2023-24 SEASON
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A Note from the Artistic Director ..... 5 Title Page ................................................. 7 Cast Page ................................................. 8 From Our Dramaturgs 9 Cast Bios................................................. 16 Understudy Bios................................... 18 Creative Team Bios ............................ 20 For This Production ........................... 24 Yale Repertory Theatre Staff .......... 25 Accessibility Services and Team .... 28 Events 30 Youth Programs ................................... 31 David Geffen School of Drama Board of Advisors 32 Our Donors ........................................... 32 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.
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.
YALEREP.ORG
A NOTE FROM THE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR
Welcome to Yale Repertory Theatre!
Thank you for joining us for today’s performance of The Far Country by Lloyd Suh. It is a joy to welcome Lloyd and director Ralph B. Peña, who collaborated on the stunning production of The Chinese Lady at Long Wharf Theatre in 2021, back to New Haven for their Yale Rep debuts.
I have been eager to bring The Far Country to Yale since seeing an earlier production in New York in 2022. I was transported by the history it recounts, which was virtually unknown to me at the time. With epic sweep and poignant intimacy, The Far Country is the story of an unlikely family’s harrowing journey from rural Taishan to San Francisco, at a time when the Chinese Exclusion Act barred migrants, fleeing poverty and starvation at home, from legally entering the United States. (The law was first passed in 1882 and remained in force in various forms through 1965.)
Now as then, I am moved by Lloyd’s powers of observation: The Far Country speaks not only to a painful period of American history that none of us were alive for, but also to the painful period of American history that we are living through now, as well as to the personal courage and compassion it takes to choose a family. Under Ralph’s direction, the company of actors, as well as the artistic, technical, and management teams, have brought the play to life for us with attention to large and small forces of history.
Over the course of the run of The Far Country, we will welcome nearly 750 high school students from New Haven Public Schools, who will attend a series of special morning matinee performances entirely free of charge through our annual WILL POWER! education program. Lloyd is the first Asian American playwright to be included in the program, which has introduced students to works by Luis Alfaro, Arthur Miller, Suzan-Lori Parks, William Shakespeare, and Stephen Sondheim, among others, since its launch in 2004.
The Far Country is also the final production of our 2023–24 season. Whether this is your first visit to Yale Rep, or you are longtime subscriber, thank you for choosing to spend your time with us. At the time of this writing, we are putting the finishing touches on our plans for the 2024–25 season. I can’t wait to share what we have in store with you!
In the meantime, I look forward to hearing your thoughts on The Far Country or any of your experiences at Yale Rep. My email address is james.bundy@yale.edu.
See you in the fall!
Sincerely,
James Bundy
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6 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
YALE REPERTORY THEATRE
James Bundy, Artistic Director | Florie Seery, Managing Director
PRESENTS
Scenic Designer
Kim Zhou
Costume Designer
Kiyoshi Shaw
Lighting Designer
Yichen Zhou
Sound Design and Original Music
Joe Krempetz
Xi (Zoey) Lin 林曦
Projection Designer
Hana S. Kim
Hair Designer
Matthew Armentrout
Production Dramaturg
A.B. Orme
Technical Director
Matteo Lanzarotta
Vocal and Dialect Coach
Midori Nakamura
Casting Director
Calleri Jensen Davis
Stage Manager
Alexus Jade Coney
Season Sponsor: APRIL 26–MAY 18, 2024
The world premiere of The Far Country was presented by Atlantic Theatre Company, New York City, 2022.
Permission to use excerpts from the work of Genny Lim and Marlon K. Hom from Island: Poetry and History of Chinese Immigrants on Angel Island, 1910-1940 granted by University of Washington Press © 2014.
Production support for The Far Country is provided by Yale’s Binger Center for New Theatre.
The Far Country is presented through special arrangement with and all authorized performance materials are supplied by TRW Plays, 1180 Avenue of the Americas, Suite 640, New York, NY 10036. trwplays.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:
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Cast
in alphabetical order
Low Tina Chilip
Moon Gyet.......................................................................................................................... Hao Feng
Two Đavid Lee Huỳnh
Dean/Inspector .......................................................................................................... Haskell King
Yip/One Jesse Cao Long
Harriwell/Interpreter ............................................................................................... Joe Osheroff
Gee/Three David Shih
Yuen/Four .................................................................................................. Joyce Meimei Zheng
Times and Places
Time: 1909–1930
Places: San Francisco, USA, and Taishan, China
There will be a 15-minute intermission.
Understudy Cast
in alphabetical order
Two, Yip/One ............................................................................................... Sergio Mauritz Ang
Dean/Inspector Edoardo Benzoni
Moon Gyet....................................................................................................... Anzi DeBenedetto
Gee/Three Paul Juhn
Low, Yuen/Four .....................................................................................................Christina Liang
Harriwell/Interpreter Max Sheldon
Assistant Stage Managers Nakia Shalice Avila ............................................................................................... Hope Binfeng Ding
Content Guidance
The play refers to difficult subjects including anti-Chinese sentiment, xenophobia, forced incarceration, and attempted suicide. Production effects include haze, fog, and use of herbal cigarettes
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“With Laws Harsh as Tigers, I Had a Taste of All the Barbarities”
Imprints of the Chinese Exclusion
Era
Poem carved onto the walls of the Chinese men’s barracks on Angel Island. © Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Decades after the closure of Angel Island Immigration Station, a park ranger wandering the second floor of a neglected wooden building on this islet in San Francisco Bay came upon something extraordinary. The lead paint in what had once been the Chinese men’s barracks had worn away, revealing hundreds of poems, painstakingly etched in Chinese onto the wooden panels that wrap the room. Each scratched figure is a scar of the shameful—but quintessentially American—era of Chinese Exclusion, a period defined by a series of increasingly stringent anti-immigration laws. Most famously, 1882’s Chinese Exclusion Act banned Chinese laborers from entering the United States. People came anyway, forced to fabricate personal histories to fit through the few loopholes in these xenophobic laws. Between 1910 and 1940, thousands being held for months of processing in Angel Island’s cramped quarters turned the very building imprisoning them into an archive of their resilience.
A rural road in China, most likely in Guangdong province, c.1920.
This archive is at the root of Lloyd Suh’s The Far Country, which carefully constructs Angel Island as a purgatory between the story’s main locales. On one side of the Pacific, Suh introduces us to rural life in Guangdong 廣東 province as the Manchu-led Qing dynasty gasps its final breaths. On the other, three years after the devastating earthquake and fire of 1906, San Francisco and its Chinatown are still in the process of rebuilding. By the time our sometime-protagonist Moon Gyet travels from Guangdong to California, Angel Island has become an unavoidable and cruel intermediary for Chinese arrivals. Japanese, Russian, German, and other groups of immigrants also made their way through the station, occasionally referred to as the “Ellis Island of the West.” The Chinese immigrants held in this rickety wooden building endured dramatically worse conditions, significantly longer periods of detention, and far more extensive interrogations. The poems on the walls of Angel Island testify to a legacy of Chinese American survival, a refusal to succumb to the obliviating powers of time and empire. The Far Country takes that refusal as a call to action, breathing radical new life into a history so often forgotten.
1859
The provincial government in 廣 東 (Guangdong) reluctantly authorizes foreign recruitment of Chinese laborers.
1869 The transcontinental railroad, built mainly by underpaid and exploited laborers from south China, is completed.
1876
These pages sketch out a minimal timeline of the events leading up to and following this play. But presenting history as a series of two-dimensional dates, laws, and treaties can obscure the legacy of those without political power. Attempts at a comprehensive historical narrative inevitably leave something out. Each page here attempts to strip a layer of paint from the walls of history and reveal a mark of the human beings who survived.
45-year-old Ah Ling is shot in Truckee while fleeing the local chapter of the “Caucasian League” after they burned down a cabin filled with Chinese woodcutters. All the other woodcutters escaped. An all-white jury acquits Ling’s white murderer after nine minutes of deliberation.
Sunning, Albert Tschepe, 1906.
1842
The Treaty of Nanking cedes Hong Kong to the British as a colony, among other major concessions, ending the first “Opium War” between the weakened Manchu-led Qing dynasty and increasingly imperial Western powers.
Hoisan
1868
Qing and American officials sign The Burlingame Treaty, which limits American interference in Chinese affairs, advances American trade interests in China, and opens the doors for more extensive Chinese migration to the United States.
1875
In response to Sinophobic campaigns by white labor groups, Congress passes The Page Act, prohibiting entry by Chinese contract laborers and women suspected of being sex workers. This suspicion is so loosely defined that this law effectively bans Chinese women from entering the country.
1879
The Fifteen Passenger Bill prohibits port access to any ship from China carrying 15 or more passengers. Proponents of the bill argue that the Chinese are “an indigestible element in our midst . . . without any adaptability to become citizens.”
In 1909, China was recovering from a bombardment of Western imperial projects begun in the mid-nineteenth century. Beginning with both “Opium Wars,” a series of conflicts (spurred in part by British opposition to an attempted Chinese ban on opium, a commodity with heavy Western investment) that lasted from 1839-1862. Guangdong, a rural southern province that was once the sole center of Chinese trade with the West, fell into economic ruin. Weakened by constant violence— from warfare and rebellion against Western forces and the crumbling Qing Dynasty—and economically stifled by the treaties that resolved the “Opium Wars” with Western powers, Guangdong was also defenseless against natural disasters. Devastating floods and droughts led to widespread famine. These accumulating tribulations led Guangdong, the home province of most Chinese Americans during this period, to increasingly rely on money sent home by overseas laborers.
For laborers like the protagonists of The Far Country, who hail from Guangdong’s Hoisan 臺山 county (then called Sunning 新寧), working in the United States was the only way to feed themselves and their families back home. As a Sunning gazette from 1893 stated, “when the ships occasionally cannot [sail], kitchen fires immediately stop burning.” Today Hoisan refers to a population of 2.3 million—1 million living in the city itself and 1.3 million living overseas. It’s a qiaoxiang—a town of emigrants, nicknamed “the First Home of the Overseas Chinese.” These emigrants are vital to Hoisan economically and socially. When they return from abroad, after days or generations, they are embraced as Hoisanese.
1880
The United States and China sign the Angell Treaty, which calls for a ten-year pause in new arrivals from China, with the exception of white-collar workers.
September 1885
An armed white mob in Rock Springs, Wyoming, massacres 28 Chinese miners after a dispute over a proposed strike by the Knights of Labor.
1885–86
A wave of xenophobic pogroms pushes more than 15,000 Chinese people out of the United States in this two-year period.
“Paper Sons”
By falsely claiming American nativity, Moon Gyet becomes a “paper son.” This is the common term for the countless Chinese migrants who came to the United States with fake documents having memorized fictional biographies, hoping to be admitted despite the immigration ban on Chinese laborers. The 14th amendment’s guarantee of birthright citizenship created one of the few avenues for bypassing the ban: if you could convince American authorities that you were either Americanborn or the child of American citizens, you could be granted entry. Given the desperate economic situation in Guangdong, thousands of people adopted false biographies in order to emigrate to the United States. Emigrants would
feverishly memorize coaching papers, which ensured their stories would be consistent with those of fictive family members when they were interrogated by U.S. immigration officials. These papers were typically destroyed before arrival on the American coast. Further updates—with instructions that helped keep multiple “paper sons’” stories straight—were often smuggled by kitchen workers onto Angel Island on scraps hidden under plates and, occasionally, in the food itself. The pressure on the immigrants was immense: any discrepancy, any failure to answer the impossibly detailed interrogation questions, could result in continued detention or deportation.
Coaching papers hidden in a banana.
February 1885
300 Chinese Americans flee Eureka, California, in 48 hours following mob threats, including a sign next to a hanging effigy of a Chinese man saying: “Any Chinese seen on the street after three o’clock today will be hung to this gallows.”
1882
The Chinese Exclusion Act expands and bans all Chinese laborers from entering the country for ten years.
1888
The Scott Act, removes an exemption for returning laborers from 1882’s Chinese Exclusion Act. 20,000 Chinese American workers are left stranded overseas as a result.
1892
The Geary Act extends the Exclusion Act for another ten years. The law also requires all Chinese laborers to carry “resident permits” on them at all times. Permits require testimony from at least one white witness in order to get approved.
1898
A broad coalition of Chinese anti-imperial militants, dubbed “Boxers” by Western commentators, begin to strike Christian missionaries and European corporate and state actors in Northern China. Over the next few years, the militias behind the “Boxer Rebellions” enter a tenuous alliance with Qing imperial forces in an attempt to repel Western forces from the region.
Rebuilding San ChinatownFrancisco’s
A linen postcard from the 1930s by Stanley A. Piltz.
The first wave of Chinese migrants arrived in the U.S. in the mid-nineteenth century, some seeking work on the transcontinental railroad, others chasing the gold rush, and many joining industries like lumber and mining. As the Chinese population in California grew, San Francisco’s Chinatown began to develop. Restricted from the city proper due to racial discrimination, these migrants settled near the waterfront. Merchants and a network of Chinatown firms allowed migrants to send money home and import goods from China. This allowed Chinatown to maintain Cantonese restaurants and medicine shops, preserving and transplanting their food, goods, and traditions.
1903
1906
The Great Earthquake of 1906 devastates San Francisco, killing thousands and destroying over 80% of the city’s infrastructure. Many birth certificates and other identification documents disappear in the aftermath.
What will eventually be called the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) is established in the Department of Commerce and Labor 1909
The events of The Far Country begin.
January 1910
Angel Island Immigration Station opens in San Francisco Bay.
1911
An uprising in 武昌区 (Wuchang) turns into a broader nationalist rebellion against the Qing dynasty, eventually leading to the establishment of the Republic of China
After the earthquake and fire of 1906 destroyed the neighborhood, Sinophobic sentiments pushed to displace Chinatown in the rebuilding of San Francisco. In an effort to appeal to Western sensibilities, Chinatown merchants like Look Tin Eli reimagined Chinatown as a modern tourist hub. The architecture of this new Chinatown was inspired by the “Orient” of the white imagination.
While the resulting neighborhood did not resemble any actual places in China, its unique look became archetypical for future Chinese enclaves in the U.S. Chinatown residents built community through organizations to provide support in the face of neglect from the city government. Clans formed around shared family names and hometown districts in Guangdong. These groups offered various services, including travel aid, care for the sick, and legal advocacy. Chinatown provides the soil for our protagonists to plant new roots.
1917
The Immigration Act of 1917 implements literacy tests and a head tax on new immigrants over the age of 16 and expands exclusion to new arrivals from anywhere in the “Asiatic Barred Zone.”
1929
A new federal Immigration Act makes unauthorized entry into the United States a misdemeanor and re-entry after deportation a felony punishable by prison time and heavy fines.
1924
The Johnson-Reed Act extends Asian exclusion indefinitely, implements an extensive national origins quota system (that applies to everywhere but western Europe), and creates the Border Patrol
October 1929
The stock market crashes, plunging the United States into The Great Depression.
1930
The final scene of our play.
Between the far country that is China and the far country that is the United States, in the cramped barracks on Angel Island, Chinese immigrants resisted the Exclusion era in many ways: through mutual aid, through storytelling, through poetry. When the first round of poems drawn upon the walls there were painted over by guards, these poets replaced inking with etching. Rosy narratives of the American melting pot and convenient historical amnesia may try to beautify our past, but memories cannot be erased. They imprint themselves on walls, in bodies, in language. From these imprints, Lloyd Suh has crafted a blueprint for remembrance.
Staging this play is an act of historiography—making clear through sheer presence that the era of Chinese Exclusion is not a closed book but an early chapter in an ongoing story. Quotas on Asian immigration remained in place for two decades following the Chinese Exclusion Act’s repeal in 1943, and many of the systems that led to and were created by the law continue to this day. Western imperialism continues to create starvation and migration. Children still languish in American immigration detention centers. What memories, what stories, what poems are being forged right now? How can we fight attempts to paint over history?
—A.B. Orme and Elliot Valentine, Production Dramaturgs
Tap
English. 96 33 9 76 75 105 4
or click here to read the poems in
CAST
in alphabetical order
Tina Chilip* (Low) Off-Broadway: The Knight of the Burning Pestle (Red Bull) and Twelfth Night (Classic Stage Company), both coproductions with Fiasco Theater; A Delicate Balance (Transport Group); Mothers (Playwrights Realm); Golden Child (Signature Theater); House Rules, Flipzoids (Ma-Yi Theater); A Dream Play (NAATCO). Regional: The Old Globe, Huntington Theatre, Guthrie, Hudson Valley Shakespeare, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Portland Center Stage, Berkeley Rep, Cincinnati Playhouse, Syracuse Stage, Trinity Rep. TV: Law & Order: SVU, Jessica Jones, It’s Bruno!, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, FBI: Most Wanted, The Good Fight, Elementary, Deception, Madam Secretary. Feature films: Nonnas, Miguel Wants to Fight, Doctor Doctor. Training: M.F.A., Brown/ Trinity Rep. Proud company member of Fiasco Theater and The Actors Center.
Hao Feng* (Moon Gyet) is honored to be making his Yale Rep debut, especially as a part of this telling of a vital part of Asian American history that has often deliberately been neglected from the American curriculum. Thank you, Lloyd, for weaving this powerful story with your mellifluous language. Theater: Grumpy Monkey, The Musical (Pasadena Playhouse); The Dance and the Railroad (A Noise Within/ Artists at Play); Twelfth Night, Pericles (Independent Shakespeare Company); Nightwalk in the Chinese Garden (The Huntington Library/CalArts Center for New Performance). Film: Twisted Little Lies (Lifetime). Voiceover: Heavenly Delusion (Hulu), Alchemy of Souls (Netflix), Soundtrack #1 (Disney+). M.F.A., acting, CalArts; M.Phil, music and science, University of Cambridge; B.S. in neuroscience and B.A. in piano performance, Emory University. In his free time, Hao can be found doing martial arts, photography, or eating. Mostly eating. @haothefeng
Đavid Lee Huỳnh* (Two) is an actor and writer based in NYC. Off-Broadway: The Merchant of Venice (Theatre for a New Audience), ONCE UPON A (korean) TIME (Ma-Yi Theater Company), the Drama Desk-nominated Henry VI (NAATCO), Mrs. Warren’s Profession (Gingold Theatrical Group), The Trial of the Catonsville Nine (Transport Group), Warrior Sisters of Wu, No-No Boy, The Emperor’s Nightingale (Pan Asian Rep). Regional: Alley Theatre, Oregon Shakespeare, Everyman Theatre, Mixed Blood, and many others. Television/ film: Blue Bloods, FBI, Solitary, Children of the Dust. He stars in the Dungeons & Dragons television show Encounter Party streaming on Freevee and Plex. M.F.A., University of Houston. davidleehuynh.com | @huynhsome
Haskell King* (Dean/Inspector) OffBroadway: Russian Troll Farm (Vineyard Theatre); Kingfishers Catch Fire (Irish Rep); Please Continue, Isaac’s Eye, Photograph 51, Turnabout (Ensemble
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Studio Theatre); Mother (wild project); Elvis and Juliet (Abingdon Theatre).
Regional: Russian Troll Farm (Geva Theatre). Television: Dear Edward, Law & Order: Criminal Intent. Film: The Heart Stays, The Fly Room, Shadows and Lies
Jesse Cao Long he/him (Yip/One) is pleased to be making his Yale Rep debut. Previous theater credits include Short Stack 2 (Ma-Yi Theater Company); Big Love and Middletown (Columbia University); Translations (Barnard College); and Hamlet and Twelfth Night (RADA). He is currently a first-year M.F.A. Acting student at Columbia University and holds a B.A. in Modern East Asian and 20th-Century American History from Columbia University. @paroldhinter
Joe Osheroff* (Harriwell/Interpreter)
First time at Yale Rep! National Tour: War Horse. Off-Broadway: The Public, The Acting Company. Regional highlights: Molly’s Hammer, The Other Place, The Drawer Boy, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Merchant of Venice, Proof, The War of the Roses, As You Like It, The Caucasian Chalk Circle
Television: Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Quantico, The Blacklist, East New York, Blue Bloods, plus various commercials and voiceovers. Thank you, Roger Paul Inc.! Love to KLC and SP.
*Member of
David Shih* he/him (Gee/Three)
Broadway: Life of Pi Off-Broadway: Will Eno’s Gnit (Theater for a New Audience); KPOP (Ars Nova); ONCE UPON A (korean) TIME, Bike America (Ma-Yi); Henry VI (NAATCO); Awake and Sing! (NAATCO/The Public); Somebody’s Daughter (2ST); Crane Story (Playwrights Realm).
Regional: SUMO, Tiger Style! (La Jolla Playhouse); Life of Pi (A.R.T.); Kim’s Convenience (Westport Country Playhouse); The Paper Dreams of Harry Chin (Indiana Rep); The Great Wave (Berkeley Rep). Television: Law & Order, Billions, Hunters, City on a Hill, Iron Fist, The Path, Blindspot, Elementary, Madam Secretary, The Blacklist, Unforgettable. Film: The Amazing Spider-Man 2, Eighth Grade, Mr. Sushi, Saving Face. He is the voice of Eddie Toh in Grand Theft Auto V Joyce Meimei Zheng she/her (Yuen/ Four) is a proud Jersey Girl, daughter of Chinese immigrants, and lover of song. She is so excited to make her Yale Rep debut with this formidable team and this beautiful play. She holds a B.F.A. from Mason Gross School of Arts at Rutgers University. Recent credits: A Christmas Carol (Alabama Shakespeare Festival), Macbeth (Double Feature Plays), Vicky & Frank (Form Theatricals), Irina in Three Sisters (Rutgers), Enobarbus in The
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Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.
CAST
in alphabetical order
Tragedy of Antony and Cleopatra (Rutgers at Shakespeare’s Globe), Bounty in Chinatown (LF8 Studios debut short). @irokpink. Jesus loves you. She dedicates this performance to Mama, Baba, Derek, 外公, 奶奶, and the rest of her family in the far country.
UNDERSTUDY CAST
in alphabetical order
Sergio Mauritz Ang* he/they (understudy for Two, Yip/One) is making their Yale Rep debut. New York: Learning How to Read by Moonlight (Leviathan Lab), Colman Domingo’s The Brother(s) (Out of the Box Theatrics), Anna in the Tropics (Gallery Players), Summertime (Between Two Boroughs). Regional: Pride and Prejudice (Hartford Stage); Song of Me (Stages, Houston); Yoga Play, The Skin of Our Teeth, A Wrinkle in Time, As You Like It, Julius Caesar, Ragtime (PlayMakers Rep); Flowers of Hawaii (Chautauqua Theater Company); Bruise & Thorn (PlayPenn); Peter and the Starcatcher (Kitchen Theatre Company); Mañanas de Abril y Mayo (Connecticut Free Shakespeare). Film: Relay (Black Bear Films).
Television: The Other Two (HBO Max); Law and Order: SVU (NBC). M.F.A. in acting, UNC Chapel Hill; B.F.A. in acting, Brooklyn College. LaGuardia Arts High School. 谢谢大家 The Far Country Team, my beloved husband, BWA and CLA Fam. For 爸 and 媽 who sacrificed everything to live in this country. sergiomauritzang.com
Edoardo Benzoni (understudy for Dean/Inspector) is a second-year M.F.A. acting candidate at David Geffen School of Drama, where he has been seen in Uncle Vanya, How to Live on Earth, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Other credits include We F*cked Up (Yale Cabaret); Pride and Prejudice, Cannabis Passover, The Light and the Dark (Chautauqua Theater Company); and The Importance of Being Earnest (Chalk Rep). He received his bachelor’s degree from University of California, Berkeley.
Anzi DeBenedetto he/him (understudy for Moon Gyet) is a graduate of NYU Tisch (Atlantic and Stonestreet studios) in 2021. Recent theater includes Chamber Theatre’s Encore national tour in which he played 10 characters, and the title role in Thom Pain (based on nothing), a Bella Abzug Park public performance in NYC. Television and film credits include CBS’s FBI, Amazon Studios’ Chemical Hearts, and A24’s Y2K. Upcoming: Rosemead, starring Lucy Liu. Anzi is honored to be working at Yale Repertory Theatre with Ralph B. Peña and would like to especially thank his parents for all their love and support.
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Paul Juhn* (understudy for Gee/ Three) Theater credits include Coleman ’72 (South Coast Rep); A Delicate Balance (Transport Group/ NAATCO); Snow in Midsummer (Classic Stage Company); Henry VI (NAATCO); The Good Person of Szechwan (The Public Theater); The Great Wave (Berkeley Rep); Hannah and the Dread Gazebo, The Merry Wives of Windsor, The Winter’s Tale, Antony and Cleopatra (Oregon Shakespeare Festival); White Chocolate (The Culture Project); Sides: the Fear is Real (Mr. Miyagi’s Theatre Company); wAve (Ma-Yi Theater). Film and television credits include Dr. Death, Girls5Eva, The Blacklist, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Law & Order, Salt, Quantico, 30 Rock, Person of Interest, Works of ART. Paul is a member of Mr. Miyagi’s Theater Company. M.F.A., UCSD.
Christina Liang* (understudy for Low, Yuen/Four) is excited to be understudying in The Far Country at Yale Rep. She is an actress and writer based in New York. Her theater credits include The Chinese Lady (Kitchen Theatre Company); Pride and Prejudice (Triad Stage); Three Musketeers: 1941 (Project Y
Theatre); Quack (Alley Theatre); Issei, He Say (New Jersey Rep); A Christmas Carol, Love and Information, and Ah, Wilderness! (A.C.T.). She has also appeared on FBI: Most Wanted (CBS) and Grand Theft Auto Online (Rockstar). M.F.A., A.C.T, acting; B.A., NYU, individualized studies.
Max Sheldon he/him (understudy for Harriwell/Interpreter) is a first-year actor at David Geffen School of Drama and is thrilled to be working with the incredible team of The Far Country. His credits include Finian’s Rainbow (Irish Rep); Afloat (WP Theater); West Side Story, Peter and The Starcatcher (Weston Playhouse); and Dracula, or the Undead (Williamstown Theatre Festival). Film and television credits include Law & Order: Organized Crime (NBC), Theater Camp (Searchlight Pictures), Red Oaks (Amazon), and The Path (Hulu). Max is a proud graduate of NYU Tisch School of the Arts. Max would like to thank his family, his chosen family, all of his teachers, Ted Walch, and his parents for their love and unwavering belief.
*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
Matthew Armentrout (Hair Designer) previously worked at Yale Rep on Escaped Alone, 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).
Nakia Shalice Avila she/they (Assistant Stage Manager) is a black afro-latine abolitionist, dreamer, and multi-hyphenate artist. Credits include The Salvagers; Today is My Birthday; the ripple, the wave that carried me home (Yale Rep); Skeleton Crew, Othello (Trinity Repertory Company); Big River (Utah Shakespeare Festival); Familiar, True West (Steppenwolf Theatre Company); I was waiting for the echo of a better day (Fisher Center at Bard); The Tempest (Elm Shakespeare Company); the father, the son, and the holy spirit (Yale Summer Cabaret); love i awethu further, Hedda Gabler, Ghosts, and Macbeth (David Geffen School of Drama). Nakia holds a B.A. in psychology from Claflin University. They dedicate their work on this production to the black and queer stage managers before them.
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
Alexus Jade Coney* (Stage Manager) is a graduating M.F.A. candidate in stage management at David Geffen School of Drama, where she has worked on Furlough’s Paradise, Marys Seacole, Love’s Labor’s Lost, Manning, and Bodas de sangre/Blood Wedding. Other credits include The Bleeding Class (Chautauqua Theater Company); The Salvagers, Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Between Two Knees (Yale Rep); The Royale, burnbabyburn: an american dream, and Bakkhai (Yale Cabaret). Alexus was the Stage Management Apprentice for New York Stage and Film’s 2023 Summer Season. She proudly holds a B.A. in English from Yale University and dedicates her final production as a Yale student to her parents, Jackie and Bryan Coney—thank you for lifting
*Member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.
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her up throughout life and especially the last eight years. “Every truly great accomplishment is at first impossible.”
Hope Binfeng Ding she/her (Assistant Stage Manager) is a second-year M.F.A. candidate in stage management at David Geffen School of Drama, originally from Shenzhen, China. Credits at the Geffen School include Uncle Vanya, Ghosts, Next to Normal, Grand Concourse, and The Winter’s Tale. Other selected credits include Romeo and Juliet (NAATCO); Aubergine, The Scarlet Letter (South Coast Rep); The Heart of Rock and Roll (The Old Globe); Sleep No More Shanghai; Eye of the Storm Stunt Spectacular (Disney Shanghai). B.A., UC San Diego.
Hana S. Kim she/her (Projection Designer) Broadway: The Old Man and the Pool; Summer, 1976; The Outsiders. Off-Broadway: The Harder They Come, The Visitor (Lucille Lortel nomination), and Eve’s Song at The Public Theater; Everything Rises (BAM); Magdalene (Prototype Festival). New music/ opera: L’Orfeo (Santa Fe Opera), Sweet Land (The Industry), The Anonymous Lover (Los Angeles Opera). Regional: Geffen Playhouse, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, South Coast Rep, Magic Theatre, A.C.T, among others. Hana is the recipient of the Princess Grace, Center Theatre Group’s Sherwood, Helen Hayes, and LA Drama Critics Circle Distinguished Achievement awards, among others. hananow.com
Joe Krempetz (Sound Design and Original Music) is a sound designer and composer from the San Francisco Bay Area. Recent credits include Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (Yale Rep); Fucking A, Julius Caesar (David Geffen School of Drama); Transpositions (Yale Schwarzman Center); and Upwelling (multiple Bay Area venues). As a sound engineer, Joe has worked with Microsoft, Stanford University, Berkeley Rep, Theaterworks Silicon Valley, IFAI, and many others. Recently, Joe designed sound for Voices of the New Belarus, an installation for the Oslo Freedom Forum. He is easily Google-able.
Matteo Lanzarotta (Technical Director) is a second-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama. He served as an assistant technical director for Wish You Were Here at Yale Rep and Next to Normal at the Geffen School. Before Yale, he worked on various productions in New York City and spent many summers at Williamstown Theatre Festival. He is very excited to be the technical director for The Far Country and would like to thank everyone who has helped him succeed here—too many to list, but you know who you are.
Xi (Zoey) Lin 林曦 (Sound Design and Original Music) is a native of Nanjing, China, and holds a B.A. in theater arts and a B.M. in piano performance from Lawrence University. She is currently an M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama. Previous credits include original music composition for Morpho Studio’s digital
21
CREATIVE TEAM
in alphabetical order
fashion collection releases of「CORAL 珊瑚」and VINCENT at Beijing Fashion Week, the Carlotta Festival 2023 (production sound engineer) and Next to Normal (assistant sound designer and engineer) at the Geffen School, and Detroit ’67 (Princeton Summer Theatre, sound designer). xizoeylin.com
Midori Nakamura (Vocal and Dialect Coach) is a Brooklyn-based teaching artist and Designated Linklater Voice Teacher. She teaches voice for David Geffen School of Drama, The Linklater Center in New York, the Maggie Flanigan Studio, and NYU Tisch at The Lee Strasberg Theatre & Film Institute. She has also taught for Columbia University’s Social Impact Fellowship and LAByrinth Theater’s Intensive Ensemble, as well as coaching private clients in both acting and voice. As an actor, she has worked in film, TV, on Broadway, Off-Broadway, for Shakespeare in the Park, at the Kennedy Center, at the RSC, and in regional theater. She has acted alongside Philip Seymour Hoffman, Alec Baldwin, Anthony Hopkins, Patrick Stewart, Angela Bassett, Bill Irwin, Keanu Reeves, Michael C. Hall, Liev Schreiber, Karen Allen, Del Close, Kim Cattrall, and Jennifer Aniston. Directors she has acted under include George C. Wolfe, Morgan Freeman, Lena Dunham, Barry Levenson, Peter Sellars, Nicholas Hytner, Austin Pendleton, James Lapine, Jerzy Grotowski, and Joe Chaikin. Midori codirected, co-produced, and co-edited T’an Bakhtale, a documentary about the Russian Roma, which received awards from the American Association of Anthropology and the Royal Anthropological Institute. She assisted Karen Allen in her directorial debut, A Tree, A Rock, A Cloud
A.B. Orme (Production Dramaturg) is a second-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama, interested in bringing the worlds of scholarship, performance, and activism into more honest and generative conversation with one another. On the page and on the stage, they love to explore queer theater, theaters of the left, and the legacies of early modern verse drama. Geffen School credits include The Alley and Solstice. They currently serve as the Co-Managing Editor of Theater, Yale’s journal of drama and performance.
Permanent Ceasefire Now.
Ralph B. Peña (Director) is an OBIE Award-winning theater maker based in New York City. Recent directing credits include the world premiere of Lisa Sanaye Dring’s SUMO at La Jolla Playhouse; Lloyd Suh’s The Chinese Lady at The Public Theater, Indiana Rep, Long Wharf Theatre, Barrington Stage (Drama Desk, Lortel, New York Outer Critics, Connecticut Critics Circle nominations); Michael Lew’s Tiger Style! at South Coast Repertory; and Daniel K. Isaac’s ONCE UPON A (korean) TIME for Ma-Yi Theater Company, where he is currently Producing Artistic Director. For Ma-Yi he has directed the world premieres of Hansol Jung’s Among the Dead (The New York Times Critic’s Pick), Michael Lew’s microcrisis, Lloyd Suh’s The Wong Kids (Off Broadway, Alliance Best Children’s Play), and Children of Vonderly (both also NYT Critic’s Picks). He wrote and directed the short film Vancouver (Cannes World Film Festival, L.A. Indie Festival, NY International Film Award for Best Short and Best Director, 2023 UNIMA Citation of Excellence), and the documentary The First Twenty: 20 Years of Asian American Playwriting for PBS/ALL ARTS.
22
Kiyoshi Shaw he/him (Costume Designer) is a fourth-year M.F.A. candidate at David Geffen School of Drama, where he has designed costumes for Ibsen’s Ghosts and Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. He received his B.F.A. in costume design and technology from Virginia Commonwealth University, where he designed costumes for One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Assistant credits include Fly at Ford’s Theatre, Bodas de sangre/ Blood Wedding at the Geffen School, and Choir Boy at Yale Rep.
Lloyd Suh (Playwright) is also the author of The Heart Sellers, which premiered last February at Milwaukee Rep, and later played at the Huntington Theatre. Other plays include The Chinese Lady, Bina’s Six Apples, Charles Francis Chan Jr.’s Exotic Oriental Murder Mystery, American Hwangap, and more, and have been produced across the country, with Ma-Yi, Atlantic, The Public Theater, Alliance, Children’s Theatre Company, Magic, Long Wharf Theatre, Denver Center, Ensemble Studio Theatre, and more, including internationally at the Cultural Center of the Philippines and with PCPA at the Guerilla Theatre in Seoul, Korea. He is the recipient of the Steinberg Playwright Award, the Herb Alpert Award in the Arts, the Horton Foote Prize, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. He is a Resident Playwright at New Dramatists and was elected in 2016 to the Dramatists Guild Council.
Kim Zhou she/her/hers (Scenic Designer) is a Chinese-born set designer and theater maker. Her recent credits include Next to Normal (David Geffen School of Drama); Pride365 (Yale Summer Cabaret); La Doriclea (associate scenic design, Yale Baroque Opera); The Fairy Queen (Crescent Theater); And the Beetle Hums (playwright), Every Brilliant Thing, We Fucked Up, Dr. Ride’s American Beach House, and We’re Gonna Die (Yale Cabaret). She received her bachelor’s degree from OCAD University in Toronto, where she studied and practiced architecture design. She is in her final year of training at David Geffen School of Drama. kimzhou.com | @kimx.zhou
Yichen Zhou (Lighting Designer) is a theater designer born and raised in China and is currently pursuing an M.F.A. at David Geffen School of Drama. In her theatrical practice, she is deeply fascinated by the stories told through space and the truth one can find through imagination. Selected recent credits include Invasive Species (The Tank); The Rasa Project (National Sawdust); Furlough’s Paradise, Marys Seacole, Ghosts (Geffen School); If We Could Turn Back Time (Connecticut College); burnbabyburn: an american dream (Yale Summer Cabaret); and A Number (Beijing Inside-Out Theatre).
23
ARTISTIC
Assistant Director
Destyne Miller
Assistant Scenic Designer
Jennifer Yuqing Cao
Assistant Costume Designer
Allison Morgan
Associate Lighting Designer
Eitan Acks
Assistant Lighting Designer
Gib Gibney
Assistant Sound Designer and Engineer
Robert Salerno
Associate Projection Designer
John Horzen
Assistant Dramaturg
Elliot Valentine
Toisanese Language Consultant
Karen Huie
Additional Translation
Xi (Zoey) Lin 林曦
PRODUCTION
Production Manager
Sydney Raine Garick
Assistant Production Manager
Yun Wu 吳昀
Assistant Technical Directors
Nicolas Benavides
Steven Blasberg
Alex Theisen
Technical Designer
Shawn Poellet
Properties Manager
Nickie Dubick
Production Electrician
Steph Lo 盧胤沂
Front of House Mix Engineer
Stephanie Smith
Projection Engineer
Constanza Etchechury López
Projection Programmer
Cheyenne Doczi
Run Crew
Matthew Chong, KT Farmer, Lilliana Gonzalez, Rosemary Lisa
Jones, Twaha Abdul Majeed, Georgia
Petersen, Annie Wang
Run Crew Swing
Kemar Jewel
Rehearsal Assistant
Chloe Xiaonan Liu
ADMINISTRATION
Associate Managing Director
Chloe Knight
Assistant Managing Director
Jeremy Landes
Management Assistants
Iyanna Huffington Whitney
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
Joy Chen
Kavya Shetty
24
SPECIAL THANKS
Dustin Chinn; Daisy Yee; Christine Mok; Annie MacRae; Neil Pepe; Loretta Greco; Beth Blickers; Kimber Lee; Andrea Hiebler; Krista Williams; Jennifer Chang; A.K. Howard; Edward Tepporn; and everyone at the Angel Island Immigration Station Foundation, and especially to Him Mark Lai, Genny Lim and Judy Yung for their extraordinary scholarship and work in uncovering and documenting this history, particularly through Island: Poetry and History of Chinese Immigrants on Angel Island, 1910-1940, University of Washington Press, 2014, and Angel Island: Immigrant Gateway to America, Oxford University Press, 2012; and to Erika Lee, for her At America’s Gates: Chinese Immigration During the Exclusion Era, 1882-1943, University of North Carolina Press, 2003; Emily Chew; Jennifer Heikkila Díaz; Russell Nauman; Michael Meng, Librarian for Chinese Studies at Yale and Head of Yale’s East Asia Library, for his research guidance to the production’s dramaturgy team.
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
25
YALE REPERTORY THEATRE STAFF
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
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
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
First Hand
Anna Blankenberger
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
Projection Technician
Erin Pleake
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
Iyanna Huffington Whitney
Company Manager
Sarah Machiko Haber
Assistant Company Managers
Joy Chen
Victoria McNaughton
Development & Alumni Affairs
Senior Director of Development and Alumni Affairs
Deborah S. Berman
Deputy Director of Operations for Development and Alumni Affairs
Susan C. Clark
Associate Director of Development and Alumni Affairs
Jacob Santos
Assistant Director of Development & Alumni Affairs
Mikayla Stanley
Senior Administrative
Assistant to Development and Alumni Affairs
Jennifer E. Alzona
Development Associate
Delaney Kelley
Finance, Human Resources, & Digital Technology
Director of Finance and Business Administration/Lead
Administrator
Nicola Blake
26
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, & Audience Services
Director of Marketing
Daniel Cress
Director of Communications
Steven Padla
Senior Associate Director of Marketing and Communications
Caitlin Griffin
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
Claudia Campos
Publications Manager
Marquerite 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 Valentine, 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
Timothy “TJ” Wildow
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
27
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.
The Far Country, April 26–May 18, 2024. Yale Repertory Theatre, 1120 Chapel Street, New Haven, Connecticut.
ACCESSIBILITY SERVICES
May 11 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.
May 11 at 8PM
American Sign Language (ASL)
An ASL-interpreted performance for patrons who are deaf or have hearing loss.
May 18 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.
Free listening devices, headsets, and neck loops, and Sensory items 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.
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.
c2 is pleased to be the official Open Captioning Provider of Yale Repertory Theatre.
28
ACCESSIBILITY TEAM
in alphabetical order
Lucy Annett (ASL Interpreter) is thrilled to be making her return to Yale Rep having previously interpreted for The Brightest Thing in the World. Based in San Diego, she has interpreted for productions at American Repertory Theater, Broadway Across America, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, and Center Theatre Group, among others. Having a background in music and interpreting for nearly 25 years, she enjoys the opportunity to be in a performing environment. She is grateful to her loved ones for their support, especially her kiddo.
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.
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.
Travis Giuse Nguyễn he/él (ASL Interpreter) is a multilingual interpreter (American Sign Language/English/ Spanish/Vietnamese) based in the Greater Houston area. Certified under the Texas Board for the Evaluation of Interpreters (BEI) and the National Board for Certified Medical Interpreters (NBCMI), Travis enjoys providing language accessibility to stakeholders such as medical providers, patients, and theatergoers. In the performing arts world, Travis has had the privilege of working with theater productions at multiple venues, including American Repertory Theater, Moonbox Productions, Cleveland Play House, and Alley Theatre. When not interpreting, Travis enjoys knitting, sewing, and gardening.
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EVENTS!
AAPI GATHERS
Throughout the run of The Far Country, Yale Rep will host programming related to the production and in celebration with and of the AAPI community. Visit yalerep.org for the full calendar of events.
SATURDAY, APRIL 27 at 8PM
TUESDAY, MAY 7 AT 8PM
Post-Show Conversation
Join us in the August Wilson Lounge following the performance for a conversation about the show with our production dramaturgs.
MONDAY, APRIL 29 at 8PM
AAPI Gathers Night at Yale Rep
WEDNESDAY, MAY 8 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.
THURSDAY, MAY 9 at 6PM
Yale Rep @ NHFPL
Fair Haven Branch, 182 Grand Ave
Join us for a conversation in English and Spanish about the themes of The Far Country and learn about Yale Rep’s Spanish captioned performance.
SATURDAY, MAY 11 at 11AM
Yale Rep @ NHFPL
Ives Main Library, 133 Elm St
Join us for a family-friendly storytime and craft activity related to the historical content of the play.
SATURDAY, MAY 11 at 2PM
Talk Back
Join us after the show for a conversation about the play and its themes with members of the company.
FRIDAY, MAY 17 at 8PM
Spanish Language Captioning La presentación del 17 de mayo será subtitulada en español. This performance will be open-captioned in Spanish.
All events are subject to change. Additional details at yalerep.org.
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YOUTH PROGRAMS
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
DWIGHT/EDGEWOOD PROJECT (D/EP) is a community engagement program of Yale Rep and David Geffen School of Drama for middle schoolaged students from Barnard Environmental
Forget Me Not F low er Shop www.forgetmenotfloristCT.com 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
THE
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
Amy Aquino ’86
Rudy Aragon LAW ’79
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
James Chen ’08
Lois Chiles
Patricia Clarkson ’85
Edgar M. Cullman III ’02, YC ’97
Michael David ’68
Wendy Davies
Special Research Fellow ’21
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 DFAH ’14
Woody Taft YC ’92
Andrew Tisdale
Edward Trach ’58
Julie Turaj YC ’94
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
Julie Turaj and Rob Pohly
Esme Usdan
Donald R. Ware
GUARANTORS
($25,000–$49,999)
Americana Arts Foundation
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
Rudy Aragon
Carmine Boccuzzi and Bernard Lumpkin
Lynne and Roger Bolton
James and Deborah Burrows Foundation
Burry Fredrik Foundation
Wendy Davies
Michael Diamond*
*deceased
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
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
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
Ellen Iseman
JANA Foundation
Ann Judd and Bennett Pudlin
Rocco Landesman
George Lindsay, Jr.
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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
Daphne Rubin-Vega and Thomas Costanzo
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
Miles Benickes
David J. Berendes
Ashley Bishop
John and Suzanne Bourdeaux
Shawn Boyle
Joy Carlin
Lawrence Casey
Sarah Bartlo Chaplin
Audrey Conrad
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
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
Chih-Lung Liu
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
John Turturro and Katherine Borowitz
Paul Walsh
Stephanie Waaser
Kristan and Nathaniel Wells
Vera Wells
Walton Wilson
Steven Wolff
Amanda Wallace Woods
Nancy Yao
Robert Zoland
INVESTORS
($250–$499)
Actors’ Equity Foundation
Clayton Austin
Alexander Bagnall
Michael Bianco
Susan Brady and Mark Loeffler
James and Dorothy Bridgeman
Tom Broecker
Donald Brown
Suzanne Bruhn
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Buckholz
Kate Burton
Michael Cadden
Sarah Cain
Nicholas Cimmino
Jeffrey Cohen
Daniel Cress
Claire A. Criscuolo
Janet Cunningham
Rick Davis
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
Barbara and William Nordhaus
33
Thank you to the generous contributors to David Geffen School
Adam O’Byrne
Kevin and Margaret O’Halloran
Steven Padla
Gamal Palmer
Michael Parrella
Michael Posnick
Dr. Michael Rigsby and Prof. Richard Lalli
Tialoc Rivas
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
Josh Taylor
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
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
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 Massotta
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
Carolynn Richer
Joan Robbins
Nathan Roberts
Peter S. Roberts
Brian Robinson
Lori Robishaw
Miguel Rosadu
34
of Drama and Yale Repertory Theatre
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
Rita Scheeler
Steven Schmidt
Jennifer Schwartz
Alexander Scribner
Patrick Seeley
Tom Sellar
Subrata K. Sen
Suzanne Sessions
*deceased
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
Katherine Touart
Russell L. Treyz
Adam Tucker
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 Foundation
IN KIND
Andrew and Nesrin
Tisdale
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
Frances Black and Matthew Strauss
Carmine Boccuzzi and Bernard Lumpkin
James Bundy and Anne Tofflemire
Lois Chiles
Michael David and Lauren Mitchell
Wendy Davies
Scott Delman
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
Woody Taft
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 January 1, 2023, through April 1, 2024.
35
gift to Yale Rep’s Annual
more information,
C. Clark,
MAKE A GIFT! When you make a
Fund, you support the creative work on our stage and our education programs in New Haven. For
or to make a donation, please call Susan
203.432.1559. You can also give online at yalerep.org/support.
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