2009 BREAKING GROUND FESTIVAL OF NEW PLAYS INCLUDES MUSICAL
PLUS THREE SELECTIONS BY HUNTINGTON PLAYWRITING FELLOWS
WHAT: The Huntington Theatre Company’s 2009 Breaking Ground Festival of new work occurs July 24 and August 3-5, 2009 and is comprised of three new plays by Huntington Playwriting Fellows and a musical about Filipino immigrants to Alaska.
WHEN:
The Long Season: Friday, July 24 at 4pm
Deported / a dream play: Monday, August 3 at 7pm
Lizzie Stranton: Tuesday, August 4 at 7pm
Jeanie Don’t Sing No Mo’: Wednesday, August 5 at 7pm
WHERE: Stanford Calderwood Pavilion at the Boston Center for the Arts, 527 Tremont Street, Boston
The Long Season: Roberts Studio Theatre
Other titles: Deane Rehearsal Hall
TICKETS: Free and open to the public. Suggested donation of $10. Seating is limited so reservations are encouraged and can be made by calling 617 266-0800 or at tickets@huntingtontheatre.org.
(BOSTON) – New plays by Huntington Playwriting Fellows Lydia R. Diamond, Jacqui Parker, and Joyce Van Dyke and a new musical by Chay Yew and Fabian Obispo will be read this July and August as part of the Huntington Theatre Company’s sixth Breaking Ground Festival, held at the Huntington’s Stanford Calderwood Pavilion at the Boston Center for the Arts. Readings are free and open to the public, though reservations are recommended as seating is limited.
The Festival begins July 24 with a reading of The Long Season, a musical that chronicles Filipino immigration to the United States in the 1920s and the unionization of a cannery in Alaska. Huntington Artistic Director Peter DuBois commissioned the piece by writer Chay Yew and composer Fabian Obispo while artistic director of Perseverance Theatre in Juneau, AK. With DuBois as director, the three subsequently developed the piece through workshops at The Public Theater (NY) and at the George Street Playhouse (NJ). Yew is an acclaimed theatre and opera director and helmed the Huntington’s 2008 production of Boleros for the Disenchanted. Obispo, composer and sound designer of Boleros, has contributed music to numerous Off Broadway and regional theatre productions The reading of The Long Season is supported by a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
Deported / a dream play, by Huntington Playwriting Fellow (HPF) Joyce Van Dyke, will be read on Monday, August 3 at 7pm. It tells the story of Elmas and Varter who save each other's lives during the Armenian genocide. After they come to America, their story leaps across time and space, ending in a dream world of the future where Armenians, Turks, the living, and the dead commingle. Van Dyke received the 2009 Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding New Script for The Oil Thief, which was commissioned by the Ensemble Studio Theatre/Alfred P. Sloane Foundation Science and Technology Project, and received its premiere in 2008 at the Boston Playwrights’ Theatre. Her play A Girl’s War premiered at New Repertory Theatre in 2003. She has been developing Deported, a true story about her grandmother, with director Judy Braha and a company of actors for two years through improvisation, taped interviews of survivors, photos, memoirs, and letters.
Lizzie Stranton by HPF Lydia R. Diamond will be read on Tuesday, August 4 at 7pm. In Diamond's bawdy reimagining of Aristophanes' even bawdier Lysistrata, a fictional first lady convenes a meeting in 2016 of the most prominent women in the world with a radical scheme to end war. Diamond is the author of The Bluest Eye, Voyeurs de Venus, and Stick Fly, which the Huntington will present in February 2010 as part of its upcoming season. The reading’s director and cast will be announced shortly. Please note that Lizzie Stranton contains bold sexual images and strong language appropriate for mature audiences.
Jeanie Don’t Sing No Mo’, by HPF Jacqui Parker will be read on Wednesday, August 5 at 7pm. Jeanie, a once-famous blues singer, stopped speaking the day her father died, and she and her Southern family carry the burden of secrets long concealed in Parker’s play. Parker received the 2006 Independent Reviewers of New England Award for Best New Play for Dark as a Thousand Midnights. Her play Feathers on My Arms…Zora Neale Flying High premiered this spring as part of the African American Theatre Festival at the Huntington’s Calderwood Pavilion at the BCA. The reading’s director and cast will be announced shortly.
Read about the 2009 Breaking Ground Festival at huntingtontheatre.org/breakinggroound.
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