ALSO PLAYING… ANIMAL CRACKERS n ROCK OF AGES n AMERICAN IDIOT
ONCE
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© J
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T H E D E N V E R C E N T E R F O R T H E P E R F O R M I N G A R T S
VOLUME XXV n NUMBER 7
APRIL – MAY 2014 ONCE
APPLAUSE denvercenter.org 4
APPLAUSEM A G A Z I N E
VOLUME XXV n NUMBER 7 n APRIL – MAY 2014
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BOARD OF TRUSTEESDaniel L. Ritchie,
Chairman and CEODonald R. Seawell,
Chairman EmeritusRandy Weeks, PresidentWilliam Dean Singleton,
Secretary/TreasurerW. Leo Kiely III,
First Vice Chair Robert Slosky,
Second Vice Chair
Dr. Patricia Baca
Joy S. Burns
Isabelle Clark
Navin Dimond
Margot Gilbert Frank
Thomas W. Honig
Mary Pat Link
Trish Nagel
Robert C. Newman
Richard M. Sapkin
Martin Semple
Jim Steinberg
Peter Swinburn
Ken Tuchman
Tina Walls
Lester L. Ward
Dr. Reginald L. Washington
Judi Wolf
Sylvia Young_______________________
Carolyn Foster, Executive Assistant to Daniel L. Ritchie
Kim Schouten, Executive Assistant to Daniel L. Ritchie
HONORARY MEMBERSJeannie Fuller
Glenn R. Jones
M. Ann Padilla
Cleo Parker Robinson
HELEN G. BONFILS
FOUNDATION BOARD
OF TRUSTEES
Lester L. Ward, President
Martin Semple, Vice President
Judi Wolf, Sec’y/Treasurer
Donald R. Seawell, President Emeritus
W. Leo Kiely III
Daniel L. Ritchie
William Dean Singleton
Robert Slosky
Jim Steinberg
Dr. Reginald L. Washington
SENIOR MANAGEMENT STAFF
Randy Weeks, President and Executive Director, Denver Center Attractions
Kent Thompson, Producing Artistic Director, Denver Center Theatre Company
Dorothy Denny, Executive Vice President
Vicky Miles, Chief Financial Officer
Jennifer Nealson, Chief Marketing Officer
Clay Courter, Director of Facilities Management
INDE
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4022
ANIMAL CRACKERSA madcap romp with all
your favorite brothers: Groucho, Chico, Harpo,
Zeppo—and Margaret Dumont. by Doug Langworthy
ROCK OF AGESChart-topping rock songs and
ballads from the 1980s offer “nothing but a good time.”
This show’s a party!by Genevieve Miller Holt
ONCEVacuum cleaner repairman meets immigrant flower seller, make music, fall in love and part. But not before changing each other’s lives—and enriching yours.
AMERICAN IDIOTA musical based on Green Day’s Grammy® Award-winning album. Three friends must choose between dreams and suburbia. All you need to do is enjoy.by Rob Weiner-Kendt
As you’ve heard by now, we’re launching our 36th Denver Center Theatre Company season with a ma-jor revision of the beloved musical, The Unsinkable Molly Brown, featur-ing a new book by Dick Scanlan (based on Molly Brown’s real life), several songs replaced by others from the Meredith Willson catalog, and a top creative team, led by three-time Tony® Award-winning director/chore-ographer Kathleen Marshall. And that’s just the thrilling start of an exciting year. Below (and on pages 16-17) I am outlining the rest of our 2014/15 season. William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, a title many of us read in school, tells the harrowing story of a group of schoolchildren dropped on an island after a plane crash during World War II. Left to their own de-vices, they sink into power struggles, even savagery, as bullying wins over cooperation; a scary, but touching play. Next up, Christopher Durang’s Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike (winner of the 2013 Tony for Best New Play) delivers a very funny, sometimes wistful reflection about middle-age ennui, loosely based on Uncle Vanya with hilarious Chekho-vian references, and the addition of a muscular “boy toy” and a prophetic, sassy housekeeper.
At the holidays we’ll hold to tradi-tion with our sumptuous staging of A Christmas Carol. We’ll celebrate our 10th annual Colorado New Play Summit in February with two world premieres that emerged from this year’s Summit to serve as the center-piece for the next one: James Still’s Appoggiatura, a romantic and tender story set in the mystical beauty of Venice as time bends and magic lies just around the corner—and Bene-diction, adapted by Eric Schmiedl to complete a trilogy drawn from the popular novels of Colorado’s acclaimed writer Kent Haruf. As with Haruf’s Plainsong and Eventide, Benediction weaves together the authentic, vivid and deeply human stories of Holt, a fictional small town on the eastern plains of Colorado. The spring brings One Night in Miami..., a surprising contemporary play by Will Kemp that fictionalizes a real meeting in a hotel room in Florida. After Cassius Clay won his first world heavyweight champion-ship (1964 against Sonny Liston), he spent the evening with three close friends: football legend Jim Brown, the remarkable composer/singer/producer Sam Cooke and Malcolm X, culminating in an announcement from Clay that shocked the world. I call One Night in Miami... a “dram-edy” because it’s filled with laughter, insight and, yes, drama. Our final stage show is yet to be selected, but we’re looking at several fascinating projects. Do come along for the adventure. Do join us again as a season ticket holder. n
Producing Artistic DirectorDenver Center Theatre Company
PROD
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G AR
TIST
IC D
IREC
TOR’
S LE
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Kent Thompson
PHOT
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Executive Artistic Director: Paige Price
A new comedy, written by Sandy RustinBook by Terrence McNally Music and Lyrics by David Yazbek
JUNE 24 – AUGUST 9 JULY 22 – AUGUST 16 JULY 1 – AUGUST 16Book by Allan Knee - Music by Jason Howland
Lyrics by Mindi Dickstein
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APPLAUSE denvercenter.org 8
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AT SELECT PERFORMANCES; CHECK DATES/TIMES WHEN ORDERING.
Performances at The Denver Center are made possible in part through the generous support of:
Denver Center Theatre Company 2013/14 Season Sponsors
Denver Center Attractions 2013/14 Season Sponsors
Media Sponsors
Red PMS 200 Gold PMS 123
Animal Crackers costume designs by Kevin Copenhaver
Dixie’s Tupperware Party
Now – April 20Garner Galleria
TheatreON SALE NOW
ShadowlandsNow – April 27Space TheatreON SALE NOW
Animal CrackersNow – May 11Stage TheatreON SALE NOW
Celtic WomanApril 19
Buell TheatreON SALE NOW
Dixie’s Never Wear a Tube Top
While Riding a Mechanical Bull...April 24 – May 11
Garner Galleria Theatre
ON SALE NOW
Rock of AgesApril 25 – 27Buell TheatreON SALE NOW
onceMay 6 – 18
Buell TheatreON SALE NOW
American IdiotMay 23 – 25Buell TheatreON SALE NOW
PippinSept 6 – 20
Buell Theatre
Lord of the Flies Sept 6 – Nov 2Space Theatre
The Unsinkable Molly Brown
Sept 12 – Oct 26Stage Theatre
Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike
Oct 10 – Nov 16 Ricketson Theatre
Kinky BootsOct 29 – Nov 9Buell Theatre
Forbidden Broadway: Alive
and KickingNov 15 – March 1
Garner Galleria Theatre
A Christmas CarolNov 29 – Dec 29
Stage Theatre
Jersey BoysDec 10 – 14
Buell Theatre
Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas!
The MusicalDec 17 – 28
Buell Theatre
AppoggiaturaJan 16 – Feb 22,
2015Ricketson Theatre
Benediction Jan 30 – Mar 1,
2015Space Theatre
Rodgers + Hammerstein’s
CinderellaFeb 3 – 15, 2015
Buell Theatre
Motown The Musical
March 31 – April 19, 2015
Buell Theatre
One Night in Miami...
Mar 20 – Apr 19, 2015
Space Theatre
AnnieApril 29 – May 10,
2015Buell Theatre
WickedJune 3 – July 5,
2015Buell Theatre
The Book of Mormon
Aug 11 – Sept 13, 2015
The Ellie
For in that sleep of death what dreams may come… -William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act III, scene i
The Denver Center is saddened to announce the loss of Jeri Zucherman, longtime member of the Best of Broadway and Directors societies, who recently passed away. Our condolences to Jeri’s family and friends at this difficult time. Jeri will be greatly missed. n
Jeri Zucherman
SINGLE TICKETS ON
SALE IN AUGUST
The silver screen springs to life at the Denver Center Theatre Company in this stage version of the Marx Brothers’ Ani-
mal Crackers—a boisterous comedy about the theft of a valuable painting from a society dinner party that is quintessential Marx Brothers may-hem. Costume designer Kevin Copenhaver takes you back to the 1930s through vintage creations in this whodunit spoof. As with many productions that went on to meet broader fame on the big screen, this play with music is smaller in scale, with a nimble cast of nine actors playing multiple characters—sometimes with just one line of dialogue in which to make a change! The frequency of the lightning-fast costume changes helps dictate fab-ric and color, as well as how a costume is built. “I will be looking for stretch charmeuse, fanciful woolens, knits that resemble the rougher textures of stretch fabrics from the period, and some wacky brocades and sleek fabrics for the ‘dream’ sequence near the end of the play,” Copenhaver noted. A strong color palette also assists in defining character and affiliation, both in the clothes and hair color. Women’s fashion in the 30s went from the boyish, columnar silhouette of the 1920s to a more feminine form achieved by cutting gar-ments on the bias. Because men’s fashions have not changed drastically since the 1930s, they will seem almost modern save for differences in lapel width, shoulder shape, trouser width and rise. From the show’s zinging one-liners to its slapstick brilliance, you will travel back to the swank of the 30s as Groucho, Harpo, Chico and Zeppo zip around the stage—and take your breath away. n
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ANIM
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RACK
ERS
APPLAUSE denvercenter.org 10
ILLU
STRA
TION
BY
KYLE
MAL
ONE
Animal Crackers is classic Marx Brothers comedy
brought to the modern stage
B Y D O U G L A S L A N G W O R T H Y
CRACKING
FUNNY
Animal Crackers, the hilarious Marx Brothers movie, started its life as a long-running Broadway musical that was hand-tailored to showcase the
energy of the madcap brothers (Groucho, Chico, Harpo and Zeppo) and their signature comic personae. In the stage show, with a book by George S. Kaufman, highbrow meets lowbrow to exhilarating effect. Mrs. Rittenhouse, a high-society matron, is throwing a big party to celebrate the return of Captain Spauld-ing (Groucho) from the wilds of Africa. To mark the festivities, she wants to reveal a famous painting she has borrowed for the occasion.
Animal Crackers delivers classic Groucho one-liners
(“I intend to live forever, or die trying”), comedy routines,
In the meantime, a quartet of young lovers vie for each other’s affections, while Spaulding attempts to woo his
wealthy widowed hostess. As it’s a musi-cal, there are plenty of songs and choral numbers with clever lyrics such as “He’s ended our anxiety/and saved our high society/from shameless impropriety.” Into this genteel entertainment about the pastimes of the very rich, the four Marx Brothers zip around like bottle rockets, derailing the story and burst-ing the bubbles of societal pretension. The play itself serves as a backboard for these expert vaudevillians to fling them-selves against. Animal Crackers delivers classic Groucho one-liners (“I intend to live forever, or die trying”), comedy rou-tines, instrumental interludes and plenty of physical shtick.
By the time the Marx Brothers opened that show, they were at the height of their pre-Hollywood fame. They had been honing their craft on the vaudeville stage for more than 25 years. Minnie Schoenberg Marx, their ferocious stage mother—whose own parents were a ma-gician and a yodeling harpist and whose brother, Al Shean, became a vaudeville star—shoved all her boys onto the stage, like it or not. They started out as a sing-ing group (first the Three, then the Four Nightingales), but as the boys’ voices began to change, they tried peppering the act with jokes, funny characters and mock fights, and found that their antics earned them more applause than their music.
Criss-crossing the country on the vaudeville circuit, the brothers developed the roles they became
known for, each picking up a nickname along the way: Groucho, the wise-crack-er with bushy eyebrows, moustache, glasses and a cigar; Chico (pronounced Chick-o, because he chased after the chicks), the con man with an Italian ac-cent who played the piano—and Harpo, the wide-eyed innocent with bushy hair who didn’t speak at all but liked to steal silverware and play the harp.
Zeppo, the youngest, usually played the handsome straight man, although once during the run of Animal Crackers, Zeppo went on for Groucho and was accounted even funnier than Groucho himself. (A fifth brother, Gummo, left the group during World War I.) After a successful run in 1915 at the Palace in New York City, Chico was getting restless, saying they were “too good” for vaudeville. This might have been sour grapes, as the brothers had gotten themselves banned from the major vaudeville circuits because of a dispute with impresario E.F. Albee (the adoptive grandfather of playwright Edward Albee). So they decided to try to conquer Broadway, pulling together the revue I’ll Say She Is out of their old routines and musical numbers, loosely
tied together by the story of a rich girl’s adventures with a variety of men.
The show opened in 1924 and played for 313 performances. The Marx Brothers were the toast
of the town. Then followed two more Broadway hits—The Cocoanuts (1925) and Animal Crackers (1928). As their fame kept growing, there was only one place left for them to go: Hol-lywood. When the first talkie (The Jazz Singer) was released in 1927, the Marx Brothers were perfectly positioned to bypass silent film and proceed directly to making pictures with sound. By the time the brothers started working on their first film, they were in their 40s with a wealth of theatrical experience under their belts. Paramount snapped up the team with a lucrative five-film contract. So while they were performing Animal Crackers in the evenings in Manhattan, during the day they filmed The Cocoanuts over in Queens at the Astoria Studios. In typical zany fashion, Groucho found his perfect comic foil in Margaret Dumont (Mrs. Rittenhouse), who played a succession of matronly high-society widows whom Groucho alternately insulted and pursued for their money. Her trademark deadpan was always able
to fend off Groucho’s attempts to drag her through the swamps of low comedy. Trained as an operatic singer and actress, she became a de facto “fifth brother,” starring in seven Marx Brothers films and two of their Broadway musicals, including Animal Crackers. How then do you stage a play so close-ly associated with its Marxian creators? According to Bruce Sevy, who directed this production, the actors portraying the famous siblings won’t be doing imita-tions per se.
“That would get tiresome,” he says. “The challenge is to in-habit the spirit of these guys
and their comedy so that the scenes live and breathe in the moment.” In a nod to the brothers’ musical virtuosity the actor playing Ravelli, the Chico role, will be doing some live tricks at the keyboard (one involving an orange). So is Animal Crackers serious theatre? Absolutely not. Is there a place in the theatre for laughter and silliness and comic anarchy? Absolutely. But let’s let Groucho have the final word. In a sardonic moment he once said: “If it weren’t for the brief respite we give the world with our foolishness, the world would see mass suicide in numbers that compare favorably with the death rate of lemmings.” Whoever would have thought “lemmings” could be the punchline of a joke? n
Douglas Langworthy is the Literary Manager of the Denver Center Theatre Company
ANIMAL CRACKERS
303.893.4100 APPLAUSE 11
Tickets: 303.893.4100 Toll-free: 800.641.1222 • TTY: 303.893.9582 Groups (10+): 303.446.4829 • denvercenter.org
April 4 – May 11 • Space TheatreProducing Partners: Margot & Allan Frank, Robert & Judi Newman
Sponsored by HealthONE
The performance on Wednesday, April 23, is dedicated to the memory of Jeri Zucherman
ASL interpreted, Audio Described & Open Captioned • May 4, 1:30pm
Perspective on the play: April 4, 6pm, Jones Theatre Attend this FREE moderated discussion with DCTC’s creative team. All are welcome.
Animal Crackers is classic Marx Brothers comedy
brought to the modern stage
B Y D O U G L A S L A N G W O R T H Y
CRACKING
FUNNY
Animal Crackers delivers classic Groucho one-liners
(“I intend to live forever, or die trying”), comedy routines,
instrumental interludes and plenty of physical shtick.
PREM
IUM
SUB
SCRI
PTIO
NS
APPLAUSE denvercenter.org 12
P R E M I U M S U B S C R I P T I O N SJoin Now – Support the Denver Center Theatre Company and enjoy the
new 2014/15 Season as a VIP Member!
Marquee Club sponsored in part by:
WilliamLaBAHN
visit www.denvercenter.org/members or contact David Zupancic at 303.446.4811 or [email protected] O J O I N
DIRECTORS SOCIETYTailored for the subscriber who wants to get closer to the company:• Eight-play subscription on selected Wednesday evenings• Before the Show: members-only cocktail parties• After the Show: casual yet elegant dinners with the cast and crew• Behind-the-scenes programs led by Producing Artistic Director Kent Thompson• Personalized ticketing and exchange services
$1,900 per person (A portion is tax deductible)
MARQUEE CLUBStep up your nightlife! Tailored for the active professional:• Four-play subscription on selected Thursday evenings• Before the show: members-only cocktail parties with open bar and hors d’oeuvres• After the show: meet the cast at Larimer Square hot spots• Personalized ticketing and exchange services
$500 per person ($227 is tax deductible)
Directors Society sponsored in part by:
PHOTOS BY SUZANNE YOE
PHOTOS BY VICKI KERR
THE 2014/15 EVENTSThe Unsinkable Molly Brown Sept 19Lord of the Flies Oct 8Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike Oct 22A Christmas Carol Dec 10Appoggiatura Jan 28Benediction Feb11One Night in Miami... April 1 Director’s Choice TBA April 15
THE 2014/15 EVENTSThe Unsinkable Molly Brown Oct 2Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike Nov 6Appoggiatura Feb 5Director’s Choice TBA April 16
TICKETS START AT $32!
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The Aurora Fox presents
...raises silliness to an art form -glorious, irresistible silliness! - The Sunday Times
April 11 - 27, 2014
www.AuroraFox.org
Book and Lyrics by Eric Idle, Music by John Du Prez and Eric Idle
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This exhilarating refresh of Meredith Willson’s 1960 musical tells the rags-to-riches romance of Colorado’s own heroine, Molly Brown. With a new book by Dick Scanlan (Thoroughly Modern Millie), new songs from the Willson songbook and staging by Tony-winning director/choreog-rapher Kathleen Marshall (Anything Goes), the tempestu-ous can’t-live-with-him/can’t-live-without-him love story that survived the Silver Boom, Gold Rush and sinking of the Titanic returns to the stage in an all-new production.
A staple in classrooms for generations, Chicago Theatre Beat raves Lord of the Flies is a “powerful, passionate adaptation that breathes new life into the classic novel,” which tells the story of a group of English boys who become stranded on a deserted island. Intoxicated by sudden freedom, their games quickly descend to a savage struggle for power. A compelling glimpse into dystopia that explores the grimmest reaches of human nature and fragility of free will.
LORD OF THE FLIES Adapted for the stage by Nigel WilliamsSept 26-Nov 2 • Space Theatre
SEAS
ON
Photos by Terry Shapiro
VANYA AND SONIA
AND MASHA AND SPIKE
By Christopher DurangOct 10-Nov 16 • Ricketson Theatre
Absurdist master Christopher Durang blends melancholy with mayhem in what the The New York Times declares a “deliriously funny” black comedy. Winner of the 2013 Tony Award for Best Play, this Chekhovian mash-up erupts into chaos when Vanya and Sonia receive a surprise visit from their Hollywood star sister, Masha, and her boy-toy Spike. Residents and visitors of the normally quiet house-hold are thrown into hilarious upheaval as they confront issues of sibling rivalry, regret, lust and love.
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7 SHOWS FOR AS LOW AS $238!
THE UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWNLyrics and Music by Meredith WillsonAdditional Lyrics and Book by Dick ScanlanBased on the Original Book by Richard MorrisDirected and Choreographed by Kathleen MarshallSept 12-Oct 26 • Stage Theatre
W I L L I A M G O L D I N G ’ S
DENVERCENTER.ORG • 303.893.4100GROUPS (10+): 303.446.4829 • TTY: 303.893.9582
2014/15 SEASON SPONSORS
This slice-of-life dramedy that the LA Times calls “en-gaging and thought-provoking,” imagines what occurred the night of Cassius Clay’s historic win over heavyweight champ Sonny Liston. Declining a glamorous Miami Beach party, Clay chooses to celebrate in a hotel room with his closest friends: activist Malcom X, singer Sam Cooke and football player Jim Brown. Over the course of the night each man argues his vision for what it means to be black in 1964, culminating in an early morning announcement from Clay that will shock the world. Filled with “crackling good dialogue and timely themes,” as proclaimed by Variety, One Night in Miami... is a “decisive knockout.”
Essential to the holiday season in Denver, A Christmas Carol promises to “warm your heart and renew your holi-day spirit” according to the Examiner. Based on Charles Dickens’ classic novel, this joyous and opulent musical adaptation traces money-hoarding skinflint Ebenezer Scrooge’s triumphant overnight journey to redemption. A Christmas Carol illuminates the meaning of the holiday season in a way that has resonated for generations.
Written by three-time Pulitzer nominee James Still, Appoggiatura follows three closely related Americans, each nursing a hunger and a hard-to-heal wound, as they travel to the romantic city of Venice seeking solace. As time bends and magic lies just around the corner, this favorite of the Colorado New Play Summit weaves a quirky and lyrical narrative exploring love, loss and the human soul.
Boasted a “masterful look at the end of life” by The Denver Post, this adaptation of best-selling Kent Ha-ruf’s novel takes place on the high plains of Colorado. The final chapter of a trilogy, Benediction is a power-ful drama about three souls searching for meaningful connections despite separation, loneliness and the race against time.
ONE NIGHT
IN MIAMI... By Kemp PowersMar 20-Apr 19 • Space Theatre
Photos by Terry Shapiro
APPOGGIATURABy James StillJan 16-Feb 22 • Ricketson Theatre
WORLD PREMIERE
BENEDICTION By Eric SchmiedlBased on the novel by Kent HarufJan 30-Mar 1• Space Theatre
WORLD PREMIERE
Part of the thrill of live theatre is the element of the unexpected. We are reviewing a few dynamic choices for our final production of the 2014/15 season. Stay tuned!
A CHRISTMAS CAROLBy Charles DickensAdapted by Richard HellesenMusic by David de BerryNov 28-Dec 28 • Stage Theatre
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ADDED ATTRACTION
2014/15 SEASON SPONSORS
DIRECTOR’S CHOICEMar 27-Apr 26 • Stage Theatre
Elite #
In Connection With Steamboat All Arts Festival, Emerald City Opera presents
Giuseppe Verdi’s FALSTAFF(Sung in English)
August 15 & 17, 2014
Featuring: David Malis, Megan Marino,
Chad Armstrong, Keri Rusthoi and Max HosnerDirected by Glynis Leyshon | Orchestra conducted by Adam Flatt
The Opera Artist Institute presents
Henry Purcell’sDido and Aeneas
(Sung in English)August 10 & 16, 2014
Falstaff Presenting Sponsor:
For lodging reservations call 800-525-2622
emeraldcityopera.com | Steamboat Springs, CO
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escapes #
303.292.6700 | CentralCityOpera.orgYou won’t know until you go.
The Sound of Music
Denver comes alive with
Ellie Caulkins Opera House August 2 - 10
June 28 - August 10
THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO | DEAD MAN WALKING THE SOUND OF MUSIC in denver
OKLAHOMATHE LIAR
ONE MAN, TWO GUVNORS
2014SUMMER SEASON
June 20 – August 30
Famous Performing Arts Center131 W Main StreetTrinidad Colorado
(in the middle of the Creative District)
719.846.4765www.scrtheatre.com
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901), Jane Avril, 1893, color lithograph, 48 ¾ x 36 inches,
Musée d’Ixelles, Brussels.
Toulouse-Lautrec and La Vie Moderne:
Paris 1880-1910
Downtown Golden, CO For more information: www.foothillsartcenter.org
This exhibition is organized & circulated by Art Services International, Alexandria, Virginia.
PRESENTING
Celebrating Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec and 94 avant-garde artists in the Parisian artistic and
cultural scene, with over 180 objects that will delight you!
June 7 - August 17, 2014
Elite #
The 27th Annual Schomp BMW Denver Polo Classic
JUNE 27-29, 2014
An event of the Denver Active 20-30 Children’s Foundation benefiting at-risk and disadvantaged children
Friday, June 27, Del Frisco’s - Sullivan’s Black Tie Ball
Saturday, June 28, Family Day
Sunday, June 29, Lockton Championship Day
To purchase single day tickets or a weekend pass call 303-832-8390 or go to www.DenverPolo.com
Celebrating its 27th year, the Schomp BMW Denver Polo Classic is three days of exciting entertainment with all proceeds benefiting local children’s charities. The weekend events will take place at the exclusive Polo Reserve Development in Littleton. Set against the spectacular backdrop of the Rocky Mountains, under our signature white tent, patrons and guests of the Schomp BMW Denver Polo Classic will enjoy world-class polo matches, exquisite spirits, wines and beers, and gourmet food from some of the finest restaurants in Denver.
The largest charitable polo event in the country
SPONSORED BY
6th Annual!
Era
We will never tell you to use your “inside voice”!
Audition and let your inner voice sing!Scheduling auditions for children entering
2nd-5th grades who love to sing and perform.ChildrensChorale.org or 303.892.5600
We will never tell you to use your “inside voice”!
Audition and let your inner voice sing!Scheduling auditions for children entering
2nd-5th grades who love to sing and perform.ChildrensChorale.org or 303.892.5600
escapes #Blue Mountain Arts presents COLORADO SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL
June 6 - August 10, 2014Tickets are now on sale
303-492-8008 COLORADOSHAKES.ORG
MeMorial day weekend 2o14
May 23–25 Fri 4–8pm | Sat 11–8pm | Sun 11–5pm
denver Performing arts Complex downtowndenverartsFestival.com
“You cannot come to Taos without feeling that hereis one of the chosen spots on earth.”—D.H. Lawrence
Lenn
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ter Taos.org/applause
800.348.0696
Taos is
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APPLAUSE denvercenter.org 22
When writer Chris D’Arienzo’s agent let him know that a musical based on ’80s heavy-metal hits was being pro-duced in Los Angeles, he knew he was the man to write the book. You might say he couldn’t “fight this feeling any lon-ger” or that he wouldn’t “stop believing,” but D’Arienzo knew he could do justice to some of the biggest hits of his youth by weaving them into a Broadway musical with real heart. To win the gig, however, he had to impress the producing team. “It was probably the ballsiest pitch of my life,” he says. When he arrived for the pitch meeting, he saw the writer who had just finished pitching shuffle out the room with deflated energy, and it lit a spark of inspiration inside D’Arienzo. “I walked to the conference room where all the producers were sitting and kicked in the door, threw my bag in, took my shirt off (revealing an authentic sleeveless Journey con-cert T-shirt underneath) and sauntered in like I was some kind of David Lee Roth character.” In a move that very easily could have gotten D’Arienzo kicked out of the building, he managed to impress the team of neophyte Broadway producers with his guts. They hired him immediately.
D’Arienzo got to work. His gargantuan task was to identify pop and rock songs of the ’80s that he wanted to use, seek out the rights to use them, then
interlace them to tell a story. “For me it was important to make sure that the songs transitioned seamlessly with the book so that they really acted as dialogue, instead of, ‘Hey, let’s take a time out to sing an ’80s pop song,’ ” he says. “I wanted to find a way to re-conceive them as show tunes, as if they were written for the show and not plugged in.” He sought out songs he liked, that represented the era and the genre, and informed the emotional journey of the characters. “It was actually the most fun I’ve ever had writ-ing anything.” Some bands were understandably resistant to having their most famous rock anthems turned into a Broadway musical. “I get it,” says D’Arienzo. “If I was a hard rocker and someone told me they wanted to make a Broadway show out of my heavy-metal tunes, I would be very leery. But luckily a lot of them saw what we were trying to do.” The creative team found that it was mainly the bands that didn’t come see the show that staunchly refused use of their music. “It worked out, and I can honestly say that there isn’t a song in the show that I would replace.”
ROCK OF AGES IS “NOTHIN’ BUT A
”B Y G E N E V I E V E M I L L E R H O LT
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When asked if there was one song that got away, one that he would have really wanted in the show, D’Arienzo says, “I always dreamt of starting the show with [Guns N’ Roses’] ‘Welcome to the Jungle.’ I was really bummed at first when they wouldn’t give it to us, but then I started playing with the opening and re-listened to David Lee Roth’s ‘Livin’ In Paradise’ and I realized that Roth’s song worked so much better… Although I think ‘Jungle’ is one of the greatest rock songs ever written, I do believe it was a happy accident and a real gift from Diamond Dave!”
With a portfolio of awesome ’80s tunes in hand, D’Arienzo cre-ated a plotline that spoke to the
spirit of rock’n’roll of the era. Sher-rie (as in ‘Oh Sherrie’) is an aspiring actress just off the bus seeking fame in L.A. She lands a job at a bar on the Sunset Strip and meets aspiring rocker Drew, who’s bussing tables waiting to make the big time. Along with other kooky denizens of the Strip, the two set out to save the bar (and the rock’n’roll lifestyle it represents) from greedy
developers plotting to tear it down. D’Arienzo knew two of the songs he had in hand would inform the plot—Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin’ ” and Starship’s “We Built This City.” “The other songs really informed character more…. I always tried to avoid songs that were really literal,” D’Arienzo says of his process. So as our hero and heroine fall in love, we rock out to Foreigner’s “Waiting for a Girl Like You,” and as the characters set out to follow their hearts we hear, “Here I Go Again on My Own” by Whitesnake, and as the crew protests against the developers, we chant, “We’re Not Gonna Take It.” In 2006, once the script was crafted, the creative team of Rock of Ages took the show to a bar in L.A, where the reception was enormously positive. “[The bar] was packed every night,” says D’Arienzo. “Then we went to Ve-
gas for ten days; that was soul-sucking and horrible…. There is nothing worse than trying to do theatre for a room full of really drunk gamblers coming in on Rascal scooters with Margaritas-by-the-Yard hanging around their necks.” The production moved to off-Broad-way in 2008, where it enjoyed a hugely successful run, and in 2009 transferred to Broadway. D’Arienzo spent five months working with the cast and crew to make the transition. “I can say with-out question [those were] the best five months of my professional life.” On the other hand, the team was not sure how audiences in New York, that mecca of high art, would receive such a cheeky, low-brow kind of show. “But people really dug it,” D’Arienzo recalls. “I was relieved, only because we were told from the beginning that New York would absolutely hate us. But we always believed in our show and the majority of people in the Broadway community really embraced [it] and made us feel right at home.”
Note to theatregoers over the age of 25: while the music will leave you dancing in the aisles and nostalgic
for a bygone era, the costumes in the show are equally authentic and may hit a bit close to home. “There were some really bad looks back then,” acknowl-edges D’Arienzo, “and I think I tried them all.” Pegged pants, layered tops, polo shirt upon polo shirt (collar up, of course), with a button-up on top and a T-shirt underneath, the styles, in retro-spect, were not kind. “But I have to say women’s clothes were more tragic. Ev-erything was either baggy and ill-fitting or super tight and slutty. There was very little in between.” D’Arienzo has stayed actively involved in the life of the show. In Manhattan he watched over the setting up of the re-opening of Rock of Ages on Broadway (after a brief hiatus and move to a smaller Broadway house). He also
adapted the screenplay for the feature film based on the musical (it starred Tom Cruise, Paul Giamatti, Mary J. Blige and Alec Baldwin and was di-rected by Adam Shankman). In addition to the Broadway and New York runs, the film and the ongoing national tour, the show has enjoyed hit productions in Australia, Asia and England.
The world over, Rock of Ages has proved to be a light-hearted, joy-ful rock musical and a nostalgic
trip down memory lane for audiences. Never underestimate the power of rock anthems, garish outfits—and a good bit of hairspray. n
Genevieve Miller Holt is the General Manager for Broadway Across America in Cincinnati. Formerly, she was Direc-tor of PR & Promotions at The Denver Center for the Performing Arts.
ROCK OF AGES
303.893.4100 APPLAUSE 23
Tickets: 303.893.4100 Toll-free: 800.641.1222 • TTY: 303.893.9582 Groups (10+): 303.446.4829 • denvercenter.org
“For me it was important to make sure that the songs transitioned seamlessly with the book so that they really acted as dialogue, instead of, ‘Hey, let’s take a time out to sing an ’80s pop song.’ ” — Chris D’Arienzo
April 25 – 27 • Buell TheatreASL interpreted, Audio Described & Open Captioned • April 26, 2pm
CHRIS CICCHINO - ROCK OF AGES LEAD GUITARIST.
PHOTO BY SCOTT SUCHMAN
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APPLAUSE denvercenter.org 24
WELLS FARGO ADVISORSProudly working together for a better Colorado
A proud sponsor of the 2013/14 Denver Center Theatre
Company Season
Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC, Member SIPC, is a registered broker-dealer and a separate non-bank affiliate of Wells Fargo & Company. 0214-00836
Aside from the contribution Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC, makes to The Denver Center for the Performing Arts, team members in the Rocky
Mountain Market of Wells Fargo Advisors strive to make a difference in their local communities…whether it’s through contributions of time, talent or resources. Wells Fargo invested $78.9 million in 28,000 not-for-profit organizations in 2012. Team members also personally contributed more than $60 million and logged more than 232,000 volunteer hours. More recently, Wells Fargo contributed $100,000 to the American Red Cross, $30,000 to the Salvation Army and $20,000 to Foothills Relief Fund to support flood disaster relief and recovery efforts in Colorado. Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC is proud to make a difference in the lives of those in need. n
Wells Fargo Advisors Rocky Mountain Market team members jumped into action collecting donations to aid wildfire victims.
Wells Fargo Advisors’ Managing Director - Market Manager Marc Beshany and his team presented a check for $18,000 to Jeff Reilly, Chief Development Officer of the American Red Cross Mile High Chapter.
The Colorado Springs branch raised more than $10,000 for the American Cancer Society with a Relay for Life team led by Stephen Drexler, Managing Director – Investments.
ONCEDenver Center Attractions
The Broadway division of The Denver Center for the Performing Arts
and Season Sponsors
and
BARBARA BROCCOLI JOHN N. HART JR. PATRICK MILLING SMITH FREDERICK ZOLLOBRIAN CARMODY MICHAEL G. WILSON ORIN WOLF PRODUCTIONS
ROBERT COLE, EXECUTIVE PRODUCERin association with
NEW YORK THEATRE WORKSHOPpresent
book music and lyrics
ENDA WALSH GLEN HANSARD & MARKÉTA IRGLOVÁbased on the motion picture written and directed by
JOHN CARNEYstarring
STUART WARD DANI DE WAALRAYMOND BOKHOUR MATT DEANGELIS JOHN STEVEN GARDNER DONNA GARNER EVAN HARRINGTON
RYAN LINK BENJAMIN MAGNUSON ALEX NEE ERICA SWINDELL KOLETTE TETLOW CLAIRE WELLIN scenic and costume design lighting design
BOB CROWLEY NATASHA KATZ sound design dialect coach casting
CLIVE GOODWIN STEPHEN GABIS JIM CARNAHAN, CSA/STEPHEN KOPEL associate director associate movement director resident music supervisor
SHAUN PEKNIC YASMINE LEE JASON DEBORD associate associate associate production set designer lighting designer sound designer manager
FRANK MCCOLLOUGH PETER HOERBURGER ALEX HAWTHORN AURORA PRODUCTIONS production stage manager tour press representative company manager general manager
DANIEL S. ROSOKOFF ALLIED LIVE CHRIS DANNER LISA M. POYERmusic supervisor and orchestrations
MARTIN LOWEmovement by
STEVEN HOGGETTdirected by
JOHN TIFFANYOnce was originally developed at the American Repertory Theater, Cambridge, Massachusetts, in April 2011,
Diane Paulus, Artistic Director, Diane Borger, Producer
Sponsored in Denver by and
ONCE THE COMPANY
STUART WARD
DANI DE WAAL
RAYMOND BOKHOUR
MATT DEANGELIS
JOHN STEVEN GARDNER
DONNA GARNER
EVAN HARRINGTON
RYAN LINK
ZANDER MEISNER
TINA STAFFORD
TIFFANY TOPOL
MATT WOLPE
BENJAMIN MAGNUSON
ALEX NEE
ERICA SWINDELL
KOLETTE TETLOW
CLAIRE WELLIN
ESTELLE BAJOU
CHARLEENE CLOSSHEY
STEPHEN MCINTYRE
ONCECAST
(in alphabetical order)
Da ......................................................................................... RAYMOND BOKHOURMandolin
Girl ..................................................................................................... DANI de WAALPiano
Švec ............................................................................................. MATT DeANGELISGuitar, Mandolin, Banjo, Drum Set, Percussion
Eamon ............................................................................ JOHN STEVEN GARDNERPiano, Guitar, Percussion, Melodica, Harmonica
Baruška ......................................................................................... DONNA GARNER(5/13-5/18) TINA STAFFORD
Accordion, ConcertinaBilly......................................................................................... EVAN HARRINGTON
Guitar, Percussion, UkuleleEmcee .......................................................................................................RYAN LINK
Guitar, BanjoBank Manager ................................................................... BENJAMIN MAGNUSON
Cello, GuitarAndrej ........................................................................................................ALEX NEE
Electric Bass, Ukulele, Guitar, PercussionEx-Girlfriend ................................................................................ERICA SWINDELL
Violin, PercussionIvanka .........................................................................................KOLETTE TETLOWGuy .................................................................................................... STUART WARD
GuitarRéza ................................................................................................ CLAIRE WELLIN
Violin
DANCE CAPTAIN—ERICA SWINDELL
MUSIC CAPTAIN—JOHN STEVEN GARDNER
Stuart Ward is appearing with the support of Actors’ Equity Association pursuant to an exchange program between American Equity and UK Equity.
THERE WILL BE ONE 15-MINUTE INTERMISSION.
UNDERSTUDIESUnderstudies and standbys never substitute for listed performers
unless a specific announcement is made at the time of the performance.
For Eamon—ZANDER MEISNER, MATT WOLPEFor Andrej—ZANDER MEISNER, MATT WOLPEFor Réza—ESTELLE BAJOU, CHARLEENE CLOSSHEY, ERICA SWINDELLFor Guy—RYAN LINK, ALEX NEEFor Da—STEPHEN McINTYREFor Girl—ERICA SWINDELL, TIFFANY TOPOLFor Baruška—TINA STAFFORDFor Švec—ZANDER MEISNER, MATT WOLPEFor Bank Manager—STEPHEN McINTYREFor Ex-Girlfriend—ESTELLE BAJOU, CHARLEENE CLOSSHEYFor Billy—STEPHEN McINTYRE, MATT WOLPEFor Emcee—ZANDER MEISNER, MATT WOLPE
The use of any recording device, either audio or video, and the taking of photographs, either with or without flash, is strictly prohibited. Please turn off all electronic devices such as cellular phones, beepers and watches.
ONCE
MUSICAL NUMBERS
ACT ONE“Leave” .................................................................................................................................. Guy
“Falling Slowly” .........................................................................................................Guy & Girl
“North Strand” ...............................................................................................................Ensemble
“The Moon” ............................................................................................... Andrej (as Ensemble)
“Ej, Pada, Pada, Rosicka” ..............................................................................................Ensemble
“If You Want Me” ..........................................................................................Guy, Girl, Ensemble
“Broken Hearted Hoover Fixer Sucker Guy” ........................................................................ Guy
“Say It to Me Now” ............................................................................................................... Guy
“Abandoned in Bandon” ........................................................................................Bank Manager
“Gold” ................................................................................................................Guy & Ensemble
ACT TWO“Sleeping” .............................................................................................................................. Guy
“When Your Mind’s Made Up” .....................................................................Guy, Girl, Ensemble
“The Hill” ................................................................................................................................Girl
“Gold” (A capella) .........................................................................................................Company
“The Moon” ...................................................................................................................Company
“Falling Slowly” (Reprise) ............................................................................Guy, Girl, Ensemble
ONCE
STUART WARD (Guy) is an English actor who studied at LIPA in Liverpool. He is a passionate singer-songwriter; his debut EP Pictures is available for purchase at the merchandise stand in the theater lobby. More info at www.stuartward.net. West End: Once, The Recruiting Officer (Donmar), Dreamboats and Petticoats. NYC: The Hired Man. UK theater: The Go-Between, The Mayor of Zalamea. Television: “Downton Abbey,” “Holby City” and “Anthem for Doomed Youth.” Film: Our Girl.
DANI de WAAL (Girl). Broadway: Picnic. West End: Mamma Mia! (Sophie Sheridan). Edinburgh Fringe: Just So. Workshops: The Last Ship, LIFT, Defect. Film: Non-Stop. Dani trained at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama, London. “Thank you Stone Manners Salners. Love to the Support System, near and far.”
RAYMOND BOKHOUR (Da). Broadway: Chicago (Helen Hayes Best Actor nomina-tion). Film: Man on the Moon, Changing Lanes. TV: “30 Rock,” “Flight of the Conchords,” “Third Watch,” “L&O.” Also a composer recorded by London Symphony, Warsaw Philharmonic, Moravian Philharmonic. Co-authored The Suicide: A Musical Comedy directed in concert by John Rando. “For you, Dad.”
MATT DeANGELIS (Švec). Broadway, West End, and first national tour of Hair (Woof) and the first national tour of Green Day’s American Idiot. He’s hum-bled to be performing with this clan of wonderful people and musicians. He believes in optimism, kindness, marriage equality, Actors’ Equity Association and the Boston Red Sox! Twitter: Mattdeangelis22.
JOHN STEVEN GARDNER (Eamon) . NYC: Under the Greenwood Tree (Flea Theater). Regional: Shakespeare Theatre of N.J., Hope Summer Repertory Theatre, Edinburgh Fringe Festival (Scotland). B.F.A.: Ithaca College. “Thank you Jim Carnahan and Stephen Kopel, creative team, cast and crew! Love to Mom and Dad.”
DONNA GARNER (Baruška). Selected theater: Thea in Two Pianos, Four Hands (Canadian tour, Portsmouth, N.H. Opera House); Vi Petty in Buddy Holly (Theatre Aquarius, Charlottetown Festival, Stage West Calgary); Fräulein Schneider in Cabaret; Vicki in Full Monty (Rose Theatre); Fairy Godmother (Disney). “To my love: ‘I carry your heart.’”
EVAN HARRINGTON (Billy) is immensely grateful to be a part of this show! Broadway: Peter and the Starcatcher (Alf), Avenue Q (Brian), The Phantom of the Opera (Piangi). Regional: Assassins (John Hinckley, Jr.), Sweeney Todd (Beadle/Pirelli), Into the Woods (Baker), The Full Monty (Dave). TV: “30 Rock.” evanharrington.com.
RYAN LINK (Emcee, u/s Guy). Broadway: Wonderland (Knight/Rabbit u/s), Hair (Berger/Woof u/s), Rent (Roger). Tours: Hair (Woof), Aida (Radames s/b). Hometown: Seattle. Actors’ Equity since 2002. Proudly “going through it” since 2007, and now teaching at Matthew Corozine Studio (NYC). “For Granny and Grandpa, who knew the joys of music. Lokah Samastah Sukhino Bhavantu….” ryanlink.com.
B E N J A M I N M A G N U S O N (Bank Manager). Broadway/tour: Sweeney Todd (2005 revival and tour), Guys and Dolls (2009 revival),
Les Misérables (25th anniversary). Regional: American Conservatory Theater, La Jolla Playhouse, Long Wharf Theatre, Paper Mill Playhouse, Human Race Theater, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Drury Lane. Film/television: The Other Guys, “30 Rock.” Training: CCM. For Em. benjaminmagnuson.com.
ALEX NEE (Andrej, u/s Guy). Credits include international tour of American Idiot (Johnny), Rent (Roger), Spring Awakening (Melchior) and The Who’s Tommy (Hawker). Proud Northwestern alum. He can’t believe that he gets to chill in a pub and jam with such beautiful people. “Thank you for everything, I have no complaints whatsoever.” @alexnee42.
E R I C A S W I N D E L L (Ex-Girlfriend, u/s Girl, Réza). Broadway: Once (Girl u/s, Réza u/s, Ex-Girlfriend u/s). Off-Broadway: Mary Broome (Mint Theater Company). NYC theater: Romeo and Juliet (American Globe Theatre), The Lady Drug Dealer (Fringe NYC). Regional: Much Ado About Nothing (Penn Shakes). “Love to family. For Gdawg.” ericaswindell.com.
KOLETTE TETLOW (Ivanka). Age 8, national tour debut! Credits include commercials/print ads. “Thank you David Doan, Rochelle Shulman of RKS, Erin Kesser and Bob Marks for your guidance. Love to my Pittsburgh family and friends. Thank you mom and dad for every-thing! Thrilled to be a part of Once!” kolettetetlow.com.
CLAIRE WELLIN (Réza) . Broadway: Once . Regional: Eastland (Lookingglass Theatre); To Kill a Mockingbird and Man In Love (Steppenwolf Theatre); A
WHO’S WHO in the CAST
ONCE
WHO’S WHO in the CAST
Christmas Carol (The Goodman Theatre); and Killer Joe (Profiles Theatre). Claire leads the gypsy folk band Youth in a Roman Field and contributes to the Chicago-based Glad Fanny. B.F.A., Minnesota S ta te Univers i ty Manka to . clairewellin.com.
ESTELLE BAJOU (u/s Réza, Ex-Girlfriend) is wonderstruck to join this remarkable troupe. Thea te r : PS122 , LaMaMa, Rattlestick, HERE, Lark PDC, 59E59, Abingdon. Tour: The Diary of Anne Frank (Anne). TV: “Boardwalk Empire.” Film: Chaplin of the Mountains. “Pour toi, maman.” estellebajou.com.
CHARLEENE CLOSSHEY (u/s Réza, Ex-Girlfriend) Broadway: Once (u/s Reza, ExGirlfriend). NYC Theatre: produced, composed score, and starred in Feather: A Musical Portrait (NYMF). Regional: Hair, Nine, Striking 12. Film: Balsam Falls, A Thousand Cuts, and Hushabye. With gratitude and love! www.charleeneclosshey.com
STEPHEN McINTYRE (u/s Da, Bank Manager, Billy). Shenandoah 1989 Broadway debut. Sweeney Todd 2006 Broadway and national tour (Jonas Fogg and Upright Bass/Cello). Broadway pit orches-tras with tuba: Chicago, Chitty…. “Thank you Janet for 25 years of love and encouragement.”
ZANDER MEISNER (u/s Andrej, Švec, Eamon, Emcee) is elated to be a part of Once. National tours: Annie (Rooster), Cats (Rum Tum Tugger). NYC/regional: FringeNYC, Drilling Company, Northlight among many more. Graduate: IU Music. Thanks to Stephen Kopel, Jim Carnahan, SpotCo and all who led him to this.
TINA STAFFORD (u/s Baruška). New York: Ionescopade (York Theatre), I Married Wyatt Earp (59
E. 59), Illyria (Prospect Theatre Co.). Regional: Westport Country Playhouse, La Jolla Playhouse, Denver Center, Arena Stage, Paper Mill, Goodspeed Musicals, Shakespeare Theatres of New Jersey, Maine, Utah and Texas. Equity!
TIFFANY TOPOL (u/s Girl). Credits include Xanadu (first national tour), Writers’ Theatre, Lookingglass Theatre, Marriott Theatre, Milwaukee Rep. Tiffany collaborates with castmate Claire Wellin in her band, Glad Fanny, while also contributing to Claire’s proiect, Youth in a Roman Field.
MATT WOLPE (u/s Andrej, Švec, Eamon, Emcee, Billy). Regional: Ensemble Theatre, Kirk Douglas, Pasadena Playhouse, Sacramento Music Circus, La Mirada. Matt attended The Boston Conservatory and Berklee College of Music. He’s also an accomplished songwriter. “Love and thanks to Mom, Pops, Saunders/Wolpe crew and Gage.” Info and music: MattWolpe.com.
ENDA WALSH (Playwright) is an Irish playwright living in London. He is the winner of numerous inter-national awards, and his work has been translated and produced world-wide. Recent plays: Misterman (Landmark, Ireland); Penelope, The New Electrical Ballroom, The Walworth Farce (all Druid Theatre, Ireland). Other plays: Chatroom, The Small Things, Bedbound, Disco Pigs. Shorter plays: How These Desperate Men Talk, Lynndie’s Gotta Gun, Gentrification, My Friend Duplicity, Room 303. Film: Hunger. Walsh was awarded the Tony Award and the Outer Critics Circle Award for his work on Once.
GLEN HANSARD (Music and Lyrics). Film: The Commitments, Once. Albums: Strict Joy, the soundtrack of Once (Academy
Award, Best Original Song, “Falling Slowly”), The Swell Season, The Cost, Burn the Maps, Set List: Live in Dublin, For the Birds, Dance the Devil, Fitzcarraldo, Another Love Song.
MARKÉTA IRGLOVÁ (Music and Lyrics). Film: Once. Albums: The Swell Season, the soundtrack of Once (Academy Award, Best Original Song “Falling Slowly”), Strict Joy, Anar.
JOHN CARNEY (Writer and Director of the Film, Once) is a Dublin-based writer-director who came to the world’s attention fol-lowing the box office hit and criti-cally acclaimed musical feature film Once, which garnered multiple Independent Spirit, Sundance and Raindance awards. Previously, John was a bassist in the Irish rock band the Frames, where he met Glen Hansard. These musical roots con-tinue to be evident in John’s work with his latest production, Can a Song Save Your Life?, heading into production in NYC. Other upcoming projects include Dogs of Babel for David Heyman and Nathan Kahane starring Steve Carell and a feature adaptation of M.R. James’s Casting the Runes for Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson.
JOHN TIFFANY (Director) won Tony, Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle awards for his work on Once. Recent work: The Glass Menagerie (Broadway and A.R.T.); Let the Right One In; Macbeth (also Broadway); Enquirer; The Missing; Peter Pan; The House of Bernarda Alba; The Bacchae; Black Watch (Laurence Olivier Award for Best Director, Critics’ Circle Award for Best Director); Elizabeth Gordon Quinn; Home: Glasgow (all National Theatre of Scotland); Jerusalem (West Yorkshire Playhouse); Las Chicas del Tres y Media Floppies (Granero
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Theatre, Mexico City; Edinburgh Festival Fringe); If Destroyed True, Mercury Fur, The Straits (Paines Plough); Gagarin Way (Traverse, Edinburgh). Education: University of Glasgow (M.A. in Theatre and Classics). Associate Director (National Theatre of Scotland, 2005–2012). Radcliffe Fellow (Harvard University, academic year 2010–2011). Associate Director (Royal Court).
S T E V E N H O G G E T T (Movement). For Once, Steven won the Obie, Lortel and Calloway awards. Broadway: The Glass Menagerie (also A.R.T.), American Idiot, Peter and the Starcatcher (Lortel Award). West End: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. International: Rocky the Musical (Stage Entertainments), Rigoletto (Met Opera), The Full Monty (Sheffield), Let the Right One In, Black Watch (Olivier Award, Best Choreographer) (National Theatre of Scotland), The Light Princess (Royal National Theatre), What’s It All About (NYTW), Lovesong, Beautiful Burnout, Othello (TMA Award, Best Director) (Frantic Assembly, founding Artistic Director).
MARTIN LOWE (Musical Supervisor, Orchestrations and Additional Material) was awarded Tony, Grammy, Drama Desk and Obie awards for his work on Once. Theater: Once (NYTW); Jedermann (Salzburg Festival); The Light Princess; War Horse; Caroline, or Change; Jerry Springer: The Opera; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; Nation (National Theatre); An Appointment with the Wicker Man; The Wolves in the Walls (National Theatre of Scotland/Improbable); Mamma Mia! (London, Tokyo, Seoul, international tour, Stockholm, Shanghai); The Full Monty; Once on This Island; Cats; Les Misérables
(West End). Recordings: Once, Mamma Mia! (original London cast and movie soundtrack), Jerry Springer: The Opera. Martin was musical director for Mamma Mia! the movie (Universal).
BOB CROWLEY (Scenic and Costume Design). Theater includes The History Boys (National Theatre; Broadway, Tony Award); Les Liaisons Dangereuses and The Plantagenets (RSC, Olivier Award); Don Carlos (Met); Pavane and Anastasia (Royal Ballet); La Traviata (ROH); Alice in Wonderland (ROH, Canada). Broadway: The Coast of Utopia (Tony), Carousel (Tony), Disney’s Aida (Tony), Tarzan, Mary Poppins (Tony), The Year of Magical Thinking. Crowley won a Tony Award for his work on Once. Recipient of the Royal Designer for Industry Award and the Robert L.B. Tobin Award for Lifetime Achievement in Theatrical Design.
NATASHA KATZ (Lighting Design) won a Tony for her work on Once. She has designed exten-sively for plays, musicals, dance, opera and architectural instal-lations in the U.S. and through-out the world. Recent Broadway: Motown, Follies, Hedda Gabler, Sister Act, The Addams Family, The Coast of Utopia: Salvage, Aida and Beauty and the Beast. Awards: Tony, Drama Desk, Outer Critics, Broadway League Touring Award, Whatsonstage, The Lucille Lortel and The Ruth Morly Design Award. Natasha is thrilled to be working on Once again.
CLIVE GOODWIN (Sound Design). Broadway: The Glass Menagerie, Once (Tony Award, Best Sound Design of a Musical). London West End: Once. Off-Broadway: Once (Lortel nomi-nation for Outstanding Sound Design), What’s It All About.
American Repertory Theater (A.R.T.), Cambridge, Mass.: Pippin, The Glass Menagerie, Once, Prometheus Bound, The Blue Flower (IRNE and Elliot Norton awards for Best Sound Design of A Musical), Cabaret with Amanda Palmer. Worldwide: Sound designer/engineer for Radiohead, Underworld, Pulp. Film/televi-sion: Greetings from Tim Buckley, “Dancing with the Stars” (BBC), “Later with Jools Holland” (BBC), “The Sound of Musicals” (BBC).
STEPHEN GABIS (Dialect Coach). Selected Broadway/Off-Broadway: Tribes, Magic/Bird, Look Back in Anger, Man and Boy, Bluebird, Through a Glass Darkly, Lombardi, The 39 Steps, A View From the Bridge, Lend Me a Tenor, Port Authority, Memphis, Jersey Boys, Coram Boy, Brief Encounter, The Lieutenant of Inishmore, Doubt. Regional: Educating Rita (Huntington); Shirley Valentine, The Train Driver (Long Wharf). Selected film/TV: “Prime Suspect,” “Boardwalk Empire,” Salt, Across the Universe, “Bernard and Doris.”
L I Z C A P L A N V O C A L S T U D I O S , L L C ( Vo c a l Supervisor). Broadway: Motown: The Musical, The Book of Mormon, American Idiot, Rock of Ages, 13 (JRB). Off-Broadway: Once (NYTW), Voca People. Consultant: Dogfight (2nd Stage), Chaplin, Bring It On, Wicked, Godspell, Next to Normal, In the Heights, Rent. Film: Shame, Les Misérables. Television: “The Colbert Report,” “Totally Biased With W. Kamau Bell.” Recording artists: The Bedingfield, The Donnas, Goo Goo Dolls, Lily Allen, Nick Littlemore (Empire of the Sun, Pnau), Chantal Claret (Morningwood), Eric Hutchinson. Tony Award-winning students: Nikki M. James, Steve Kazee and Patina Miller. Lizcaplan.com.
WHO’S WHO in the CAST
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WHO’S WHO in the CAST
JIM CARNAHAN (Casting). Roundabout’s director of artis-tic development. Shows cast for Roundabout: Harvey, Anything Goes, The Road to Mecca, The Importance of Being Earnest, Sondheim on Sondheim, Bye Bye Birdie, Sunday in the Park…, 110 in the Shade, The Pajama Game, Twelve Angry Men, Assassins, Twentieth Century, Nine, Big River, Cabaret. Other Broadway: The Mountaintop, On a Clear Day…, Jerusalem, Arcadia, The Scottsboro Boys, La Bête, American Idiot, The Seagull, Spring Awakening, Boeing-Boeing, Curtains, The Pillowman, La Cage, Chitty…, Democracy, Fiddler on the Roof, …Millie. Film: A Home at the End of the World, Flicka. TV: “Glee” (Emmy nom.).
SHAUN PEKNIC (Associate Director) . Broadway: Once (Associate Director). West End: Once (Associate Director). Select directing credits: Pageant Princess (Bleecker Street Theatre), The Girl With the Red Balloon (The Tank), Must Be the Music (Ars Nova), Pieces (Gene Frankel Theatre), Chaser (NYC Fringe Festival), Aimless (Theatre Row), A Streetcar Named Desire (New York University). Education: NYU (B.F.A.), Lincoln Center Directors Lab.
YASMINE LEE (Associate Movement Director). Tender Napalm, Once (A.R.T., NYTW, Broadway, West End); Rent (Broadway); Momix ; Brown Butterfly; The Dunham Technique; Across the Universe; Malcolm X; Renato Zero Fonopoly; Canale 5 AMICI Di Maria De Fellipi; open-ing Guggenheim Bilbao; opening ceremonies 2014 winter Olympic Games.
JASON DeBORD (Resident Music Supervisor). Broadway: Shrek, Rock of Ages, Legally Blonde, Lestat, All Shook Up and Rent. Off-Broadway:
Bare, Fat Camp, Bat Boy The Musical. National tours: A Chorus Line, Rent, Urinetown The Musical. Film: Every Little Step. More at jasondebord.com.
F R A N K M c C U L L O U G H (Associate Scenic Designer) has contributed to the designs for more than 25 Broadway shows includ-ing Once, War Horse, The Book of Mormon, The Addams Family, The Coast of Utopia and others. Frank is originally from Evansville, Ind. and trained at Webster University in St. Louis.
P E T E R H O E R B U R G E R (Associate Lighting Designer). Recent Broadway ALD Credits: Betrayal (Barrymore Theater); Once (Broadway and West End); Scandalous (Neil Simon Theater); Bring It On (St. James Theatre); The Mountaintop (Jacob’s Theater); GhettoKlown (Lyceum Theatre); Elf (Al Hirschfeld Theatre); faculty at Purchase College.
ALEX HAWTHORN (Associate Sound Designer). Brooklyn-based sound designer and engineer for theater and live music. Broadway, Associate: Aladdin, A Christmas Story, Chaplin, Newsies, Memphis, A View From the Bridge, Hair. Alex has designed and engineered concerts, live events and theater both nationally and internationally.
AURORA PRODUCTIONS (Produc t ion Managemen t ) . Current projects: The Book of Mormon (Broadway, national tour and Chicago), Once (Broadway), Anything Goes (national tour), Matilda, Soul Doctor, Bad Jews, The Winslow Boy, Big Fish, Betrayal, No Man’s Land, Waiting for Godot and Machinal. Aurora has been providing technical super-vision and production management to the entertainment industry since 1989. auroraprod.com.
D A N I E L S . R O S O K O F F (Production Stage Manager). B r o a d w a y : D i r t y R o t t e n Scoundrels, By Jeeves, Swinging on a Star, Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas. Tours: Sister Act, The Addams Family, 9 to 5: The Musical, Legally Blonde, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, The Full Monty, Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas, Barry Manilow’s Copacabana , Jo l son : The Musical, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. Regional: many.
E. CAMERON HOLSINGER (Stage Manager). Tours: The Addams Family, 9 to 5, Wicked, …Spelling Bee, The Grinch. New York: Fuerza Bruta. Regional: Wicked (Chicago), The Grinch (L.A.), The Addams Family (Buenos Aires), The Alliance Theatre, Goodman Theatre, Chicago Shakespeare Theater. A graduate of Wright State University.
AARON ELGART (Assistant Stage Manager). Broadway: Newsies; Shatner’s World: We Just Live In It; Wit; Bonnie and Clyde; Wonderland; La Cage Aux Folles (2010). Off-Broadway: The New York Idea. National Tours: Sister Act; The Addams Family; 9 to 5 The Musical. Regional: Cutman (Goodspeed Musicals). A graduate of University of Colorado Boulder.
ALLIED LIVE (Marketing and Press) is a full-service market-ing and advertising agency repre-senting Broadway shows, national tours, performing arts institutions and experiential entertainment enti-ties. Current clients include: Blue Man Group, The Book of Mormon, A Christmas Story, Rodgers + Hammerstein’s Cinderella, Elf, Ghost, Kinky Boots, Mamma Mia!, Motown, Once, Peter and the Starcatcher, Stomp, We Will Rock
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WHO’S WHO in the CAST
You, West Side Story and Irving Berlin’s White Christmas.
CHRIS DANNER (Company Manager). When not on the road, Chris calls Puerto Vallarta home. He has enjoyed touring around the world for the past 14 years as company manager for The Addams Family, 9 to 5, Legally Blonde, The Color Purple, My Fair Lady, Blue Man Group, The Light in the Piazza, Annie, Oliver!, Cover Girls, Blue’s Clues Live!, The Magic of David Copperfield. “My love to Gabriel and Maddox.”
AARON QUINTANA (Associate Company Manager). Broadway: Next to Normal, The Addams Family. National Tours: Disney’s The Lion King. Aaron also served as the opera-tions associate for Denver Center Attractions. Thanks to his family and friends for the continuous support.
LISA M. POYER (General Manager). Broadway includes: Once, Orphans, That Championship Season, A Steady Rain, A Raisin in the Sun, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, The Crucible, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Moon for the Misbegotten, The Price, Death of a Salesman, Freak, An Ideal Husband, Having Our Say, Angels in America: Millennium Approaches and Perestroika, A Streetcar Named Desire, Lend Me a Tenor, Fences. Graduate: Harvard College and Law School, admitted to practice law in N.Y.
B A R B A R A B R O C C O L I (Producer) has been part of the James Bond world all of her life. The daughter of Albert R. “Cubby” Broccoli, who turned 007 into the longest-running series in movie history, Barbara began working on the Bond films at the age of 17. With Michael G. Wilson, she pro-duced the past seven Bond films, including the most recent, Skyfall, directed by Sam Mendes and star-
ring Daniel Craig. Theater includes Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (London, Broadway), A Steady Rain starring Daniel Craig and Hugh Jackman.
JOHN N. HART JR. (Producer). Mr. Hart has produced more than 15 Broadway shows, includ-ing the current revival of The Glass Menagerie, Once, Seminar, Chicago, Annie Get Your Gun, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, Hamlet, The Who’s Tommy and the Nathan Lane revival of Guys and Dolls. Mr. Hart’s pro-ductions have garnered him four Tony Awards. His feature films include Boys Don’t Cry, You Can Count on Me, Home at the End of the World, Proof and Revolutionary Road.
PATRICK MILLING SMITH (Producer) co-founded, with Brian Carmody, the bicoastal and interna-tional production house Smuggler Inc., an industry leader in music videos, film and commercials. In 2011 Smuggler was awarded the Cannes Lions Palme d’Or along with Clio and British Arrows awards for Production Company of the Year. Patrick served on the Board of Trustees of the NY Theatre Workshop and was among this year’s six honorees of the Made in NY Awards presented by Mayor Bloomberg. Patrick most recently produced the film Greetings from Tim Buckley and the Broadway pro-duction of Seminar featuring Alan Rickman.
FREDERICK ZOLLO (Producer). New York productions include Orphans; Lucky Guy; A Steady Rain; That Championship Season; The Farnsworth Invention; Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom; ’night, Mother; King Hedley II; On Golden Pond; The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel; Death and the Maiden; Hurlyburly; Angels in America: Millennium Approaches and Perestroika; Private
Lives; Caroline, or Change; Frozen; The Goat; Our Country’s Good; Butley; The Hairy Ape; Buried Child; Talk Radio; Marvin’s Room; Oleanna; Goose and Tomtom; Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll; Aven’U Boys. London productions include Les Liaisons Dangereuses, Glengarry Glen Ross, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Breaking the Silence, Camille, The Cryptogram. Films include Mississippi Burning, Quiz Show, The Paper, Ghosts of Mississippi, Naked in New York, The Music of Chance, Resurrecting the Champ, In the Gloaming, Lansky and the just-com-pleted Sweet Lorraine and Greetings From Tim Buckley. Mr. Zollo and Robert Cole are producing partners in Grey Matter Theatre Productions.
BRIAN CARMODY (Producer). An Irish native from Skibbereen, County Cork, Brian co-founded, with Patrick Milling Smith, the bicoastal and international pro-duction house Smuggler Inc., an industry leader in film, theater and commercials. In 2011 Smuggler was awarded the Cannes Lions Palme d’Or along with Clio and British Arrows awards for Production Company of the Year. Also in 2011, Brian served as the chairman of AICP’s 20th annual awards show. He served on the jury of the Cannes Lions Festival and was among that year’s six honorees of the Made in NY Awards presented by Mayor Bloomberg. He’s presently produc-ing the upcoming film Flat Lake directed by Kevin Allen, which is set in Ireland. Passions: his wife’s cook-ing, Liverpool football club, golf and being home in Ireland as often as possible.
M I C H A E L G . W I L S O N (Producer) began his producing career in 1976 working with Cubby Broccoli on The Spy Who Loved Me, and they co-produced the next six Bond films, five of which he co-wrote. He then went on to produce
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the hugely successful Golden Eye with his sister Barbara Broccoli, fol-lowed by the next five 007 releases. Together they produced the 23rd Bond adventure, Skyfall, directed by Sam Mendes and starring Daniel Craig. Michael was awarded the OBE in Her Majesty the Queen’s New Year’s Honours list in 2008. Theater includes Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (London, Broadway), A Steady Rain starring Daniel Craig and Hugh Jackman.
ORIN WOLF PRODUCTIONS (Producer). Broadway: That Championship Season and A View From the Bridge, both directed by Gregory Mosher. Off-Broadway: Groundswell directed by Scott Elliott, Robert Wuhl’s Assume the Position (Ars Nova), History of the Word (Vineyard). Producing partner Styles Four (John Styles and Dave Clemmons) credits on Broadway: Driving Miss Daisy, The Pee-wee Herman Show, Talk Radio, Spring Awakening (Tony Award). Orin is the recipient of the T-Fellowship for Creative Producing at Columbia University in conjunction with Hal Prince. Orin, with partners John Styles and David Schwartz, pro-duced Judy Gold’s 25 Questions for a Jewish Mother and run OBB/Off Broadway Booking (obbbnyc.com).
ROBERT COLE (Executive Producer) made his Broadway pro-ducing debut in 1984 with August Wilson’s Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom. He is the recipient of four Tony Awards. Other credits include That Championship Season (2011); A Steady Rain (Daniel Craig and Hugh Jackman); The Crucible (Liam Neeson and Laura Linney); Death of a Salesman (Brian Dennehy); Angels in America; Horton Foote’s The Young Man from Atlanta; Redwood Curtain (Lanford Wilson); Elaine Stritch: At Liberty; Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll (Eric Bogosian); One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (Gary Sinise); Freak (John Leguizamo); and
Emily Mann’s Having Our Say. Mr. Cole produced the film Tape (Uma Thurman and Ethan Hawke).
NYTW (Producer) is an Off-Broadway theater dedicated to sup-porting theater artists at all stages of their careers. The Workshop is represented on Broadway this season with Once and Peter and the Starcatcher and is renowned for a long list of acclaimed work, including Jonathan Larson’s Rent, Tony Kushner’s Homebody/ Kabul, Caryl Churchill’s Far Away and A Number, Doug Wright’s Quills, Claudia Shear’s Dirty Blonde, Will Power’s The Seven and Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen’s Aftermath. NYTW’s productions have received a Pulitzer Prize, four Tony Awards and assorted Obie, Drama Desk and Lucille Lortel awards.
A.R.T. (Workshop Producer) at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., is one of the country’s most celebrated regional theaters and winner of numerous awards, includ-ing the Tony and the Pulitzer Prize. It was founded by Robert Brustein in 1980. Diane Paulus became artis-tic director in 2008 and continues A.R.T.’s mission to expand the boundaries of theater with innova-tive work such as Sleep No More, Prometheus Bound and the recent production of The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess, winner of the 2012 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical.
A C T O R S ’ E Q U I T Y ASSOCIATION (AEA), founded in 1913, represents more than 49,000 actors and stage managers in the United States. Equity seeks to advance, promote and foster the art of live theater as an essential component of our society. Equity negotiates wages and working con-ditions, providing a wide range of benefits, including health and pension plans. AEA is a member of the AFL-CIO, and is affiliated with FIA, an international organi-zation of performing arts unions.
The Equity emblem is our mark of excellence. actorsequity.org.
PRODUCTION STAFF FOR ONCE
GENERAL MANAGEMENTROBERT COLE PRODUCTIONS
Lisa M. Poyer Steven Rowe Hallie Bowen
COMPANY MANAGEMENTCompany Manager ......................... Chris Danner Associate Company Manager ....... Aaron Quintana
PRODUCTION MANAGEMENTAURORA PRODUCTIONS
Gene O’Donovan Ben Heller Chris Minnick, Anita Shah, Anthony Jusino, Jarid
Sumner, Liza Luxenberg, Rachel London, David Cook, Bridget Van Dyke, Melissa Mazdra, & Cat Nelson
EXCLUSIVE TOUR DIRECTIONTHE ROAD COMPANY
Stephen Lindsay Brett SirotaMagaly Barone Shawn Willet Jenny KirlinJustine Spingler Garrett Holtz Allie Beik
theroadcompany.com
TOUR PRESS & MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE
ALLIED LIVELaura Matalon Marya Peters
Jennifer Gallagher Jacqueline SmithDoug Blemker, Mary Alyce Blum, Sarah Dahlberg,
Andrew Damer, John Gilmour, Anne Dailey Meyer, Meghan McDonald
CASTINGJim Carnahan, CSA Stephen Kopel
Carrie Garnder, Jillian Cimini, Lain Lunin,Logan Reid, Heather Washburn
Production Stage Manager ...... Daniel S. RosokoffStage Manager ................. E. Cameron HolsingerAssistant Stage Manager ................. Aaron ElgartStage Mgmnt. Production Assistant Amy RamsdellAssociate Director ..........................Shaun PeknicAssociate Movement Director ...........Yasmine LeeResident Music Supervisor ............. Jason DeBordAssociate Music Supervisor for Mounting the U.S. Tour ............. Jim HensonAssociate Scenic Designer ....... Frank McCulloughAssociate Lighting Designer ......Peter HoerburgerAssociate Sound Designer ............ Alex HawthornMoving Light Programmer .................Sean BeachProduction Carpenter.............. Jonathan WildesenProduction Electrician ....................Michael PitzerAssistant Production Electrician ... Jeremy WahlersProduction Sound ...............................Phillip LojoAssistant Production Sound ........Jason ChoquetteProduction Prop Coordinator ......Matthew HodgesNYTW Costume Liason..................Jeffrey WallachDialect Coach .............................. Stephen GabisCzech Dialect Consultant ................ Pavel ZustiakVocal Coach ........ Vocal Studios, LLC / Liz CaplanAssistant to John N. Hart, Jr ..... Maximillian TraberAssistant to Patrick Milling Smith Catherine Waage
TOURING CREWHead Carpenter ...................... Jonathan WildesenFly Carpenter ..............................Christian YoungHead Electrician ...........................Steve LaPlante
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Assistant Electrician ............Stephanie McFarlandHead Propsman .......................... Gardner FrisciaHead Sound Engineer .......... Walter “Wes” ShafferAssistant Sound Engineer ................Kevin McCoyInstrument Tech .............................Tim BjorklundWardrobe Supervisor ................Marcia VanKuikenChild Wrangler ................................Leah Osborn
Tutoring Services ..............On Location EducationAlan Simon, Jodi Green
Touring Teacher...............................Leah OsbornAdvertising ..................... SpotCo / Drew HodgesWebsite Design ............ SpotCo / Sara FitzpatrickProduction Photographer ................. Joan MarcusLegal ...... Franklin, Weinrib, Rudell & Vassallo, P.C.
Jonathan LonnerImmigration Counsel .... Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel, LLP
Mark D. KoestlerAdditional Immigration Counsel .................................Shannon K. SuchAccounting .................FK Partners / Robert FriedComptroller......................... Anne Stewart FitzroyInsurance ..................................DeWitt Stern Inc.Banking .....City National Bank / Anne McSweeneyPayroll ...........................Castellana Services, Inc.Merchandising The Araca Group / Meghan RhoadsMerchandise Manager....................Claudia LeinerHousing Services ..............................Road Rebel
Kate Hawn, Kendra SmithFlights Tzell Travel / Andi Henig & Alan BraunsteinBussing Services ..... Road Rebel / Jeremy DeckerTrucking .......................................Clark TransferRental Car Services ..Enterprise / Natalie CordovaPhysical Therapy .....Neuro Tour Physical Therapy, Inc.
Carolyn M. LawsonTheater Displays .....................King Displays, Inc.
International Booking Inquiries ...................... National Artists Mgmnt.
Alecia Parker
CREDITS AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSScenery and scenic effects built, painted, and electrified by Show Motion, Inc., Milford CT. Lighting equipment from PRG Lighting. Video equipment from PRG Video. Sound equipment by Masque Sound®. Banjo built by Nechville Musical Products. Cellos and violins provided by Samuel Kolstein & Son; Hosiery and undergarments sup-plied by Bra*Tenders; Cosmetics provided by M•A•C Cosmetics; Emergen-C Health & Energy Drink Mix supplied by Alacer Corp.
SPECIAL THANKSSusan Keappock and David Grindrod
MUSIC CREDITS“On Raglan Road” by Patrick Kavanagh is per-formed by kind permission of the Trustees of the Estate of the late Katherine B. Kavanagh, through the Jonathan Williams Literary Agency.“Gold” composed by Fergus O’Farrell, published by Yell Music Ltd.“Abandoned in Bandon” composed by Martin Lowe, Andy Taylor and Enda Walsh.
Once on Tour rehearsed at Chelsea Studios, New York, NY
Original cast album now available onSony Masterworks
Souvenir merchandise designed and created by:The Araca Group
araca.com or 212-869-0070
C.F. Martin and Company is theOfficial Guitar of Once on Tour, LLC.
Once on Tour equipment is transported on a carbon-neutral basis in partnership with
oncemusical.com
DENVER CENTER ATTRACTIONS STAFFD. Randall Weeks . . . . . . . . . . . . .Executive Director/President
Jeff Hovorka . . . . . . . . . . . . . Director of Media and Marketing
John Ekeberg . . . . . . . Director of Programming & Operations
Heidi Bosk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PR & Promotions Manager
Alicia Giersch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Business Manager
Emily Lozow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marketing Coordinator
DCPA MARKETING STAFFJennifer Nealson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chief Marketing Officer
Sylvie Drake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Director of Publications
Brianna Firestone . . . . . . . . . . . .Director of Marketing, DCTC
Janet Flesch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Director of Strategy and Insights
Suzanne Yoe . . . . . . . . . . . . . Director of Creative Services and Cultural Affairs
Jessica Bergin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Box Office Manager
Nick Brown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Account Sales Manager
Nathan Brunetti . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Digital Manager
Kim Conner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Graphic Designer
FloraJane DiRienzo . . . . . . . . . . . . Business Relations Manager
Anita Edwards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Web Services Manager
Brenda Elliott . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Senior Graphic Designer
Simone Gordon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Project Manager
Alexandra Griesmer . . . . . PR & Promotions Manager, DCTC
Tristan Jungferman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Box Office Manager
Jennifer Kemps . . . . . . . . . Groups Sales Business Coordinator
Laura Kirby . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Box Office Manager
Carol Krueger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Theatre Services Manager
Jennifer Lopez . . .Assoc. Director of Ticket Services/Operations
Kyle Malone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Senior Graphic Designer
Jane McDonald . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marketing Coordinator, DCTC
John Moore . . . . . . . . . . . . Assoc. Director of Content Strategy
Mark Onderdonk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Business Manager
Michelle Patrick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Box Office Manager
Kirk Petersen . . . Assoc. Director of Ticket Services/Patron Relations
Tina Risch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Community Services Manager
Anthoney Sandoval . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Box Office Manager
Joe Schurwonn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Marketing Financial Analyst
Jill Schwager . . . . Student Matinee and Group Tours Associate
David Smith . . . . . . . Assoc. Director of Subscription Services
Emily Zeck . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Subscription Manager
INFORMATION SERVICESBruce Montgomery . . . . . . . . . Director of Information Services
Jim Hipp . . . . . . . . . Associate Director of Information Services
Bobby Jiminez . . . . . . . . . . . . Senior Audience View Specialist
DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENTDorothy Denny . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Executive Vice President
Tiffany Grady . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate Director
Linda Mitchell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate Director
David Zupancic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate Director
Jeremy P. Anderson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate Director
Mary Mosher . . . . . . Manager, Membership Groups/Major Gifts
Megan Fevurly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Business Manager
Chelley Canales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Development Assistant
The Denver Center for the Performing Arts
Denver Center Attractions gratefully acknowledges the following support
in its 2013/14 season
THE BUELL THEATRE is part of the Denver Performing Arts
Complex, owned and operated by the City and County of Denver, Arts and Venues.
CITY & COUNTY OF DENVER
Michael Hancock, Mayor
ARTS AND VENUES Kent Rice, Director
For information call:
720.865.4220
The Director is a member of the Stage Directors and Choreographers Society, a national theatrical labor union.
Backstage and Front of the House Employees are represented by the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (or I.A.T.S.E.).
United Scenic Artists represents the designers and scenic painters for the American Theatre.
The actors and stage managers employed in this production are members of Actors’ Equity Association, the union of professional actors and stage managers in the United States.
The musicians employed in this production are members of the American Federation of Musicians.
The Press Agents, Company and House Managers employed in this production are represented by the Association of Theatrical Press Agents & Managers.
“FLAT-OUT ELECTRIFYING!”- Boston Globe
Pho
tos
by J
erem
y D
anie
l
the groundbreaking BROADWAY musical
May 23 – 25 | Buell Theatre
303.893.4100denvercenter.orgGROUPS: 303.446.4829 • TTY: 303.893.9582
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APPLAUSE denvercenter.org 28
Going from the Big Screen to the Broadway Stage, ONE look, ONE song &
ONE dance step at a time…
PHOT
O BY
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303.893.4100 APPLAUSE 29
Tickets: 303.893.4100 Toll-free: 800.641.1222 • TTY: 303.893.9582 Groups (10+): 303.446.4829 • denvercenter.org
In 2007, the seductive, off-beat Irish film once opened to glowing reviews and quickly developed a fervent following. This lyrical musical tells the story of two down-on-their-luck musicians: an angst-ridden Dublin street singer/songwriter who works as a vacuum cleaner repairman, and a Czech immigrant who sells flowers to support herself and her family. Girl (as she is known) initiates a friendship with Guy (as he is known), and in the course of a week they make music together, fall in love and part, but not before changing each other’s lives. The movie’s stars—Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova—also wrote much of the score and received an Oscar for their beautiful ballad, “Falling Slowly.” once is both graceful and gritty. It has a naturalism and intimacy that are generally best achieved in film, which explains why the Irish playwright Enda Walsh was less than enthusiastic when he was asked if he would write the book for a Broadway-style musical based on the movie. “I guffawed when my agent called and asked me to speak to the producers,” says Walsh. “I said, ‘What a stupid idea.’ It’s a two-hander with very little plot. It’s delicate. I called the producers and told them it wasn’t for me. There’s no tradition of musical theatre in Ireland. Then they told me John Tiffany was attached to it as director.” Walsh and Tiffany are longtime friends, and although Tiffany also had doubts at first as to the viability of the material as a musical, he convinced Walsh not to reject the idea outright. Says Walsh, “John said, ‘Let’s just take two days, and we can read the screenplay and listen to the songs and talk about it.’ I said, ‘Okay, we’ll do two days—and that’s all we’ll do.’ ” Well, not quite. “Those two days convinced us that we wanted to do this show,” says Tiffany.
The musical became such a critical and commercial success that it spawned a London production, a Broadway
show and a U.S. national tour—a journey that saw this modest undertaking win no fewer than eight 2012 Tony® Awards, including Best Musical, Best Book (Walsh), and Best Direction of a Musical (Tiffany). “I never think about adapting films for the stage. That’s not the way I work,” insists Tiffany. “When I was approached about once, I hadn’t even seen the film. But one of my best friends said, ‘You will love the music.’ So I downloaded the soundtrack—and I absolutely loved it. I’d never heard music like that. [It’s] the reason I wanted to do the show. Not just the music itself, but the fact that it’s a story about creating music, the healing power
of music. Immediately I thought, ‘We’re going to be able to see actors create that music in front of us.’ That’s really exciting. Actors have played instruments onstage for years, but not always in a show about making music.” In reading through John Carney’s screenplay, Walsh discovered there was much he could relate to. “I’m a big fan of the movie Brief Encounter, and I saw similarities,” he says. “There’s a bittersweet pang that really hurts. Very quickly I thought I was a good match for the material. I tend to write characters that are inarticulate and lonesome, and something comes into their life that changes them. From listening to the songs, I thought it might be good for me to do something about Ireland, which was so hurt in the recession. A little love letter to Dublin.
“That was my way in. You start by bringing two people together and getting them to talk to one another. The tone shows itself quickly, so you step out of the way and allow it to write itself. “I knew all along that there were markers. I just had to unlock a stage language that was right. As soon as the Girl started talking, I thought, ‘That’s the swagger of it.’ She became the style of it and the force of the piece—and the central storyteller.” The 12 adult members of the cast play at least one instrument and are onstage virtually throughout the show. “I didn’t want anyone on stage we didn’t get to know intimately,” says Tiffany. By individualizing each character, adds Walsh, “we built a community, and that became the heart of the piece. “They’re an ensemble of misshapen people who sing and tell the story. Watching them play the music and sing and find their voice is very beautiful and very strong. But in addition, we wanted the show to be hugely communal. So how do we do that? We allow the audience on stage.” Prior to the start of the show, the audience
is welcome to come up on stage, buy a drink at the bar, mingle with the cast. There’s a bit of a jam session going on. This bonding ritual obliterates the fourth wall. “We wanted the audience to own the experience,” says Walsh. As the show unfolds, the focus, of course, is on the relationship between Guy and Girl, but the audience also catches glimpses of the lives of the other characters.
“We needed to be sure that there are all these other love stories in the air. Each person is riffing
off a love that’s been lost, that got away. That was the key: for the audience to feel part of the experience, and look at the people on the stage and go, ‘They’re us.’ ” Casting the show wasn’t easy. “We needed actors who could act brilliantly, move and play instruments,” said Tiffany. They found them, “but it took ages,” he adds. “Casting the first production was easiest, because we arranged the music around the instruments the actors could play. We got used to having the bank manager play the cello, for instance, and a character named Baruska has to play the accordion because it fits who she is.” Because there are only a dozen performers on stage in once, they can’t hide. If they can’t play the piano, the guitar or the violin, they’re out. In addition, Walsh’s text is difficult to do and demands really good actors. Finally, Steven Hogget’s choreography may look easy, but it requires a great deal of skill. In the end, the material proved to be as powerful on stage as it is on film. “What’s very moving about the piece is how sometimes we meet people who we don’t necessarily stay with forever, but they give us the resources to move on to the next part of our life,” says Tiffany. “There’s something very truthful in that. People have said to me, ‘When I was sitting in the theatre watching once, I felt like I was watching it with everyone I’ve ever loved, whether or not they’re still in my life.’ ” n
Portions of this text were provided by the show’s production company.
May 6 – 18 • Buell TheatreSponsored by HealthONE and ComcastASL interpreted, Audio Described & Open Captioned • May 18, 2pm
‘‘Each person is riffing off a love that’s been lost, that got away. That was
the key: for the audience to feel part of the
experience, and look at the people on the stage and go, ‘They’re us.’ ’’
~ Enda Walsh, book writer
APPLAUSE denvercenter.org 30
SPEC
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HHHHHTime Out NYDaily News
“
“
WINNER! BEST MUSICAL REVIVAL
2013 TONY AWARD®
Sept 20, 2014 • $225
Dec 11, 2014 • $225 April 17, 2015 • $225 June 12, 2015 • $250
JUST
ANNOUNCED!
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The Unsinkable Molly BrownLyrics and Music by Meredith Willson
Additional Lyrics and Book by Dick ScanlanBased on the Original Book by Richard Morris
Directed and Choreographed by Kathleen MarshallM
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APPLAUSE denvercenter.org 34
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Find out more about Colorado State Bank and Trust at www.csbt.com
Auction Sponsor of Saturday Night Alive
“We’re proud to contribute our professional resources
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tions such as the DCPA.”
— Bill Sullivan CSBT President and CEO
Colorado State Bank and Trust leadership (from left): Andy Aye, SVP, Commercial; Mike Burns, SVP, Private Bank; Aaron Azari, EVP, Wealth Management. Seated: Bill Sullivan, President and CEO.
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APPLAUSE denvercenter.org 36
THE
SHOW
S
HHHHHTime Out NYDaily News
“
“
WINNER! BEST MUSICAL REVIVAL
2013 TONY AWARD®
Sept 6–20, 2014Buell Theatre
Feb 3–15, 2015Buell Theatre
March 31–April 19, 2015Buell Theatre
April 29–May 10, 2015Buell Theatre
Nov 15–March 1, 2015Garner Galleria Theatre
Oct 29–Nov 9, 2014Buell Theatre
DENVER CENTER ATTRACTIONS SEASON
SUBSCRIBE
TODAY!FOR AS LOW AS
8 PAYMENTS
OF $21.38
Broa
dway
’s M
usic
Box
The
atre
; NYC
the
cast
of P
ippi
n, p
hoto
© 2
013
Joan
Mar
cus
Santino Fontana and Laura Osnes from the Rodgers + Hammerstein’s CINDERELLA Original Broadway Company. Photo by Carol Rosegg
The original Broadway cast of Kinky Boots. © Matthew Murphy
303.893.4100 APPLAUSE 37
Jan 23-24, 2015Buell Theatre
ADDED ATTRACTIONS
FOR AS LOW AS
8 PAYMENTS
OF $21.38
Sept 19 - Oct 19Garner Galleria Theatre
Dec 10–14Buell Theatre
The
orig
inal
201
3 Ca
st o
f PIP
PIN.
pho
to ©
201
3 Jo
an M
arcu
s
June 3–July 5, 2015Buell Theatre
April 22-26, 2015Buell Theatre
Dec 17–28Buell Theatre
TM &
© 1
957,
201
4 Dr
. Seu
ss E
nter
prise
s, LP
Oct 10-12 Buell Theatre
Motown the Musical (l to r) Sydney Morton, Valisia LeKae and Ariana DuBose. Photo © 2013 Joan Marcus
ANDWITH
303.893.4100GROUPS: 303.446.4829 TTY: 303.893.9582
denvercenter.org/bwaysubs
Aug 11–Sept 13, 2015The Ellie
BECOME A PREMIUM DENVER CENTER ATTRACTIONS SUBSCRIBER WITH THIS SPECIALLY CUSTOMIZED SEASON
All with concierge services Membership Benefits Include:
Membership is $5,000 per person (a generous portion is tax deductible). To personally discuss your membership, please contact David Zupancic:
303.446.4811 • [email protected] • denvercenter.org/premium
2014/15 SEASONGenerously Sponsored for the 11th
Consecutive Season by:
HHHHHTime Out NYDaily News
“
“
WINNER! BEST MUSICAL REVIVAL
2013 TONY AWARD®
TM & © 1957, 2014 Dr. Seuss Enterprises, LP
IMPACTCRE TIVITY
A
CURRENT CONTRIBUTORS List Complete August 2013
Impact Creativity is an urgent call to action to save theatre educa-tion programs in 19 of our largest cities. Impact Creativity brings together theatres, arts education experts and individuals to help over 500,000 children and youth, most of them disadvantaged, succeed through the arts by sus-taining the theatre arts education programs threatened by today’s fiscal climate. For more informa-tion on how “theatre education changes lives,” please visit: www.impactcreativity.org
($250,000 or more)The James S. and Lynne P. Turley Ernst & Young Fund for Impact CreativityClear Channel Outdoor*CMT/ABC*
($100,000 or more)The Hearst Foundations
($50,000 or more)AOL*
($10,000 or more)Christopher Campbell/ Palace Production Center*Lisa OrbergFrank and Bonnie OrlowskiThe Ralph and Luci Schey FoundationThe Schloss Family FoundationSouthwest Airlines*James S. TurleyJohn ThomopoulosWells Fargo
($5,000 or more)Steven and Joy BunsonPaula DominickChrist EconomosMariska Hargitay*Ogilvy & Mather*The Maurer Family Foundation
($1,000 or more)Nick AdamoMitchell J. AuslanderRyan DudleyBruce R. EwingJessica FarrSteve & Donna GartnerGlen GillenPeter HermannJanet and Howard KaganJohn MajorJonathan Maurer and Gretchen ShugartGeorge S. Smith, Jr.Florence Miller Memorial FundTheodore NixonCarol OstrowRBC Wealth ManagementIsabelle Winkles
*Includes In-kind support
V Front-and-Center orchestra seating on Opening Night or Opening Week Fridays
V Personalized ticketing and exchange services by our concierge staff
V Elegant pre-show dining at Kevin Taylor’s at the Opera House
V Intermission cocktails in the private Wolf Room
V Opportunity to purchase great seats to any added at-tractions, such as Jersey Boys
V A generous tax deductionLimited ticket availability
The Unsinkable Molly BrownLyrics and Music by Meredith WillsonAdditional Lyrics and Book by Dick ScanlanBased on the Original Book by Richard MorrisDirected and Choreographed by Kathleen Marshall
JUST
ANNOUNCED!
SEP 19, 2014
JUNE 4 OR 5, 2015
DEC 17
FEB 3 OR 6, 2015
SEP 10 OR 12
MAR 31 OR APR 3, 2015
OCT 29 OR NOV 7
APR 29 OR MAY 1, 2015
NOV 18 OR DEC 5
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own®
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APPLAUSE denvercenter.org 40
Once upon a time, composers and playwrights conceived musicals together, with some degree of simultaneity and shared understanding about the story they were striving to tell. From Daponte and Mozart to Rodgers & Hammerstein, teams teamed, toiling to marry music and theatre into a harmonious whole. That’s so last millennium, dude. Today’s rock and pop musicals might start instead with a catalogue of well-known songs, artfully woven into an evening of theatre (Mamma Mia!, Jersey Boys) or with a club-seasoned troubadour whose story/cabaret songs seem to want to grow into some-thing play-like (Passing Strange, Hedwig and the Angry Inch). Then there’s the concept-album-turned-Broadway-rock-opera, a unique hybrid form that began in 1969 with a pair of messianic double-LP extravaganzas, Jesus Christ Superstar and Tommy. Neither was written for the stage, though both were eventually theatricalized and filmed: Superstar on Broadway in 1971 and on film two years later, and The Who’s pinball allegory, first as a film in 1975 and then on Broadway in 1993. While the Superstar album looks in retrospect like an audition demo for its writers, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, The Who had no such ambitions, let alone theatri-cal know-how. Apart from its outré film adaptation by the late Ken Russell, Tommy seemed destined to be performed as a sort of rock oratorio—until the La Jolla Play-house’s Des McAnuff came along in the early 1990s. With the help of Pete Townshend, The Who’s lead songwriter, McAnuff rethought Tommy for the stage, turning it into the song-and-dance entertainment it didn’t know it was meant to be.
Director Michael Mayer played a similar role with American Idiot, the chart-busting 2004 album by the punk-pop band Green Day, which he helped shape into a Broadway show in 2010. But Mayer’s job proved a good deal more involved and
interpretive than McAnuff’s had been—not least because, while Green Day front man and main songwriter Billie Joe Armstrong proved open and cooperative, the narrative threads holding together the American Idiot album were more tenuous. “It’s not easy to follow,” Mayer admits of the record. “The story is deliberately am-biguous. It’s almost more an emotional narrative than it is a literal narrative.”
AMER
ICAN
IDIO
T
B Y R O B W E I N E R T - K E N D T
THE MUSICALS
INTO
A BROADWAYSHOW
or how to turn an albumAmerican Idiot is yet another example of a strong collection of songs lending themselves to transformation into a powerful stage show.
GOOG
LE IM
AGES
“The amount of freedom I had to
dream and imagine was unprecedented.
For whatever reason, something alchemical
happened when I spent time with
these characters.”— Director Michael Mayer
Its rough outline follows a sad sack described in the song suite as “Jesus of Suburbia” as he travels into the depths of
a city nightlife, where he meets “punk-rock freedom fighter” St. Jimmy as well as an “Extraordinary Girl” later called simply “Whatshername.” “St. Jimmy is powerful and sexy and dangerous and possibly destructive,” Mayer explains, “and this girl, who’s a rebel, is someone with whom he has some real connection.” There’s not a lot else in terms of concrete story points, Mayer concedes. “What you glean from listening to the album a lot, and reading it in a particular way, is that Jesus returns home having experienced the suicide of St. Jimmy and the destruction of his relationship with the girl. It’s kind of a mock-heroic return. Billie Joe describes it as one step forward, two steps back.” That wouldn’t be enough to sustain an evening of theatre, in other words. Besides, Armstrong, though open to the idea of a stage version, wasn’t a playwright. That left Mayer—who had a background in shepherding both bracing new works and unlikely adaptations to the stage, from The Triumph of Love to Thoroughly Modern Millie to Spring Awakening—to embark on his first professional writing gig (he shares book-writing credit with Armstrong). “It was the conceit of the project that I would take the record and basically write a story onto it and from inside it,” Mayer says. “All the songs are intact and in order” (and there are a few bonus tracks, courtesy of Green Day’s follow-up album, 21st Cen-tury Breakdown). Though Armstrong’s lyr-ics are virtually the only text
of the show, Mayer did invent characters and situations. “Jesus of Suburbia,” a.k.a. Johnny, now has two friends: Will, who stays home to molder in the small town, and Tunny, who escapes with Johnny but grows disaffected, enlists in the army and ends up wounded in Iraq. “I had great anxiety with the liberties we were taking, dramatically as well as emo-tionally, and I kept thinking we would cross a line that would be intolerable,” Mayer confesses of the writing process. “But Bil-lie Joe kept encouraging me to go further. The amount of freedom I had to dream and imagine was unprecedented. For whatever reason, something alchemical happened when I spent time with these characters.” Such was the simpatico nature of this odd collaboration, Mayer says, that he recalls “the very cool feeling of hearing Billie Joe talk about characters I’d made up in a way that demonstrated his understanding of them—which he should, given that he’d written what they say.” So American Idiot may have enough narrative content to fill an evening. But it wouldn’t be a musical at all if the songs themselves hadn’t cried out for the stage.
“The music has such buoyancy and authenticity,” Mayer effuses. “That’s what got my heart racing when I
thought of putting it on stage and creating stories that would fulfill the promise of this rock opera they’d written. They play against the tragedy of the story. If the songs were all slow, mournful, dirge-like, minor-key hymns to destruction, you wouldn’t want to watch it at all.”
This dramatic flair for contrast may be no coincidence; Armstrong had been a rosy-cheeked child performer before he became a spike-haired Berkeley punk rocker. “As far as I’m concerned, Billie Joe is a direct descendant of Al Jolson,” Mayer says. “Having seen him sing ‘Rockabye Your Baby With a Dixie Melody’ at the Bowery Ballroom, I can say it’s in his DNA. He’s a real entertainer, and that comes through.”
Ultimately, what comes through Ameri-can Idiot—and the thing that made this ad hoc adaptation process work
at all—is not only Green Day’s knack for show-stopping rock, but a sort of overarch-ing coherence of attitude and tone. This quality, in turn, may be traced to some of this concept musical’s antecedents. “He was thinking of Tommy and Rocky Horror Show,” Mayer says of Armstrong’s Idiot templates. “He also thought about West Side Story, and I think he thought a little bit about Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.” That Green Day had a template in mind may have helped Mayer feel his way to a story. But don’t ask him to pin down the punk lightning he’s caught in this musical-theatre bottle. “I’ve been trying very hard not to define it for anyone, because it is unusual and it is its own thing,” Mayer says. “Is it a musical? Is it an opera? Is it a rock opera? Is it a punk-rock opera? Is Green Day even punk?” (A seemingly simple question that can start a long debate, if you’re up for it.) Mayer throws up his hands and says, “I’m just committed to calling it a show.”
Rob Weinert-Kendt is a senior editor at American Theatre and has written about theatre and the arts for The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, Variety, The Guardian and The San Francisco Chronicle.
303.893.4100 APPLAUSE 41
AMERICAN IDIOT
Tickets: 303.893.4100 Toll-free: 800.641.1222 • TTY: 303.893.9582 Groups (10+): 303.446.4829 • denvercenter.org
May 23 – 25 • Buell TheatreASL interpreted, Audio Described & Open Captioned • May 24, 2pm
THE MUSICALSTH
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F AM
ERIC
AN ID
IOT.
(PHO
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One of the world’s most prestigious and innovative airlines, Lufthansa has served the Denver market for more than 12 years. Through its extensive global network, it provides the city access to more than 250
destinations in 103 countries. In the spirit of connecting people, countries and cultures, Lufthansa is a strong supporter of outstanding cultural events and institutions everywhere. The airline has sponsored The Denver Center for the Performing Arts (DCPA) for many years. It also supports the German Forum in New York City, another of the carrier’s important U.S. gateway cities. Among its cultural initiatives in Germany, Lufthansa was the first Global Partner of the Gürzenich Orchestra in the airline’s hometown of Cologne. It has presented Berlin’s annual Lufthansa New Year’s Concert for 17 years and this year will present London’s 30th Lufthansa Festival of Baroque Music. Lufthansa’s dedication to social responsibility also extends to humanitarian efforts. Social and philanthropic endeavors are centered around Lufthansa’s Help Alliance employee-founded charity and other humanitarian efforts around the world. n
For reservations or additional information, visit lufthansa.com.
LUFTHANSA and the Arts
A proud sponsor of VIP Evenings
ART
PART
NERS BRUSHSTROKES STUDIO-GALLERY
Nationally noted as an exemplary artist-owned gallery, Den-ver’s Brushstrokes is the creative home of acclaimed paint-ers John Harrell, Kit Hevron Mahoney, Anita Mosher
and Kelly Berger. These artists can be found painting most days in the gallery’s gorgeous turn-of-the-century space where visitors are welcome to drop in and watch them work. The gallery’s owner/artists have garnered awards and media cov-erage and are well-represented in private and corporate collections worldwide. They have been longtime supporters of The Denver Center’s Arts in Education programs by contributing to Saturday Night Alive’s silent auction. They welcome commissions, corporate art consultation, giclée reproductions, pet portraits, original paintings and affordable miniatures—while continually displaying freshly created art on the gallery walls. Find them at 1487 S. Broadway, at Florida Ave., 303.871-.0800, Tue-Sat, 11am-5pm (or happily by appointment) www.brushstrokesstudio.com. n
Brushstrokes artists welcome visitors to their
relaxed gallery-studio setting.
“Street Musicians (Prague)” by Anita Mosher
“Traditional Girls” by John K. Harrell
Altar BoyzJune 12 - July 27
(in Repertory)
The MarvelousWonderettes
June 19 - 22
SylviaJune 26-July 25
(in Repertory)
God of CarnageJuly 3-July 19
(in Repertory)
Swing!July 31-August 3
Box Of�ice:970-351-2200www.arts.unco.edu/ltr
Little Theatre of the Rockies80th Professional
Summer StockTheatre Season
Greeley, Colorado
The University of Northern Colorado’s
Where great theatre leaps off the page!
Megan Van De Hay in
SATU
RDAY
NIG
HT A
LIVE
APPLAUSE denvercenter.org 44
A sold-out crowd of 800 guests raised a record-breaking $842,000 in net proceeds for the DCPA’s Arts in Education programs at the March 1 Saturday Night Alive. The 34th annual black-tie fundraiser supports the
educational efforts serving 50,000 students each year. Song and dance man Matthew Morrison (who also stars in the hit TV series “Glee”) headlined the benefit, which was chaired by Susan and Leo Kiely.
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IN REVIEW
And a big thank you to our contributing supporters:
1 Whitney Moehle, Event chair Susan Kiely, Matthew Morrison and Ju-lie Erlich 2 Patrons Claudia Miller, Jane Netzorg, Debi Tepper & Cindi Burge enjoyed the evening. 3 DCPA Trustee and Event Chair Leo Kiely welcomes the 800 guests. 4 Kat Wong & Matt Watkins 5 Matthew Morrison performs. 6 Beverlee Hackmeister (center) hosted Dina and Ed-die Altman at the JHL Constructors table. 7 Adrienne & Jack Fitzgibbons 8 Peter Swinburn, CEO of event sponsor MolsonCoors with Linda and Mike Rengel. 9 Patrons Al and Terri Fisher 10 Noreen Salah Burpee, executive director of the Salah Foundation, with her son Fred Churbuck. TheSalah Foundation granted matching funds for items in the silent auction. 11 Pa-
trons and past Saturday Night Alive chairs Steven and Ryta Sondergard 12 Ron & Chris Yaros with Sandi Hewins and Craig Fleishman 13 State Representative Rhonda Fields with donating artist Juliette Hemingway and her husband Paul Chase 14 Will Amerine & Andrea Ho 15 Patrons Denise & Ray Bellucci 16 Auction chair Susan Stiff, area director of PR for event sponsor Westin Down-town Denver, joined Danny Showers at the baby grand piano the Westin donated in addition to accommodations to the more than 60 Starwood Hotel & Resort Properties around the world. 17 Bill Sullivan, President of Colorado State Bank & Trust with his wife Tricia. CSBT returned as silent auction sponsor for the third year. Photos by Vicki Kerr & John Moore.
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The Anschutz
COLORADOENERGY PRODUCERS
COLORADOENERGY PRODUCERS
Oil & Gas Producers of Colorado
OIL & GAS PRODUCERS OF COLORADO
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ART
PART
NERS MICROSOFT
Powering joy, fun and intellect through art
Many know Microsoft as the brand behind their favorite software, services and devices. But they
might not know that the company has a heart as big as its brand, committed to giving back in every region it serves. In fact, an official corporate giving program has been in place since the company went public in 1986. Microsoft believes a community is only as strong as its ability to nourish the mind and spirit through excellent, diverse and accessible programming in the visual and performing arts. It is within this vision that the company works with The Denver Center for the Performing Arts (DCPA). Since 1996, Microsoft has given the DCPA more than $2.3 million in software to present exceptional theatre, embrace classics, create new work and be a center for learning and civic engagement. Microsoft technology enables more than 300 DCPA employees to innovate and stay competitive in the industry as they pro-duce plays, present Broadway and cabaret musicals and provide arts education and school matinees for as many as 50,000 students each year. Through Microsoft’s software donation, the DCPA now has the latest desktop and server operating systems to provide operational improve-ment and the flexibility to meet patron and user needs.
“We are proud of the innovation and new ideas made possible through our work with the DCPA,” said J.P.Westwood, Microsoft General Manager overseeing Denver. “There are dynamic new works and musical collaborations in develop-ment that will benefit the community and inspire others to achieve greatness.” A significant portion of the Microsoft funding is directed through ArtsFund, a federated giving program for local corpo-rations, foundations and individuals. In addition to the arts, Microsoft is committed to serving Denver and other local communities in four key areas: em-powering youth, empowering nonprofits, empowering employees—and humanitar-ian and disaster response. With these pillars in mind, Microsoft do-nated more than $9.5 million to Colorado charities in the company’s most recent fiscal year. State employees also have utilized 2,792 volunteer hours to increase their community impact in a way above and beyond dollars and cents. n
Learn more about Microsoft corporate giving at http://www.microsoft.com/about/corporatecitizenship. Our stores host reg-ular events ranging from free educational workshops to community events with local nonprofit partners. To find your local store visit: content.microsoftstore.com.
A proud supporter ofThe Denver Center for
the Performing Arts
“We are proud of the innovation and new ideas
made possible through our work with the DCPA. There
are dynamic new works and musical collaborations
in development that will benefit the community
and inspire others to achieve greatness.”
—J.P.Westwood, Microsoft General Manager overseeing Denver.
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