Tag Archives: Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park

Cincinnati Playhouse Presents August Wilson’s SEVEN GUITARS Beginning April 23

PIP_Seven Guitars

Photo by Tony Arrasmith/Arrasmith & Associates.

Blues-infused play part of Wilson’s groundbreaking American Century Cycle

CINCINNATI (April 11, 2023) – The groundbreaking work of playwright August Wilson returns to the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park April 23 with SEVEN GUITARS, presented by the Carol Ann and Ralph V. Haile, Jr. Foundation. Featuring live blues and lyrical dialogue, the play is part of Wilson’s award-winning American Century Cycle. (Previews take place April 23, 25 and 26; opening night is April 27.) The show runs through May 14 in the new Moe and Jack’s Place — The Rouse Theatre.

Like recent productions of Wilson’s American Century Cycle plays Jitney and Two Trains Running, SEVEN GUITARS presents an unrivaled exploration of the Black American experience in the 20th century.

Set in the summer of 1948 in Pittsburgh’s Hill District, blues music echoes through every building and creates a poignant rhythm to everyday life. A tight-knit group of friends gather together to reminisce and explore the ties that bind after the untimely death of their friend Floyd “Schoolboy” Barton – a gifted guitarist whose star was on the rise. As they do, a mystery unfolds that touches each of their lives.

“With SEVEN GUITARS, August deviates somewhat from his usual format and gives us a little twist on structure by using a flashback to help us follow the seven characters (seven guitars, so to speak)…Like always, August’s characters are rich and complicated,” explains Director Ron OJ Parson, who has directed more than 30 August Wilson plays and is one of the foremost experts of his work.

The play is among only a few by Wilson to feature live music. Characters bring blues to life, creating a soulful and emotional cadence to a story that’s already lyrical in its writing.

“SEVEN GUITARS, like Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,is about a musician,” says Parson. “I like to take that aspect to another level in the way I direct them. Being into blues and jazz myself, I use that to the fullest extent. Music is so important in the culture and world of the play.”
Considered one of the greatest American playwrights, Wilson and his Tony Award- and Pulitzer Prize-winning body of work have opened doors to innumerable revelations and conversations about the Black experience in the U.S. His chronicling and contributions to Black culture have reached across generations, races and national boundaries, inviting readers and audiences across the globe to examine at ground level the despair generated by poverty and racism, while simultaneously celebrating Black America.

CAST

Saran Bakari (Ruby); Bryant Bentley (Red Carter); Kevin Brown (Hedley); Kierra Bunch (Vera Dotsun); Marsha Estell (Louise); Dimonte Henning (Floyd “Schoolboy” Barton); Vincent Jordan (Canewell)

PRODUCTION
Ron OJ Parson (Director); Shaun L. Motley (Set Designer); Yvonne L. Miranda (Costume Designer); Jason Fassl (Lighting Designer); Andre J. Pluess (Sound Designer); Joe Foust (Fight Director); Cristin Carole (Movement/Intimacy Consultant); Jonathan Hetler (Casting Director); Brooke Redler (Stage Manager); Andrea L. Shell (Second Stage Manager); Co-production with Milwaukee Repertory Theater.

TICKETS

Tickets begin at $35. Preview performances take place April 23 at 2 p.m. and. April 25- 26 at 7:30 p.m.  Opening night is April 27 at 7:30 p.m. Performances will take place on Tuesday-Fridays at 7:30 p.m., Saturdays at 2 and 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. A weekday matinee will be offered on May 10 at 1 p.m.   To purchase tickets or for more information, call the Playhouse Box Office at 513-421-3888 (toll-free in Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana at 800-582-3208) or visit www.cincyplay.com. Patrons who are deaf, hard-of-hearing, deaf-blind or speech disabled: dial 711 to connect to the Box Office via Ohio Relay Services.

EVENT: ART TALKS (FORMERLY MEET THE ARTISTS)

Stay after select performances for a behind-the-scenes discussion with members of the artistic team.

  • Sun, April 30 at 2 p.m.
  • Thu, May 4, at 7:30 p.m.
  • Wed, May 10 at 7:30 p.m.

ADVISORY

August Wilson’s Seven Guitars is suitable for adult and older teenage audiences. This landmark script contains adult language (including the n-word) as it explores the tunes of life for the story’s characters. Through poetic dialogue and blues melodies, they speak frankly and deeply about hardship, violence, death and racism. The show runs approximately 3 hours and 15 minutes, with one intermission.

SPONSORS
Production Sponsor is the Carol Anne and Ralph V. Haile, Jr. Foundation.  Artist Sponsors are Geiler, BHDP, 19/19 Investment Counsel, AAA/Provident Travel and Diane and Carl Iseman. Season Sponsors is Schueler Group. The Rosenthal Family Foundation is the season sponsor of new work.

The Playhouse is supported by the generosity of almost 40,000 contributors to the ArtsWave Community campaign. 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.

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Playhouse’s Free NATE THE GREAT the Musical on April 8 at Kennedy Heights Arts Center

PIP_Nate the GreatNate the Great is on the case! When Annie tells Nate that her new painting has gone missing, the world’s greatest boy detective sets out to solve the mystery. He tracks down clues and puts suspects to the test — and then, another mystery unfolds. Nate finds himself facing the biggest challenge of his career. And worse yet, Mom is all out of pancakes!

This fun-filled musical reminds us of the importance of friendship and opening our minds to new possibilities. Recommended for kindergarten and up.

Saturday, April 8, 2023, 2:15 p.m.
Kennedy Heights Arts Center – 6546 Montgomery Rd, Cincinnati, Oh, OH 45213

For more information visit www.cincyplay.com/productions/nate-the-great-the-musical.

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Playhouse’s Free NATE THE GREAT the Musical on April 7 at Arts Center at Dunham

PIP_Nate the GreatNate the Great is on the case! When Annie tells Nate that her new painting has gone missing, the world’s greatest boy detective sets out to solve the mystery. He tracks down clues and puts suspects to the test — and then, another mystery unfolds. Nate finds himself facing the biggest challenge of his career. And worse yet, Mom is all out of pancakes!

This fun-filled musical reminds us of the importance of friendship and opening our minds to new possibilities. Recommended for kindergarten and up.

Friday, April 7, 2023, 7:30 p.m.
Sunset Players – 1945 Dunham Way, Cincinnati, OH 45238

For more information visit www.cincyplay.com/productions/nate-the-great-the-musical.

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August Wilson’s SEVEN GUITARS Runs April 23-May 14

PIP_Seven Guitars

Photo by Tony Arrasmith/Arrasmith & Associates.

August Wilson’s SEVEN GUITARS
Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park
April 23-May 14
The Rouse Theatre [Eden Park]

It’s 1948 in Pittsburgh’s Hill District, and blues music echoes throughout the neighborhood. A group of old friends gathers to mourn and reminisce about Floyd “Schoolboy” Barton — a gifted guitarist whose star was on the rise and whose untimely death has irrevocably changed each of them. With live blues and lyrical dialogue, August Wilson weaves a poetic and poignant composition about the Black American experience. This landmark, Tony Award-winning play — a part of Wilson’s American Century Cycle — promises a soulful exploration of the ties that bind and the chords that hold us together. August Wilson’s Seven Guitars is suitable for adult and older teenage audiences. This landmark script contains adult language (including the n-word) as it explores the tunes of life for the story’s characters. Through poetic dialogue and blues melodies, they speak frankly and deeply about hardship, violence, death and racism. 

  • In preview Sun, April 23 at 2pm
  • In preview Tue-Wed, April 25-26 at 7:30pm
  • Thu-Fri, April 27-28 at 7:30pm
  • Sat, April 29 at 2pm & 7:30pm
  • Sun, April 30 at 2pm
  • Tue-Fri, May 2-5 at 7:30pm
  • Sat, May 6 at 2pm & 7:30pm
  • Sun, May 7 at 2pm
  • Tue, May 9 at 7:30pm
  • Wed, May 10 at 1pm & 7:30pm
  • Thu-Fri, May 11-12 at 7:30pm
  • Sat, May 13 at 2pm & 7:30pm
  • Sun, May 14 at 2pm

Official page |

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Cincinnati Playhouse Explores the History of the Asian Immigrant Experience through the Eyes of THE CHINESE LADY Beginning March 30

PIP_The Chinese LadyCINCINNATI (March 28) – Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park will open THE CHINESE LADY by Lloyd Suh, the first show in the Rosenthal Shelterhouse Theatre since the opening of the mainstage theatre complex, beginning March 30. (Previews are March 28 and 29; the show runs through April 30. Opening night is March 30.)  Inspired by a true story, the production paints a unique and surprising portrait of the U.S. as seen through the eyes of the first Chinese woman to set foot on American soil in 1834.

“THE CHINESE LADY offers an eye-opening look at the experience of Asian and Asian American women in the US that calls for empathy and understanding of cultural differences by tracing the experience of Afong Moy nearly 200 years ago to our present day,” says Osborn Family Producing Artistic Director Blake Robison.

The story blends historical accounts with a deep exploration of character and culture through the experience of Afong Moy, a 14-year-old girl brought to the U.S. in 1834. She was placed on display like an exhibit and then sent on a tour across the nation.

New York Theater called THE CHINESE LADY, which premiered off-Broadway in 2018 at Ma-Yi Theater Company, “a gently amusing, lyrical, yet sharply pointed play.” New York Theatre Guide praised the production as “an evocative exploration of cultural difference.”

Suh’s script breaks the traditional bounds of autobiographical storytelling by following Afong Moy from the 19th century to the present day. All the while, she walks us through American history with a singular point of view, striking a rare balance between poetic darkness and humorous moments of whimsy.

“We’re having a lot of fun playing with the fact that Asian American women are always performing,” explains director Jess McLeod. “Whether you’re Afong Moy in 1834 or me, an Asian American woman walking down the street in 2023, we’re forced to be in conversation with Asian stereotypes because we’ve been silenced and kept from the public eye — other than stories about Asian women written by white men with their own agendas.”

As Moy’s character says in the production, “It is a beautiful thing to look at something long enough to fully understand it. But it is so much more beautiful to be looked at long enough to be understood.”

CAST

Sami Ma (Afong Moy); Albert Park (Atung); Yuchi Chiu (Understudy); Elizabeth Chinn Molloy (Understudy)

PRODUCTION

Jess McLeod (Director); Se Hyun Oh (Set Designer); Hahnji Jang (Costume Designer/Cultural Consultant); Lee Fiskness (Lighting Designer);  Fan Zhang (Sound Designer/Compositions); Stephanie Klapper, CSA (Casting Director); Brandon T. Holmes (Stage Manager)

TICKETS 

Tickets begin at $35. Preview performances take place March 25, 28 and 29 at 7:30 p.m. Performances will take place on Tuesday-Fridays at 7:30 p.m., Saturdays at 2 and 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. A matinee will be offered April 12 at 1 p.m.   To purchase tickets or for more information, call the Playhouse Box Office at 513-421-3888 (toll-free in Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana at 800-582-3208) or visit www.cincyplay.com. Patrons who are deaf, hard-of-hearing, deaf-blind or speech disabled: dial 711 to connect to the Box Office via Ohio Relay Services.

EVENT: ART TALKS (FORMERLY MEET THE ARTISTS)

Stay after select performances for a behind-the-scenes discussion with members of the artistic team.

  • Sun, April 2 at 2 p.m.
  • Sun, April 9 at 2 p.m.
  • Wed, April 12 at 7:30 p.m.
  • Thu, April 20 at 7:30 p.m.

ADVISORY

The Chinese Lady is suitable for ages 13 and up. As Afong May tells her story, she doesn’t shy away from authentic and unfiltered descriptions of historical violence and cultural exotification.

SPONSORS

Production Sponsor is Ohio National Financial Services. Artist Sponsor is Mark and Rosemary Schlachter. Rosenthal Shelterhouse Season Sponsor is The Vonz Family. Season Sponsor of New Work is the Rosenthal Family Foundation.

The Playhouse is supported by the generosity of almost 40,000 contributors to the ArtsWave Community campaign. 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.

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