Monthly Archives: March 2014

Know Theatre is Excited to Announce THE TWENTIETH-CENTURY WAY

KNOW THEATRE IS EXCITED TO ANNOUNCE
THE TWENTIETH-CENTURY WAY
by Tom Jacobson
directed by Kimberly Faith Hickman

 Two men. Over a dozen roles. A queer piece of American History.

KTC_20th Century WayLong Beach, California. 1914. A scourge of homosexuality plagues the city.The Long Beach Police hire two actors to entrap gay men in the crime of “social vagrancy.”

In an empty theatre, two actors meet while awaiting an audition. As tension between them mounts, they find themselves playing the story of a near forgotten piece of American history — a story from a time when people were prosecuted for daring to be themselves. But the truth of who these actors really are is slowly exposed as the story unzips. Performances run April 4-May 3 at Know Theatre in Over-the-Rhine.

A highly theatrical exploration of performance and the masks we all wear in our everyday lives, The Twentieth-Century Way is part engaging historical drama, part acting tour de force, and part incisive social commentary.

“This is the kind of play that begs to be staged,” says Know’s incoming Artistic Director Andrew Hungerford. “Tom Jacobson utilizes the kind of quick character shifts and theatricality that we normally associate with madcap, small cast comedies, like The 39 Steps, in service of a story that, while playful, has decidedly serious undercurrents.”

Director Kimberly Faith Hickman (Assistant Director of Broadway’s Clybourne Park and The Assembled Parties) helms the show in her first Mainstage production with Know Theatre. “The Twentieth-Century Way is one of the most surprising plays I have ever directed,” Kimberly says. “With its muscular theatricality and unpredictable plot twists, the play takes audiences on a ride that they have never experienced before – leading the audience to often consider ‘what is true?’ and ‘what is real?’ ”

“It’s fascinating to me that there are such egregious pieces of our collective history that few remember or have ever heard of,” says current Producing Artistic Director Eric Vosmeier. “I’m pleased Andrew has chosen this show which gives voice to stories that may not otherwise have one. This production marks Andrew’s first in his capacity as the next Artistic Director for Know Theatre. I’m thrilled with his selection, casting, and production crew. I look forward to sitting back with the audience to watch this production unfold under his leadership.”

Know is thrilled to welcome back actor Jens Rasmussen (Skin Tight, Gruesome Playground Injuries). Playing opposite Jens is Chicago actor Michael McKeogh in his Know Theatre debut.

Cast: 

  • Jens Rasmussen* – Warren
  • Michael McKeogh – Brown
    *Member of Actors’ Equity Association 

Production Team

  • Director: Kimberly Faith Hickman
  • Scenic and Lighting Designer/Incoming Producing Artistic Director: Andrew Hungerford
  • Sound Designer: Doug Borntrager
  • Costume Designer: Noelle Wedig

Note: This production has adult content and is recommended for mature audiences only.

Calendar Listing:

Production: The Twentieth-Century Way by Tom Jacobson.
Directed by Kimberly Faith Hickman.
When: April 4 -May 3, 2014. Performances on Thursdays through Saturdays at 8pm.
With a special matinee on Sunday, April 27 at 2pm.
Where: Know Theatre of Cincinnati. 1120 Jackson Street, Cincinnati, OH 45202. In historic Over-the-Rhine.
Tickets: $15 in advance, $20 week of the performance beginning Mondays at noon.

To purchase tickets or for more information, visit: http://www.knowtheatre.com or call 513.300.3669 (KNOW).

Additional Information:
Kimberly Faith Hickman
(Director) Off-Broadway and NYC credits include work with Manhattan Theatre Club, Roundabout Theatre Company, Atlantic Theatre Company, Women’s Project, Epic Theatre Ensemble and Theatre Row, as well as terraNOVA Collective, Horse Trade Theatre Group and Writopia Lab. Regional credits include Center Theatre Group, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Westport Country Playhouse, Next Act Theatre, Springer Opera House, Off Square Theatre Company, Playhouse on the Square, Know Theatre / Cincinnati Fringe Festival and national touring companies. Select Broadway assistant directing credits include mentorships with Lynne Meadow (The Assembled Parties), Pam MacKinnon (Clybourne Park) and Susan Stroman (The Scottsboro Boys). BFA: Columbus State University, Artistic Associate at terraNOVA Collective, recipient of the Alec Baldwin Directing Fellowship, two SDC Foundation Observerships and two Manhattan Theatre Club Directing Fellowships. Member of Directors Lab West, Lincoln Center Theater Directors Lab and SDC. Special thanks to Andrew and the rest of the Know team. Visit www.kimberlyfaithhickman.com

Michael McKeogh (Brown) A Chicago-based actor, Michael is thrilled to be making his Know Theartre debut in The Twentieth-Century Way. His most recent credits include: Col. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain in The Killer Angels (Lifeline Theatre); Farsari/Dmitri in Concerning Strange Devices From the Distant West (TimeLine Theatre); Dr. Greenberg in Freshly Fallen Snow (Chicago Dramatists). Other regional credits include: Algernon in The Importance of Being Ernest (Play Phare Theatre, NYC) and Roderigo in Othello (Boston TheatreWorks). In 2012, Michael received an MFA in Acting from The Theatre School at DePaul University. He is represented by Paonessa Talent.

Jens Rasmussen (Warren) Cincinnati: Know Theatre: Skin Tight (Acclaim Award), Gruesome Playground Injuries (League of Cincinnati Theatres Award) Off-Broadway: La MaMa: I Came to Look for You on Tuesday; Working Theatre: Stories from the 99%; HERE: The Strangest; Theatre Row: The Other Man; Internationalists: The Odyssey; Pan Asian Rep: Carry the Tiger to the Mountain Regional: Studio Theatre: Skin Tight; Folger Theatre: Conference of the Birds; Milwaukee Rep: Merchant of Venice; VA Shakespeare Festival: Taming of the Shrew; Mill Mountain Theatre: Doubt, Proof, Hamlet, Laramie Project; NC Shakespeare Festival: Glass Menagerie Film & TV: Morningside Monster, Stephen King’s Survivor Type, “The Plague,” “Nurse Jackie.” Proud member AEA www.jensrasmussen.info

Since 1997, Know Theatre has been dedicated to creating explosive and evocative live entertainment. We value a playful artistic community where artists can collaborate and grow.

Know Theatre’s work is made possible, in part, by the generosity of community contributions to the ArtsWave Campaign.The Ohio Arts Council helps fund Know Theatre with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence, and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans. Know Theatre is also supported by The Carol Ann & Ralph V. Haile, Jr./U.S. Bank Foundation, helping to change our communities for the better through collaboration and innovation, and the Greater Cincinnati Foundation, which provides a simple, powerful, and highly personal approach to giving.

Know Theatre is a member of Theatre Communications Group and an Associate member of the National New Play Network

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Innovative Carnegie Impresario Returns After 15 Years With Harvey

TC_Harvey_logoCOVINGTON, KY- During his decade of producing shoestring theatre in a proud but dilapidated auditorium, impresario Buz Davis could only dream of the day he might return to find that hall had received a multi-million dollar renovation, and that he was once again at the fore of creating captivating theatre there. That dream comes true this spring.

The Carnegie closes its 2013-14 Theatre Series with the Pulitzer Prize winning comedy HARVEY, playing weekends April 11 – 27, 2014 at The Carnegie in Covington. Popularized by the 1950 Jimmy Stewart film, HARVEY features some of the area’s favorite professional actors in the much-anticipated directorial return of former Carnegie impresario Buz Davis after a 15-year absence. Tickets are $17 – $24 and are available online at http://www.thecarnegie.com or by calling The Carnegie Box Office at (859) 957-1940 (open Tu – Fr, noon – 5pm).

Show Synopsis
Elwood P. Dowd is well-liked, and inexhaustibly happy, and from a respected family… and his best friend is an invisible man-sized rabbit named Harvey. Committing Elwood to a sanitarium, his social-climbing sister Veta is herself mistaken as loony while Elwood and Harvey gleefully carry out their bon vivant cocktail calendar with the hospital staff in hilarious pursuit.

The More Things Change…
Director Buz Davis pilots this production of HARVEY in a hall much transformed since his tenure as theatre director there in the 1990s. The balcony was condemned and piled deep with decades of refuse. A basketball would be thrown into the lighting grid prior to performances to scare off the bats. There was no air conditioning. Davis fondly recalls performing in a late summer show called “Sweat,” which included the distribution of frozen washcloths at intermission.

Yet for all its flaws, more often than not audiences left the old theatre with a sense of wonder at what had been accomplished. Homemade improvements were devised, including a fly system for bringing scenery, lighting instruments and people on and off stage. The same actors performing one night would be selling concessions or running lights the next. The space was an early venue for Fahrenheit Theatre Company (which later became Cincinnati Shakespeare Company), welcomed national acts like Emmylou Harris and housed the area’s first regular series for staged readings and performance art, according to Davis.

“Devoid of niceties and rife with artists of all stripes, we produced magical theatre here, with no budgets, no HVAC, no carpets, old seats, donated and found curtains and supplies and volunteers from every walk of life,” says Davis. “It was rarely comfortable, but always filled with engaging, entertaining, provocative stuff: hosting a handful of young theatre companies, local high schools, regional and national music acts and international organizations and producing a few things ourselves. This grand old lady of a room was packed and humming!”

Twenty-five years and a $2.5 million renovation later, the theatre is still special, a beautifully restored and technically superior performance space that retains many of its quintessential quirks, “Now, the challenges are different. The holes are gone and it’s very comfortable here. It is a pleasure to come home to the Carnegie and direct HARVEY.”

Beloved Players for a Beloved Comedy
Amid its four-year, 1,800-performance Broadway run, Mary Chase’s HARVEY took the 1945 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. But as with so many stage productions, it was the film adaptation that would truly catapult HARVEY into the national consciousness. The 1950 film of the same title starred Jimmy Stewart as Elwood P. Dowd, earning him an Oscar nomination and his co-star, Josephine Hull, an Oscar win for her role as Elwood’s sister, Veta Louise Simmons. Stewart would reprise his role on stage in the 1970 Broadway revival. The recent 2012 Broadway run featured Emmy Award winner Jim Parsons (CBS’s The Big Bang Theory) as Elwood.

A company of Cincinnati favorites will inhabit these starlit roles in The Carnegie’s production, led by stage and screen actor Nathan Neorr as Elwood. Cast in films with stars including Nicolette Sheridan and in several national television commercials, Neorr returns to The Carnegie in a total reversal of his nefarious role as Herr Zeller in The Carnegie’s January staging of THE SOUND OF MUSIC. The role of Veta Louise Simmons will be played by award-winning theatre artist Regina Pugh*, longtime favorite with Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati and a nearly twenty-year veteran of Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park’s annual production of A CHRISTMAS CAROL. Michael Bath* makes his Carnegie Theatre Series debut in the role of sanitarium director Dr. William R. Chumley. Perhaps the area’s most demanded character actor, Bath’s resume includes award-winning credits at Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati, Know Theatre and as a company member with The Clifton Players, where he works frequently with HARVEY director Buz Davis.

Rising talents and Clifton’s Untethered Theatre Company members Carter Bratton and Leah Strasser make their Carnegie debuts as young Dr. Lyman Sanderson and Nurse Kelly, who are horrified after mistakenly subjecting Veta to intensive mental therapy. Mike Hall returns to The Carnegie as the oafish orderly, Duane Wilson, along with Tom Manning (Judge Omar Gaffney) and Lisa DeRoberts (Myrtle Mae Simmons). Christina Jeans (Miss Johnson), Abby Rowold (Betty Chumley) and Martha Slater (Mrs. Ethel Chauvenet) each make their Carnegie debuts.

*Actor appears courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association, the union of professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.

Ticketing
Tickets to The Carnegie’s production of HARVEY are $17 – $24 and may be purchased online at http://www.thecarnegie.com or by calling The Carnegie Box Office at (859) 957-1940 (open Tu – Fr, noon – 5pm).

HARVEY will include nine performances over three weekends:

  • Friday, April 11, 7:30pm
  • Saturday, April 12, 7:30pm
  • Sunday, April 13, 3pm
  • Friday, April 18, 7:30pm
  • Saturday, April 19, 7:30pm
  • Sunday, April 20, 3pm
  • Friday, April 25, 7:30pm
  • Saturday, April 26, 7:30pm
  • Sunday, April 27, 3pm 

Single Ticket Pricing

  • $24 Adults
  • $22 Carnegie and Enjoy The Arts Members
  • $19 Groups of 8 or More
  • $17 Students 

About The Carnegie
THE CARNEGIE is a multidisciplinary arts venue serving the Northern Kentucky and Greater Cincinnati community. Over the course of the past ten years The Carnegie has “morphed” from a grassroots gallery with an education component into an all-inclusive arts organization offering professional theatre, art exhibitions showcasing the best of local and regional artists, and a comprehensive arts education program.

The Carnegie is home to The Carnegie Galleries, comprised of more than 6,000 square feet of gallery space where emerging and established artists exhibit in multiple shows throughout the year; the Eva G. Farris Education Center, which provides arts education to thousands of children, many of whom are at or below the poverty level; and the newly renovated 447-seat Otto M. Budig Theatre, which offers an affordable theatre space for local, up-and-coming and established production companies and is home to The Carnegie’s Theatre Series and Carnegie in Concert series. The Carnegie is the largest arts venue in Northern Kentucky.

The Carnegie receives ongoing operating support from ArtsWave, Kenton County Fiscal Courts, the Kentucky Arts Council, the Greater Cincinnati Foundation and the Carol Ann and Ralph V. Haile Jr. / US Bank Foundation.

Director Biography
BUZ DAVIS (Director) returns to direct at The Carnegie after his tenure in the 1990s, when he directed DUVENECK: A PORTRAIT IN WORDS AND MUSIC, and THE ARKANSAW (sic) BEAR, as well as hundreds of single night events (staged readings, variety, shows, concerts, etc) all in this grand old room. Other directing credits include: CREATION OF THE WORLD AND OTHER BUSINESS, ON THE OPEN ROAD (both as part of Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati’s Off-Center series), THE LARK, THE CRUCIBLE, DIE FLEDERMAUS (Miami University), TRANSLATIONS, and most recently with the Clifton Players, A BRIGHT NEW BOISE and THE WHALE. Mr. Davis also is an actor and has performed regionally with ETC, CSC, Cincinnati Playhouse, Michigan Shakespeare Festival, Theatre On The Square and The Clifton Players. Buz has ten fine toes.

HARVEY Cast and Production Team List

Cast

  • Myrtle May Simmons – Lisa DeRoberts
  • Veta Louise Simmons – Regina Pugh*
  • Elwood P. Dowd – Nathan Neorr
  • Miss Johnson – Christina Jeans
  • Mrs. Ethel Chauvenet – Martha Slater
  • Ruth Kelly, R.N. – Leah Strasser
  • Duane Wilson – Mike Hall
  • Lyman Sanderson, M.D. – Carter Bratton
  • William R. Chumley, M.D. – Michael Bath*
  • Betty Chumley – Abby Rowold
  • Judge Omar Gaffney – Tom Manning

Production Team

  • Director – Buz Davis
  • Scenic Designer – Ron Shaw
  • Lighting Designer – Natalie Paige
  • Costumer – Dean Walz
  • Sound Designer – David Levy
  • Stage Manager – Josh Neumeyer
  • Assistant Stage Manager / Props – Nick Garcia
  • Production Manager – Bleu Pellman
  • Technical Director – Richard Sillen 

*Actor appears courtesy of Actors’ Equity Association, the union of professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.

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PIP Continues Off the Hill Season with THE SHORT TREE AND THE BIRD THAT COULD NOT SING

PIP_The Short Tree and(CINCINNATI) – The Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park’s Off the Hill series for families concludes with THE SHORT TREE AND THE BIRD THAT COULD NOT SING, which will tour to community venues throughout the Tristate from April 8 through May 24. Recommended for ages 5 and up, the show is a wacky fable of an unlikely friendship between a tree that resents its roots and a spunky, unflappable bird with a horrible singing voice.

Adapted by Dennis Foon from his picture book of the same name, the play follows the bird and tree’s relationship as it builds around the joys of music, storytelling, the weather and the stars. The two friends must navigate the ups and downs of getting to know one another, growing closer and suddenly finding themselves apart.

Playhouse Education Director Mark Lutwak, who will direct the production, calls THE SHORT TREE AND THE BIRD THAT COULD NOT SING “a charming and funny play about building friendship and separation — two processes with which young kids are familiar. For kids, it’s an epic and entertaining journey with a full roller coaster of emotions.”

The cast includes Meggy Hai Trang (Ensemble), Chelsea D. Harrison (Ensemble), Rico Reid (Short Tree), Sam Rueff (Ensemble), Shayna Schmidt (Bird) and Britian Seibert (Ensemble), all members of the Playhouse’s Bruce E. Coyle Acting Intern Company. Other production team members include Melanie Burgess (Set/Props/Costume Designer), Katherine Stromberger (Set/Props/Costume Design Associate), Sherry Tippey (Puppet Construction), Kendra Struthers (Music Director), Aly Michaud (Choreographer) and Tracy Hoida (Stage Manager).

For more information about the Playhouse’s education and outreach programs, contact the Education Department at 513-345-2242 or visit www.cincyplay.com.

Off the Hill is made possible by The Robert and Adele Schiff Family Foundation and the John A. Schroth Family Charitable Trust, PNC Bank, Trustee. This production is supported by the Charles H. Dater Foundation. The season is presented by The Otto M. Budig Family Foundation and Heidelberg Distributing Company. The season sponsor of new work is The Lois and Richard Rosenthal Foundation.

The Playhouse is supported, in part, by the generosity of the tens of thousands of individuals and businesses that give to ArtsWave.

The Ohio Arts Council helps fund the Playhouse with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans.

The Playhouse also receives funding from the Shubert Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.

PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE

  • Tuesday, April 8, 7:00 p.m., Murphy Theatre (Wilmington)
  • Friday, April 11, 7:00 p.m., Blue Ash Recreation Center
  • Saturday, April 12, 3:00 p.m., Circus Mojo (Ludlow, KY)
  • Saturday, April 12, 7:00 p.m., The Drama Workshop (Cheviot)
  • Sunday, April 13, 2:00 p.m., Oxford Community Arts Center
  • Friday, April 18, 7:00 p.m., Grove Banquet Hall (Springfield Township)
  • Saturday, April 19, 2:00 p.m., Sunset Players at Dunham Recreation Center (Price Hill)
  • Friday, April 25, 7:30 p.m., Dramakinetics/North Presbyterian (Northside)
  • Saturday, April 26, 2:00 p.m., Sharonville Fine Arts Council
  • Saturday, April 26, 7:00 p.m., Evendale Cultural Arts Center
  • Friday, May 9, 10:00 a.m. and 12:30 p.m., Miami University Middletown
  • Saturday, May 10, 2:00 p.m., Tall Institute (Oakley)
  • Saturday, May 10, 7:00 p.m., District A (Kennedy Heights at The Character Building)
  • Sunday, May 11, 2:00 p.m., Clifton Cultural Arts Center
  • Tuesday, May 13, 6:30 p.m., Silverton Paideia Academy
  • Saturday, May 17, 11:00 a.m., Woman’s Art Club (Mariemont)
  • Saturday, May 17, 7:00 p.m., Baker Hunt Art and Cultural Center (Covington, KY)
  • Sunday, May 18, 2:30 p.m., The Carnegie Center of Columbia Tusculum
  • Saturday, May 24, 10:30 a.m., Boone County Library
  • Saturday, May 24, 3:00 p.m., Hosted by Sweet Sistah Splash at Carl H. Lindner YMCA (West End) 

Note: Details vary by location. Contact the individual sites for tickets and prices. Contact information is available on the Playhouse website at www.cincyplay.com.

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CPI Officers Step Down

CPI_logoPlaywright Kalman Kivkovich and his wife, Sandra Kivkovich, president and vice president of respectively of Cincinnati Playwrights’ Initiative, have announced their resignation. Fred Rothzeid, CPI Treasurer has assumed the additional role of Acting President and Dennis Blom will continue as Secretary until new officers are sworn in on June 10th.

Mr. and Mrs. Kivkovich held office for nearly 4 years, facilitating CPI services to playwrights seeking staged readings of their work, and publicizing the organization’s events. Membership increased substantially during this time. Mrs. Kivkovich chaired a “salon,” which fielded cold readings of new works, allowing authors to hear their words for the first time.

The salon also played host to Cincinnati theater luminaries such as Blake Robison, artistic director of Cincinnati Playhouse, and Brian Isaac Phillips, head of the Cincinnati Shakespeare Company. At a March 23 salon, to be moderated by CPI member Renee Alper, a panel of actors will discuss “what actors want from playwrights,” at 7 p. m. in the University of Cincinnati’s French Hall, room 2225.

Upcoming CPI staged readings include NOSE, three one-act plays by Roger Brookfield at the Aronoff Center’s Fifth/Third Bank Theater on April 8th at 7:30 PM and IN THE GARDEN: About God, Belief and Stuff Like That, three one act plays by Fred Rothzeid at the Aronoff Center’s Jarson Kaplan Theater on May 20th at 7:30 PM.

Discounted tickets may be purchased for $8 from the Cincinnati Arts Association, (513) 621-2787.

CPI is a grassroots non-profit arts organization of Tri-State playwrights, directors, actors, and theater supporters dedicated to developing new plays written by local playwrights and is a member of the League of Cincinnati Theaters (LCT).

For more information on CPI or upcoming events please visit our website at http://www.cincinnatiplaywrights.org or email dennisb@piap.com or frothzeid@yahoo.com.

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VENUS IN FUR Runs April 19-May 17

PIP_Venus in FurVENUS IN FUR
Presented by Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park
April 19-May 17
Eden Park

Directed by KJ Sanchez

At the end of a long day of auditions, a playwright is convinced he’ll never find the right actress to play the heroine in his adaptation of a scandalous 19th century erotic novel. Enter Vanda, determined to prove she possesses the perfect blend of beauty, intelligence and sex appeal for the role. As the two act out the play, reality and fiction begin to blur in an electrifying cat-and-mouse game of love, seduction and power. Appropriate for adult and older teenage audiences. It is a sexual cat-and-mouse game. As such, it contains strong adult language, sexual themes and a scantily clad woman.

  • In preview Sat, April 19 at 8pm & Sun, April 20 at 2pm. $30 seats available.
  • In preview Tue-Wed, April 22-23 at 7:30pm. $30 seats available.
  • Thu-Fri, April 24-25 at 8pm
  • Sat, April 26 at 4pm & 8pm
  • Sun, April 27 at 2pm & 7pm
  • Tue-Wed, April 29-30 at 7:30pm
  • Thu-Fri, May 1-2 at 8pm
  • Sat, May 3 at 4pm & 8pm
  • Sun, May4 at 2pm & 7pm
  • Tue-Wed, May 6-7 at 7:30pm
  • Thu-Fri, May 8-9 at 8pm
  • Sat, May 10 at 4pm & 8pm
  • Sun, May 11 at 2pm & 7pm
  • Tue, May 13 at 7:30pm
  • Wed, May 14 at 1pm
  • Thu-Fri, May 15-16 at 8pm
  • Sat, May 17 at 4pm & 8pm

Official page |

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