WHAT OF THE NIGHT? David Geffen School of Drama, 2024

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What of the Night?

SEPTEMBER 26–28, 2024

DAVID GEFFEN SCHOOL OF DRAMA AT YALE

James Bundy, Elizabeth Parker Ware Dean Florie Seery, Associate Dean

Chantal Rodriguez, Associate Dean Carla L. Jackson, Assistant Dean Nancy Yao, Assistant Dean

PRESENTS

What of the Night?

Directed by Joan

Creative Team

Choreographer

Jennifer Archibald

Production Dramaturg

Karoline Vielemeyer

Fight and Intimacy Directors

Kelsey Rainwater

Michael Rossmy

Stage Manager

Rethabile Headbush

Cast

NADINE

Nadine .............. Gretta Marston

Charlie Hiếu Ngọc Bùi

Pete Ariyan Kassam

Leah Mariah Copeland

Rainbow ........................... Sarah Lo

Birdie Rosie Victoria

SPRINGTIME

Rainbow ........................... Sarah Lo

Greta Rosie Victoria

Ray

Max Sheldon

LUST

Joseph ................ Ariyan Kassam

Helena Mariah Copeland

Ray Max Sheldon

Birdie Rosie Victoria

HUNGER

Charlie Hiếu Ngọc Bùi

Birdie Rosie Victoria

Ray .......................... Max Sheldon

Reba Gretta Marston

Angel Ariyan Kassam

Warehouse Residents ...... Mariah Copeland

Sarah Lo

“Sabor a mi” arrangement and vocals by Gretta Marston

Content Guidance

What of the Night? contains simulations of sexual and physical violence, psychological violence, sexual intimacy, and coarse language. One play also features a non-firing theatrical firearm prop.

There will be a 10-minute intermission.

This production is supported by The Benjamin Mordecai III Production Fund.

Artistic

Assistant Director

Cindy De La Cruz

Assistant Stage Manager

Aura Michelle

Production

Technical Supervisor

Allie Posner

Associate Safety Advisors

Shannon Dodson

Gaby Rodriguez

Davon Williams

Associate Production Manager

Bryant Heatherly

Production Crew

Rea J. Brown

Xi (Zoey) Lin 林曦

Yung-Hung Sung 宋永鴻

Run Crew

Tricie Bergman

Rosemary Lisa Jones

Administration

Associate Managing Director

Mikayla Stanley

Assistant Managing Director

Mithra Seyedi

Management Assistant

Jazzmin Bonner

House Manager

Maura Boseman

Production Photographer

Maza Rey

David Geffen School of Drama productions are supported by the work of more than 200 faculty and staff members throughout the year.

Special Thanks

Hannah Louise Jones

Yale acknowledges that indigenous peoples and nations, including Mohegan, Mashantucket Pequot, Eastern Pequot, Schaghticoke, Golden Hill Paugussett, Niantic, and the Quinnipiac and other Algonquian speaking peoples, have stewarded through generations the lands and waterways of what is now the state of Connecticut. We honor and respect the enduring relationship that exists between these peoples and nations and this land.

We also acknowledge the legacy of slavery in our region and the enslaved African people whose labor was exploited for generations to help establish the business of Yale University as well as the economy of Connecticut and the United States.

The Studio Projects are designed to be learning experiences that complement classroom work, providing a medium for students at David Geffen School of Drama at Yale to combine their individual talents and energies toward the staging of collaboratively created works. Your attendance meaningfully completes this process.

THE BENJAMIN MORDECAI III

PRODUCTION FUND , established by a graduate of the School, honors the memory of the Tony Award-winning producer who served as Managing Director of Yale Repertory Theatre, 1982–1993, and as Associate Dean and Chair of the Theater Management Program from 1993 until his death in 2005.

Cracks in the Dark

Nadine, Springtime, Lust, and Hunger—the four plays that make up María Irene Fornés’s What of the Night?—tell stories of people from an extended family who experience a myriad of hardships across a century of U.S. history. But no matter how dire their lives seem, there’s also something magical about these characters. Leonard Cohen once sang, “There is a crack in everything; that’s how the light gets in.” By exploring human brokenness in the world of these plays, Fornés creates space for profound love.

Nadine

The first play in the quartet takes place during the Great Depression, a period when the American economy was driving millions into joblessness, homelessness, and starvation. It is no coincidence, however, that the main character’s name is the French derivative of the Russian word “Nadezhda” meaning “Hope.” And while despair may scream loudly in dark times, hope is what carries people through the night. Fornés tells the story of a struggling family centered around its matriarch and plumbs the ugliest depths of human behavior that manifest when people have to fight for survival. But in this world even the most despicable acts are foremost symptoms of cracked hearts that yearn to find warmth and protection.

Springtime

During the second play, the standard of living in the US has significantly improved after the Second World War. In the 1950s, suburban bliss became possible: a white picket fence, a house, a car, and a TV for popular entertainment. But this life was reserved for the picture-perfect nuclear family. Instead, Fornés chooses to shed light on those who live on the fringe of a system

that leaves no room for them. In a time when the government saw queer people as a threat to society, she tells an intimate story of two women in love. For these characters, falling through the system’s cracks necessitates a quest for survival.

Lust

This play begins in 1968, a tumultuous year that changed the American landscape forever, and follows the characters through the rebellious 1970s. The decade was marked by a booming counterculture that protested shallow materialism, the Vietnam War, and a sexually inhibited society. But Fornés doesn‘t tell the story of a hippie love-in. Instead, her characters are part of a culturally repressed majority that privately explores hidden desires. Here, lust has seeped in through the cracks in their veneer of propriety, lurking and breathing in the dark corners of the human mind.

Hunger

The final play is set in a dystopian future that— despite the play’s being written more than 30 years ago—strikes a chord with contemporary angst about the climate crisis and the surge of authoritarian politics. A world that feels cold, deserted, and dangerous doesn’t seem to leave much room for heartfelt engagements or even the memory of a meaningful past. Here, hunger is both an existential threat and a craving to salvage lost connections. As grim as this setting may seem, Fornés reminds us: the darker the night, the more radiant the rays of light that shine through the cracks, and the more powerful the smallest acts of love.

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