Monday, June 30, 2014

Virginia's Point of View: Thespians, Stumble-Throughs, and Photoshoots, Oh My!



Last week the University of Nebraska-Lincoln hosted the International Thespian Festival for the twentieth year. This means 3,400 high school kids and their teachers and chaperones descended on The Lied Center, the Temple Building, Kimball Hall, the Student Union and every hotel and restaurant in the area, not to mention several dorms. It's an awesome event that includes multiple shows, workshops, competitions, parties, auditions, and hard work for lots of people. What it means for us is that personnel in the scene shop and electrics virtually stop working on our shows and get busy making all those festival productions and workshops possible. It also means we have a single rehearsal room to do all our rehearsals. Vanya rehearses there in the morning and Farce in the afternoon, which left Circle hunting for a home. We found it in St. Mark's On-Campus Episcopal Church, just steps from the Ross on Q Street. It has been a nice change as the room is flooded with sunlight and not a festival venue.

Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, being the first to open, is completely staged and off-book. I saw a run-through on Saturday morning and it's going to be delightful. All the real props are being used, selected costume pieces as well, and the music between scenes has been added. The highest priority next week will be getting the set out of the scene shop and on to the Howell stage. They have a little over a week in the rehearsal hall before technical rehearsals and the addition of all the other elements.

Alan Knoll arrived on Monday, so Unnecessary Farce rehearsals have begun. I can't sit in because my rehearsals for Circle are at exactly the same time. My spies say it's going well. Staging went very quickly so they had a stumble-through on Saturday. Alan says he is delighted that the actors are so willing to try anything! The crazy bits, sight gags, and all things farcical are popping up everywhere!

I'm working Circle Mirror Transformation scene-by-scene, asking the actors to be off-book as we tackle each, doing it multiple times to set lines, adjust staging and make decisions about the transitions between scenes. Megan, my stage manager, cues the actors by saying what will happen ultimately when we have lights and sound. "Black out." "Lights up." "Lights shift." "Music, music, music, music... out," is what we hear from her. We'll do another run-through on Thursday, and will add sound cues for that run.

Last Thursday was also the crazy day we call publicity day. It is the day the Journal Star comes to take the publicity photos they use in the newspaper. I look on this as the only opportunity to give our audiences a peek into each of the plays by showing some of the characters in costume in a situation from the play. Julie and I decide what story we want to tell with the shots and choose who is in each one. This year Vanya, Masha, and Spike represent their show in costumes they wear to a costume party dressed as Snow White, Prince Charming and a dwarf, Doc. This is action that happens offstage, but gives insight into some of the relationship in the play. Eric and Billie, the cops in Unnecessary Farce, are tied up with a phone cord and being threatened by one of the crooks. I don't think this actually happens in the play, but it sure could. For Circle Mirror Transformation, we show Theresa hooping (remember hula hoops?) while two of the other characters look on in admiration and envy. This moment happens in the play, and it represents how each central action is always reflected in how each character perceives it. On publicity day we also do a whole day of interviews for the podcasts we produce every year. Our podcasts are five three-four minute videos, one for each show, one for the Destinations, and one that summarizes all of the other four. They contain a synopsis of the play, shots of rehearsals and selected interviews with directors, designers and actors. The podcasts will soon be available on our web site, www.unl.edu/rep, to whet your appetite for the season. Shooting the podcasts is a scheduling nightmare, but Julie's staff of students is wonderful, and it came off without a hitch. (I was pooped.)

It was a great week. We accomplished everything we needed to and are ready to hit the ground running for week three!

Talk to you in a week!

Friday, June 27, 2014

Feature Friday: International Thespian Festival



This week, the Temple Building has been full of busy schedules, long checklists, and over 3500 high school thespians from across the globe. That's right, it's that time of year again: International Thespian Festival (ITF)!

For the past 20 years, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Johnny Carson School of Theatre and Film have played host to thousands of high school students participating in the International Thespians Festival. In the span of just one week, students have the opportunity to participate in different workshops for straight theatre, musical theatre, technical theatre, and more; perform and watch main stage performances on the Temple Building and Lied Center stages; visit college representatives; and audition for different collegiate theatre programs.

One of those theatre programs is, of course, our own Johnny Carson School of Theatre and Film. Every day this week, many of our NRT student workers have also been doubling as college recruiters for International Thespian Festival. One even sat in on college auditions with Carson School Director Paul Steger! We would like to thank everyone who represented the Carson School so well over the week at ITF. Not only did you fulfill all of your NRT duties (including putting together and executing an entire publicity day), but you also served as great voices for all that our school has to offer! Thank you so much for your hard work.

International Thespian Festival is a time for high school theatre students to realize the potential they have to turn their passion into a career. The Nebraska Repertory Theatre and Johnny Carson School of Theatre and Film are proud to support and host the bright young theatre artists of ITF and hopefully one day have them as fellow company members and students.

For more information on International Thespian Festival, click here.



Thursday, June 26, 2014

NRT Excitement with Emma: The 411 on Theatre Games



In Annie Baker's 2009 play Circle Mirror Transformation, a group of people take an adult drama class together. Each has had an impactful event in their recent past which they attempt to overcome, with help from one another. The class, led by the eccentric Marty, plays various theatre games together to instill trust in each other and in themselves.

Theatre games are essential to an actor's training. Some games aim to build mental or physical stamina, while others center on focus and trust between yourself and your fellow actors. Others prove great warm-ups for the voice and the body! It's always a good idea to do a combination of games as a warm-up before a performance. You can pick and choose to include a vocal/physical warm up, a focus warm up for the mind, and perhaps another that forces you to put your trust in others.

Here's a guide to the theatre games featured in Marty's class!

1-10
All members lie on the ground with their eyes closed. They must count to ten together, but only one person may say one number at a time and there can be no rhythm, no pattern, no secret communication. For example, if two people say the number "seven" on top of each other, the entire group must start again!
Purposes: Trust, Energy, Focus

Huntington Theatre's Production of Circle Mirror Transformation
Playing 1-10

When I Go to India
One person starts this game by saying "When I go to India, I'm going to bring..." and lists one object-it could be anything. The next person says the same phrase, lists the previously stated object and then adds their own object. It continues and each person must list what the others have said as well as add their own item at the end.
Purposes: Memory, Improvisation, Living in the Moment

Explosion Tag
Similar to the classic playground game of tag, this version merely adds the factor that the person who is "it" must be exploding in some way until they tag another. This can be vocally, physically, or a combination of both.
Purposes: Vocality, Physicality, Releasing Inhibitions 

Recreating Places, Scenes, or Conversations
One member from the group decides to recreate a place or conversation from their past. If recreating a place, he or she may ask other members of the group to be items in the space, or they may use the available furniture in the room if they wish. If recreating a conversation, he or she will cast other members from the group to be those having the conversation from their past, and he or she will watch from the outside.
Purposes: Self-reflection, Emotional Recall

Seattle Repertory Theatre's Production of Circle Mirror Transformation
Recreating a Scene

Telling Stories As Another
In this exercise, a member from the group will tell a personal story from their past, or perhaps a collection of facts about themselves. Then another member must re-tell the story as the other person. The intent is to speak with the same speech patterns, intonation, gestures, and mannerisms as the original speaker.
Purposes: Trust, Listening, Noticing Detail 

Nonsense Conversations
This is a game for two people. Each person gets a silly word, or a nonsense phrase. That phrase is the only thing they are allowed to say to the other person, but they must communicate enough with the person that those watching the exercise can understand what the conversation is about. As an example from the play, one character can only say "Goulash" while the other can only say "Ak Mak."
Purposes: Communication, Vocality, Physicality   

One-Phrase Conversation 
Similar to Nonsense Conversations, in this exercise for two, each person gets one phrase or sentence that they are allowed to say to the other person. Typically these phrases contrast with each other, which creates clashing objectives that players can fight for. For example, one person’s phrase may be “I want to go,” while the other’s is “I need you to stay.”
Purposes: Vocality, Physicality, Fighting for Objectives

 Circle Mirror Transformation
Not only the title of the play, but also an excellent game! The group stands in a circle, with one person in the middle. That person begins an abstract movement, sound, or a combination of the two. Once they have created it, the group begins to mirror the person in the middle. Then a member from the outside circle steps in and transforms the motion/sound, swapping places with the person in the middle of the circle. The cycle repeats.
Purposes: Vocality, Physicality, Releasing Inhibitions

Playwright Horizons' Peter Jay Sharp Theatre's Production of Circle Mirror Transformation
Playing Circle Mirror Transformation

These are some of the games played in Marty's class in Circle Mirror Transformation, though there are so many other theatre games out there! Hopefully, this gives you an introduction to some of the more common games. Don't miss the opening of Circle Mirror Transformation on July 17!

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Humpday With Howard: Playwright Annie Baker



Hello! This week, I'll be delving into the biographical background of Annie Baker, the playwright of our second show, Circle Mirror Transformation.

The New Yorker relates an excellent anecdote about Annie Baker's career as a playwright, and it deals with one of those moments that every theatre-maker has, so I'm going to share it with you. When she was twenty-four, Baker's physician asked her what her job was. She replied with "I write plays, but you can’t be a playwright, so I have a day job, and maybe I’ll end up teaching or something." The doctor explained that he had another patient who was a prominent playwright. Baker responded by saying "Yeah, but you can’t make a living as a playwright. You can’t, like, be a playwright." Her doctor gave her a funny look.

Flash-forward nine years to 2014, and Baker finds herself at Columbia University picking up the Pulitzer Prize she won for her play, The Flick. After that encounter with her physician, she realized that it was possible to make a living as a playwright, and she has been doing it successfully ever since.

Annie Baker receives the 2014 Pulitzer Prize Drama
from 
Lee C. Bollinger, President of Columbia University.
Baker was born in April, 1981, in Cambridge, Massachusetts and has her undergraduate degree (in dramatic-writing) from NYU's Tisch School of the Arts. After graduating and before working full-time as a playwright, she held a slew of miscellaneous positions including assistant residence-hall director for the School of American Ballet, contestant wrangler for The Bachelor, and writer for the television show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? - first writing throws (pre-commercial sendoffs), and later as one of the show’s researchers.


Her 2009 play, Circle Mirror Transformation, won countless awards and, during the 2010-2011 theatre season, was the second most produced play in the United States. Her writing style has been likened to the naturalist and realist styles of Ibsen and Chekhov, but it inhabits an entirely different category from those late nineteenth-century playwrights. Her plays are immensely realistic and down to earth, yet also contain moments of suspended animation and transcendence where action is and characters are transfixed. The awkward pauses and strange silences that often play a role in day-to-day conversation find a place in her plays, and as The New Yorker so elegantly explains, "Her goal is to explore what’s left unsaid along the edges of conversation: it’s the principle of looking at familiar stars so that the galaxies that can’t be seen head on appear out of the corner of your eye." What you see and hear in her plays are snippets of conversation you would overhear on the subway, in a coffee shop, on line at the supermarket. And then you watch someone hula hooping for a minute. The juxtaposition of these two elements-of  reality and transcendence-characterize Baker's unique, touching, and entertaining style.

On another note, when asked who her heroes are, Baker replied
"Chekhov. Chekhov. Chekhov. Chekhov." It seems Durang isn't the only playwright we're producing this season who's a fan of Anton's.

Be sure to check out our production of Circle Mirror Transformation, which opens July 17th and runs in repertory with Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike and Unnecessary Farce until August 10th.

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Stephanie's Weekly Spotlight: What's on the Menu?




Though it may feel like we are approaching the middle of summer, it officially began on Saturday. And nothing says summer like relaxing in your yard, at the lake, or even in the comfort of air-conditioned home with a good drink or snack. For my weekly spotlight, I selected a recipes inspired by the plots and characters of our three plays. For your next summer party or quiet night at home, try one of these delicious treats!

Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike

Siblings Vanya and Sonia are living in their Pennsylvania family home, bemoaning their unfufilled potential. Enter movie star sister Masha, and her her boy-toy. Successful and sassy, Masha does little to help Vanya and Sonia's situation.

Mango Passion Fruit Smoothie (inspired by the character of Masha):

Ingredients:
2 cups 1/2-inch cubes peeled mango 
2 cups crushed ice
5 tablespoons strained passion fruit juice (from about 8 passion fruit seeds)
1/4 cup coconut water
1 teaspoon 

Combine all ingredients in a blender and process until smooth. Divide between two glasses and serve.


Circle Mirror Transformation

A delightful comedy set in an adult creative drama class, where our characters explore their lives through the use of theatre games. 

Chocolate Peanut Protein Balls (a perfect on-the-go snack):

Ingredients: 
1 cup unsalted peanuts
1 1/3 cup tightly packed, pitted medjool dates
2 tablespoons raw cacao powder
2 scoops chocolate protein powder
Pinch of sea salt

1) Grind all ingredients in a food processor till they're evenly and finely ground. When you can take a small handful and squeeze it in your palm and it holds together well, you're ready to roll.
2) Roll the mixture into 1 or 1 1/2" balls.
Store in an airtight container in a cool place for up to two weeks.

Unnecessary Farce

In this hilarious slapstick comedy, a police sting takes place while the mayor meets with his accountant in the other room. But nothing goes right, amidst the confusion as to who's occupying which room, who's watching the video, who's taken the money, and who's hired a hit man. 

Cinnamon Carrot Chips with Yogurt Honey Dip (quirky but delicious!):

Ingredients:
2 large carrots, preferably organic
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
Cooking oil spray
1/2 cup plain or plain greek yogurt
1 tablespoon pure honey

Arrange the oven racks in thirds. Preheat oven to 400°F.

Wash, scrub, and dry carrots. With a vegetable peeler, peel the carrots entirely into strips. Place the carrot strips into a bowl and toss with cinnamon and ginger.

Being careful not to overlap, lay carrot strips on two baking sheets that have been lightly sprayed with cooking oil spray. Place in the oven on the top and bottom racks and bake for 10 minutes, rotating the pans halfway through. Turn the oven off and crack the door. Allow to sit in the oven for 8 minutes. Keep an eye on it while the carrots are in the oven as oven temperatures vary and some ovens are hotter than others. Remove from the oven if they begin to brown. Carefully, transfer the carrots to a cooling rack or plate and allow to cool. The chips will crisp while they cool.

In a bowl, combine yogurt and honey; stir.

Once the chips have crisped up, serve the carrot chips with the dip and snack away.

Monday, June 23, 2014

Virginia's Point of View: A Director's Process



What a great week! It's hard to believe that the time has passed so quickly. The company got together to meet and greet on Monday, June 16th at Paul Steger and Sara Bucy's home. I'm sure there were over fifty people there, all interested in getting to know each other, excited about the process of all the collaboration to come, and happy to chow down on some great food!

I attended the first reading of Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike on Monday and was pleased that the actors I had met all separately throughout the casting process actually looked and sounded great, and fit their parts. Doug Finlayson, the director, is pleased. In his second rehearsal on Tuesday, he started staging the play, or blocking, as some people call it. I call it staging because it is literally the process of putting the written play on the stage. It means putting down taped lines for walls in the rehearsal hall, adding furniture, and deciding how the characters move as they speak and act out the play. Doug works much the way I usually do. He plans the movements on a specific ground plan of the setting (in this case a room in a large home in Buck's County, PA) as a part of his preparation before rehearsals start. Then he works slowly through the play over several days of rehearsal communicating his ideas to the actors scene by scene. When that process is done, there will be a run-through, or what we more often call a "stumble-through" because usually no one is quite ready to run yet. For Vanya, that will happen today: one week after the first rehearsal. In the process of continuing to work on the play, all of the movements will be refined and often changed completely. It's like sewing pattern pieces together before fitting; so much still needs to be adjusted.

Circle Mirror Transformation takes place in a rehearsal hall with the characters going through the process of both learning to act and getting to know each other. There is nothing in the space but a big blue yoga ball and five people playing theatre games. I didn't think my usual process would work. So, we started by playing the games that the characters play in the script. This was really helpful. Playing these games teaches new actors about being in the present, focusing on each other, observing and listening closely to what is happening, establishing a safe space and learning how to express your emotions. They are also really fun and energizing, so it was a blast to spend time revisiting games each of the actors had played in the past with other groups. It is also a great way to build ensemble, something every show benefits from, but that we often skip for lack of time. For this play it's fundamental. So we played for a few hours, learned so much and developed trust and appreciation of each other as a bonus!

On to staging: the play takes place over six weeks, so it was logical to take each week as a section that we'd work over in one rehearsal. A week is also cut into more short sections, so we've been working each of those three or four times with me offering suggestions as I watch the actors play. By the end of a rehearsal we have staged that week (but loosely and with an improvisational feel). When we read it last Monday, we discovered that the play has so much movement that only parts of it actually are interesting to hear read while sitting at a table. Sometimes I will begin working on a play with several table readings. I'm not sure we really made it through one full read of this play. I also learned that one of the exciting things about staging is its relationship with the audience. (Don't worry, there is no audience participation!) But I'm finding it thrilling to be so close to what is happening. It's almost like I'm a member of the class, or maybe a curious observer watching through a curtain. We have two more days of staging before our first stumble-through Wednesday.

Have a great week!

Friday, June 20, 2014

Feature Friday: Looking Forward to NRT 2014




In yesterday's blog, we celebrated "Throwback Thursday" by taking a look back at the success of our 2013 season. It was great to relive the laughs, cries, and memories of last year's shows, but it also made us excited for all of the wonderful art that awaits us in this year's season. Though the Nebraska Repertory Theatre loves looking back at all we've done in previous seasons, we are still always looking forward: to new shows, new company members, and new opportunities to share our art. That being said, today we wish to show you what we are most looking forward to in this year's season.

Management
The NRT Management Team has been hard at work the past few weeks putting together special opportunities for audience and community members to get to know the Rep and come see our shows. We've been busy attending events like Jazz in June, Lincoln Community Garden Performance Series, and Hear Lincoln Concert Series to promote the Rep and give passersby chances at discount tickets. Though some of these events have passed, many of them will continue throughout the summer, so you still have the opportunity to plan attending!

The Management Team is also in the process of planning some special nights right here in Temple Building. Currently, we are scheduling artists to be part of "Fine Art Fridays,"planning a special night for our Osher Lifelong Learner Institute (OLLI) members, and brainstorming for opening night receptions. There's something for everyone to look forward to!

You can find more information about management and special Rep events on our "Events and Promotions" page here on the blog.

Technical
Whether it is in the scene shop, electrics room, or costume shop, our designers and technicians are hard at work and quickly "transforming" our spaces into the worlds of the play. The carpenters are starting to stand up scenery, paint, and put all of the pieces together in Howell Theatre. Electricians have begun hanging and focusing lighting plots in the Studio Theatre, and the costumers and stitchers in the costume shop are quickly bringing beautiful renderings to life. Once you see the photos of progress below, you'll understand why we're so excited and looking forward to seeing the finished product!














Acting and Directing
Today marks the end of the first week of rehearsals for Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike and Circle Mirror Transformation. All of the actors, directors, and stage managers are settled in and well on their way to putting up a great show. They've made it through their first read and are in the swing of rehearsal, both inside and out of the Temple Building. Word has it that earlier this week, some management team members saw the cast of Circle Mirror Transformation playing a trust theatre game out on the grounds surrounding Temple. Things are definitely getting interesting in rehearsals!

Rehearsals for Unnecessary Farce start next week, and everyone is looking forward to start the creative process for our third and final show of the summer. We can't wait until opening nights!


There's a lot to look forward to this summer at the Nebraska Repertory Theatre, both for our company members and audience members! We can't wait to have you follow us as we transform this summer.






Thursday, June 19, 2014

NRT Excitement with Emma: Throwback to NRT 2013



While we, as theatre artists, are always looking ahead to the next opening night, next season, next promotional event or what have you, sometimes it can be a joy to look back and reflect on works of the past. In honor of Throwback Thursday, today we are going to do just that, with a glimpse back to Nebraska Rep's 2013 season!

We opened the season with Jon Jory's adaptation of Jane Austen's Emma, featuring Jessie Tidball and Sean Schmeits. Emma is convinced that she is the perfect matchmaker. But, in an attempt to set up her friend, Harriet, with Mr. Elton, Mr. Elton falls for Emma. As Emma deters Mr. Elton, she sets up her friend, Mr. Knightly with Harriet, which of course backfires when Emma begins to fall for Mr. Knightly. In true Jane Austen fashion, by the middle of the play, everyone seems to be in love with the wrong person!

Mr. Knightly (Sean Schmeits), Emma Woodhouse (Jessie Tidball), and Mr. Woodhouse (Alan Knoll)

The Cast of Emma
(Alan Knoll, Jessie Tidball, Emily Martinez, Chet Kincaid, Sasha Dobson, Richard Nielsen, Sean Schmeits, Dan Rodden; Not pictured: Jaimie Pruden, Alexander Jeffery, Kimberly Clark Kaczmarek)

Emma Woodhouse (Jessie Tidball) and Mr. Knightly (Sean Schmeits)


Next, we polished our etiquette skills with Mrs. Mannerly by Jeffrey Hatcher, starring Mark McCarthy and Juanita Pat Rice. In this comedy, a young boy by the name of Jeffrey attends a manners and etiquette class taught by none other than Mrs. Mannerly herself. In preparation for the final test, for which Jeffrey aims to achieve a perfect score (never before reached by one of Mrs. Mannerly's students), Jeffrey and Mrs. Mannerly may learn things about themselves they never knew, and develop an unlikely friendship along the way.

Mrs. Mannerly (Juanita Pat Rice) and Jeffrey (Mark McCarthy)

Mrs. Mannerly (Juanita Pat Rice) and Jeffrey (Mark McCarthy) sit down for a drink together.

Mrs. Mannerly (Juanita Pat Rice) and Jeffrey (Mark McCarthy) get up to dance!


Finally, our season closed with the stories of holidays past in Making God Laugh by Sean Grennan, with Alan Knoll and Melissa Epp. Spanning a time frame of four decades, this story focuses on Bill & Ruthie's family, with their children, Rick, Maddie, and Tom. The audience witnesses their Thanksgiving celebration in 1980, Christmas in 1990, New Year's Eve of 2000, and finally, Easter in 2010. A heartwarming dramedy, this play had audiences laughing and crying by the end of it!



Melissa Epp and Becky Key Boesen take a photo backstage before the show!

Tom (Dan Rodden), Maddie (Becky Key Boesen), Ruthie (Melissa Epp), Rick (Mark McCarthy), and Bill (Alan Knoll) attempt to eat the infamous cheese dip.

Bill (Alan Knoll) braces himself before taking a bite of Ruthie's fantasia cheese dip. Alan is back at NRT this season to direct Unnecessary Farce

Maddie (Becky Key Boesen), Tom (Dan Rodden), Ruthie (Melissa Epp), Rick (Mark McCarthy), and Bill (Alan Knoll) pose for their traditional family photo.

As we look back on the successful 2013 season of NRT, it only makes us more excited to share the 2014 season with you! We're less than a month away from our first opening, so get ready to start making new memories with the Rep.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Humpday With Howard: Vanya and Chekhov and Durang and Spike






Hello, all! For the next few weeks, the Rep's weekly newsletter will be featuring articles on the three plays we're producing this season in order to provide a little extra insight into the texts. I wrote this week's article and its focus was on our first show, Christopher Durang's Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, and the play's Chekhovian roots. For those of you who don't receive our newsletter, I'm going to recap some of what I said in the newsletter, and then I'll go a little bit more in depth into playwright Christopher Durang's own background.

Durang likens his 2013 Tony award-winning play to Chekhov in a blender. It is not a parody, however, and no prior knowledge of the 19th-century Russian playwright is needed in order to enjoy this exceptional play. But it does make the story more fun!


Born in Taganrog, Russia on January 29, 1860, Anton Pavlovich Chekhov was a grocer's son who became one of Russia's greatest storytellers. His plays are considered comedies of the human condition, and they emphasize emotion and the exploration of character and existence in ways that his contemporaries had not done. Some of his greatest works feature characters in country estates mourning the lives they never led and living in excruciating anguish and boredom. This often makes his writing seem deeply tragic, but this was not Chekhov's intention. The playwright once explained that:

"All I wanted was to say honestly to people: 'Have a look at yourselves and see how bad and dreary your lives are!' The important thing is that people should realize that, for when they do, they will most certainly create another and better life for themselves. I will not live to see it, but I know that it will be quite different, quite unlike our present life.



Enter Christopher Durang, a playwright born on January 2, 1949 in Montclair, New Jersey. This places him on planet Earth forty-five years after and 3,881 miles away from Chekhov's death (July 14, 1904 in Badenweiler, Germany). Durang holds a B.A. in English from Harvard College and an M.F.A. in Playwriting from Yale School of Drama. His writing style is darkly satirical and he uses "wit and absurdity" (The New York Times) to explore topics such as family and religion.

Durang's first professional production was the play The Idiots Karamazov, which he co-wrote with classmate Albert Innaurato. Prada-wearing Meryl Streep, a classmate of theirs at the time, starred in the play as a quirky 80 year-old at the Yale Repertory Theatre. His play, Titanic, premiered 1976 and was his first production to be transferred to off-Broadway. It starred yet another one of his famous classmates, the alien-hunting Sigourney Weaver. This was the beginning of a long line of collaborations with Weaver, leading up to her performance as Masha in Durang's Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike.





Left: Sigourney Weaver in Titanic.
Right: Meryl Streep in The Idiots Karamazov





Durang earned his first  nomination (Best Book of a Musical) for his 1978 musical A History Of The American Film. He earned his first Tony for Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike (which we'll be producing in July!). Vanya premiered at the McCarter Theatre Center in Princeton, New Jersey, in September of 2012; was transferred to Lincoln Center Theater in October 2012; and was finally transferred to Broadway in March of 2013.

In Vanya, Durang pulls character traits, situations, and themes from Chekhov's four greatest plays, The Seagull, Uncle Vanya, The Three Sisters, and The Cherry Orchard, and creates a witty and contemporary play in dialogue with Chekhov's masterpieces. Be ready to see them on stage at the Nebraska Rep this summer!

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Stephanie's Weekly Spotlight: Party Time at the Rep






Yesterday was a big day for NRT. It marked the start of rehearsals for Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike and Circle Mirror Transformation, and for some out-of-town company members, it was their first official day in Lincoln. So what better way to end it than with a get-together! Last night, the management team hosted the annual company party. The theme was Tropical Barbeque, complete with grilled kabobs and RumChata flavored ice cream courtesy of Ivanna Cone! It was a long day of preparation, but the end product was well worth it. Take a look:


A special thanks is extended to Paul Steger and Sara Bucy for hosting the party at their beautiful home. Thank you to all of the company members who attended and made the evening a great one. Here’s to a fantastic upcoming season!

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