynsky
Charles H. Long
Mary Lloyd
Adam Man
Peter Marshall
Edwin Martin
Thomas G. Masse and James M. Perlotto, MD
Deborah McGraw
David Muse
Regina and Thomas Neville
Adam O’Byrne
Edward and Frances O’Neill
Bruce Payne and Jack Thomas
Dw Phineas Perkins
Jeffrey Powell and Adalgisa Caccone
Jon and Sarah Reed
Ted Robb
Brian Robinson
25
Thank you to the generous contributors to David Geffen School
Steve Robman
Erin Rocha
Constanza Romero
Nan Ross
Jean and Ron Rozett
Sarah Ruhl
Robert Sandberg
Suzanne Sato
Robin Sauerteig
Kenneth Schlesinger
Kathleen McElfresh Scott
Paul Selfa
William Skipper
Kenneth Stein
Howard Steinman
Susan Stevens
Wilma and Williams Summers
Bernard Sundstedt
Richard B. Trousdell
George C. White
Guy and Judith Yale
FRIENDS ($100–$249)
Theresa Aldamlouji
Michael Albano
Jeffrey Alexander
Michael Annand
Anonymous
William Armstrong
Clayton Austin
Warren Bass
Michael Baumgarten
Richard Beals
Karen BedrosianRichardson
Ned Blackhawk
Mark Bly
Amy Brewer and David Sacco
Arvin Brown
Donald and Mary Brown
Oscar Brownstein
Stephen Bundy
Katherine and Chava
Burgueño
Richard Butler
Susan Byck
Barbara Bzdyra
David Calica
Kathryn A. Calnan
Juliana Canfield
H. Lloyd Carbaugh
Vincent Cardinal
Sami Joan Casler
Gus Christiansen
King-Fai Chung
Nicholas Cimmino
Cynthia Clair
Aaron Copp
Jane Cox
Douglas and Roseline
Crowley
Anne Danenberg
Timothy Davidson
Cathy Davies-Harmon
Mr. and Mrs. Paul
DeCoster
Penney Detchon
Connie and Peter Dickinson
Derek DiGregorio
Melinda DiVicino
Megan and Leon Doyon
Samuel Duncan
John Duran
Terry Dwyer
Ann D’Zmura
Laura Eckelman
William Eckerd
Phoebe and Kem Edwards
Fran Egler
Robert Einienkel
Nancy Reeder El Bouhali
Janann Eldredge
Donald Engelman
Dirk Epperson
David Epstein
Dustin Eshenroder
Frank and Ellen Estes
Femi Euba
Connie Evans
Jerry Evans
John D. Ezell
Ann Farris
Paul and Susan Birke Fiedler
Terry S. Flagg
Keith Fowler
Adam Frank
Walter M. Frankenberger III
Richard Fuhrman
Gerald E. Gaab
Stephen Gefroh
Carol Gibson-Prugh
Lorraine Golan
Lindy Lee Gold
Betty and Joshua Goldberg
Carol Goldberg
Robert Goldsby
Naomi Grabel
Hannah Grannemann
Steve Grecco
Bigelow Green
David Hale
Stephanie Halene
Amanda Haley
Marion Hampton
Alexander Hammond
Ann Hanley
Scott Hansen
John Harnagel
Charlene Harrington
Babo Harrison
Brian Hastert
James Hazen
Al Heartley
Beth Heller
Robert Heller
Ann Hellerman
Steve Hendrickson
Chris Henry
Brian Herrera
Jeffrey Herrmann
Caite Hevner
Elizabeth Holloway
Nicholas Hormann
Susan Horrowitz
Bruce Horton
Kathleen Houle
Kevin Hourigan
John Howland
Evelyn Huffman
Charles Hughes
Derek Hunt
Peter H. Hunt
John Huntington
John W. Jacobsen
Chris Jaehnig
Eliot and Lois Jameson
Elizabeth Johnson
Jonathan Kalb
Carol Kaplan
Edward Lapine
Jay B. Keene
Samuel Kelley
Roger Kenvin
Peter Kim
William Kleb
Dr. Lawrence Klein
Deborah Kochevar
Steve Koernig
Bonnie Kramm
Brenda and Justin Kreuzer
David Kriebs
Joan Kron
Mitchell Kurtz
Ojin Kwon
Marie Landry and Peter Aronson
Robert Langdon
James and Cynthia Lawler
Clare Leinweber
Martha Lidji Lazar
Drew Lichtenberg
Elizabeth Lewis
Fred Lindauer
Benjamin Lloyd
Thornton Lockwood
Jerry Lodynsky
Robert Hamilton Long II
Everett Lunning
Andi Lyons
Wendy MacLeod
Marvin March
Edwin Martin
Maria Matasar-Padilla
Amy McCauley
Margaret and Robert McCaw
Robert McDonald
Deborah McGraw
Bill McGuire
Patricia McMahon
Donald Michaelis
Kathryn Milano
George Miller
Jane Ann Miller
Lawrence Mirkin
Jennifer Moeller
Richard Mone
Beth Morrison
Jay Mullen
Kevin Muzin
Tina Navarro
Kaye Neale
Netalia Neparidze
Jennifer Harrison Newman
Kate Newman
Ruth Hunt Newman
Jane Nowosadko
Mark Novom
Deb and Ron Nudel
Adam O’Byrne
Eileen O’Connor
Richard Olson
Alex Organ
Kendric T. Packer
Steven Padla
Michael Parrella
Jeffrey Park
Dr. and Mrs. Michael Parry
Amanda Peiffer
Ruth Perlman
William Peters
Joel Polis
Lisa Porter
Michael Posnick
Gladys Powers
Robert Provenza
William Purves
Norman Redlich
Ralph Redpath
Gail Reen
Barbara Reid
Oakton Reynolds
Lisa Richardson
Elizabeth Riedemann
Joan Robbins
Nathan Roberts
Peter S. Roberts
Lori Robishaw
Chantal Rodriguez
Kevin Rogers
Stu Rohrer
26
of Drama and Yale Repertory Theatre
Robert Rooy
Melissa Rose
Joseph Ross
Donald Rossler
Rebecca Rugg
Janet Ruppert
John Barry Ryan
Dr. Robert and Marcia
Safirstein
Steven Saklad
Robert Sandberg
Donald Sanders
Cynthia Santos-DeCure
Adam Saunders
Peggy Sasso
Joel Schechter
Anne Schenck
Kenneth Schlesinger
Georg Schreiber
Jennifer Schwartz
Patrick Seeley
Ellen Seltzer
Subrata K. Sen
Paul Serenbetz
Sandra Shaner
Morris Sheehan
Lorraine Siggins
William and Elizabeth Sledge
Gilbert and Ruth Small
E. Gray Smith, Jr.
George Smith
Helena L. Sokoloff
Suzanne Solensky and Jay Rozgonyi
Charles Steckler
Louise Stein
John Stevens
Mark Stevens
Michael Strickland
Mark Sullivan
Thomas Sullivan
Erik Sunderman
Jane Suttell
Douglas Taylor
Jane Savitt Tennen
Muriel Test
David F. Toser
Russell L. Treyz
Deb Trout
Carrie Van Hallgren
Adin Walker
Jaylene Wallace
Erik Walstad
Brad Ward
Joan Waricha
Peter White
Robert Wildman
Annick Winokur and Peter Gilbert
June Yearwood
EMPLOYER
MATCHING GIFTS
Aetna Foundation
Ameriprise Financial
Chevron Corporation
Covidien
General Electric Corporation
IBM
Mobil Foundation, Inc.
Pfizer
Procter & Gamble
The Prospect Hill Foundation
Gifts to the For Humanity campaign and David Geffen School of Drama New Facility Fund
Anonymous (3)
Nina Adams and Moreson Kaplan
Amy Aquino and Drew McCoy
Rudy Aragon
John Badham
Pun Bandhu
Frances and Ed Barlow
John B. Beinecke
Sonja Berggren and Patrick Seaver
Carmine Boccuzzi and Bernard Lumpkin
James Bundy and Anne Tofflemire
Lois Chiles
Michael David and Lauren Mitchell
Scott Delman
Michael Diamond and Amy Miller
Estate of Nicholas Diggs*
Estate of Richard Diggs*
Lily Fan
Terry Fitzpatrick
Anita Pamintuan Fusco and Dino Fusco
David Marshall Grant Gilder Foundation
Lane Heard and
Margaret Bauer
Cheryl Henson
Ellen Iseman
David G. Johnson
Rolin Jones
Jane Kaczmarek
Cathy MacNeil-Hollinger and Mark Hollinger
Brian Mann
Jennifer Harrison Newman
Julie Turaj and Rob Pohly
Tracy Chutorian Semler
Michael and Riki
Sheehan
Frances Black and
Matthew Strauss
Andrew and Nesrin
Tisdale
Ed Trach
Esme Usdan
Shana C. Waterman
Amanda Wallace
Woods and Eric Wasserstrom
The Prospect Hill Foundation
Jeremy Smith
Courtney B. Vance
Donald and Susan Ware
Henry Winkler
*deceased
These lists includes current pledges, gifts, and grants received from July 1, 2021, through November 15, 2022.
COMMUNITY SUPPORTERS
MAKE A GIFT! When you make a gift to Yale Rep’s Annual Fund, you support the creative work on our stage and our education programs in Greater New Haven. For more information, or to make a donation, please call Susan Clark, 203.432.1559. You can also give online at yalerep.org/support.
27
®
h e i r l o o m FARM + COASTAL CUISINE 1157 Chapel Street | New Haven, CT 06511 | www.heirloomnewhaven.com | 203.503.3919