June 24, 2009
Contact: Chris Boneau, Joe Perrotta, Kelly Guiod (212-
575-3030)
ATLANTIC THEATER COMPANY ANNOUNCES
2009-2010 SEASON
PRODUCTIONS
MAIN STAGE PREMIERES FROM ATLANTIC FOUNDER DAVID
MAMET
AND PULITZER PRIZE WINNER SAM SHEPARD
ATLANTIC STAGE 2 WORLD PREMIERE FROM BEKAH
BRUNSTETTER
ATLANTIC THEATER COMPANY AT THE LINDA GROSS
THEATER
MAMET DOUBLE BILL - NEW YORK
& WORLD PREMIERE
TWO UNRELATED PLAYS BY DAVID
MAMET:
KEEP YOUR PANTHEON and SCHOOL
BY DAVID MAMET
DIRECTED BY NEIL PEPE
SEPTEMBER
9th – NOVEMBER 1st, 2009
OPENS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER
30, 2009
U.S.
PREMIERE
“AGES OF THE MOON”
BY SAM SHEPARD
DIRECTED BY JIMMY FAY
JANUARY
9th – MARCH 7th, 2010
OPENS WEDNESDAY, JANUARY
27, 2010
ATLANTIC
STAGE 2
WORLD PREMIERE
“OOHRAH!”
BY BEKAH BRUNSTETTER
DIRECTED BY EVAN CABNET
SEPTEMBER 1st
– 27th, 2009
OPENS WEDNESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 9, 2009
Atlantic Theater Company (Neil
Pepe, Artistic Director, Jeffory Lawson, Managing Director) is proud
to announce three of its 2009-2010 season productions. The main stage season at the Linda Gross
Theater will mark premieres from Atlantic co-founder David Mamet and Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Sam Shepard, while Bekah Brunstetter makes her Off Broadway debut at Stage 2 with the
world premiere of a new comedy.
Pulitzer Prize winning playwright David
Mamet returns to the company he founded with a double bill of one-act plays - the
world premiere of SCHOOL and the New
York premiere of KEEP YOUR PANTHEON,
following an acclaimed staging at Center Theatre Group last season, directed by
Atlantic Artistic Director Neil Pepe. Mamet was last represented on the
Atlantic stage with the smash hit comedy Romance,
also staged by Pepe.
Fellow Pulitzer Prize winning
playwright Sam Shepard will make his Atlantic debut with the U.S. premiere of the Abbey Theatre’s production
of AGES OF THE MOON following
an acclaimed world premiere engagement in Ireland directed by Jimmy Fay. A
third new play will be announced for the Linda Gross Theater main stage.
Atlantic Stage 2, the company’s state-of-the-art second stage, will
feature the world premiere limited engagement of OOHRAH!, by Bekah Brunstetter, directed by Evan Cabnet. A
second new play will be announced for Atlantic Stage 2.
2009-2010 ATLANTIC THEATER COMPANY LINDA GROSS
THEATER
NEW YORK & WORLD PREMIERE
TWO UNRELATED PLAYS BY DAVID
MAMET: KEEP YOUR PANTHEON and SCHOOL
By David Mamet, Directed by Neil Pepe
Founder David Mamet returns to Atlantic with his new comedy that made its world premiere
at Center Theatre Group, directed by Atlantic Artistic Director Neil Pepe. KEEP YOUR PANTHEON is a rousing farce that follows the
fortunes and misfortunes of an acting troupe in ancient Rome. An impoverished acting company on the
edge of eviction is offered a lucrative engagement. But through a series of
riotous mishaps, the troupe finds its problems have actually multiplied, and
that they are about to learn a new meaning for the term "dying on
stage."
Mamet’s world premiere play SCHOOL is a brief comic discourse on recycling, poster design and
the transmission of information.
U.S. PREMIERE
THE ABBEY THEATRE’S
PRODUCTION OF
AGES OF THE MOON
By Sam Shepard
Directed by Jimmy Fay
AGES
OF THE MOON is
a gruffly poignant and darkly funny play. Byron and Ames are old friends, re-united by mutual
desperation. Over bourbon on ice, they sit, reflect and bicker until fifty
years of love, friendship and rivalry are put to the test at the barrel of a
gun.
2009-2010 ATLANTIC STAGE
2 THEATER
WORLD PREMIERE
OOHRAH!
By Bekah Brunstetter, Directed by Evan Cabnet
Young playwright Bekah Brunstetter makes her
Off-Broadway debut with the world premiere of OOHRAH! In Fayetteville, North
Carolina, home to one of the South's largest military bases,
practically everybody has somebody “Over There.” Sara is relieved when her
husband Ron returns home from an uneventful tour in Iraq, but he's finding it difficult
to settle back into the domestic bliss that is “home improvement” and “Rachel
Ray's 30-minute meals.” Sara's sister Abby has set herself up for an uneventful
life with a civilian fiancé who's more interested in PlayStation than the
battlefield. But when a hot, mysterious Marine walks into their lives, all bets
on stability are off.
BIOGRAPHIES
DAVID
MAMET (Playwright). Plays: Keep Your Pantheon (world premiere,
Center Theatre Group 2008), Romance (world premiere Atlantic 2005, Mark
Taper Forum), November, Boston
Marriage, Oleanna, Glengarry Glen Ross (1984 Pulitzer Prize
and New York Drama Critics Award), American Buffalo, The Old
Neighborhood, A Life In The Theater, Speed-the-Plow, Edmond,
Lakeboat, The Water Engine, The Woods, Sexual
Perversity in Chicago, Reunion and The Cryptogram (1995 Obie
Award). Translations and adaptations: The Voysey Inheritance by Harvey Granville-Barker, Red River by
Pierre Laville and The Cherry Orchard, Three Sisters and Uncle
Vanya by Anton Chekov and Faustus. Films: The Postman
Always Rings Twice, The Verdict, The Untouchables, House
of Games (writer/director), Oleanna (writer/director), Homicide (writer/director),
The Spanish Prisoner (writer/director), Hoffa, Wag the Dog,
The Edge, The Winslow Boy (writer/director), Hannibal, State and Main
(writer/director), Heist (writer/director), Spartan
(writer/director), Redbelt (writer/director).
Mr. Mamet is also the author of Warm
and Cold, a book for children with drawings by Donald Sultan and two
other children's books, Passover and The Duck and the Goat; Writing
in Restaurants, Some Freaks and Make-Believe Town, three
volumes of essays; The Hero Pony and The China Man, a book of
poems; Three Children's Plays, On Directing Film, The Cabin
and the novels The Village, The Old Religion and Wilson.
His most recent books include the acting books, True and False and Three
Uses of the Knife, The Wicked Son, and Bambi Vs. Godzilla. Mr. Mamet was also a co-creator of the 4-season running, hit CBS
television series "The Unit." He
is a co-founder and member of Atlantic Theater Company.
SAM SHEPARD (Playwright). was first produced in New York in 1963 at Theatre
Genesis and many times at La MaMa and Café Cino. Eleven of his plays have won Obie Awards
including The Tooth of Crime (1972)
and Curse of the Starving Class (1976). He was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for his play Buried Child (1979). The critically acclaimed production of True West, starring Jon Malkovich and
Gary Sinise opened Off-Broadway in 1982.
Fool For Love (1982) starring
Ed Harris received Obie Awards for Best Play and Direction. A Lie
of the Mind (1985) won the New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award and the
Outer Critic’s Circle Award for Outstanding New Play. Simpatico
opened at The Royal Court Theatre after its New York premiere at The Public Theater in
1994 and was made into a feature film by Matthew Warchus starring Nick Nolte
and Sharon Stone. A revised Buried Child under the direction of Gary
Sinise opened on Broadway in 1996 and was nominated for a Tony Award. Several new plays opened over the next decade
in the United States and in London, most notably The Late Henry Moss and The God of Hell. Mr. Shepard recently began a fruitful
collaboration with The Abbey Theatre in Dublin,
Ireland where Ages of the Moon had its world premiere
in March, and where Kicking a Dead Horse starring
his friend Stephen Rea also premiered. As an actor he is perhaps best known for
his roles in Days of Heaven, The Right Stuff and Frances. His third book, Day Out of Days will be published by
Knopf early next year.
BEKAH BRUNSTETTER (Playwright). Plays include Be a Good Little
Widow (Commissioned by Ars Nova, 2009), OOHRAH! (Ars Nova
outloud reading series, dir, Leigh Silverman; developed in London at the
Finborough Theater), To Nineveh (NY Innovative Theater Award for Best
new full length play, 2006) Sick (winner, Sam French short play festival
2006), Green (finalist, Alliance Theater’s Kendeda Competition; national
finalist, Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival) Space (semi-finalist,
Princess Grace Award 2007) I Used to Write On Walls (published and
licensed by Samuel French,) Fat Kids On Fire (published and licensed by
Playscripts, Inc), You May Go Now: A Marriage Play (Winner, 2008 NYIT
award for best new Full Length Play (Babel Theater Project), Cenentary Stage
2009, Le Fou (The Atlantic Acting school), Happy Birthday/ I’m Dead (Samuel
French Short Play festival Finalist, 2007), Miss Lilly Gets Boned (nominee,
2008 L. Arnold Weissberger Award), Celebrity, and Torch Number 2
(SOHO Think Tank), and Fucking Art (winner, Sam French Short play
Festival 2008.) Her plays have been read and produced by the Babel Theatre
Project, New Georges, The Rattlestick Playwright’s Theater, the Ohio Theater
(Think tank), NYU, Centenary Stage, NC New Voices, The New School for Drama,
Working Man’s Clothes, Flux Theatre Ensemble, Phare Play Productions, Old Vic/
New Voices, Boston Theatre Works, Manhattan Theatre Source, SPF, and The
Alliance Theater. Her plays are published by Sam French, Playscripts, Original
Works, and Smith and Krauss. She is a member of the Ars Nova play group,
the Playwright’s Center, At Play Productions, and the Dramatist’s Guild. She is
proud to be the 2009 playwright in residence at Ars Nova, and a member of the
Women's Project Writer's Lab. She received her BA (Theater/Fiction Writing)
from UNC Chapel Hill, and an MFA in Dramatic Writing from the New School
for Drama. Bekah is currently working on a commission for the Roundabout
Underground. www.bekahbrunstetter.com
EVAN CABNET (Director).
Mark Schultz’s The Gingerbread House (stageFARM at the
Rattlestick, world premiere), Donald Margulies’ Shipwrecked! An
Entertainment (Long Wharf Theater, East Coast premiere), Elizabeth
Meriwether’s The Mistakes Madeline Made (Naked Angels, world premiere),
new plays by Adam Rapp, Schultz, and Meriwether as part of SPIN (Cherry Lane),
Lewis Black and Rusty Magee’s The Czar of Rock and Roll (Joe’s
Pub), his own adaptations of Ubu Roi and Salman
Rushdie’s Haroun and the Sea of Stories (Williamstown), and
the 2009 TFI Sloan staged readings for the Tribeca Film Festival. He has
developed new works by: Carly Mensch (Playwrights Horizons), Rajiv Joseph
(Vineyard), Lucy Thurber (MCC), Molly Smith Metzler (MTC), Bekah Brunstetter
(Atlantic Theater Co.), Diana Fithian (Roundabout), Lauren Gunderson (NYU
Grad), Cusi Cram (WET), Anna Ziegler (Cape Cod Theater Project), Annie Baker,
Steven Levenson, Beau Willimon, Liz Flahive and many others. Five seasons at
the Williamstown Theater Festival, including the 2003 Boris Sagal and 2002 Bill
Foeller Fellowships. Recipient of the 2008 Claire Tow Award for Emerging
Artists.
JIMMY FAY (Director). For the past year Jimmy
served as acting Literary Director of the Abbey Theatre where his acclaimed
production The Resistable Rise of Aturo Ui
enjoyed a limited engagement. His productions at the Abbey Theatre include The Seafarer by Conor McPherson, The Playboy of the Western World in a new
version by Bisi Adigun and Roddy Doyle, Saved
by Edward Bond for which he won Best Director Irish Times Theatre Award 2007, The School for Scandal by R B Sheridan, Howie the Rookie by Mark O’Rowe, True West by Sam Shepard, Shakespeare’s Henry IV in an edit by Mark O’Rowe, The Muesli Belt by Jimmy Murphy, Flánn O’
Brien’s At Swim-Two-Birds adapted
by Alex Johnston and Melonfarmer
by Alex Johnston. He is Artistic Director of Bedrock Productions. His recent
productions include Hoors by Gregory Burke for the Traverse
Theatre Company, This is Our Youth by
Kenneth Lonergan for his own company, Bedrock, Roberto Zucco by
Bernard Marie-Koltes, This is not a Life
by Alex Johnston, That Time by
Samuel Beckett for Bedrock’s Beckett’s
Ghosts at Project Arts
Centre, Shooting Gallery by Des
Bishop and Arthur Riordan, the experimental double-bill of Self-Accusation and Pale Angel under the rubric Urban Ghosts
as part of the Dublin Fringe Festival, Faraway
by Caryl Churchill, Entertainment
by Alex Johnston, the Irish premiere of Blasted
by Sarah Kane, The Massacre @ Paris
by Christopher Marlowe, Wideboy Gospel
by Ken Harmon, Quay West and Night Just Before the Forest by Bernard
Marie-Koltes. Other productions include most recently,The Last Days of the Celtic Tiger by Paul
Howard (Landmark Productions), a Romanian version of Malachy McKenna’s Tillsonburg at Arad State Theatre,
Transylvania and Sibiu Festival, Romania, The
Chairs by Eugene Ionesco adapted by Owen McCafferty (Tinderbox),
Martin Lynch’s monologue for Convictions
(Tinderbox at Crumlin Road Jail), True West (Lyric Theatre), Blown by Nicholas Field, Royal Supreme and Melonfarmer by Alex Johnston (Theatre
Royal, Plymouth). For Bickerstaffe he directed Rap Éire by Arthur Riordan and Des Bishop and Comedians by Trevor Griffiths which won
the Best Production of the Dublin Theatre Festival 1999. Jimmy was the Theatre
Curator Kilkenny Arts Festival,
2007. He was the first director of the Dublin Fringe Festival (1995 -1996),
which he co-founded with Bedrock Productions.
NEIL PEPE (Director) made his acclaimed
Broadway debut with the hit revival of David Mamet’s Speed-the-Plow last season and staged the world premiere of Ethan Coen’s
trio of one act comedies Offices. He
directed the world premiere
of Mamet’s Keep Your Pantheon as well as The Duck Variations at
Center Theatre Group. He has been the artistic director of
Atlantic Theater Company since 1992. There he directed Ethan Coen’s Almost
an Evening; Jez Butterworth’s Parlour Song; David Pittu’s What’s
That Smell: The Music of Jacob Sterling; David Mamet’s American Buffalo
starring William H. Macy (also Donmar Warehouse, London); Harold Pinter’s
The Room and Celebration; David Mamet’s Romance (also Mark Taper
Forum, L.A.); Milos by John Guare; Tom Donaghy’s The Beginning of
August (also South Coast Rep.); Howard Korder’s Sea of Tranquility;
Jez Butterworth’s Mojo and The Night Heron; Joe Penhall’s Blue/Orange;
Wolf Lullaby by Hilary Bell; Clean by Edwin Sanchez; and Shaker
Heights by Quincy Long. Other credits include Further Than the Furthest
Thing by Zinnie Harris (Manhattan Theatre Club), Eric Bogosian’s Red Angel
(Williamstown Theatre Festival) and Jessica Goldberg’s Refuge
(Playwrights Horizons).
ATLANTIC THEATER COMPANY (Neil Pepe, Artistic
Director; Jeffory Lawson, Managing Director) is the award winning Off-Broadway
theater dedicated to producing great plays simply and truthfully utilizing an
artistic ensemble. Atlantic believes that the
story of the play and the intent of the playwright are at the core of the
creative process.
This season Atlantic and Neil Pepe were awarded a special
2009 Drama Desk Award for exceptional craftsmanship, dedication to excellence
and productions that engage, inspire and enlighten, while Atlantic
and Druid’s hit revival of Martin McDonagh’s The Cripple of Inishmaan was awarded an Outstanding Ensemble
Performance Award.
Atlantic’s acclaimed world premiere
production of its first musical Spring Awakening, with music by Duncan
Sheik, book and lyrics by Steven Sater and direction by Michael Mayer, won 8
Tony Awards®, including Best Musical. In 2006, Atlantic
was awarded the Lucille Lortel Prize for Outstanding Body of Work.
Atlantic produced five world premieres during its 2007-2008
season: Academy Award® winner Ethan Coen’s comedy Almost an
Evening, directed by Neil Pepe and featuring Academy Award®
winner F. Murray Abraham and Mark Linn-Baker; Peter Parnell’s Trumpery,
directed by David Esbjornson and featuring Tony Award® winner
Michael Cristofer and Tony Award® nominee Manoel Felciano; Lucy
Thurber’s Scarcity, directed by Jackson Gay and featuring Emmy Award®
winner Kristen Johnston, Jesse Eisenberg and Michael T. Weiss, Jez
Butterworth’s Parlour Song, directed by Neil Pepe and featuring Chris
Bauer, Jonathan Cake and Emily Mortimer and Annie Baker’s Body Awareness,
directed by Karen Kohlhaas and featuring Academy Award® nominee
JoBeth Williams, Peter Friedman and Mary McCann and the
critically acclaimed New York premiere production of Oliver Award®
winning and Tony Award® nominated playwright Conor McPherson’s play Port
Authority, directed by
Henry Wishcamper and featuring Tony Award® nominee Brian d’Arcy James, Tony Award® winner John Gallagher,
Jr. and Tony Award® winner Jim Norton.
Playwright Beau Willimon made his celebrated Off-Broadway
debut during the 2008-2009 season with the world premiere of Farragut North starring Chris Noth and
John Gallagher, Jr. The world premiere comedy What's That Smell: The Music of
Jacob Sterling, written and performed by Tony Award® nominee
David Pittu, transferred Off-Broadway to New World Stages following a
critically acclaimed extended engagement at Atlantic Stage 2. Atlantic and
Druid’s critically acclaimed production of Martin McDonagh’s The Cripple of Inishmaan, directed by Tony
Award® winner Garry Hynes, was extended three times and received
four 2009 Lucille Lortel Award nominations including Outstanding Revival, three
Outer Critics Circle Award nominations including Outstanding Revival, and a Drama
League Award nomination for Distinguished Revival. Academy Award® winner
Ethan Coen returned to Atlantic with a trio of one-act comedies, Offices,
directed by Neil Pepe, and Leslie Ayvazian’s new comedy Make Me made its world premiere at Stage 2 directed by Atlantic
Associate Artistic Director Christian Parker.
Since it’s inception in 1985, Atlantic has produced more
than 120 productions including the Tony Award® winning play The
Beauty Queen of Leenane, the world premieres of Woody Allen’s A Second
Hand Memory and Writer’s Block, the acclaimed world premiere of
David Mamet’s Romance and his new adaptation of The Voysey Inheritance, the musicals Spring Awakening and 10
Million Miles, Jez Butterworth’s Mojo, Tom Donaghy’s Minutes
From The Blue Route, Edwin Sanchez’ Trafficking in Broken Hearts and
the American premieres of Blue/Orange, Dublin Carol and The
Night Heron, the New York premieres of The Intelligent Design of Jenny
Chow and The Cider House Rules, the revivals of American Buffalo,
Edmond, The Hothouse and Hobson’s Choice. Atlantic
maintains an ensemble of acclaimed actors, writers and directors including
David Mamet (playwright and director) and William H. Macy (Academy Award®
nominee for Fargo), who founded Atlantic over twenty years ago in 1985.
ATLANTIC THEATER COMPANY MAIN STAGE AT THE LINDA GROSS
THEATER is located at 336 West 20th Street
(between 8th and 9th Avenues). Tickets for main stage productions are $65.00
and available by calling Ticket Central at 212-279-4200 (ticketcentral.com).
ATLANTIC
STAGE 2 is located at 330 West 16th Street (between 8th and 9th
Avenues). Tickets are $45 and available by calling Ticket Central at 212-279-4200
(ticketcentral.com).
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For general inquiries and/or group
sales for both theaters call 212-645-1242.www.atlantictheater.org