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| 1996-
1997 |
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Tooth Of
Crime (Second Dance)
By Sam Shepard / Music by T Bone Burnett /
Directed by Bill Hart
With Vincent D'Onofrio, Kirk Acevedo, Paul
Butler, Michael Deep, Jesse Lenat, Jeffrey Anders Ware, Sturgis
Warner, Rebecca Wisocky
Sets by E. David Cosier, Costumes by Teresa
Snider-Stein, Lighting by Anne Militello, Sound by David Van Tieghem,
Video by Kevin Cunningham, Musical Director Loren Toolajian,
Production Stage Managers Ruth Kreshka/James FitzSimmons, Casting by
Jerry Beaver and Associates
In association with Lucille Lortel and
Signature Theatre Company.
"Director Bill Hart keeps things tense
and prowling and angry in this strange play of uncertainty and
anguish that is about both the musicians' doubts of music and the
writer's terror before language. Vincent D'Onofrio gives depth and
pain to Hoss: this fine actor is coming into his own. Kirk Acevedo's
Crow is likewise a star-making turn. This is, I think, by far Sam
Shepard's best play."
— Donald Lyons, The Wall Street Journal
"Sam Shepard's Tooth of Crime is his most savage vision,
a diabolical duel between the fading king and the fast-rising
challenger."
— Mel Gussow, The New York Times
"This new version has music and lyrics
by a respected alternative folk musician, T Bone Burnett, and it adds
to the power of a play that trades heavily on musical methods and
verbal references. The present staging by Bill Hart seems exemplary.
It packs a potent punch not readily forgotten."
— Clive Barnes, New York Post
"Tooth of Crime (Second Dance)
really is - honestly! - a fascinating, even brilliant work, and those
who consider it Mr. Shepard's best aren't insane."
— Ben Brantley, The New York Times
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The Red
Address
By David Ives / Directed by Pamela Berlin
With Kevin Anderson, Ned Eisenberg, Jonathan
Hogan, Josh Hopkins, Cady McClain, Welker White
Sets by Christine Jones, Costumes by David C.
Woolard, Lighting by Donald Holder, Sound by John Kilgore, Production
Stage Manager Susan Whelan, Stage Manager Thea Bradshaw Gillies,
Press Representative Richard Kornberg, Associate Producer Carol
Fishman, Casting by Johnson-Liff Associates
Dedicated to the memory of Richard Nelson, an
extraordinary human being, uniquely talented Tony Award-winning
lighting designer and our wonderful friend.
"The play is crisply staged by Pamela
Berlin, there is an excellently versatile setting by Christine Jones,
and the acting throughout is superb."
— Clive Barnes, New York Post
"Gentle and profound. Kevin Anderson
gives one of his deepest and most likeable performances.He also looks
good in red pumps."
— David Patrick Stearns, USA Today
"Playwright David Ives is the master
wordsmith. Ives can indeed create crackling scenes."
— Aileen Jacobson, New York Newsday
"David Ives has cunningly couched
serious themes in a seemingly comic shell, which makes the
developments that much more unsettling. It is remarkable how swiftly
Ives gets us involved with his personages, outlandish though they may
be."
— John Simon, New York Magazine
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Sympathetic
Magic
By Lanford
Wilson
Directed by Marshall W. Mason
With Tanya Berezin, David Bishins, Herb
Foster, Ellen Lancaster, Jeff McCarthy, Dana Millican, Jordan Mott,
David Pittu
Sets by John Lee Beatty, Costumes by Laura
Crow, Lighting by Dennis Parichy, Sound by Chuck London, Original
Music by Peter Kater, Fight Staging by BH Barry, Production Stage
Manager Denise Yaney, Stage Manager Karen Potosnak, Casting by
Johnson-Liff Associates, Associate Producer Carol Fishman, Press
Representative Richard Kornberg
Written on commission for Second Stage
Theatre
This production was part of The Harold and
Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust New Play Development Program for
Second Stage Theatre.
Support for this production was provided by generous grants from Axe
-Houghton Foundation and The Laura Pels Foundation. This production
was sponsored in part by AT&T.
"Lanford Wilson's Sympathetic
Magic is the most intelligent and engagingly intellectual theatre
piece since Tom Stoppard's Arcadia. The cast is flawless and
elegantly directed."
— Scott and Barbara Siegel, Drama-Logue
"Lanford Wilson's best play yet. He
encompasses it all, always landing, however daring the leap, on the
balls of his elastic feet. He shies away from nothing, giving you
even one of the most complicated and terrifying fights ever,
chillingly staged by that master BH Barry."
— John Simon, New York Magazine
"Probably not since Tom Stoppard's Hapgood have we had such a genial course
in the foothills of advanced physics as we got this week at the world
premiere of Lanford Wilson's Sympathetic
Magic. I was distinctly entertained by it, and mightily
intrigued."
— Clive Barnes, New York Post
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Something
Blue
Written and performed by Michaela Murphy
Directed by Tim Blake Nelson
Lighting by Jan Kroeze, Costumes by Crystal
Thompson, Press Representative Richard Kornberg, Production Stage
Manager Rebecca C. Monroe, Associate Producer Carol Fishman
This production was sponsored in part by
AT&T.
"Michaela Murphy's good humor, good
writing, and good acting are ultimately irresistible. She brings it
all to quite vivid life."
— New York Law Journal
"In Something Blue, Michaela
Murphy enthusiastically tells of her role in her sister's hilariously
grisly wedding in Florida. It is a zesty story, and Murphy's humor is
astonishingly broad as she jumps from stoic sarcasm to slapstick.
This one-woman show has an accessible, casual quality, like the most
entertaining story you've ever heard standing around the water
cooler."
— Lisa Coleman Bradlow, Time Out New York
"Intelligently paced and sharply
staged."
— Aileen Jacobson, New York Newsday
"Michaela Murphy is expertly funny from
beginning to end. A priceless kinship-of-shame account."
— Anita Gates, The New York Times
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