Tag Archives: Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park

Cincinnati Playhouse’s Free Play Reading Series Showcases Other Works by 2015-16 Season Playwrights

PIP_logo(CINCINNATI) – The Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park will launch a free reading series of works by playwrights Lauren Gunderson, Terrence McNally and Theresa Rebeck, all of whom have productions in the Playhouse’s current season. The readings will take place on selected Monday evenings beginning March 7 and continuing through April 4.

“This series broadens the reach of our regular season,” says Playhouse Artistic Director Blake Robison. “It gives our audiences the opportunity to experience other works by this spring’s trio of Shelterhouse playwrights. We hope that subscribers and others will join us to learn more about their interests, their careers and the scope of their artistry.”

The free play reading schedule includes:

March 7: ADA AND THE ENGINE, by Lauren Gunderson. An intimate, romantic, steam-powered, math-and-music fueled story of Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage, Victorian computer visionaries, which premiered last October at Central Works in Berkeley. Jane Austen meets Steve Jobs in this poignant pre-tech romance heralding the computer age. Gunderson’s world premiere production of THE REVOLUTIONISTS continues in the Thompson Shelterhouse Theatre through March 6.

March 21: A PERFECT GANESH, by Terrence McNally. McNally’s 1993 play, which premiered off-Broadway, follows two rich, middle-aged women from Connecticut on a journey to India as they struggle to heal from the deaths of their sons. With Ganesha, their tour guide, they find their way to wisdom and inner peace. McNally’s MOTHERS AND SONS runs in the Thompson Shelterhouse Theatre March 18 to April 17.

April 4: OMNIUM GATHERUM, by Theresa Rebeck. Believing that lively, contentious debate is the heart and soul of a dinner party, a domestic artist and perfect hostess invites an assortment of opinionated personalities to share a surreal meal. The guests at this exquisite feast of food and argument confront the global implications of 9/11 and beyond in this work that debuted at Actors Theatre of Louisville’s Humana Festival in 2003 and was a finalist for the 2004 Pulitzer Prize. Rebeck’s production of BAD DATES will be performed April 30 to June 12 in the Thompson Shelterhouse Theatre.

All readings will take place at 7 p.m. in the Playhouse’s Marx Rehearsal Hall. The readings are free, but space is limited and advance reservations are required. Limit four tickets per household per show. To make a reservation, contact the Playhouse Box Office at 513-421-3888 (toll-free in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana at 800-582-3208). Call 513-345-2248 for Telecommunications Device for the Deaf accessibility.

The Free Play Reading Series is supported in part by The Greater Cincinnati Foundation, The Louise Taft Semple Foundation and the Wohlgemuth Herschede Foundation.

The 2015-16 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.

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MOTHERS AND SONS Runs March 19-April 17

PIP_Mothers and Sons promo

Alvin Keith as Cal Porter, Austin Vaughan as Bud Odgen-Porter & Ben Cherry as Will Odgen.

MOTHERS AND SONS
Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park
March 19-April 17
Eden Park

Directed by Timothy Douglas

Cast: Stephanie Berry as Katharine Gerard, Ben Cherry as Will Odgen, Alvin Keith as Cal Porter & Austin Vaughan as Bud Odgen-Porter

What does family mean to you?
From the award-winning playwright of Love! Valour! Compassion! comes a gripping new drama about change, reconciliation and what it means to be a family. Cal and his husband Will have built a happy life with their 6-year-old child. Then the mother of Cal’s former lover makes a surprise visit to their Manhattan home — 20 years after her son’s untimely death. She’s a vibrant reminder of how much and how little has changed for a generation of gay men facing a future they never imagined. A 2014 Tony nominee for best play. Advisory: Appropriate for adults and older teenage audiences. It’s a lovely story of reconciliation, but it does contain some strong adult language and other mature themes.

  • In preview, Sat March 19 at 8pm & Sun, March 20 at 7pm
  • In preview, Tue-Wed, March 22-23 at 7:30pm
  • Thu, March 24 at 7:30pm
  • Fri, March 25 at 8pm
  • Sat, March 26 at 4pm & 8pm
  • Sun, March 27 at 2pm & 7pm
  • Tue-Thu, March 29-31 at 7:30pm
  • Fri, April 1 at 8pm
  • Sat, April 2 at 4pm & 8pm
  • Sun, April 3 at 2pm & 7pm
  • Tue-Thu, Apri 5-7 at 7:30pm
  • Fri, April 8 at 8pm
  • Sat, April 9 at 4pm & 8pm
  • Sun, April 10 at 2pm & 7pm
  • Tue, April 12 at 7:30pm
  • Wed, April 13 at 1pm & 7:30pm
  • Thu, April 14 at 7:30pm
  • Fri, April 15 at 8pm
  • Sat, April 16 at 4pm & 8pm
  • Sun, April 17 at 2pm

Official page |

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NKU Hosts Tony Award Winner Karen Ziemba

PIP_Native Gardens2.jpg

Virginia Butley (Karen Ziemba, right) attempts to sway new neighbor Tania Del Valle (Sabina Zuniga Varela, left) to her point of view in the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park’s world premiere of Karen Zacarías’ Native Gardens, which runs through Feb. 21 in the Robert S. Marx Theatre. A disagreement over a longstanding fence line spirals into an all-out war of taste, class, privilege and entitlement with hilarious results. For NATIVE GARDENS tickets call 513-421-3888 (toll-free in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana, 800-582-3208) or visit http://www.cincyplay.com. Photo – MIKKI SCHAFFNER; Date – January 2016.

HIGHLAND HEIGHTS, KY –Tony Award winner Karen Ziemba will visit Northern Kentucky University to speak with students about her life and career on Tuesday, February 16 from 3-4pm. The event is open to the public and will take place in the Stauss Theatre in the Fine Arts Center.

Ziemba is currently appearing in the world premiere of Native Gardens at Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park.

Karen Ziemba is an American actress, singer and dancer, best known for her work in musical theatre. Ms. Ziemba received the Tony Award, the Drama Desk Award and the Outer Critics Circle Award for her performance in Contact at Lincoln Center Theater. Other Broadway, off-Broadway and regional credits include Bullets Over Broadway; Chicago; Curtains (Outer Critics Circle Award and Tony nomination); Crazy for You (Jeff Award); Never Gonna Dance (Outer Critics Circle Award and Tony nomination); And the World Goes ‘Round (Drama Desk Award); Steel Pier (Tony nomination); I Do! I Do! (Drama Desk nomination); A Little Night Music; Sweeney Todd; 110 In the Shade; The Most Happy Fella; Hello, Dolly!; Boeing-Boeing; Much Ado About Nothing; Brighton Beach Memoirs; Broadway Bound; Heresy; Sylvia; and Six Degrees of Separation. She’s appeared on The Good Wife, Madam Secretary, Law and Order, Law and Order: Criminal Intent, Law and Order: Special Victims Unit, Scrubs and The Kennedy Center Honors in tributes to Angela Lansbury and Julie Harris, as well as for PBS’ Great Performances in My Favorite Broadway: The Leading Ladies, Gershwin at 100 and Sondheim: A Celebration At Carnegie Hall.

WHO
Karen Ziemba, Tony Award winning actress
Hosted by Northern Kentucky University | School of the Arts | Theatre and Dance

WHEN
February 16, 2016 | 3-4pm

WHERE
NKU Fine Arts Center | Stauss Theatre | 100 Nunn Drive, Highland Heights, KY 41099

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Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park Brings Harper Lee’s TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD to Life March 5-April 3, 2016

PIP_To Kill A Mockingbird promo(CINCINNATI) – TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD, one of the most popular and best-loved stories in American literature, returns to the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park for the first time in more than 20 years in a thought-provoking and visually exciting new production. Christopher Sergel’s adaptation of Harper Lee’s coming-of-age story will be introduced to a new generation on the Playhouse’s Robert S. Marx Theatre stage from March 5 through April 3, 2016. The innovative production of the classic story, which is both timeless and timely, features the Playhouse debut of Obie Award-winning director and Associate Artist Eric Ting.

Set in Depression-era Alabama, TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD follows the precocious tomboy Scout and her brother Jem during one life-changing summer. When their father, Atticus, a small-town lawyer, is called upon to defend a black man accused of a crime he didn’t commit, they discover the true meaning of courage. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD is a tale of innocence lost and honor found.

“This production addresses the fundamental question of why do this play now?” says Playhouse Artistic Director Blake Robison. “It’s easy to draw parallels to Mockingbird in 2016. Here we are in the midst of racial strife in communities and on campuses across America. I’m excited that we’ll have the chance to explore what Mockingbird means to us today, in a supposedly ‘post-racial’ America that is proving to be anything but.”

Director Ting and his design team have opted for a storytelling approach that highlights this question. “This production of Mockingbird is not the film,” Robison says. “It is not a Hallmark Hall of Fame version. Nor will we try to recreate a fully realistic facsimile of a Southern town on stage. Theatre is, after all, a more creative and evocative art form.

“Eric is imagining that, as in Our Town, the story comes to life in a bare theatre. The show is filled with the same characters, events, themes and dialogue that make it a beloved classic. But, by placing the story in a theatre — our theatre, our own ‘our town’ — we highlight the simple reality that we view the story from our own contemporary vantage point. This will be a thoughtful and visually exciting approach, as our audiences have come to expect from the Playhouse.”

“It’s hard to imagine that a single person has escaped the story of Atticus Finch, his daughter Scout and the trial of Tom Robinson — it’s a story that’s become almost inseparable from the American identity, a story that confronts our great national tragedy with a dignity and idealism that is both inspiring and deeply complicated,” says Ting. “Harper Lee was writing just as the Civil Rights Movement was taking hold across the country — and I see embedded in her tale a genuine call to white allies to stand up for the rights of all people; it tapped into the zeitgeist of the early ’60s, and Atticus Finch became a symbol for moral integrity in a time of profound change.

“I think what’s most compelling about bringing this story to the stage today,” adds Ting, “is the opportunity to see it in light of recent events — at a moment that feels sadly not so dissimilar, to examine how far we’ve come and more importantly how far we have left to go.”

When first published in 1960, TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD was the rare novel that was an immediate sensation, spending a remarkable 80 weeks on the bestseller list. Since then, it has been translated into 40 different languages with more than 40 million books sold, making it one of the bestselling novels of the 20th century. The story gained even wider acclaim when Hollywood came calling quickly after the novel was published, and the 1962 film version is also considered a masterpiece. Subsequently, playwright Christopher Sergel scripted not one but two stage adaptations: It’s in his revised version, which is the one being produced at the Playhouse, that we see an adult Jean Louise looking back on her own childhood.

The cast of TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD includes Randy Lee Bailey (Walter Cunningham), Brooke Chamberlin (Scout), Judith Lightfoot Clarke (Maudie Atkinson), Kevin Cristaldi (Bob Ewell), R. Ward Duffy (Heck Tate), Law Dunford (Townsperson), Kenneth Early (Reverend Sykes), John Feltch (Atticus), Annie Fitzpatrick (Stephanie Crawford), Dale Hodges (Jean Louise Finch), Jared Joplin (Mr. Gilmer), Gabriel Lawrence (Tom Robinson), Zoaunne LeRoy (Mrs. Dubose), Aidan McCracken (Jem), Barry Mulholland (Judge Taylor), Serena Ryen (Townsperson), Ty Joseph Shelton (Dill), Robert Carlton Stimmel (Townsperson), Seth Wallen (Nathan Radley/Arthur (Boo) Radley), Erin Ward (Townsperson), Torie Wiggins (Calpurnia), Magan Wiles (Mayella Ewell), Renika Williams (Helen Robinson) and Lilian Wouters (Townsperson).

In addition to Ting, the creative team features Laura Jellinek (set designer), Toni-Leslie James (costume designer), Mark Barton (lighting designer) and John Gromada (sound designer/composer). Jenifer Morrow is the production stage manager, and Suann Pollock and Brooke Redler are the second stage managers.

TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD is sponsored by Leading Ladies. American Modern Insurance Group is the design sponsor; Huntington National Bank is the artist sponsor/Scout, the Morse and Betty Johnson Family is the artist sponsor/Atticus and Barbara and Bill Weyand are the artist sponsor/director Eric Ting.

Ticket prices for TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD start at $35. Prices are subject to change, and patrons are encouraged to buy early for the best seats at the best prices. The show is appropriate for adults and children ages 11 and up.

Continuing this season is the popular Sunday College Night, with tickets to all 7 p.m. Sunday performances priced at just $10 with a valid student ID. Student tickets are just $15 on the day of the show for all other performances.

Discounted ticket prices for children, teens and students are available in advance for all performances for $45 or $30, depending on seating section.

Previews for TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD are at 8 p.m. Saturday, March 5; 2 p.m. Sunday, March 6; 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 8; and 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 9. The official opening night is Thursday, March 10, at 7:30 p.m.

Performances take place at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays, 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturdays, and 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Sundays.

Free Meet the Artists programs that allow audiences to interact with the cast and others
associated with TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD will be held after the following performances: 2 p.m. Sunday, March 13; 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 23; 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 31; and 2 p.m. Sunday, April 3. Playhouse Perspectives talk-backs will be held following every other performance. Playhouse Perspectives is supported by a gift from Roderick and Barbara Barr.

TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD will be audio described for those with visual impairments at 4 p.m. Saturday, March 26, and signed for persons with hearing impairments at 2 p.m. Sunday, April 3. The Playhouse is fully accessible. Audio enhancement receivers, large print programs and complete wheelchair access are available.

Tickets to TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD are on sale now. 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 http://www.cincyplay.com. Call 513-345-2248 for Telecommunications Device for the Deaf accessibility.

The 2015-16 Robert S. Marx Theatre season is presented by The Otto M. Budig Family Foundation, and Macy’s is the Robert S. Marx Theatre season design sponsor. The season sponsor of new work is The Lois and Richard Rosenthal Foundation.

The Playhouse is supported by the generosity of the community contributors to the ArtsWave 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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TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD Runs March 5-April 10

PIP_To Kill A Mockingbird1

John Feltch as Atticus & Brooke Chamberlin as Scout. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD
Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park
March 5-April 10
Eden Park

Directed by Eric Ting

Cast: Randy Lee Bailey as Walter Cunningham, Brooke Chamberlin as Scout, Judith Lightfoot Clarke as Maudie Atkinson, Kevin Cristaldi as Bob Ewell, R. Ward Duffy as Heck Tate, Law Dunford as Townsperson, Kenneth Early as Reverend Sykes, John Feltch as Atticus, Annie Fitzpatrick as Stephanie Crawford, Dale Hodges as Jean Louise Finch, Jared Joplin as Mr. Gilmer, Gabriel Lawrence as Tom Robinson, Zoaunne LeRoy as Mrs. Dubose, Aidan McCracken as (Jem), Barry Mulholland (Judge Taylor), Serena Ryen (Townsperson), Ty Joseph Shelton as Dill, Robert Carlton Stimmel as Townsperson, Seth Wallen as Nathan Radley/Arthur (Boo) Radley, Erin Ward as Townsperson, Torie Wiggins as Calpurnia, Magan Wiles as Mayella Ewell, Renika Williams as Helen Robinson & Lilian Wouters as Townsperson

Share this American classic with a new generation.
One of the most treasured novels of all time returns to the Playhouse stage for the first time in more than 20 years in this sweeping adaptation! Set in Depression-era Alabama, To Kill a Mockingbird follows the precocious tomboy Scout and her brother Jem during one life-changing summer. They discover the true meaning of courage when their father, Atticus, a small-town lawyer, defends a black man accused of a crime he didn’t commit. Harper Lee’s Pulitzer Prize winner is a timeless and timely tale of innocence lost and honor found. Advisory: To Kill a Mockingbird is appropriate for adults and young people ages 11 and up.

  • In preview Sat, March 5 at 8pm & Sun, March 6 at 2pm
  • In preview, Tue-Wed, March 8-9 at 7:30pm
  • Thu, March 10 at 7:30pm
  • Fri, March 11 at 8pm
  • Sat, March 12 at 4pm & 8pm
  • Sun, March 13 at 2pm & 7pm
  • Tue & Thu, March 15 & 17 at 7:30pm
  • Fri, March 18 at 8pm
  • Sat, March 19 at 4pm & 8pm
  • Sun, March 20 at 2pm & 7pm
  • Tue, March 22 at 7:30pm
  • Wed, March 23 at 1pm & 7:30pm
  • Thu, March 24 at 7:30pm
  • Fri, March 25 at 8pm
  • Sat, March 26 at 4pm & 8pm
  • Tue-Thu, March 29-31 at 7:30pm
  • Fri, April 1 at 8pm
  • Sat, April 2 at 4pm & 8pm
  • Sun, April 3 at 2pm & 7pm
  • Thu, April 7 at 7:30pm
  • Fri, April 8 at 8pm
  • Sat, April 9 at 4pm & 8pm
  • Sun, April 10 at 2pm

Official page |

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