2023-24 SEASON
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A Note from the Artistic Director ..... 5 Title Page ................................................. 7 Cast Page ................................................. 8 From Our Dramaturgs 11 Cast Bios................................................. 16 Understudy Bios................................... 18 Creative Team Bios ............................. 19 For This Production ........................... 24 Yale Repertory Theatre Staff .......... 25 Accessibility Services and Team .... 28 Youth Programs 30 David Geffen School of Drama Board of Advisors 31 Our Donors 31 CONTENTS
Yale Repertory Theatre, the internationally celebrated professional theater in residence at David Geffen School of Drama, has championed new work since 1966, producing well over 100 premieres—including two Pulitzer Prize winners and four other nominated finalists—by emerging and established playwrights. Seventeen Yale Rep productions have advanced to Broadway, garnering more than 40 Tony Award nominations and ten Tony Awards. Yale Rep is also the recipient of the Tony Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre. Established in 2008, Yale’s Binger Center for New Theatre has distinguished itself as one of the nation’s most robust and innovative new play programs. To date, the Binger Center has supported the work of more than 70 commissioned artists and underwritten the world premieres and subsequent productions of more than 30 new plays and musicals at Yale Rep and theaters across the country.
MISSION
David Geffen School of Drama and Yale Repertory Theatre train and advance leaders in the practice of every theatrical discipline, making art to inspire joy, empathy, and understanding in the world.
VALUES
Artistry
We expand knowledge to nurture creativity and imaginative expression embracing the complexity of the human spirit.
Belonging
We put people first, centering wellbeing, inclusion, and equity for theatermakers and audiences through anti-racist and anti-oppressive practices.
Collaboration
We build our collective work on a foundation of mutual respect, prizing the contributions and accomplishments of the individual and of the team.
Discovery
We wrestle with compelling issues of our time. Energized by curiosity, invention, bravery, and humor, we challenge ourselves to risk and learn from failure and vulnerability.
YALEREP.ORG
Alma Martinez and Camila Moreno in a scene from Mojada: A Medea in Los Angeles by Luis Alfaro, directed by Laurie Woolery. Photo © Joan Marcus, 2023.
A NOTE FROM THE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR
Welcome to Yale Repertory Theatre and Caryl Churchill’s Escaped Alone!
In a career spanning more than half a century, Caryl Churchill has distinguished herself as one of the English language’s greatest, and most subversive, playwrights. From her earliest professionally produced play, 1972’s Owners (seen at Yale Rep in 2013); to modern masterpieces such as Cloud Nine (1979), Top Girls (1983), and Serious Money (1987, staged here in 2002); and more recent plays including Far Away (2000), A Number (2002), and Love and Information (2013), her work reveals a lifelong engagement with issues related to gender, politics, power, and personal responsibility.
Today’s play is no exception. Reading Escaped Alone a year ago, with my colleagues on the season planning committee, was a gut-wrenching experience; and the play seems only to have grown in relevance in the time since. Set over tea on a series of afternoons in an English garden, the play is by turns deeply funny and harrowing, juxtaposing quotidian chitchat and looming cataclysms.
It has been a joy to see a script as meaningful as this one in the hands of Resident Director Liz Diamond, who marks her 19th production at Yale Rep with this play. I celebrate her collaboration with a creative and production team comprising students, faculty, and alumni of the David Geffen School of Drama. It is a special privilege to showcase the talent and imagination of our quartet of distinguished actors—LaTonya Borsay, Mary Lou Rosato, Sandra Shipley, and Rita Wolf. In the parlance of the day, they are iconic.
Up next, we finish our season with Lloyd Suh’s The Far Country, a finalist for the 2023 Pulitzer Prize in Drama. Directed by Ralph B. Peña, who staged Suh’s The Chinese Lady at Long Wharf Theatre in 2021, the play is set in the wake of the Chinese Exclusion Act and follows a family’s journey from rural Taishan to the Angel Island Detention Center in the hope of making lives for themselves in San Francisco. The show plays April 26–May 18: I hope you will join us!
Thank you for being here today. Whether you are a longtime audience member or first time attendee, your presence inspires us and makes it possible for us to wrestle—in person!—with compelling issues of our time. As always, I look forward to hearing your thoughts about Escaped Alone or any of your experiences at Yale Rep. My email address is james.bundy@yale.edu.
Sincerely,
James Bundy
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MARCH 8–30, 2024
YALE REPERTORY THEATRE
James Bundy, Artistic Director | Florie Seery, Managing Director
PRESENTS
By Caryl Churchill
Directed by Liz Diamond
Scenic Designer
Lia Tubiana
Costume Designer
Yu-Jung Shen 沈毓融
Lighting Designer
Stephen Strawbridge
Sound Designer
Sinan Refik Zafar
Projection Designer
Shawn Lovell-Boyle
Music Director
Liam Bellman-Sharpe
Hair Designer
Matthew Armentrout
Production Dramaturgs
Catherine Sheehy
Karoline Vielemeyer
Technical Director
Keira Jacobs
Vocal and Dialect Coach
Julie Foh
Casting Director
Calleri Jensen Davis
Stage Manager
Charlie Lovejoy
Escaped Alone was first presented by The English Stage Company at The Royal Court Theatre, London, on 28th January 2016. The U.S. premiere was presented at BAM Harvey Theater, New York, on 15th February 2017, directed by James MacDonald.
Escaped Alone is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals on behalf of Samuel French, Inc. concordtheatricals.com
Yale Repertory Theatre gratefully acknowledges Carol L. Sirot for generously funding the 2023–24 season.
Yale Repertory Theatre thanks our 2023–24 season funders:
Season Sponsor:
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Cast in alphabetical order
Mrs. Jarrett ............................................................................................................
LaTonya Borsay
Vi Mary Lou Rosato
Sally .......................................................................................................................... Sandra Shipley
Lena Rita Wolf
Place & Time
Sally’s back garden
A summer afternoon; a number of afternoons.
Escaped Alone is performed without an intermission.
Understudy Cast in alphabetical order
Sally ...........................................................................................................................
Vi
Mrs. Jarrett .........................................................................................................
Chloe Howard
Anna Roman
Lauren F. Walker
Lena Amelia Windom
Assistant Stage Managers
Adam Taylor Foster ................................................................................................
Chloe Xiaonan Liu ................................................................................................................................
Content Guidance
This production contains graphic descriptions of human and environmental apocalypse.
Recording and Photo Policy
The videotaping or making of electronic or other audio and/or visual recordings of this production and distributing recordings or streams in any medium, including the internet, is strictly prohibited, a violation of the author(s)’s rights and actionable under United States copyright law. For more information, please visit: concordtheatricals.com/resources/protecting-artists
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10 N ew H ave n ’s O w n Serious Coffee. S in ce 198 5 Yale A rc h i t ec t u re Buildin g 19 4 Yo rk S t ree t | O pen 7 d a y s un til 9 p m
TEMP(O) WORK:
Caryl Churchill Makes Time for Us
Four older ladies sit in a garden having what the Brits like to call a natter. There’s tea, of course, for what’s a natter without a cuppa? The time is now, the present, though the fact of their decades-long friendships means that their staccato verbal shorthand constantly hales their memories (common and competing) right into the garden with them: families and fashions, jobs and joint pains, triumphs and tristesse. Then, just as our ears adjust to the up tempo of their banter, wham! We’re left asking not only where but when in the world are we? That is the exhilaration of Caryl Churchill’s Escaped Alone
There is no writer working today who has greater faith in the potentialities of time or who possesses a more supple touch or better ear for ringing the changes of those potentialities. Churchill plays time like it’s an accordion, expanding and contracting the unwieldy instrument with tremendous finesse to create sometimes exquisite, sometimes dissonant chords of meaning.
Her facility results from a combination of gift and grit; after all, she’s been at her craft for more than half a century with time not only as her instrument but often as her subject and her medium. Audiences were dazzled in 1979 when her first big success, Cloud Nine, featured a first act set in 1800s colonial Africa and a second act set in 1970s London with characters who age only 25 years in the century that passes during intermission. Her next major work was Top Girls which premiered just three years later and begins with the play’s heroine Marlene hosting women, real and fictional, from different periods of history at dinner in a nice restaurant. 1987’s Serious Money is a murder mystery written largely in rhymed couplets excoriating the ugly rapaciousness of Thatcherite (and Reaganite) economics and deregulation. But Churchill kicks the play off by lifting a scene from Thomas Shadwell’s 1692 play, The Volunteers or The Stock Jobbers; then, without transition, that archaic, 17th-century prose slams into the dazzling present-day jargon from frenzied scenes on the floor of London’s International Financial Futures and Options Exchange.
Of course, Caryl Churchill doesn’t only manipulate temporal adjacency; she’s just as adept at stretching and slowing the inexorable wingèd chariot. Escaped Alone deploys a kind of epiphanic suspension of the tyrant time. Flashes of truth are given the poetic space to allow them to inspire—breathe insight into—character and audience alike.
Then there is the work she does with time on our side of the footlights. Like her acknowledged influence, Samuel Beckett, Caryl Churchill, with her expansive artistic imagination, has become a minimalist to the max, able to distill intense human experiences down to breathtaking brevity. Performances of her most recent plays often don’t outlast the running of an actual hourglass. As you’ll see, that’s true of this play, but when it’s over and done, what a time you will have had!
—Catherine Sheehy, Production Dramaturg
Little Green Apotheosis: A Field Guide to
Throughout centuries of cultivation, the British garden has at once been a place of deep serenity and of world-historical forces as they germinate and collide. In Caryl Churchill’s short masterwork, four contemporary women give voice to how we might see this green space as a physical inflection point, always and already seeding profound change.
Native Plants
Aliena legata
Far from the colorful flower gardens on display from the early modern period, most of Britain’s native flora is green. The popularization of vibrant floral displays peaking in the Victorian era relied on a wide new palette of foreign plants, the spoils of aggressive imperial expansion through violence and plunder. Many of today’s most quintessentially British flowers are of foreign—that is, colonized— provenance: (a) Dahlias, from South Africa; (b) Chrysanthemums, from China; (c) Asters, from North America.
Hotbeds
Socialis mutatio
Britain’s cold, harsh climate would have been prohibitive for new flowers if not for the 17th-century advent of climate-controlled raised beds. These not only allowed plants to grow in more familiar soil but helped them gradually adapt to European conditions. Seen this way, “hotbed for change” appears either like a figure of speech in favor of assimilation, or—as Churchill might have it—like a move toward re-politicizing the garden, exposing the unsettled parts below its surface.
a. b. c.
Escaped Alone
Garden Walls
Occultata consilio
Borders have played multiple roles in the history of garden design in Britain. In the 17th century and before, walls restricted gardens reserved for private contemplation by landed gentry; in the landscape movement of the 18th century, hidden garden walls called ha-has separated livestock from areas newly designated for activity; in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, borders delineated small “rooms” of larger plots as gardens began to mirror domestic spaces; and in the postwar period, tight grids allowed for even allotments as gardening gained popularity with a growing working and middle class. Blurred, too, was the line between egalitarianism and sequestration.
Labyrinths Ambulans per vitam
Employed as Catholic symbols as early as the 16th century in British gardens, these winding, circular pathways symbolized in miniature the penitent’s slow walk through life. The labyrinth, real or implicit, has remained a fixture, turning the smallest plot into a space rich for meditation. While four women can sit reminiscing and reflecting, so too can they see the entire life cycle of a plant as it blooms, dies, and blooms again over the course of a year.
Publics Populi Churchillus
Derby Arboretum (left), Britain’s first public park, opened in 1840 as a democratized green space for the working public who had built the gardens reserved for an exclusive aristocracy. In the nearly two centuries since, industrial agriculture, urban expansion, and gardening programs on TV and radio have extended access to more and more people. In 2024, nearly 90% of British households have gardens; the solitude of the garden, if it can still be called solitude, is one enjoyed by a vast majority of Britons today.
—Georgia Petersen, Production Dramaturg
A World Adrift: Caryl Churchill
During a storm in 1992, nearly twentynine thousand “Friendly Floatees,” including red beavers, blue turtles, green frogs, and most famously yellow ducks, spilled into the Pacific Ocean from a ship on its way from Hong Kong to Tacoma, Washington. The first “survivors” were soon found on Alaskan beaches while others traveled around the globe. After fifteen years, some had made it all the way to European waters and began washing up on British shores. This incident seems like a prank Mother Nature played on us for the way we’ve treated the world, making it a perfect entry point into understanding the universe Caryl Churchill crafts in Escaped Alone
Those thousands of little bits of plastic whimsy that survived salt water, Arctic ice, and the test of time could have been invented by Churchill for this play in which she explores how human convenience and greed can quickly become both disastrous and absurd.
Churchill uses humor—sometimes sly, sometimes wonderfully silly—to tackle a topic so big it can stymie all response: environmental and societal collapse. Her vehicle? Four older women who grew in the fertile soil of her imagination to then be planted in a modest British garden as world messengers. These women take us on a journey through intimate and global topics, guiding us through everything from quotidian, personal squabbles to large existential questions. Sally, Lena, Vi, and Mrs. Jarrett, all weathering their own storms within a chaotic world, find comfort in each other’s company.
Churchill Imagines Apocalypses
That comfort, however, is far from stable as Churchill’s apocalyptic visions of human greed and carelessness taken to satirical extremes function as distorted mirrors of the absurdities of real-life events.
These actual disasters that Churchill’s words inspire us to reflect on, range from mere thoughtlessness—like a gender reveal party causing a wildfire—to deliberately harmful activities such as burning down the Amazon rain forest for farmland to satiate a global desire for beef.
In this vast whirlwind of global unknowns, Sally’s little garden filled with wit, laughter, and perseverance becomes an intimate raft of belonging for these four women and an invitation for everyone else to come aboard.
—Karoline Vielemeyer, Production
Dramaturg
CAST
in alphabetical order
LaTonya Borsay* she/her/hers
(Mrs. Jarrett) is thrilled to return to Yale Repertory Theatre; previous productions at Yale Rep are Jenny in Death of a Salesman and Darlene in dance of the holy ghosts. Other regional theater credits include the role of Grace in The West End (Cincinnati Playhouse), and Delia in Blues for an Alabama Sky (Crossroads Theatre Company). She has also worked at Philadelphia Theater Company, The Passage Theatre Company, Denver Center, and Indiana Repertory. OffBroadway credits include Mistress Prattle in The Saintliness of Margery Kempe, Mrs. Drinkwater in Des Moines (The Flea Theater); Georgia Hayes in The Exonerated (Bleecker Theater); James Baldwin in Civil Sex, and Second Witch in Macbeth (The Public Theater). Television and film credits include The Gilded Age, City on Fire, For Life, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Luke Cage, The Knick, Show Me a Hero, Orange Is the New Black, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Law & Order: SVU, The Wire, ED, Sisterhood of Night, Lights Out, and It Takes Two. Upcoming releases: Netflix’s Eric and FX’s American Sports Story: Gladiator LaTonya is a Beinecke Fellow at David Geffen School of Drama this spring. “Give light and people will find the way.”—Ella Baker.
Mary Lou Rosato* (Vi) Broadway: Once Upon a Mattress, The Suicide, The School for Scandal, The Inspector General. Off-Broadway: Henry V, The Skin of Our Teeth (Theatre for a New Audience); The Government Inspector (Red Bull); The Misanthrope, The Winter’s Tale (Classic Stage Company); King Philip’s Head Is Still on That Pike Just Down the Road (Clubbed Thumb). The Acting Company (seven seasons): The School for Scandal (Drama Desk Award), The Robber Bridegroom (Drama Desk nomination), The Cradle Will Rock (Off-Broadway/Old Vic, London). Regional: American Repertory Theater, Guthrie Theater, Old Globe, Mark Taper Forum, Shakespeare Theatre, South Coast Rep, McCarter, Yale Rep (Elizabeth: Almost by Chance a Woman, The Alchemist), and St. Nicholas/ Chicago (Jeff Awards: The Primary English Class, The Curse of an Aching Heart). Television/film: Warehouse
13, Law & Order: SVU, Titus, Caroline in the City, Two Bits, Quiz Show, The Hudsucker Proxy, The Wedding Banquet, Illuminata, Spike of Bensonhurst. Mary Lou is a Lecturer in Acting at David Geffen School of Drama, CalArts (CoHead, B.F.A. acting program), Tisch at NYU, Stella Adler, BADA in Oxford. Directing credits include As You Like It (Juilliard), Henry V (TAC), The Beaux’ Stratagem (Pearl Theater), Richard II (Creative Pulse, LA). Member AEA, SAGAFTRA, SDC. Founding Member of The Acting Company. Education: Juilliard Drama (Group 1). Mary Lou is a Beinecke Fellow at David Geffen School of Drama this spring.
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Sandra Shipley* (Sally) was born and raised in England. She attended New College of Speech and Drama and was a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company, appeared at the Royal Court and on the West End, and in regional repertory. Broadway credits include Present Laughter with Kevin Kline, Indiscretions, Pygmalion, The Importance of Being Earnest, Vincent in Brixton, Equus, and Retreat from Moscow. Off-Broadway: Venus, Stuff Happens (The Public Theater); Suddenly Last Summer (Roundabout); The Daughter in Law, Hindle Wakes (Mint), Phaedra in Delirium (Classic Stage Company), Gentleman Prefer Blondes (Encores), Man in Snow (La MaMa). National and International tours: Anything Goes and Blithe Spirit with Angela Lansbury. Regional: Williamstown Theatre Festival, Shakespeare Theatre Company in D.C., McCarter, The Old Globe, Guthrie, ART, Long Wharf Theatre, Humana Festival. Previously at Yale Rep: You Never Can Tell, The Way of the World, The Adventures of Amy Bock, and Venus. Sandra is a Beinecke Fellow at David Geffen School of Drama this spring.
Rita Wolf* she/her/hers (Lena)
Recent theater: Out of Time at The Public Theater and Edward Albee’s A Delicate Balance for The Transport Group, both coproductions with NAATCO. Other recent credits include The Michaels and What Happened? The Michaels Abroad, the final two installments of Richard Nelson’s Rhinebeck Plays (The Public Theater and Hunter College); the world premiere of Tony Kushner’s Homebody/Kabul at New York Theatre Workshop, Mark Taper Forum, and BAM; David Grieg’s The American Pilot (MTC, Drama Desk nomination: Featured Actress); David Hare’s Stuff Happens (The Public Theater); Hammad Chaudhry’s An Ordinary Muslim (New York Theatre Workshop); and Lorca’s The House of Bernarda Alba (Mark Taper Forum). Television and film work includes My Beautiful Laundrette (Hanif Kureishi/Stephen Frears), Girl Six directed by Spike Lee, Law & Order, and The Good Wife. Audio work includes Madhuri Shekar’s Evil Eye for Audible (Winner, Audie for Best original work 2020). Rita also has extensive theater, film, and television credits in the UK and is the co-founder of the London-based Kali Theatre Company which exclusively produces and promotes the work of South Asian female playwrights. In her free time, she studies yoga and the classical Indian dance form, Bharatnatyam. Rita is a Beinecke Fellow at David Geffen School of Drama this spring.
*Member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.
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UNDERSTUDY CAST in alphabetical
order
Chloe Howard (understudy for Sally) is a second-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama. She is the co-creator and lead of VIRAL, a web series that premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival and subsequently screened at SeriesFest and Stareable Fest LA, where she was nominated for Best in Acting. Chloe grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area, attended Northwestern University, and most recently lived in New York where she acted in several developmental processes for new plays and musicals. chloe-howard.com
Anna Roman she/her (understudy for Vi) is a second-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama, where she has been seen in Uncle Vanya, Fucking A, and How to Live on Earth. Other credits include stray dogs by comfort ifeoma katchy and The Lighthouse Keepers (Yale Cabaret); The Dreamer Examines His Pillow (Tampa Repertory Theatre); Cannabis Passover by Sofya-Levitsky Weitz, and Pride and Prejudice (Chautauqua Theater Company). She has a B.F.A. in theater performance from the University of Florida. She is honored to be making her Yale Rep understudy debut with this dream of a group and alongside her brilliant teacher, Mary Lou. Love always to her family and E. @a.rom
Lauren F. Walker (understudy for Mrs. Jarrett) is a second-year actor at David Geffen School of Drama, where her credits include Cleansed, The Alley, and Furlough’s Paradise. As an artist who is dedicated to telling stories that make space for the complexities of humanity, Lauren is honored to uplift this story. Lauren’s previous credits include Charmed (MCC), Cullud Wattah (The Public Theater), That Damn Michael Che (HBO), and Bad Monkey (Apple TV+). Lauren would like to send a special thank you to God, her family, and her support system here at Yale. LaurenFWalker.com | @lovevolvz
Amelia Windom she/her (understudy for Lena) is in her fourth year at David Geffen School of Drama, where she was seen in Measure for Measure, HELLYOUTALMBOUT, Marys Seacole, and Affinity. Previous theater credits include A Christmas Carol, Wonderous Strange, Coffee Break (Actors Theatre of Louisville); and The Piano Teacher (Kitchen Theatre Company). Television credits include Law & Order: SVU, The Sinner, High Fidelity, and The Flight Attendant Amelia received her B.F.A. in acting from Ball State University.
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CREATIVE TEAM in alphabetical order
Matthew Armentrout (Hair Designer) previously worked at Yale Rep on Wish You Were Here, The Brightest Thing in the World, Edward Albee’s 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).
Liam Bellman-Sharpe (Music Director) is a multi-disciplinary practitioner working primarily in sound and music for live performance. Liam specializes in devising unique musical and sonic scores and environments for theater, dance, installation, and hybrid forms, as well as designing sound delivery systems and digital tools to realize these scores. As a composer, sound designer, orchestrator, musician, and music director, Liam’s work has been heard in the United States, Europe, Hong Kong, and Australia. Liam holds an M.F.A. in sound design from David Geffen School of Drama, and a B.H.Mus from the Melbourne Conservatorium of music. Liam’s theatrical credits include A Midsummer Night’s Dream (The Classical Theatre of Harlem); Everybody (Yale Dramat); Manning, Mr. Burns: a post-electric play, shakespeare’s as u like it, and The Tempest (the Geffen School); The American Unicorn (Long Wharf Theatre); Bakkhai (Yale Summer Cabaret); The Ugly One, Mud, Phosphene, and Camille: A Tearjerker (Yale Cabaret). With dancer Sarah
Xiao, he has presented untitled semi-improvised dance/music piece (Yale Cabaret) and from/to nothing (International Festival of Arts & Ideas).
Calleri Jensen Davis (Casting Director) is a creative casting partnership among James Calleri, Erica Jensen, and Paul Davis of over 20 years. They began their collaboration with Yale Rep last season with Mojada: A Medea in Los Angeles and the ripple, the wave that carried me home. Broadway credits: The Piano Lesson, Topdog/Underdog, for colored girls..., Thoughts of a Colored Man, Burn This, Fool for Love, The Elephant Man, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Of Mice and Men, Venus in Fur, A Raisin in the Sun, 33 Variations. Television: Love Life, Queens, Dickinson, and The Path, to name a few. callerijensendavis.com
Caryl Churchill (Playwright) was born on September 3, 1938, in London and grew up in the Lake District and in Montreal. She was educated at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. Downstairs, her first play written while she was still at university, was first staged in 1958 and won an award at the Sunday Times National Union of Students Drama Festival. Caryl Churchill’s plays include Owners, Traps, Light Shining in Buckinghamshire, Cloud 9, Top Girls, Fen, Serious Money, Ice Cream, Mad Forest, The Skriker, Blue Heart, This Is a Chair, Far Away, A Number, Drunk Enough To Say I Love You?, Seven Jewish Children, Love and Information, Here We Go, and Escaped Alone Music theater includes Lives of the Great Poisoners and Hotel, both with Orlando Gough. Caryl has also written for radio and television.
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CREATIVE TEAM in alphabetical order
Liz Diamond (Director) is a Resident Director at Yale Repertory Theatre and serves as Chair of the Directing program at David Geffen School of Drama. Productions at Yale Rep include The Winter’s Tale; Lucinda Coxon’s Happy Now? (also at Primary Stages in New York); Marcus Gardley’s dance of the holy ghosts (world premiere); Strindberg’s Miss Julie; Sunil Kuruvilla’s Fighting Words and Rice Boy (world premiere); Seamus Heaney’s The Cure at Troy; Brecht’s The Caucasian Chalk Circle and St. Joan of the Stockyards; and SuzanLori Parks’s The America Play (world premiere), The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World (world premiere), and Father Comes Homes
From the Wars, Parts 1, 2 & 3. She has directed new plays, adaptations, and classical works at theaters including the Alliance, American Repertory Theater, The Public Theater, Vineyard Theatre, Theatre for a New Audience, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, and Westport Country Playhouse, and has won the OBIE and the Connecticut Critics Circle Awards for Outstanding Direction. Additional projects at Yale include Diamond’s staging of her translation of Stravinsky’s L’Histoire du soldat, in a joint David Geffen School of Drama/Yale School of Music production at Carnegie Hall, as well as Matthew Suttor’s and Timothy Young’s musical adaptation of Blaise Cendrar’s epic poem, La prose du Transsibérien et de la Petite Jehanne de France for the Beinecke Library’s 50th-anniversary celebration.
Julie Foh she/her (Vocal and Dialect Coach) is a voice, text, and dialect coach and is an Associate Professor Adjunct of Acting at David Geffen School of Drama. Previous coaching credits include the ripple, the wave that carried me home (Yale Rep); The Winter’s Tale (Hartford Stage); Othello, Love’s Labour’s Lost, The Tempest, The Winter’s Tale, Measure for Measure, Henry V, Twelfth Night, Coriolanus (Next Chapter Podcasts); A Man for All Seasons, And a Nightingale Sang, The Caretaker, A Child’s Christmas in Wales (Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey); Belfast Girls (Irish Rep); Mlima’s Tale (Repertory Theatre of St. Louis and Westport Country Playhouse); Ride the Cyclone: The Musical, Sleuth (McCarter Theatre Center); Wolverine: The Lost Trail (Marvel podcast); As You Like It, King Charles III (Colorado Shakespeare Festival); Sherwood (Cleveland Play House); Pygmalion (BEDLAM); Familiar (Woolly Mammoth); Trans Scripts, Cardenio (American Repertory Theater); The Tallest Tree in the Forest (Tectonic Theater Project); and others. She is an Associate Teacher of Fitzmaurice Voicework, a Master Teacher of Knight-Thompson Speechwork, and co-author of Experiencing Speech: A Skills-Based, Panlingual Approach to Actor Training. Adam Taylor Foster (Assistant Stage Manager) is a second-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama, where credits include rent free, Marys Seacole, How to Live on Earth, HELLYOUTALMBOUT, and Measure for Measure. Other select credits: Three Sisters, Dindin, Buried Child, The Ballad of Bobby Botswain, Liv at Sea (Harbor
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Stage Company); Romeo and Juliet, Pride and Prejudice (UMass Boston). Thank you to Megan for marrying me.
Keira Jacobs (Technical Director) is a second-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama, where her credits include Ghosts (assistant technical director), Julius Caesar (projection engineer), The Carlotta Festival (associate production electrician), and Yale Rep’s Wish You Were Here (assistant technical director). Prior to Yale, Keira was a freelance carpenter and technical director based in Chicago, where she held positions with Chicago Opera Theater, Lookingglass Theatre Company, and First Folio Theatre, among others. She holds a B.A. in theater and drama and a minor in German from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Chloe Xiaonan Liu* she/her (Assistant Stage Manager) is a Chinese M.F.A. candidate in her fourth year at David Geffen School of Drama, where her credits include The Alley, Next to Normal, Green Suga Bloos, The Cherry Orchard, Twelfth Night, as well as Choir Boy at Yale Rep. Chloe holds a B.A. from Shanghai Theatre Academy. Her working experience in China included the Disney musicals Beauty and The Beast and The Lion King as well as Man of La Mancha and The Sound of Music national tours.
Charlie Lovejoy* (Stage Manager) is a fourth-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama. OffBroadway and NYC: Kimberly Akimbo (Atlantic Theater Company), Seagull
(Elevator Repair Service). Regional: The Brightest Thing in the World (Yale Rep); Otello, Kiss Me Kate (Central City Opera). Chicago: The Santaland Diaries, Incendiary, graveyard shift (Goodman Theatre); Miracle: A Musical 108 Years in the Making (Royal George Theatre); La Ronde (American Theater Company). Academic: Moonie, BURNBABYBURN: an american dream (Yale Cabaret); Moe’s a D*ck, littleboy/ littleman, Romeo and Juliet, Bodas de sangre/Blood Wedding (The Geffen School). B.A., University of Chicago.
Shawn Lovell-Boyle (Projection Designer) has designed projections for theater, dance, music, installation, and themed entertainment across the United States and internationally. Organizations include Atlantic Theater Company, Tulsa Ballet, Sioux City Symphony Orchestra, Denver Center, Lagoon Park, Alliance Theatre, Yale Rep, Goodspeed Musicals, Berkshire Theater Group, Cork Opera House, and Ogunquit Playhouse. Broadway: Paradise Square. Previous credits at Yale Rep include Mojada: A Medea in Los Angeles, peerless, and Elevada (Connecticut Critics Circle Award). Shawn is a member of United Scenic Artists I.A.T.S.E. Local 829 Projection & Lighting. B.F.A., Rutgers Mason Gross School of the Arts; M.F.A., David Geffen School of Drama, where he is also a faculty member. ShawnBoyleDesign.com
Catherine Sheehy she/her (Production Dramaturg) is Resident Dramaturg at Yale Repertory Theatre and the Chair of Dramaturgy and Dramatic Criticism at David Geffen
*Member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.
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CREATIVE TEAM in alphabetical order
School of Drama. Her Yale Rep credits include Father Comes Home From the Wars, Parts 1, 2 & 3, Happy Days, Elevada, These Paper Bullets!, In a Year with 13 Moons, The Winter’s Tale, Bossa Nova, POP!, Trouble in Mind, and The King Stag (which she also co-adapted with Evan and Mike Yionoulis). She’s a founding member of Rolin Jones’s Dwight Street Book Club and New Neighborhood. Her television work with Rolin includes HBO’s Perry Mason and AMC’s Interview with the Vampire. Her adaptation of Pride and Prejudice has been produced at Asolo Repertory Theatre and Dallas Theater Center. She has worked at the Royal Shakespeare Company, The Public Theater, Yale Institute for Music Theatre, the Signature Theatre, O’Neill Playwrights Conference, Center Stage, and in New York and Ireland with the late Joseph Chaikin. For four seasons she was Festival Dramaturg at Shakespeare Santa Cruz. She is a former associate editor of American Theatre and a former editor of Theater magazine.
Yu-Jung Shen 沈毓融 (Costume Designer) is a painter-artist from Taiwan and a 2024 M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama. His/ ta-de current focus is dramatic art and design. He received a 2017 World Stage Design Gold Medal award for Pool (No water), award-sponsored by OISTAT (International Organization of Scenographers, Theatre Architects and Technicians) with his Taiwan Taipei National University of the Arts undergrad colleagues. He has worked mostly as a costume assistant, illustrator, tailor, draper, milliner, embroiderer, and textile artist for various companies: Axiom Space, 中 華民國 Taiwan Ministry of National
Defense, Saudi Arabia’s at-Turaif Living Museum, AMC Networks, The University of Texas at Austin, ZACH Theater, Ping-Fong Acting Troupe, and Godot Theatre Company.
Stephen Strawbridge (Lighting Designer) has designed more than 200 productions on and off Broadway and at most leading regional theaters and opera houses across the U.S. Internationally he has helped create major premieres in Bergen, Copenhagen, The Hague, Hong Kong, Linz, Lisbon, Munich, Naples, São Paulo, Stockholm, Stratford-Upon-Avon (for the Royal Shakespeare Company), Wrocław, and Vienna. Artistic collaborators have included such notable directors and choreographers as Robert Brustein, James Bundy, Martha Clarke, Graciela Daniele, Barry Edelstein, Richard Foreman, Athol Fugard, Loretta Greco, Mark Lamos, Emily Mann, Kathleen Marshall, Tarell Alvin McCraney, Diane Paulus, Erica Schmidt, Bartlett Sher, Rebecca Taichman, John Tillinger, Robert Wilson, Mark Wing-Davey, and Robert Woodruff. He has numerous pieces in the repertories of Pilobolus Dance Theatre and Alison Chase/ Performance. Recent credits include King Lear with Joe Morton at Wallis Annenberg Center in Los Angeles, The Taming of the Shrew directed by Shana Cooper, A Midsummer Night’s Dream directed by Patricia McGregor, and Twelfth Night directed by Kathleen Marshall, all at The Old Globe in San Diego. He has been recognized with numerous awards and nominations including the American Theatre Wing, Bay Area Theatre Critics Circle, Connecticut Critics Circle, Dallas-Fort Worth Theater Critics Forum, Drama
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Desk, Helen Hayes, Henry Hewes Design, and Lucille Lortel. He is head of the lighting design concentration at David Geffen School of Drama and a Lighting Advisor for Yale Rep.
Lia Tubiana (Scenic Designer) is a French-Tunisian scenic designer and architect, currently in her final semester pursuing an M.F.A. at David Geffen School of Drama, where her credits include Julius Caesar and littleboy/littleman. She is also the associate set designer for Les Paravents opening in June at the Théâtre de L’Odéon in Paris.
@lia_louna
Karoline Vielemeyer (Production Dramaturg) is a second-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama, where credits include Moe’s a D*ck and How to Live on Earth Originally from Germany, she holds a B.A. from Mount Holyoke College in theatre arts and French and graduated from Prague Film School specializing in directing. Before pursuing her M.F.A., Karoline worked as a director, assistant director, and editor for cinema and television productions. Her most recent credits include assistant directing the feature documentary Rock Chicks—I am not female to you and directing the short film Woman in the Mirror—moments before Mata Hari’s first performance, both released in 2023. She is thrilled to collaborate on this production of Churchill’s magnificent play with this wonderful cast and creative team.
Sinan Refik Zafar he/him/his (Sound Designer) is an award-winning sound designer and composer from NYC. Credits include What the Constitution Means to Me (Broadway, National Tour, New York Theatre Workshop); What to Send Up When It Goes Down (National Tour, Playwrights Horizons); English [Obie Award], Shhh (Atlantic Theater Company); Letters from Max (Drama Desk and Lucille Lortel nominations, Signature Theatre); Which Way to the Stage, All the Natalie Portmans (MCC Theater); To My Girls (Second Stage); The Vagrant Trilogy, Cullud Wattah (The Public Theater); Wish You Were Here (Playwrights Horizons), Montag (Soho Rep). Regional: Kennedy Center, Guthrie, Mark Taper Forum, Berkeley Rep, Williamstown, among others. M.F.A., David Geffen School of Drama. sinanzafar.com
Concord Theatricals is the world’s most significant theatrical company, comprising the catalogs of R&H Theatricals, Samuel French, TamsWitmark and The Andrew Lloyd Webber Collection, plus dozens of new signings each year. Our unparalleled roster includes the work of Irving Berlin, Agatha Christie, George & Ira Gershwin, Marvin Hamlisch, Lorraine Hansberry, Kander & Ebb, Tom Kitt, Ken Ludwig, Marlow & Moss, LinManuel Miranda, Anaïs Mitchell, Dominique Morisseau, Cole Porter, Rodgers & Hammerstein, Thornton Wilder, and August Wilson. We are the only firm providing truly comprehensive services to the creators and producers of plays and musicals, including theatrical licensing, music publishing, script publishing, cast recording, and first-class production. Follow us @concordshows.
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FOR THIS PRODUCTION
ARTISTIC
Assistant Director
Alexis Kulani Woodard
Assistant Scenic Designer
Anthony Robles
Assistant Costume Designer
Laize Qin
Associate Lighting Designer
Graham Zellers
Assistant Lighting Designer
Celia Chen
Associate Sound Designer
Mike Winch
Assistant Sound Designer and Engineer
Shawn Poellet
Assistant Projection Designer
Christian Killada
Assistant Dramaturg
Georgia Petersen
PRODUCTION
Associate Production Manager
Steph Burke
Assistant Technical Directors
Lilliana Gonzalez
Isaac Lau
Matthew Phillips
Assistant Properties Manager
Leo Surach
Production Electrician
Luke Tarnow-Bulatowicz
Projection Engineer
Luanne Jubsee
Projection Content Creators
John Horzen, Ein Kim, Sam Skynner, Ke Xu
Projection Programmer
Wiktor Freifeld
Front of House Mix Engineer
Robert Salerno
Run Crew
Ida Cuttler, Amani Jaramoga, Austin
Riffelmacher
Run Crew Swings
comfort ifeoma katchy, ML Roberts
ADMINISTRATION
Associate Managing Director
Jake Hurwitz
Assistant Managing Director
Jeremy Landes
Management Assistants
Mithra Seyedi
Kavya Shetty
Taylor Ybarra
Company Manager
Sarah Machiko Haber
Assistant Company Managers
Claudia Campos, Joy Chen, Victoria
McNaughton, Sarah Saifi, Mithra Seyedi
House Managers
Claudia Campos
Iyanna Huffington Whitney
SPECIAL THANKS
Ralph Chipman, Hanna Diamond Chipman, Odysseus Szarabajka,The Ray Charles Foundation, Lily Thorne
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YALE REPERTORY THEATRE STAFF
Artistic Director
James Bundy
Managing Director
Florie Seery
Associate Artistic Director, Director of New Play Programs
Chantal Rodriguez
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
Projection Design Advisor
Shawn Lovell-Boyle
Sound Design Advisor
Jill BC Du Boff
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
Associate Producer
Kay Perdue Meadows
Artistic Fellows
Jisun Kim
Madeline Pages
Casting
James Calleri
Erica Jensen
Paul Davis
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
Library Services
Erin Carney
PRODUCTION
Production Management Director of Production
Shaminda Amarakoon
Production Manager
Jonathan Reed
Production Manager for Studio Projects and Special Events
C. Nikki Mills
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
Doug Kester
Kat McCarthey
Sharon Reinhart
Carpenter
David Di Fabio
Carpentry Intern
Isaac Lau
Painting
Scenic Charge
Mikah Berky
Scenic Artists
Lia Akkerhuis
Nathan Jasunas
Kathleen Kennan
Paint Interns
Nicole Goldstein
Laam Tsang
Properties
Properties Supervisor
Jennifer McClure
Properties Craftsperson
David P. Schrader
Properties Associate
Zach Faber
Properties Stock Manager
Mark Dionne
Properties Intern
Destany Langfield
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YALE REPERTORY THEATRE STAFF
Costumes
Costume Shop Manager
Christine Szczepanski
Senior Drapers
Clarissa Wylie Youngberg
Mary Zihal
Interim Senior Draper
Susan Aziz
Senior First Hands
Deborah Bloch
Patricia Van Horn
Costume Project Coordinator
Linda Kelley-Dodd
Costume Stock Manager
Jamie Farkas
Costume Interns
Amani Jaramoga
Annie Wang
Electrics
Lighting Supervisor
Donald W. Titus
Senior House Electricians
Jennifer Carlson
Linda-Cristal Young
Electricians
Katie Brown
Alary Sutherland
Ryan White
Sound
Sound Supervisor
Mike Backhaus
Senior Lead Sound Engineer
Stephanie Smith
Sound Intern
Robert Salerno
Projections
Projection Supervisor
Anja Powell
Stage Operations
Stage Carpenter
Janet Cunningham
Lead Wardrobe Supervisor
Elizabeth Bolster
Lead Properties Runner
William Ordynowicz
Light Board Programmer
Sabrina Idom
ADMINISTRATION
General Management
Associate Managing Directors
Jake Hurwitz
Chloe Knight
A.J. Roy
Assistant Managing Director
Jeremy Landes
Senior Administrative Assistant to the Managing Director and General Manager
Sarah Masotta
Management Assistant
Taylor Ybarra
Company Manager
Sarah Machiko Haber
Assistant Company Managers
Joy Chen
Victoria McNaughton
Development and Alumni Affairs
Senior Director of Development and Alumni Affairs
Deborah S. Berman
Deputy Director of Operations for Development and Alumni Affairs
Susan C. Clark
Senior Associate Director of Development
Casey Grambo
Associate Director of Development and Alumni Affairs
Jacob Santos
Assistant Director of Development and Alumni Affairs
Mikayla Stanley
Senior Administrative Assistant to Development and Alumni Affairs
Jennifer E. Alzona
Development Associate
Delaney Kelley
Finance, Human Resources, and Digital Technology
Director of Finance and Business Administration/Lead Administrator
Nicola Blake
Human Resources Business Partner
Trinh DiNoto
Director, Yale Tessitura Consortium, and Web Technology
Janna J. Ellis
Manager, Business Operations
Martha Boateng
Business Office Analyst
Shainn Reaves
Digital Communications Associate
George Tinari
Business Office Specialists
Moriah Clarke
Karem Orellana-Flores
Business Office Assistant
Asberry Thomas
Digital Technology Associates
Edison Dule
Garry Heyward
Senior Administrative
Assistant to Business Office, Digital and Web Technology, Facility Operations, Human Resources, Tessitura
Monique Moore
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
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Associate Director of Marketing and Communications
Samanta Cubias
Assistant Director of Marketing and Communications
Roman Sanchez
Community Engagement Associate
a.k. payne
Senior Administrative Assistant for Marketing and Communications
Mishelle Raza
Interim Senior Administrative Assistant for Marketing and Communications
Rachel Zwick
Marketing and Communications Assistant
Mithra Seyedi
Publications Manager
Marguerite Elliott
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
Box Office Assistants
Pilar Bylinsky, Jordi Bertrán Ramírez, Emma Fusco, Sydney Raine Garick, Jordan Graf, Elliot Lee, Kenneth Murray, Timothy “TJ” Wildow
Accessibility Assistant
Prentiss Patrick-Carter
Ushers
Calum Baker, Danielys Batista, Tracy Bennett, Maura Bozeman, Logan Carr, Josh Ellis, Gerson Espinoza Campos, Megan Foster, Lydia Gompper, Celete Kato, Şeyma Kaya, Di’Jhon McCoy, Keenan Miller, Bonnie Moeller, William Romain, Jana Ross, Mao Shiotsu, Jonathan Singleton, Nicole Stack, Larsson Youngberg
Theater Safety and Occupational Health
Director of Theater Safety and Occupational Health
Anna Glover
Assistant Director of Theater Safety
Kelly O’Loughlin
Associate Safety Advisors
Cian Jaspar Freeman
Luanne Jubsee
Operations
Director of Facility Operations
Nadir Balan
Associate Director of Operations
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
Tylon Frost, Willia Grant, Cassandra Hobby, Melloney Lucas, Shanna Ramos, Jerome Sonia
Escaped Alone, March 8–30, 2024. Yale Repertory Theatre, 1120 Chapel Street, New Haven, Connecticut.
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 Scenic, Costume, Lighting, and Sound Designers in LORT are represented by United Artists Local USA-829, IATSE.
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ACCESSIBILITY SERVICES
For Escaped Alone
March 23 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.
Touch Tour
Prior to a performance, patrons who are blind or have low vision touch fabric samples, rehearsal props, and building materials to understand what better comprises the production design.
March 23 at 8PM
American Sign Language
(ASL)
An ASL-interpreted performance for patrons who are deaf or have hearing loss.
March 30 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.
c2 is pleased to be the official Open Captioning Provider of Yale Repertory Theatre.
Free listening devices, headsets, and neck loops as well as Braille and large print programs are available at the concierge desk in the theater lobby.
Yale Repertory Theatre gratefully acknowledges the Carol L. Sirot Foundation for underwriting the assistive listening systems in our theaters.
Plan Ahead!
Upcoming Accessibility Services for The Far Country by Lloyd Suh, directed by Ralph B. Peña.
Audio Description
May 11 at 2PM
Touch Tour
May 11 at 2PM
American Sign Language
May 11 at 8PM
Open Caption
May 18 at 2PM
Dates and times are subject to change.
For more information about our accessibility services or to provide feedback about your experience, contact Laura Kirk, Director of Audience Services: 203.432.1234 or laura.kirk@yale.edu.
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ACCESSIBILITY TEAM
in alphabetical order
David Chu/c2inc-caption coalition (Open Captioner) 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.
Lisa Lockley (ASL Interpreter) is delighted to be part of this show. She is grateful to God for the opportunity to incorporate her enjoyment of theater and interpreting to provide accessibility. Her theatrical interpreting experience includes Professor Jurassic’s DinoStravaganza, Bird or Dinosaurio?, Boo at the Zoo: The Wildlife Witch’s Spooky Spectacular (The Bronx Zoo Wildlife Theater), Maestro’s Magical Music Box (Kraine Theatre); Sleeping Beauty, Dick Rivington & the Cat (Abrons Arts Center); The Comeuppance (Signature Theatre). Lisa thanks the community for their nurturing spirit: her family, friends, deaf, hard-of-hearing, deaf-blind, visually impaired, and other abilities!
Marydell Merrill (Audio Describer) is an audio describer for Yale Rep and Hartford Stage and the Artistic Director of Hamden High School’s Mainstage Ensemble. Credits include Yale Rep’s WILL POWER!; the Connecticut Association for Physical Fitness, Health, Recreation, and Dance; Breakdancing Shakespeare at Hartford Stage (Master Teaching Artist); and several regional and national educational theater festivals and conferences. 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. Awards: 2014 Northeast Educational Theatre Festival Hall of Fame, 2014 International Thespian Society Inspirational Theatre Educator Award, and the 2017 Connecticut Theatre Educator of the Year from the Connecticut Chapter of the International Thespian Society. A member of Actors’ Equity Association, she has performed with several companies including Long Wharf Theatre and Connecticut Free Shakespeare.
JO Welch she/her (ASL Interpreter) is a first-generation Latina and Certified Interpreter. She grew up in the marginalized space between Latinx and American cultures and is influenced by her commitment to the Deaf, DeafBlind, and hard-of-hearing communities. For over 30 years, she has included performing arts work within these communities, both on and backstage. She has just returned from Skylight Music Theater’s 2024 Spring Awakening JO has also the honor of working with Broadway In Boston, A.R.T and the Signature Theatre, NYC. jowelch.com
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EVENTS!
YOUTH PROGRAMS
Monday, March 4, 6–7:30PM
Yale Rep @ NHFPL Mitchell Branch Library
37 Harrison Street, New Haven
Join us for tea and conversation about Churchill with the production dramaturgs.
Saturday, March 9 at 3PM
Yale Rep @ NHFPL Wilson Branch Library
303 Washington Avenue, New Haven
Join us for an activity inspired by eco-drama.
Saturday, March 9 at 8PM
Monday, March 11 at 8PM
Post-Show Conversations
Join us in the August Wilson Lounge following the performance for a conversation about the show with our production dramaturgs.
Wednesday, March 20 at 1PM
Pre-Show Reception and Conversation
Please join us for refreshments in the August Wilson Lounge, where members of the creative team will hold a discussion about the play at 1:20PM.
Saturday, March 23 at 2PM
Talk Back
Join us after the show for a conversation about the play and its themes with members of the company.
Wednesday, March 27 at 8PM
Spanish Language Captioning La presentación del 27 de marzo será subtitulada en español. This performance will be open-captioned in Spanish.
All events are subject to change.
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. This spring we will offer programming centered on Lloyd Suh’s The Far Country to New Haven Public Schools students and educators. In previous seasons, 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
Yale Rep’s youth programs are supported by The Robert and Mercedes Eichholz Foundation, NewAlliance Foundation, and Esme Usdan.
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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
Kate Burton ’82
James Chen ’08
Lois Chiles
Patricia Clarkson ’85
Edgar M. Cullman III ’02, YC ’97
Michael David ’68
Wendy Davies
Sasha Emerson ’84
Lily Fan YC ’01, LAW ’04
Terry Fitzpatrick ’83
Marc Flanagan ’70
Anita Pamintuan Fusco YC ’90
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
Richard Ostreicher ’79
Carol Ostrow ’80
Maulik Pancholy ’03
Daphne Rubin-Vega
Tracy Chutorian Semler YC ’86
Michael Sheehan ’76
Anna Deavere Smith HON ’14
Woody Taft YC ’92
Andrew Tisdale
Edward Trach ’58
Julie Turaj YC ’93
Esme Usdan YC ’77
Courtney B. Vance ’86
Donald R. Ware YC ’71
Shana C. Waterman YC ’94, LAW ’00
Kim Williams
Henry Winkler ’70
Amanda Wallace Woods ’03
Thank 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
Lois Chiles
Estate of Nicholas Diggs*
Estate of Richard Diggs*
The Robert and Mercedes Eichholz Foundation
Anita Pamintuan Fusco and Dino Fusco
David Geffen Foundation
David G. Johnson
Neil Mazzella
Talia Shire Schwartzman
The Shubert Foundation
Jeremy Smith
Woody Taft
Stephen Timbers
Edward Trach
Esme Usdan
Donald R. Ware
GUARANTORS
($25,000–$49,999)
Americana Arts Foundation
Rudy Aragon
Reginald J. Brown and Tiffeny F. Sanchez
Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development
Sarah Long
National Endowment for the Arts
Tracy Chutorian Semler
The Sir Peter Shaffer Charitable Foundation
BENEFACTORS ($10,000–$24,999)
Nina Adams and Moreson Kaplan
Lynne and Roger Bolton
James and Deborah Burrows Foundation
Burry Fredrik Foundation
Wendy Davies
Michael Diamond*
Mabel Burchard Fischer Grant Foundation
Lucille Lortel Foundation
Cathy MacNeil-Hollinger and Mark Hollinger
Princess Grace Foundation
Michael and Riki Sheehan
Carol L. Sirot
Trust for Mutual Understanding
PATRONS
($5,000–$9,999)
Pun Bandhu
Eugene G. & Margaret M. Blackford Memorial Fund for the Blind, Bank of America, N.A.,Trustee
Santino Blumetti
Carmine Boccuzzi and Bernard Lumpkin
James Bundy and Anne Tofflemire
CT Humanities
Michael S. David
Terry Fitzpatrick
Howard Gilman Foundation
Bigelow Greene
James Guerry Hood
Brian Tyree Henry
Sally Horchow
Ellen Iseman
Rolin Jones
Tien-Tsung Ma
David and Leni Moore Family Foundation
NewAlliance Foundation
Carol Ostrow
PRODUCER’S CIRCLE
($2,500–$4,999)
Anonymous
Ed Barlow
Lisa Barlow
Angela Bassett
Frances Black
Cyndi Brown
Ian Calderon
Joan Channick
Lily Fan
Deborah Freedman and Ben Ledbetter
Fred Gorelick and Cheryl MacLachlan
JANA Foundation
Ann Judd and Bennett Pudlin
Rocco Landesman
George Lindsay, Jr.
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*deceased
Thank you to the generous contributors to David Geffen School
Tarell Alvin McCraney
Leonard Molczadski in honor of Norman
Walsh Taylor
Richard Ostreicher
Pam and Jeff Rank
Bill and Sharon Reynolds
Estate of June M. Rosenblatt
Abby Roth and R. Lee Stump
Julie Turaj
DIRECTOR’S CIRCLE ($1,000–$2,499)
Chuck Adomanis
Laura and Victor Altshul
Debby Applegate and Bruce Tulgan
Paula Armbruster
Richard C. Beacham
John Lee Beatty
Anne and Guido Calabresi
James Chen
Bob and Priscilla Dannies
Elwood and Catherine Davis
Ramon Delgado
Lynn Doucette-Stamm
Melanie Ginter
Jon Farley
Lindy Lee Gold
LT Gourzong
Eric M. Glover
Rob Greenberg
Mark Haber and Chiyo Moriuchi
William B. Halbert
Jane Head
Dale and Stephen Hoffman
Suzanne Jackson
Pam Jordan
Abby Kenigsberg
Fran Kumin
The Ethel & Abe Lapides Foundation
Charles Letts
Kenneth Lewis
Jennifer Lindstrom
Chih-Lung Liu
Brian Mann
John McAndrew
Jim and Eileen Mydosh
Stephen Newman in memory of Ruth Hunt Newman
Jacob G. Padrón
Ross S. Richards
Russ Rosensweig
Traci D. Shed
Barbara Siegler
Slotznick Family Fund, a charitable fund of The Foundation for Enhancing Communities
Shepard and Marlene Stone
Courtney B. Vance
Carol M. Waaser
Shana C. Waterman
George C. White
Carolyn Seely Wiener
Kim Williams
The Raul Yanes and Sara Hazelwood Foundation
PARTNERS ($500–$999)
Donna Alexander
ASSA ABLOY
Shaminda and Carole Amarakoon
Richard and Alice Baxter
David J. Berendes
Ashley Bishop
John and Suzanne Bourdeaux
Shawn Boyle
Kate Burton
Joy Carlin
Lawrence Casey
Sarah Bartlo Chaplin
Daniel Cooperman and Mariel Harris
Laura Copenhaver
Sean Cullen
Robert Dealy
Sasha Emerson
Peter Entin
Betty and Joshua Goldberg
Paul Goldberg
Bill and Marcy Grambo
Carolyn Gray
Regina Guggenheim
Andy Hamingson
Judy Hansen
David Henry Hwang
Sanghun Joung
Helen Kauder and Barry Nalebuff
Harvey Kliman and Sandra Stein
Corby S. Kummer
Max Leventhal
Matthew H. Lewis
Eric Lin
Charles H. Long
Virginia (Wendy) Riggs
John McAndrew
Kellen McNally
Cathy C. Mock
Janice Muirhead
Vicki Nolan and Clark Crolius
Janet Oetinger
Arthur Oliner
F. Richard Pappas
Jonathan Pellow
Dw Phineas Perkins
Louise Perkins and Jeff Glans
Jeffrey Powell and Adalgisa Caccone
Kathy and George Priest
Alec Purves
Faye and Asghar
Rastegar
Jon and Sarah Reed
Anne Renner
Ted Robb
Howard Rogut
Russ Lori Rosensweig
Robin Sauerteig
Florie Seery
Anna Deavere Smith
Matthew Specter and Marjan Mashhadi
Dr. and Mrs. Dennis D. Spencer
James Steerman
Kenneth J. Stein
David Sword
Josh Taylor
John Turturro and Katherine Borowitz
Paul Walsh
Stephanie Waaser
Kristan and Nathaniel Wells
Vera Wells
Walton Wilson
Steven Wolff
Amanda Wallace Woods
Robert Zoland
Steve Zuckerman
INVESTORS ($250–$499)
Actors’ Equity Foundation
Clayton Austin
Alexander Bagnall
Michael Bianco
Susan Brady and Mark Loeffler
James and Dorothy Bridgeman
Chris Brindley
Tom Broecker
Suzanne Bruhn
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Buckholz
Michael Cadden
Sarah Cain
Nicholas Cimmino
Jeffrey Cohen
Daniel Cress
Claire A. Criscuolo
Janet Cunningham
Rick Davis
Ramiro Diaz
Kem and Phoebe Edwards
Kenneth Elliott
Robert Emmons
Michael Fain
Richard and Barbara Feldman
Deborah and Henry Fernandez
Tony Forman
David Freeman
Richard Fuhrman
Randy Fullerton
Shaina Graboyes
Casey Grambo
Ann Hanley
Judith Hansen
Karen Hansen and Andrew Bundy
Jennifer Hershey
Chuck Hughes
John Huntington
Candace Jackson
Chris Jaehnig
Galen Kane
Edward Kaye
Alan Kibbe
Hedda and Gary Kopf
Mitchell Kurtz
Gabriela Lee
Irene Lewis
Thomas G. Masse and James M. Perlotto, MD
Pamela and Donald Michaelis
Kathryn Milano
David Muse
Regina and Thomas Neville
32
of Drama and Yale Repertory Theatre
Barbara and William Nordhaus
Adam O’Byrne
Kevin and Margaret O’Halloran
Steven Padla
Gamal Palmer
Michael Parrella
Michael Posnick
Dr. Michael Rigsby and Prof. Richard Lalli
Steve Robman
Erin Rocha
Chantal Rodriguez
Constanza Romero
Allen Rosenshine
Nan Ross
Donald Sanders
Suzanne Sato
Kenneth Schlesinger
Georg Schreiber
Paul Selfa
David Soper and Laura Davis
Erich Stratmann
Matthew Tanico
Deb Trout
Lisa Yancey
FRIENDS ($100–$249)
Ikeena Aberdeen
Jessica Adler
Michael Albano
Sarah Albertson
Narda E. Alcorn
Jeffrey Alexander
Glenn Anderson
Kaitlyn Anderson
Michael Annand
Anonymous
William Armstrong
Nancy Babington
Michael Banta
Dr. Francis A. Baran
Warren Bass
William and Donna Batsford
Michael Baumgarten
Richard Beals
James Bender
Vivien Blackford
Mark Bly
Joseph Brennan
Amy Brewer and David Sacco*
Emiko Brewer
Linda Broker
Arvin Brown
Christopher P. Brown
Donald and Mary Brown
Stephen and Nancy Brown
Colin Buckhurst
Stephen Bundy
Katherine and Chava
Burgueño
Richard Butler
Susan Byck
Kathryn A. Calnan
Vincent Cardinal
Catherine and Steven Carlson
Andrew Carson
Sami Joan Casler
Zoe Z. Chance
King-Fai Chung
Nicole Ciomek
Cynthia Clair
Susan Clark
Geoffrey Cohen
Audrey Conrad
Aaron Copp
Jennifer Corman
Jane Cox
Caitlin E. Crombleholme
Douglas and Roseline
Crowley
Samanta Cubias
Phyllis Cummings-Texeira
John Cunningham
Jonathan Daen
Anne Danenberg
Timothy Davidson
Connie and Peter
Dickinson
Derek DiGregorio
Trinh DiNoto
Melinda DiVicino
Donna Doherty
Dennis Dorn
Patricia Doukas
Megan and Leon Doyon
Samuel Duncan
John Duran
Ann D’Zmura
Laura Eckelman
Fran Egler
Robert Einenkel
Nancy Reeder El Bouhali
Samantha Else
Robert Emmons
Frank and Ellen Estes
Femi Euba
Connie Evans
Teresa Eyring
Ann Farris
Paul Fiedler and Susan
Birke Fiedler
Terry S. Flagg
Sarah Fornia
Raymond Forton
Keith Fowler
Walter M. Frankenberger III
Gerald E. Gaab
Carol Gallagher
Don and Margery Galluzzi
Leah C. Gardiner
Rachana Garg
Christopher Geary
Tobe Gerard
Barry Gladue
Stephen L. Godchaux
Lorraine Golan
Carol Goldberg
Donna Golden
Susan Goldin
Naomi Grabel
Charles Grammer
Hannah Grannemann
Jason Gray
Stephen R. Grecco
Greg Guthe
Julie Haber
Dr. James L. Hadler
Marion Hampton
Alexander Hammond
Scott Hansen
Roberta and Lawrence Harris
Michael Haymes
James Hazen
Steve Hendrickson
Thomas Herman
Ashton Heyl
Elizabeth Holloway*
Nicholas Hormann
Kathleen Houle
Evelyn Huffman
Charles Hughes
Derek Hunt
Jennifer Ito
Tatsuya Ito
Carla L. Jackson
John W. Jacobsen
Eliot and Lois Jameson
Jean Jones
Jonathan Kalb
Jay B. Keene
Kiernan Kelly
Young H. Kim
Amir Kishon
Lawrence Klein
Fredrica Klemm
Chloe Knight
Steve Koernig
Daniel Koetting
David and Julie Koppel
Bonnie Kramm
David Kriebs
Joan Kron
Azan Kung
Susan Laity
Marie Landry and Peter Aronson
Michael Lassell
Martha Lidji Lazar
Elizabeth Lewis
Fred Lindauer
Jerry Lodynsky
Robert H. Long II
Everett Lunning
Nancy F. Lyon
Andi Lyons
Peter Malbuisson
Jonathan Marks
Edwin Martin
Sarah Masotta
Robert McCaw
Deborah McGraw
Bill McGuire
James Meisner and Marilyn Lord
Jonathan Miller
Cheryl Mintz
Marta Moret
Richard Mone
Michele Moriuchi
Beth Morrison
Jason Najjoum
James Naughton
Tina Navarro
Kaye Neale
Jennifer Harrison Newman
Jane Nowosadko
Deb and Ron Nudel
Tom O’Connor
Leah Ogawa
Max Okst
Kendric T. Packer
Dr. and Mrs. Michael Parry
Linda and Peter Perdue
William Peters
Linda Polgar
William Purves
Norman Redlich
Ralph Redpath
Deborah J. Reissman
Carolyn Richer
Joan Robbins
Nathan Roberts
*deceased
33
Thank you to the generous contributors to David Geffen School of Drama and Yale Repertory Theatre
Peter S. Roberts
Brian Robinson
Lori Robishaw
Miguel Rosadu
Robin Rose
Donald Rossler
David Sacco*and Amy Brewer
Dr. Robert and Marcia Safirstein
Steven Saklad
Robert Sandberg
Cynthia Santos-DeCure
Peggy Sasso
Joel Schechter
Steven Schmidt
Jennifer Schwartz
Alexander Scribner
Patrick Seeley
Tom Sellar
Subrata K. Sen
Suzanne Sessions
Sandra Shaner
John K. Sheehan
Catherine Sheehy
Lorraine Siggins
Gilbert and Ruth Small
Helena L. Sokoloff
Suzanne Solensky and Jay Rozgonyi
Aleta Staton
Howard Steinman
Rosalie Stemer
Marcus Stern
John Stevens
Mark Stevens
Marsha Beach Stewart
Mark Sullivan
Thomas Sullivan
Tucker Sweitzer
Bob Tanner
Michelle Tattenbaum
Douglas Taylor
Jane Savitt Tennen
Ashley Thomas
Patti Thorp
David F. Toser
Russell L. Treyz
Lloyd Tucker
Joan Van Ark
Pamela Vercillo
Elaine Wackerly
Adin Walker
Christine Wall
Jaylene Wallace
Erik Walstad
David Ward
Joan Waricha
Jon West
Peter White
Dr. Robert White
Robert Wildman
Alexandra Witchel
Barbara Wohlsen
EMPLOYER
MATCHING GIFTS
Ameriprise Financial
The Benevity
Community Impact Fund
Covidien
The Prospect Hill
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
Wendy Davies
Michael Diamond* and Amy Miller
Estate of Nicholas Diggs*
Estate of Richard Diggs*
Sasha Emerson
Lily Fan
Terry Fitzpatrick
Barbara Franke
Anita Pamintuan Fusco and Dino Fusco
David Marshall Grant
Gilder Foundation
The Hastings and Barcone Trust
Lane Heard and Margaret Bauer
Cheryl Henson
Sally Horchow
Ellen Iseman
David G. Johnson
Rolin Jones
Jane Kaczmarek
Cathy MacNeil-Hollinger and Mark Hollinger
Brian Mann
Jennifer Harrison Newman
Richard Ostreicher
Daphne Rubin-Vega and Thomas Costanzo
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
Woody Taft
Courtney B. Vance
Donald and Susan Ware
Henry Winkler
*deceased
34
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 New Haven. For more information, or to make a donation, please call Susan C. Clark, 203.432.1559. You can also give online at yalerep.org/support. These lists includes current pledges, gifts, and grants received from January 1, 2023, through February 15, 2024.
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