Tag Archives: WIT-Women in Theatre

VENUS IN FUR Runs Oct. 16-24

Sam Fisher as Thomas & Hannah Goodman as Vanda.

Sam Fisher as Thomas & Hannah Goodman as Vanda.

VENUS IN FUR
WIT-Women in Theatre
Oct. 16-24
St. John United Church of Christ  [Bellevue]

Directed by Donna Hoffman

Cast: Hannah Goodman as Vanda Jordan & Sam Fisher as Thomas Novachek

A chatty, unsophisticated actress, Vanda Jordan, shows up late for an audition with a desperate, first time director, Thomas Novachek, for a play he’s written that takes place in 1870 — a dance of power begins between the two of them when she reveals that she mistook his play for a bit of pornography with lots of whips and chains.

  • Fri-Sat, Oct. 16-17 at 8pm
  • Fri-Sat. Oct. 23-24 at 8pm

Official page |

Leave a comment

Filed under On Stage

WIT-Women in Theatre Opens 2015-16 Season with VENUS IN FUR by David Ives on Oct. 16

Sam Fisher as Thomas & Hannah Goodman as Vanda.

Sam Fisher as Thomas & Hannah Goodman as Vanda.

WIT-Women in Theatre opens its 2015-16 season on October 16 with the wildly intelligent, funny, sizzling drama VENUS IN FUR by David Ives — a speculation on the innate power of women and how that power is reflected in the 21st century against a 19th century backdrop. VENUS IN FUR explores women’s servitude by wrapping the story in a sadomasochistic, black fur stole.  It is a sensually packed love story between a man, who doesn’t know what he wants and a woman who knows exactly what she wants.

A chatty, unsophisticated actress, Vanda Jordan (Hannah Goodman), shows up late for an audition with a desperate, first time director, Thomas Novachek (Sam Fisher), for a play he’s written that takes place in 1870 — a dance of power begins between the two of them when she reveals that she mistook his play for a bit of pornography with lots of whips and chains.

How do men perceive women at first glance? Are women always auditioning for some unknown role with rules that were set forth since biblical times? How do women change men’s minds?  Who’s in charge, anyway?  Is the Battle of the Sexes doomed to go on ad infinitum?

The year 1870 is an important playwriting choice for VENUS IN FUR because it was in this year that African American male slaves were given the right to vote through the 15th Amendment.  It wasn’t until 1920 with the 19th Amendment that women of all colors were given the right to vote.  Clearly, the right to vote hasn’t given universal equality to either race or gender.  The gap between the privileged and the disadvantaged is still wide, but in this playwright’s hands, Vanda Jordan reduces that distance with small miracles.  Women have changed less than the methods they use to overcome slavish power.

To make VENUS IN FUR even more fun than it already is, immediately after each performance the cast members will be available for photos on the set.  Audience members can pick their favorite scene/s, insert themselves into that stage picture, and share those pictures on social network instantaneously.

VENUS IN FUR opens on October 16 with three more performances on October 17, 23, and 24 at The Avenue Stage under the roof of St. John United Church of Christ at 520 Fairfield Ave, Bellevue, KY, just 10 short blocks east of Newport on the Levy.  All performances begin at 8:00pm.  General seating is limited but you can bring your own lawn chair to expand the permanent seating.  Beginning September 19, tickets are $18 and can be ordered on-line at St. John’s website: https://stjohnchurch.net/theatre-on-the-avenue/#.VfbP_xGrRaQ

Leave a comment

Filed under Press Releases

2015-2016 Season Announced for WIT-Women in Theatre

WIT-Women in Theatre
Announces the 2015-16 Season on
The Avenue Stage

520 Fairfield Ave, Bellevue, KY 41073
(10 blocks east of Newport on the Levy)

October 16, 17, 23, 24
VENUS IN FUR by David Ives
Directed by Donna Hoffman, the Artistic and Producing Director of WIT-Women in Theatre

VENUS IN FUR is a daring, 21st century play nominated for a Tony Award in 2012 for Best Play.

Plot: Thomas Novachek is the writer-director of a new play opening in New York City; this play-within-the-play is an adaptation of the 1870 novel Venus in Furs by the Austrian author, Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, and happens to be the novel that inspired the term Masochism. The play begins with Novachek on the telephone lamenting the inadequacies of the actresses who have showed up that day to audition for the lead character, Wanda von Dunayev.  Suddenly, Vanda Jordan, bursts in. At first it’s hard to imagine that she will please this very particular and exasperated writer/director:  She’s brash, vulgar and unschooled.  With comedy and drama, Vanda convinces him to let her audition for the part of Wanda, with the director/writer reading the part of Severin von Kushemski.

April 1, 2, 3, 8, 9
(Premier) RURAL FREE DELIVERY by Grace Epstein
Directed by Marta Backman, Resident Production SM for New Edgecliff Theatre in Cinti.

RURAL FREE DELIVERY is Grace Epstein’s first entry to the greater Northern Kentucky stage.  Grace was the dramaturge for WIT’s production of “Honour” in April 2015.   She is an Associate Professor and Assistant Department Head of the Department of English at the University of Cincinnati.

Plot: In this dramedy, a lesbian couple has moved from a northern U.S. climate to a small, eastern Kentucky homestead.  Hava is a Jewish biologist at a local university and the very pregnant Shirese is an African-American English teacher at the same university.  Joined by Hava’s straight sister, Lyla, and a middle-aged,  all-things-Kentucky, competent woman, the four of them are both prepared and unprepared for 25 inches of snow, the onset of labor, and the secret about Lyla’s mother.

July 15, 16, 22, 23
A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE by Tennessee Williams
Directed by Donna Hoffman

A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE is a 1947 play written by American playwright, Tennessee Williams which received the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1948 and is often regarded among the finest of American plays of the 20th century.  “Streetcar” marked a turning point in American acting and directing from melodrama to naturalism.  The Stanley Kowalski character played by Marlon Brando represented naturalism while melodrama is shown in all its fluttering theatricality by the character, Blanche Dubois, originally played by Jessica Tandy.

Tickets will go on sale for each play approximately one month prior to opening through St. John United Church of Christ website: https://stjohnchurch.net.

Leave a comment

Filed under Press Releases, Season Announcements