Tag Archives: New Edgecliff Theatre

New Edgecliff Celebrates 20 Years of Creating Powerful Artistic Experiences with Plays About Theatre

NETNew Edgecliff Theatre is proud to announce the lineup for their 20th Anniversary Season: Life in the Theatre.  The season will be not only a celebration of NET but of Theatre itself.  The plays explore some of the dramatic moments in the life of any performer: lessons learned, getting the role and the inevitable passing of the torch.

  • MASTER CLASS by Terrence McNally October 5-21, 2017
  • Sweet Suspense: THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES October 22, 2017
  • VENUS IN FUR by David Ives February 15 – March 3, 2018
  • A LIFE IN THE THEATRE by David Mamet April 12 – 28, 2018

New Edgecliff Theatre returns to Northside to perform at The Hoffner Lodge, 4120 Hamilton Avenue.  Set in the heart of one of Cincinnati’s coolest and most vibrant neighborhoods, NET produces in the Hoffner’s spacious second-floor hall with stage. The first floor store-fronts on Hamilton Avenue now houses The Listing Loon  — a new craft beer and wine store– Spun Bicycles  a new full service bike shop, and Hoffner Gallery.  The Hoffner Lodge is just minutes away from some of Northside’s best dining and nightlife venues including Tillie’s Lounge, Django, Ruth’s Parkside Café, the Northside Tavern and Tickle Pickle.  Free parking is conveniently located across the street at the Northside Bank and Trust.

Established in 1998, New Edgecliff Theatre built on the concept of locally-produced professional educational theater that founder Michael Shooner first experienced at Edgecliff College in the 1970s.  Since then they have been dedicated to creating powerful artistic experiences utilizing local professionals and stressing the fundamental communion between actor and audience.

About the plays:

MASTER CLASS by Terrence McNally looks at the lessons performers learn, both from masters of the craft and as said masters.  Maria Callas is teaching a master class in front of an audience (us). She’s glamorous, commanding, larger than life—and drop-dead funny. An accompanist sits at the piano. Callas’ first “victim” is Sophie, a ridiculous, overly-perky soprano, dressed all in pink. Sophie chooses to sing one of the most difficult arias, the sleepwalking scene from La Sonnambula—an aria that Callas made famous. Before the girl sings a note, Callas stops her—she clearly can’t stand hearing music massacred. And now what has started out as a class has become a platform for Callas. She glories in her own career, dabbles in opera dish and flat-out seduces the audience. Callas gets on her knees and acts the entire aria in dumb show, eventually reducing the poor singer to tears. But with that there are plenty of laughs going on, especially between Callas and the audience. Callas pulls back and gives Sophie a chance to use what she’s learned. As soon as Sophie starts singing, though, Callas mentally leaves the room and goes into a sprawling interior monologue about her own performance of that aria and the thunderous applause she received at La Scala. Callas wakes up and sends Sophie off with a pat. The next two sessions repeat the same dynamic, only the middle session is with a tenor who moves Callas to tears. She again enters her memories, and we learn about Callas’ affair with Aristotle Onassis; an abortion she was forced to have; her first elderly husband whom she left; her early days as an ugly duckling; the fierce hatred of her rivals; and the unforgiving press that savaged her at first. Finally, we meet Sharon, another soprano, who arrives in a full ball gown. With Sharon singing, Callas is genuinely moved, for the young singer has talent, but Callas tells her to stick to flimsy roles. Sharon is devastated and spits back every nasty thing you’ve ever heard about Callas: She’s old, washed up; she ruined her voice too early in her career; she only wants people to worship her, etc. Sharon rushes out of the hall, and Callas brings the class to a close with a beautiful speech about the sacrifices we must make in the name of art.

David Ives’ VENUS IN FUR brings a whole new meaning to “getting” the role.  Thomas, a beleaguered playwright/director, is desperate to find an actress to play Vanda, the female lead in his adaptation of the classic sadomasochistic tale Venus in Fur. Into his empty audition room walks a vulgar and equally desperate actress—oddly enough, named Vanda. Though utterly wrong for the sophisticated part, Vanda exhibits a strange command of the material, piquing Thomas’ interest with her seductive talents and secretive manner. As the two work through the script, they blur the line between play and reality, entering into an increasingly serious game of submission and domination that only one of them can win. A mysterious, funny, erotic drama that represents yet another departure for the multifaceted David Ives.

IN A LIFE IN A THEATRE, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Glengarry Glen Ross and Speed-The-Plow David Mamet, takes us into the lives of two actors: John, young and rising into the first flush of his success; the other Robert, older, anxious, and beginning to wane. In a series of short, spare, and increasingly raw exchanges, we see the estrangement of youth from age and the wider, inevitable and endless cycle of life, in and out of the theatre.

In addition to the regular season NET will once again present its annual radio drama fundraiser, Sweet Suspense on Sunday October 22.  Celebrate Halloween with New Edgecliff Theatre as they present Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes classic THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES.  Sir Henry is heir to the vast Baskerville fortune, a legacy that comes with a family curse – death at the fangs of a horror that prowls the moor. Only Holmes can stop the beast. As mysterious lights signal Baskerville Hall and the hound terrifies the countryside, the sleuthing begins. Who wrote the letter that summoned the hound? Is the supernatural at work?  Sit on the edge of your seat as our actors present another tale of suspense from the Golden Age of Radio. Then join us for an extended intermission featuring a dessert buffet with tasty treats from some of Cincinnati’s finest restaurants, bakeries and caterers.

About the Directors:

Farley Norman (Master Class) is the Artistic Director for Brilliantly Different Productions, LLC. Current projects include developing new works in the Cincinnati area, working as a lighting designer in multiple regions, and directing productions throughout the year.

Former NET Artistic Director Proccacino (Venus in Fur) returns to direct once again, having last directed the successful productions of Other People’s Money, Proof and [title of show]. During his four years as Artistic Director, he also directed such shows as Fool for Love, Fat Pig and Cyrano [Rehearsed]. Greg currently chairs the Theatre Department at Thomas More College.

Elizabeth A. Harris (A Life in the Theatre) is also a former New Edegecliff Theatre Artistic Director, and is thrilled to be working with NET once again.  Past NET directing credits include The Night of the Iguana, American  Buffalo, Lives of the Saints, Power Failure, The Blue Room and 3 X the Tail.  She most recently directed The Shape of Things.  Currently Elizabeth serves as co-artistic director for Cincinnati LAB Theatre and runs the theatre program at St. Xavier High School. She also teaches acting for NKU and is the Director of Theatre Arts for the University of Cincinnati-College Conservatory of Music Preparatory Department.

 

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THE GLASS MENAGERIE Runs Feb. 9-25

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Keisha Kemper as Amanda, Talia Brown as Laura, Andrew Ornelas as Tom & Landon E. Horton as Jim

THE GLASS MENAGERIE
New Edgecliff Theatre
Feb. 9-25
The Hoffner Lodge [Northside]

Directed by Daryl Harris

Cast: Talia Brown as Laura, Landon E. Horton as Jim, Keisha Kemper as Amanda & Andrew Ornelas as Tom.

Amanda Wingfield is a faded, tragic remnant of Southern gentility, living in poverty in a dingy St. Louis apartment with her son, Tom, and her daughter, Laura. Amanda strives to give meaning and direction to her life and the lives of her children, though her methods are ineffective and irritating. Tom is driven nearly to distraction by his mother’s nagging and seeks escape in alcohol and the world of the movies. Laura also lives in her illusions. She is crippled, and this defect, intensified by her mother’s anxiety to see her married, has driven her more and more into herself.

  • Thu-Sat, Feb. 9-11 at 7:30pm
  • Thu-Sat, Feb. 16-18 at 7:30pm
  • Thu-Sat, Feb. 23-25 at 7:30pm

Official page |

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New Edgecliff Draws on Non-Traditional Casting for Tennessee Williams’ Classic THE GLASS MENAGERIE

In February, New Edgecliff Theatre will join a long tradition of productions of Tennessee Williams’ THE GLASS MENAGERIE utilizing casts of color

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Keisha Kemper as Amanda, Talia Brown as Laura, Andrew Ornelas as Tom & Landon E. Horton as Jim

In this 20th century “memory play,” we see the Wingfield family caught up in a painful struggle between illusion and reality, and the means employed by each of them to escape that struggle. Originally conceived by Williams in 1944 as a Depression-era dysfunctional white family, the play has nonetheless been frequently staged with African-American or multi-ethnic casts – the first being a production by the Howard Players at Howard University in 1947.

In Philip C. Kolin’s article “Black and Multi-Racial Productions of Tennessee Williams’ The Glass Menagerie,” he states, “Black and multi-ethnic productions of THE GLASS MENAGERIE…liberate the subtext from racially-imposed constraints.” He goes on to say, “In fact, I have argued that it is only through a production of a Williams play with an all-Black cast that certain dimensions of the subtext can be realized and released.”

NET Producing Artistic Director Jim Stump explains why he was compelled to further explore this approach: “Last year I was listening to an interview with a sociologist about a book she had written. It was a history of the matriarchal single-parent African American family.  It discussed, among other things, the separation of family members during slavery, the need to travel great distances for work in the antebellum era, and the disassociation of many soldiers returning from war in the first half of the Twentieth Century.  As she was discussing fracturing of the African American family during this time, it made me think of the family in Tennessee Williams’ THE GLASS MENAGERIE.  The more I considered it, the more I realized this story could have been about any family, regardless of cultural background.  And with recent events in American society, I thought it was more important to present a story that would make audiences think about the concerns we all share – family, happiness, success – rather than one that reinforces our differences.”

Taking the helm in this production will be NKU professor Daryl Harris (recently named a Fulbright Specialist), who returns after directing two previous NET productions: Athol Fugard’s Master Harold…and the boys and David Mamet’s Race.  The cast will feature Talia Brown, Landon E. Horton, Keisha Kemper and Andrew Ornelas.  Of Harris, Stump says, “Once I settled on this approach, my first call was to Daryl Harris.  His passion for storytelling and his background in multi-cultural performance was the ideal combination for a project like this.”

In the play, Amanda Wingfield is a faded, tragic remnant of Southern gentility, living in poverty in a dingy St. Louis apartment with her son, Tom, and her daughter, Laura. Amanda strives to give meaning and direction to her life and the lives of her children, though her methods are ineffective and irritating. Tom is driven nearly to distraction by his mother’s nagging and seeks escape in alcohol and the world of the movies. Laura also lives in her illusions. She is crippled, and this defect, intensified by her mother’s anxiety to see her married, has driven her more and more into herself.

THE GLASS MENAGERIE by Tennessee Williams
February 9-25 2017, all performances 7:30 p.m.
The Hoffner Lodge, 4120 Hamilton Ave, Cincinnati, OH 45223

Tickets available at CincyTicket.com or by calling 1-888-428-7311
For more information go to: www.newedgecliff.com 

About the play: Amanda Wingfield is a faded, tragic remnant of Southern gentility, living in poverty in a dingy St. Louis apartment with her son, Tom, and her daughter, Laura. Amanda strives to give meaning and direction to her life and the lives of her children, though her methods are ineffective and irritating. Tom is driven nearly to distraction by his mother’s nagging and seeks escape in alcohol and the world of the movies. Laura also lives in her illusions. She is crippled, and this defect, intensified by her mother’s anxiety to see her married, has driven her more and more into herself. The crux of the action comes when Tom invites a young man of his acquaintance to take dinner with the family. Jim, the caller, is a nice ordinary fellow who is at once pounced upon by Amanda as a possible husband for Laura. In spite of her crude and obvious efforts to entrap the young man, he and Laura manage to get along very nicely, and momentarily Laura is lifted out of herself into a new world. But this crashes when, toward the end, Jim explains that he is already engaged. The world of illusion that Amanda and Laura have striven to create in order to make life bearable collapses about them. Tom, too, at the end of his tether, at last leaves home.

A drama of great tenderness, charm and beauty, “The Glass Menagerie” is one of the most famous plays of the modern theatre.

About the Director:  Daryl Harris is a 40-year veteran of traditional, experimental, applied and educational theatre. He has studied and worked as a producer, writer, director, actor, costume designer, professor and lecturer throughout the United States, Canada, Scandinavia, West Africa, China and Australia. In addition to teaching diverse interdisciplinary theatre courses, Harris’ work involves multicultural programming and projects that link the Underground Railroad Movement to the fields of theatre and dance, connecting themes emerging from the Movement to current social problems in ways that promote understanding and greater social harmony.  Mr. Harris holds a B.A. from The University of Southern Mississippi, a M.F.A. from The University of Southern Mississippi and a Ph.D. from The University of Alabama.  He was recently named a Fulbright Specialist.

About the Fulbright Program (from the Kentucky Tribune): Northern Kentucky University professor Dr. Daryl Harris has been selected for the Fulbright Specialists program, a five-year appointment during which he will act as an expert consultant for other universities across the globe.

A writer, director, costume designer, and actor who has worked on nearly every continent, Harris will take his expertise to other educational institutions, helping to teach students and assisting faculty in developing curriculum.

Harris is an associate professor of performance art at NKU’s School of the Arts, which is part of the College of Arts and Sciences. He specializes in multicultural programming and linking theatre to other disciplines, and teaches his students that theatre is about more than acting.

“Theatre helps students gain confidence when speaking, to think broadly by finding multiple solutions to a problem, and to develop the ability to think quickly on one’s feet. These lessons can be applied to many fields,” he said.

The prestigious Fulbright Specialists Program pairs prominent U.S. faculty and professionals with academic institutions around the world in need of their expertise. Appointments to the program are peer-reviewed and approved by the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board (FFSB). The Fulbright Program is sponsored by the U.S. Department of State.

The program is designed to build relationships among U.S. faculty and professionals and their peers in more than 140 nations who participate in the program. That includes helping train foreign faculty, hosting seminars and lectures, organizing workshops, and helping develop curriculum.

About the Cast

Talia Brown (Laura) is ecstatic to be in her first production with New Edgeliff Theatre. She is currently a junior at Northern Kentucky University where she is working toward her BFA in Acting.  She has performed in several productions at NKU, including “Undraped”, “The Wedding Story”, and “The Bacchae”.

Landon E. Horton (Jim) is from Louisville and is currently finishing his BFA in Playwriting at NKU. He has previously appeared with New Edgecliff Theatre in “Master Harold and the Boys” (also directed by Daryl Harris) as Willie in 2007. He has performed in a variety of shows, such as “Of Mice and Men” as Crooks, “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” as Cutler, and “BlackTop Sky” as Wynn. He is overjoyed to be working with the great Daryl Harris and New Edgecliff Theatre once again.

Keisha Kemper (Amanda): A Cincinnati native, Keisha graduated from Withrow High School. She has a B.S. degree from the University of Toledo, Master of Education degree in Health Education from the University of Cincinnati (UC) and has earned her BFA in Dramatic Performance from CCM.  Keisha is also a member of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc.

Keisha has performed as Harry in Harry and the Thief at the Know Theatre of Cincinnati, with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra during a performance of Prokofiev’s Suite from Romeo and Juliet as the Chorus/Nurse, with The Burying Beetles in Revolting Circumstances as Carolyn/Prophet, and Radio Gomorrah LIVE! as Typhoon in the Cincinnati Fringe Festival. She has also appeared in original works with RoJo Productions, Jewel Entertainment Group, & God’s Champion Entertainment.  As a student at the University of Cincinnati College Conservatory of Music (CCM), Keisha performed as Tituba in The Crucible, Antonia in Pentecost, Gilly, Witch #3 and Victim in Living Dead in Denmark and as Caithness in Macbeth.

Keisha proudly served in the U.S. Army as a Health Physics Technician (91SN4). Her Basic Training was held at Fort Jackson, SC and her job training (AIT) at Fort Sam Houston, TX.

Keisha has over 10 years of Healthcare experience as an Exercise Physiologist specializing in Cardiac Rehabilitation and Cardiology. As an Exercise/Fitness Specialist, she worked in a Corporate Health Department providing health screenings and education to workers across Cincinnati.

Andrew Ornelas (Tom) is incredibly excited to be playing Tom. He hopes to bring this beautiful character to life and create a unique world on stage. Andrew is currently a senior at Northern Kentucky University pursuing a Bachelor’s in Theatre and Creative Writing. When not acting at NKU or around it, Andrew enjoys directing and playwriting. This coming semester has many exciting things in store for him and he is beyond thankful! 

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Staff and Design Positions Available at New Edgecliff Theatre

NETNew Edgecliff started in 1998 as an essentially two-person operation. Over the years, we have grown our staff but continue to seek out talented individuals with a passion for the theatre.

At this time, NET does not maintain any full-time/salaried staff members. Positions are stipend-paid on a per-production basis.  Designer and crew positions are typically filled at the beginning of each season, but opportunities occasionally arise throughout the year.  If you are interested in working with our company, check for position openings (listed to the right), or send us your resume via e-mail to jobs@newedgecliff.com.

Seeking Stage Manager for 2016-2017 Season

NET is looking for an experienced stage manager to oversee a smooth execution of our rehearsal process and production runs for the entire 2016-17 season.   The ideal candidate is able to effectively manage communication between the Director, Designers, Cast, and company staff. Learn more.

Seeking Lighting Designer for the 2016-17 Season

New Edgecliff Theatre is seeking an experienced lighting designer for our 2016-17 season. The LD will work with the Director of the production to identify the lighting elements which are needed to support the overall conceptual approach to the production. Learn more.

Seeking Managing Director for the 2016-17 Season

NET is seeking a Managing Director for its 2016-17 season. The Managing Director is directly involved in and assists with all aspects of NET’s operations. Learn more.

Seeking Assistant Stage Manager for 2016-2017 Season

NET is seeking an Assistant Stage Manager for its 2016-17 season. The ASM supports the Stage Manager during the rehearsal period and assumes assigned responsibilities during performances. Learn more.

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NET Seeks 2016-17 Staff Positions

NETNew Edgecliff Theatre is looking to fill the following staff positions for their 2017-16 Season: Managing Director, Stage Manager, Assistant Stage Manager and Lighting Designer. The season will include 3 productions (September, February and April.) Interviews will be held Sunday May 15 and Monday May 16 from 7 to 10 p.m.

For more information on these positions visit http://newedgecliff.com/get-inv…/staff-and-design-positions/.

Interested candidates should send their resume, portfolio (if applicable) and interview availability to Producing Artistic Director Jim Stump at jstump@newedgecliff.com by Friday May 13.

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