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For more information, contact:
Jenni Benzaquen, Press Director
Geffen Playhouse
310-208-6500 x126
GEFFEN PLAYHOUSE PRESENTS
AWARD WINNING HELMER CHRISTOPHER HART DIRECTS HIS
FATHERÕS PLAY IN CELEBRATION OF MOSS HARTÕS 100TH BIRTHDAY
The Geffen
Playhouse Production Stars Tony Award-Winner Roy Dotrice, Tony Abatemarco, Tim
Chiou, Magda Harout, Alexandra James, Dagney Kerr, Michael Laskin, Michael
Loeffelholz, Jeff Marlow,
Chris L. McKenna,
Brendan OÕDonnell, Ethan Phillips, Emmy Nominated Actress Christina Pickles,
Darryl Alan Reed, Carla
Renata, Lisa Richards, Conrad John Schuck and Spencer Wilson
LOS
ANGELES, CA – March 17, 2005
– Geffen Playhouse Producing Director Gilbert Cates proudly announces the
Geffen Playhouse production of George S. Kaufman and Moss HartÕs Pulitzer
Prize-winning play, YOU CANÕT TAKE IT WITH YOU.
Directed by Christopher Hart, this classic American comedy focuses on one of
the most irrepressible and eclectic families ever created for the stage. The
Geffen Playhouse production of YOU CANÕT TAKE IT WITH YOU is being presented in celebration of Moss HartÕs
centennial birthday and stars Tony Abatemarco, Tim Chiou, Tony Award-winner Roy
Dotrice, Magda Harout, Alexandra James, Dagney Kerr, Michael Laskin, Michael
Loeffelholz, Jeff Marlow, Chris L. McKenna, Brendan OÕDonnell, Ethan Phillips,
Emmy nominated-actress Christina Pickles, Darryl Alan Reed, Carla Renata, Lisa
Richards, Conrad John Schuck and Spencer Wilson. YOU CANÕT TAKE IT WITH
YOU begins in previews at the
Brentwood Theatre on April 12, 2005 and runs through May 22, with an official
press opening on Wednesday, April 20, 2005.
ŅThe
Geffen Playhouse production of You CanÕt Take It With You comes at a time when nothing could be more fitting
than a great, human comedy. ItÕs just what the doctor ordered,Ó said Cates.
ŅThis play truly epitomizes the
American experience and we couldnÕt have asked for a more meaningful director
in Christopher Hart. His life experiences and deep understanding of his
fatherÕs work bring the words on the pages to life for Geffen audiences in a
way no other director could.Ó
Headed by Grandpa
Vanderhof, the Sycamores of Manhattan are a completely uninhibited family of
lunatics whose members simultaneously manufacture fireworks in the basement,
distribute left-wing propaganda in homemade candy, practice ballet in the
living room, hunt snakes, play the xylophone, attend commencement ceremonies,
operate amateur printing presses, and turn out play after play on a typewriter
that was delivered to their home by mistake. One exception to this wildly
unconventional family group is Alice, the single ŅnormalÓ member of the
Sycamore family. When Alice and her conservative, wealthy boyfriend Tony become
engaged, their families meet for dinner where the only thing louder than the
fireworks exploding in the basement is the laughter roaring from the audience.
YOU CANÕT TAKE IT
WITH YOU
opened on Broadway in 1936 to instant critical and popular acclaim where it ran
for 837 performances. The New York Times called the play Kaufman
and HartÕs Ņmost thoroughly ingratiating comedy.Ó In 1937, YOU
CANÕT TAKE IT WITH YOU won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. The film rights were then
purchased for what was, at the time, an unprecedented sum of $200,000. Directed
by Frank Capra, the film won the 1938 Academy Award for Best Picture. YOU
CANÕT TAKE IT WITH YOU was revived on Broadway in 1965 and again in 1983. Ellis
Rabb directed both revival productions.
The
cast of YOU CANÕT TAKE IT WITH YOU features (in alphabetical order) Ovation Award-winner Tony
Abatemarco (A Perfect Wedding, Kirk Douglas Theatre; The Mystery Of Irma Vep), Tim Chiou
(Fertilizing Eggy, 2100 Square Feet Theater) Tony
Award-winner Roy Dotrice (A Moon for the Misbegotten, Walter Kerr Theatre; A Life, Morosco Theatre); Magda Harout (Les Liaisons Dangereuses, Pasadena Playhouse; Nine Armenians, Mark Taper Forum), Alexandra James (The Memory of Water, A.C.T.), Dagney Kerr (Buffy The Vampire Slayer), Michael Laskin (Richard Nixon in The Basement Tapes, Top of the Gate Theatre), Michael Loeffelholz (Absolution, Steppenwolf Theatre), Jeff
Marlow (Around
the World in 80 Days, Colony Theatre),
Chris McKenna (The Opposite Sex,
In and Out), Brendan OÕDonnell (Sight & Sound Theaters), Ethan Phillips (My Favorite Year, Vivian Beaumont Theatre; Green Card), Emmy-nominated
actress Christina Pickles (Friends;
Cloud Nine, LA Theatre
Works), Darryl Alan Reed (Dinah Was, International
City Theatre; Sweet and Lowdown),
Carla Renata (The Lion King, Pantages Theatre; According to Jim), Lisa Richards (Friends Like These, Arkansas Repertory Theatre; Henry JaglomÕs Eating), Conrad John Schuck
(Pippin, REPRISE; M*A*S*H), and Spencer Wilson (Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story).
Christopher
Hart is a Tony Award-nominated writer, director and producer. His productions
have won more than 50 Backstage West/Dramalogue Awards and numerous Ovation
Awards, Los Angeles Times CriticsÕ Choice Awards, and LA Weekly Theatre Awards.
Hart and his creative team have designed a Vanderhof/Sycamore home that
promises to be as wily and unconventional as the family that inhabits it. The creative team for YOU CANÕT TAKE IT WITH YOU includes
Oscar-nominated designer Jean-Pierre Dorlˇac
(Costume Design), Craig Pierce (Lighting
Design), Gary Randall (Scenic Design), Jonathan Burke (Sound Design), and Jill Gold (Production
Stage Manager).
Tickets for YOU CANÕT TAKE IT WITH YOU are currently on sale and can be
purchased in person at the Geffen Playhouse box office at the Brentwood
Theatre, online at www.geffenplayhouse.com, or by phone at (310)
208-5454. Single ticket prices for YOU CANÕT TAKE IT WITH YOU range from $30 to $40 for preview
performances (April 12-19), and $30 to $52 during the regular run (April 21-May
22). The Geffen Playhouse is located at the Brentwood Theatre at 11301 Wilshire
Boulevard, building 211 on the campus of the Veterans Administration in
Brentwood. The performance schedule is
Tuesdays—Thursdays at 7:30 p.m.; Fridays at 8:00 p.m.; Saturdays at 4:00
p.m. and 8:30 p.m.; and Sundays at 2:00 and 7:00 p.m.
YOU
CANÕT TAKE IT WITH YOU BIOGRAPHIES
George S. Kaufman
(1889-1961) and Moss Hart (1904-1961) (Playwrights) shared a 10-year collaboration in
the 1930s that produced a string of wildly successful American stage classics
including Once in a Lifetime (1930), Merrily We Roll Along (1934), IÕd Rather Be Right (1937), The Fabulous Invalid (1938), The American Way (1939), The Man Who Came to Dinner (1939), and George Washington Slept Here (1940). While each
made important contributions to American theater individually, Kaufman and Hart
are best known for the successful and influential comedies they wrote together.
Christopher
Hart (Director) began his career as a
theatrical producer in New York City, where he earned two Tony Award
nominations for Song And Dance (the
Andrew Lloyd Weber musical starring Bernadette Peters) and Athol FugardÕs
Blood Knot. His productions have won
more than 50 Backstage West/Dramalogue Awards, as well as numerous Ovation
Awards, Los Angeles Times CriticsÕ Choice Awards, and LA Weekly Theatre Awards.
He has also been nominated for his work as a director from the Los Angeles
Drama Critic Circle. For television, Hart directed for the HBO series, Tales
From The Crypt.
* * *
Tony
Abatemarco (DePinna) has worked in
theatre, film, and television as an actor, director, and writer for more than
30 years. He recently appeared in
Charles MeeÕs A Perfect Wedding at
the Kirk Douglas Theatre (directed by Gordon Davidson) and Ladies of the
Camellias at The Colony. In 2004, he
performed at The European Cultural Centre in Delphi, Greece in SophoclesÕ Electra. His
one-man show, Cologne, or the
Ways Evil Enters the World, received
critical acclaim off-Broadway and in Los Angeles. Abatemarco won an Ovation
Award for his performance in Charles LudlamÕs The Mystery Of Irma Vep. He has
performed at New YorkÕs Public Theatre, the Cherry Lane, the Williamstown
Theatre Festival, Arena Stage, the ICA in London, Santa Fe Stages, and Theatre
Grˇvin in Paris. AbatemarcoÕs feature film roles include A Day Without A Mexican,
I Am Sam, Clockstoppers, Town & Country, Auggie Rose, Sacrifice (HBO), and All Over The Guy. He has guest starred on nearly three-dozen
television shows, including The L Word, Frazier, Profiler, and E.R. He received two NEA Fellowships and was
a founding director of The Accident Theater and the Night House in Los Angeles.
Abatemarco directed Julie Harris in William LuceÕs LuciferÕs Child both on Broadway and for A&E Television. He was
the first artistic director of Jacques DÕAmboiseÕs National Dance Institute in
Los Angeles.
Tim Chiou (Jim)
is part of the Propergander Theater Company in Los Angeles. His recent theater credits include A
Burning Thing and Fertilizing
Eggy at the 2100 Square Feet
Theater, and Freakstorm (Lodestone
Theater Ensemble) at the Victory Theater.
Roy
Dotrice (Martin Vanderhof) began his
acting career in a German prisoner-of-war camp in 1942, having been shot down
after flying with the Royal Air Force Bomber Command. After the war, Dotrice joined the Royal Shakespeare Company
in 1957 and for nine years performed in all of ShakespeareÕs plays with some of
the worldÕs most celebrated actors and directors, including Laurence Olivier,
Peter OÕToole and Albert Finney.
Dotrice has appeared in 10 Broadway productions, including three one-man
shows (Brief Lives, Golden
Theatre, 1968; Mister Lincoln, Morosco
Theatre, 1980; Brief Lives, Booth
Theatre, 1974). Dotrice won the
2000 Tony Award for his performance in Eugene OÕNeillÕs Moon For The
Misbegotten. On television, he was a series regular
in Beauty and the Beast, Going to Extremes, Picket Fences, Mr. and Mrs.
Smith, and Madigan Men. His film credits include The Cutting Edge, Scarlet Letter, Amadeus, and Swimming
with Sharks. While at the Royal
Shakespeare Company, Dotrice introduced the game of baseball into what had been
a cricket stronghold. In 1959, he pitched for the theaterÕs baseball team
alongside Olivier, OÕToole, Finney, Paul Robeson, Sam Wanamaker, and Charles
Laughton.
Magda
Harout (Gay Wellington; Olga Katrina)
has received eight theatrical awards, including the Drama-Logue Award, LA
Weekly Theatre Award, and Los
Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award. She has starred in Tennessee WilliamsÕ The
Milk Train DoesnÕt Stop Here Anymore, Suddenly Last Summer, Big Fish, Little
Fish, Madwoman of Chaillot, Waltz of the Toreadores, and The Anniversary. Her most
recent theatrical appearances were in Les Liaisons Dangereuses and The Kiss at City Hall, both at Pasadena Playhouse. Harout appeared in Nine Armenians at the Mark Taper Forum, which continued on to the
Denver Center for Performing Arts.
Her television credits include Six Feet Under, Rock Me Baby, Without
A Trace, The Agency, and ThatÕs
Life with Ellen Burstyn. She also starred in PBSÕs Song of
The Lark for Masterpiece Theatre. Her
film credits include A Wake in Providence, The Elevator with Martin Landau and Martin Sheen, and My Life with Michael Keaton.
Alexandra
James (Alice) recently graduated from
the University of California at Berkeley, where she studied theater and
received an HonorÕs Degree in Comparative Literature. While at Berkeley, she
played Blanche in A Streetcar Named Desire and Orsino in Twelfth Night. James also studied at A.C.T. in San Francisco, where she played the
role of Catherine in The Memory of Water. She also participated in a Shakespeare program at the Royal Academy
of Dramatic Art, where she played the role of Leontes in The Winter's Tale.
Dagney
Kerr (Essie) played Kathy, the demon
roommate in Buffy The Vampire Slayer. She has also appeared on Desperate Housewives, Six Feet Under, George Lopez, Bernie
Mac and The District. Kerr has scribed several one-person comedies,
including Deep Sea Dagney, Hitchhiking To Mars, and the campy cult Christmas musical, Holiday
Fever. Her latest musical stage
creation, American Fever, is
scheduled to debut this summer. KerrÕs film credits include One ManÕs Trash, The First $20 Million is Always the Hardest, and Two Weeks Later.
Michael
Laskin (Kolenkhov) is
a former member of The Guthrie Theatre Company and has performed at The Actors
Theatre of Louisville, The Seattle Rep., The Empty Space Theatre, The L.A.
Public Theatre, The Manitoba Theatre Center, and The Mixed Blood Theatre Co.,
among others. Laskin starred off-Broadway as Richard Nixon in The Basement Tapes, which won a Fringe First Award at
The Edinburgh Festival and played at The Roundhouse Theatre in London. He also
played Matt Friedman in the Canadian premiere of TalleyÕs Folly. LaskinÕs television credits
include Judging Amy, Ally McBeal, Seinfeld, NYPD Blue and LA Law. He has also performed in more than a
dozen made-for-television movies, including the mini-series From The Earth
To The Moon.
Laskin has appeared in more than 20 films, including Eight Men Out, Bounce, Winchell (HBO), and Disclosure. He recently finished filming a
role in the upcoming feature film MiniÕs First Time with Alec Baldwin and Jeff
Goldblum.
Michael
Loeffelholz (Ed) recently moved to
Los Angeles from Chicago, where he performed in Absolution at
Steppenwolf Theatre Company, Early and Often and Hellcab at
Famous Door Theatre Company, and The Caucasian Chalk Circle
and The Gut Girls at Mary-Arrchie Theatre Company. He was
co-founder of the Non Prophet Theatre Company where he produced
and appeared in productions of David MametÕs Oleanna and Harold
PinterÕs Betrayal. He also appears in the independent
feature film Mix Tape.
Jeff
Marlow (Henderson) received an Ovation Award nomination for Best Featured
Actor for his performance in Around the World in 80 Days at the Colony Theatre. He was also nominated for an LA
Weekly Theatre Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in The
Adding Machine at Sacred Fools. His other stage credits include Medea at the Theatre @ Boston Court, The Trial of
Ebenezer Scrooge at the Orlando Shakespeare
Festival, Robert WilsonÕs Woyzeck
at the Freud Playhouse, The LadyÕs Not For Burning at Malibu Stage Company, The Merchant of Venice at Will Geer Theatricum, Louis Slotin Sonata at Circle X, and Angels in America at Human Race Theatre Company. On television, he will
appear in the upcoming GreyÕs Anatomy, and has appeared on Judging Amy and Strong Medicine. His
film credits include Astronauts, The Remnant, The Hebrew Hammer (with Adam Goldberg), I See You.Com (with Beau Bridges), and Akeelah and the Bee (with Laurence Fishburne).
Chris L. McKenna (Tony) has been acting since the age of seven. At age 11, he was cast in the daytime series One
Life to Live, where he played the
role of Joey Buchanan for three years. During this time, he was nominated for a Soap Opera Digest Award and
two Young Artist Awards. McKennaÕs other television credits include That's
Life, The District, The Practice and That
70's Show. He was a regular on The
Opposite Sex, and appeared in the films King of the Ants, In and Out, and Art School Confidential.
Brendan
OÕDonnell (The Man) attended the
American Musical and Dramatic Academy in New York and has spent the last
several years performing in numerous shows at Sight & Sound Theaters in
Pennsylvania.
Ethan Phillips (Paul) began his acting career on stage. Some of his New York stage credits include My Favorite Year at Lincoln Center, Measure For Measure at the New York Shakespeare Festival, Lips Together
Teeth Apart at the Lucille Lortel Theatre,
Donut World at Playwrights
Horizons, and Modigliani
at the Astor Place Theatre. His Los
Angeles theater credits include Hamlet at Uprising Theatre, Side Man at Pasadena Playhouse, Lips Together Teeth Apart at Mark Taper Forum, and The Dining Room at Coronet Theatre. On
television, Phillips may best be remembered for his role on the hit show Benson. His other television credits include Arrested
Development, Oliver Beene, Star Trek: Voyager, LA Law, and Murphy Brown. Phillips has appeared in numerous films, including Bad Santa, The
Shadow, Green Card, Lean On Me, and Glory,
and will be appearing in the upcoming
film The Island. Phillips is also
a playwright and an author. His original play, Penguin Blues, has been produced more than 150 times throughout USA
and Canada.
Christina Pickles (Mrs. Kirby) has
performed on Broadway in WhoÕs Who in Hell at Lunt-Fontanne Theatre, Hamlet, War
and Peace, The Misanthrope, You Can't Take It With You, and The School for
Scandal
at the Lyceum Theatre, and The Royal Shakespeare CompanyÕs Sherlock Holmes, among others. In Los
Angeles, Pickles received acclaim for her performances in Cloud Nine, Undiscovered
Country
and The Letters of Janet Flanner. On television, Pickles is perhaps best known
for her sly, subtle digs as Judy Geller, mother of Ross and Monica on Friends,
a role
for which she received one of many Emmy nominations. She has also appeared in The
Division, Legally Blonde, JAG, and Matlock. Her film credits include
George of the Jungle 2, The Wedding Singer, Romeo and Juliet and Legends of the
Fall.
Darryl Alan Reed (Donald)
has performed in two other productions of You CanÕt Take It With You,
both at Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago, where he also performed in Inspecting
Carol and The Viewing Room. His other notable theatrical appearances include All
The Rage, Transformations, and
Vivisections From The Blown Mind at The
Goodman Theatre, and Dinah Was (at
Northlight Theatre in Chicago and recently at the International City Theatre in
Long Beach). ReedÕs television and film credits include Woody AllenÕs Sweet
And Lowdown, The American President, NYPD
Blue, Bernie Mac, and C.S.I.
Carla
Renata (Rheba) received a NAACP
Theatre Award nomination for her performance in the Los Angeles production of The
Lion King, in which she played the
role of the wise cracking hyena Shenzi. On Broadway, Renata performed in How
to Succeed in Business without Really Trying (with Matthew Broderick and Megan Mullally) at Richard Rodgers
Theatre, The Life at Ethel
Barrymore Theatre, and Smokey
JoeÕs Cafe at Virginia Theatre. She
also performed in the first national tour of The WhoÕs Tommy.
RenataÕs television credits include Jake in Progress, CSI, Strong
Medicine, Bernie Mac, Will & Grace, and
a recurring role on According To Jim
with Jim Belushi.
Lisa
Richards (Penny)
performed on Broadway in Sweet Bird of Youth at the Harkness Theatre opposite Christopher Walken, Mourning
Becomes Electra at Circle in the Square
Theatre, and Love Suicide at
Scholfield Barracks at ANTA
Playhouse. She recently starred in
Tom DulackÕs Friends Like These (winner of the first Kaufman & Hart Prize for
New American Comedy) at the Arkansas Repertory
Theatre, and All Good Soldiers In The West Wind
at The Greenway Court. Richards
played Linda Loman in Death of a Salesman at HoustonÕs Alley Theatre and The Papermill Playhouse with Ralph
Waite. She won a Dramalogue Award
for her portrayal of Arcadina in The CornerstoneÕs Seagull and starred in Lay of the Land (directed by Lee Grant) at the Pittsburgh Public
Playhouse. At the Gutherie, Richards played Doll Common in The Alchemist, Therese in Ardele,
and Irina in The Three Sisters at The
Hartford Stage. At The Theatre
Company of Boston, she starred in Dirty Hands, Cocktail Party, Marat
Sade and Virginia Woolf. On television, Richards starred in The James Dean
Story, and has appeared in Highway to
Heaven, Moonlighting, One Life To Live, Where the Heart Is, and Dark Shadows, among
others. She also starred in Seasons
of the Heart, The Right to Kill, Black
Widow, Who Will Love My Children and Atlanta
Child Murders. In film, Richards played
the star role of Helene in Henry JaglomÕs Eating. Her other
movie credits include Rolling Thunder, Heaven Can Wait, and Mr. Mom.
Conrad
John Schuck (Mr. Kirby) began his
acting career at The Cleveland Play House and over the past 40 years has
performed in more than 200 theatrical productions across the United States and
Europe. In 1969, while performing
at A.C.T. in San Francisco, Schuck was discovered by director Robert Altman who
asked him to play the role of Painless in the cult classic film M*A*S*H. He starred in many other Altman films including Brewster
McCloud, McCabe, Mrs. Miller,
and Thieves Like Us. On
television, Schuck appeared on McMillan and Wife opposite Rock Hudson and Susan Saint James for six
seasons. His recent film and television credits include Woody AllenÕs The
Curse of the Jade Scorpion!, the
award winning String of the Kite, and
NYPD Blue. On Broadway, Schuck
played Daddy Warbucks in Annie and
he reprised the role in the recent Broadway revival. Most recently he was
Buffalo Bill in Annie Get Your Gun with
Reba McEntire. His off Broadway credits include The Exonerated and We The People. In Los Angeles, he recently starred in Pippin at REPRISE.
Spencer Wilson (Mac) is a graduate of The American Academy of Dramatic Arts
West. His regional theater credits include Ragtime at the Henry
Ford Theatre and The Music Man at Civic
Light Opera, South Bay Cities, A Little Night
Music, Death of a Salesman, Bloody
Poetry, Automatic Pilot, among
others. He toured with Buddy:
The Buddy Holly Story, in which he played the role of the swaggering Big Bopper, and
with The Mikado, in which he played Nanki-Poo.
Jefferson
Mays in I Am My Own Wife
June 14-July 10, 2005
Wadsworth Theatre
Written by Doug Wright
Directed by Moisˇs Kaufman
Winner,
2004 Tony Award for Best Play
Winner,
2004 Tony Award for Best Actor
Winner,
2004 Pulitzer Prize for Drama
Winner,
2004 Drama League Award for Best Play
Winner,
2004 Drama Desk Award for Best Play
The
New York Times praised Doug WrightÕs
solo show I Am My Own Wife as
Ņthe most stirring new work to appear on Broadway this fall.Ó The Geffen Playhouse production of this
2004 Pulitzer Prize winner will feature the original acclaimed Broadway
actor/director team of Jefferson Mays and Moisˇs Kaufman. Under the direction
of Kaufman, The New York Times
lauded MaysÕs performance of Charlotte von Mahlsdorf, a soft-spoken but
tenaciously gender-bending biological male, as Ņthoroughly mesmerizing.Ó Based
on a true story, and inspired by interviews conducted by Wright over several
years, I Am My Own Wife
swept the 2004 Tony Awards. The Geffen Playhouse production of I Am My
Own Wife opens on June 14 and
runs through July 10, 2005 at the Wadsworth Theatre.
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