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THE BERKELEY REP MAGAZINE 2 008 –09 · I S S U E 5 Sharon Ott & Berkeley Rep— a history · 10 A conversation with adaptors Marilyn Campbell & Curt Columbus · 14 Crime and Punishment program · 23 2008-2009 Season Director of Drama: Winter Mead Director of Music Programs: Ahmed El-Gasseir The Performing Arts —a rich tradition— Bentley School’s 11th Anniversary of Performing Arts METAMORPHOSES THE FROGS Mary Zimmerman October 23–26, 2008; The SPAC Aristophanes In a staged reading of a new Musical as part of the Mini-term Thursday, March 5, 2009; 4pm; The SPAC BETRAYAL Harold Pinter November 6–9, 2008; The Little Theater U.S. MUSIC NIGHT PROOF David Auburn March 5–8, 2009; The Little Theater Sunday, December 7, 2008; 6pm; The SPAC RHINOCEROS THE WIZ Eugene Ionesco April 2–5, 2009; The SPAC Smalls and Brown Dual-campus production January 30 & 31; February 1, 6, 7, & 8, 2009; The SPAC U.S. MUSIC NIGHT Sunday, May 3, 2009; 6pm; Location TBA LUCKY STIFF Ahrens and Flaherty May 28–31, 2009; The SPAC BENTLEY’S Performing Arts Staff brings nearly 75 years of combined experience to their work. They have taught at the Berkeley Jazz School, Mills College, Cal State University East Bay, Stanford University, ACT’s MFA Program, and UC Berkeley’s Young Musician Program and have performed or worked at venues as various as the Monterey Jazz Festival, the Negro Ensemble Theater, The New York Public Theater, The Goodspeed Opera House, The Sante Fe Opera, Berkeley Rep, ACT, Cal Performances, and Yoshi’s. Bentley School is a leading K-12 college preparatory institution. Oakland Campus ( K-8) t One Hiller Road t Oakland t CA 94618 t www.bentleyschool.net Lafayette Campus (9-12) t 1000 Upper Happy Valley Road t Lafayette t CA 94549 t www.bentleyschool.net IN THIS ISSUE C ALENDAR Unless otherwise noted, all events are associated with Crime and Punishment. FEBRUARY 7 10 14 27 Teen Night, 6:30pm 27 Previews begin, 8pm 27 Tasting: In the Next Room (ITNR) Teance, 7pm 28 Tasting: ITNR Peets, 7pm MARCH PROLOGUE REPORT FEATURES A letter from the artistic director Scenic paint: More than brushstrokes PAG E 5 PAG E 7 A conversation with adaptors Marilyn Campbell and Curt Columbus Inside out: Teens take charge in the Target® Teen One Acts Festival PAG E 9 Sharon Ott & Berkeley Rep —a history PAG E 10 Supporters in the spotlight: Jan & Howard Oringer PAG E 14 Thought in turbulent times: 19th-century Russia and Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment PAG E 18 The life and times of Fyodor Mikhaylovich Dostoevsky PAG E 20 PAG E 12 Chutzpah list PAG E 13 BERKELEY REP PRESENT S Crime and Punishment PAG E 2 3 Profiles PAG E 2 4 1 Family Series, 11am 1 Tasting: ITNR Charles Chocolates, 6pm 3 Pre-show docent talks begin, every Tue and Thu, 7pm 4 Teen Council meeting, 5pm 4 Opening night dinner, 6pm Ê 4 Opening night, 8pm 5 Post-show discussion, 8pm 6 Tasting: ITNR Fra’ Mani handcrafted salumi, 7pm 6 Tasting: Sushi Ko, 7pm 6 Cal Night, 8pm 7 Cal Alumni Night, 8pm 7 Tasting: Domaine Carneros, 7pm 8 ymca Night, 6pm 8 Tasting: Laurel Glen, 6pm 13 Post-show discussion, 8pm 14 Tasting: Triple Rock Brewery, 7pm 15 Tasting: ITNR Forth Vineyards, 6pm 15 ITNR final performance 17 Post-show discussion, 8pm 20 Tasting: Teance, 7pm 21 Tasting: Tres Sabores, 7pm 22 Tasting: Charles Chocolates, 6pm 27 Tasting: Fra’ Mani handcrafted salumi, 7pm 28 Tasting: Raymond Vineyards, 7pm 29 Final performance, 7pm APRIL CONTRIBUTORS ABOUT BERKELEY REP F YI Foundation, corporate, and government sponsors Staff and affiliations PAG E 3 0 Board of directors and sustaining trustees Everything you need to know about Berkeley Rep’s box office, gift shop, seating policies, and more PAG E 3 7 PAG E 3 8 Individual donors to the Annual Fund PAG E 3 6 PAG E 31 Michael Leibert Society PAG E 33 40th Anniversary Campaign PAG E 3 4 THE BERKELE Y REP M AGA ZINE 2008 –09 · I S S U E 5 The Berkeley Rep Magazine is published seven times per season. Editor Megan Wygant For local advertising inquiries, please contact Ellen Felker at 510 548-0725 or [email protected]. Art Director Cheshire Isaacs Designer Abby Hanson Writers Elissa Dunn Laura Fichtenberg Pauline Luppert Elisabeth Millican Madeleine Oldham Alex Rosenthal Contact Berkeley Rep Box Office: 510 647-2949 Groups (10+): 510 647-2918 Admin: 510 647-2900 School of Theatre: 510 647-2972 Click berkeleyrep.org Email [email protected] 3 Narsai Toast gourmet gala and wine auction Ï 4 Target® Teen One Acts, 8pm 5 Family Series, 11am 5 Target® Teen One Acts, 2pm 6 Spring classes begin 8 Teen Council meeting, 5pm 10 Target® Teen One Acts, 8pm 11 Target® Teen One Acts, 8pm 17 The Lieutenant of Inishmore (LI) Teen Night, 6:30pm 17 LI 30 Below, 7pm 17 LI previews begin, 8pm Ê Ï Donor appreciation event Fundraiser School of Theatre event PROLOGUE FROM THE ARTIS TIC DIREC TOR 45*.6-"5*/(5)& &$0/0.: '035)&1"45:&"34 -0$"when i first read crime and punishment i remember feeling overwhelmed. I was in high school at the time, and the sheer length of the novel was enough to elicit horrified groans from the entire class. How could we possibly endure the lurid prose of some Russian writer who lived in the middle of the 19th century? From the summary on the back of the book, I judged that the plot was annoyingly simple, and the author, whose grim features and bedraggled beard stared out me from an old photo, resembled a corpse more than a living human being. I resigned myself to idea that reading the book was going to be torture. In fact, it was torture; but the kind of ecstatic torture one experiences when encountering pure genius. It was at once engrossing and mysterious, logical and incomprehensible. The simple plot turned out to be a vehicle to describe the inner workings of the diseased mind of a murderer, the investigation of the crime an intricate and surprising portrait of a brilliant detective. But the plot was only a part of the story. Dostoevsky’s vision of the world was filled with a kind of suffering that seemed both unbearable and transcendent. He was after something much larger than a naturalistic presentation of the world. His prose was torrid, fantastic, and hyperreal. It was as if he was possessed, like his central character Raskolnikov, by a fevered dream that threatened to consume him at any moment. At the heart of Crime and Punishment is the author’s own spiritual quest to understand the world, to find a path that can lead to meaning, to empathy, and, finally, to redemption. The adaptation you will be seeing tonight by Curt Columbus and Marilyn Campbell is an intense distillation of the novel. It tightly compresses the action into a series of investigatory encounters while trying to capture Dostoevsky’s pursuit of larger metaphysical questions. Rather than trying to imitate the expansionist prose of the book, the play carefully selects its dramatic events to reveal the luminous mind of the author. The result, brought to life by three actors, is swift, vivid, and astonishingly effective. This production marks the directorial return of none other than Sharon Ott. As many of you know, Sharon served as the artistic director of Berkeley Rep for 13 terrific years, during which time she created a national reputation for the theatre. From personal experience I can tell you that she taught us all to aim higher, to make bold choices, and to take smart chances. With Crime and Punishment, we continue the tradition she so bravely established. !,/#!,,9/7.%$).$%0%.$%.4,9 /0%2!4%$"%2+%,%9"53).%33 "2/+%23 .BSZ$BOBWBO .BSJMZO1VSTMFZ 2 % ! ,4 / 2 3 .BSUIB#FDLFSt,BUIMFFO$VSSZ 5SBDZ%BWJTt -FF(PPEXJOt -PSSJ)PMU $PMMFFO-BSLJO t4BOEZ1BSLFS $BNFSPO1BSLJOTPOt$BSPM1BSLJOTPO ,BUISZO4UFJO t +PBOO4VMMJWBO )FMFO8BMLFSt -JOEB8PMBO TTony TTaccone 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 5 March 2009 Volume 41, No. 5 Paul Heppner President & Publisher Mike Hathaway Vice President Terry Coe General Manager Emily White Editorial Director Jody Chatalas Managing Editor, Arts Programs Susan Peterson Managing Editor, Custom Publishing Victoria Culver Art Director Emily Busey Assistant Art Director Ana Alvira, Kristi Atwood, Deb Choat, Robin Kessler Associate Designers Bond Huberman Associate Editor Candace Frankinburger Controller A new restaurant from the owners of Rivoli Restaurant A casual trattoria featuring the simple rustic food of Florence, with pizza, full bar and an all Italian wine list Open daily for lunch, brunch and dinner, reservations & walk-in seating Five minute walk from the Berkeley Repertory Theatre & downtown BART 1788 Shattuck Avenue, Berkeley, Ca 94709 510-704-8004 www.trattoriacorso.com Virginia Wright Systems Administrator Deborah Greer Executive Assistant Christina Buckman Administrative/Accounting Assistant Advertising Sales Brenda Senderoff Market Development Gillian Grant-Martin, Crevin Ko, Brian Martin, Rose Monahan, Lenore Waldron Account Executives Denise Wong Sales Assistant Jonathan Shipley Ad Services Coordinator Regional Sales Representatives Seattle/Tacoma Sherri Jarvey San Francisco Gregory Duchek, Marilyn Kallins, Terri Reed Los Angeles Southern California Magazine Group David Bronow, Susan Holloway CALIFORNIA T H E AT E R M E D I A ALLIANCE 425 North 85th Street Seattle, Wa 98103 206.443.0445 [email protected] 800.308.2898 x105 www.encoremediagroup.com Encore Arts Programs is published monthly by Encore Media Group to serve musical and theatrical events in Western Washington and the San Francisco Bay Area. All rights reserved. ©2009 Encore Media Group. Reproduction without written permission is prohibited. 6 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 REPORT Scenic paint More than brushstrokes BY ELISABETH MILLICAN · PHOTOS BY LISA LÁZÁR the y come ar med with paintbrushes, rollers, hot knives, stencils, auto-body paint guns, kitty litter, mops, and cake-decorating tools. They take designers’ dreams of fantastic worlds and spin them into tangible realities—adorning the stage with fireproof, waterproof, actorproof surfaces, all painstakingly painted for your viewing pleasure. They are the scenic painters. Lisa Lázár, Berkeley Rep’s scenic artist, runs a tidy shop where quality and craftsmanship go hand-in-hand with worker safety and conscientious environmental practice. She is a talented artisan who deftly balances wild inspiration with pragmatic project-management. Behind every set exists an CO NTIN UED O N NE X T PAGE Main image and inset Hand-painted wallpaper for In the Next Room (or the vibrator play) 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 7 Scenic paint CO NTIN UED FROM PRE VIO US PAGE 1 Ê Ê - " , / Ê 7 - / Ê / " Ê / , Ê / / £ÇÊ1ÛiÀÃÌÞÊVÀiÀÊvÊÀ>Ì®Ên{{Èn£Ê ÜÜÜ°V>vviÛiiâ>°VÊÊ Does your investment advisor talk about performance? We do. To start a conversation, call us at 510.433.1066. Bell Investment Advisors, Inc. 1111 Broadway, Suite 1630, Oakland, CA 94607 www.bellinvest.com excruciatingly detailed construction process. Think of set-building as piecing together a very large and intricate puzzle. Lisa works closely with the entire scenic department to coordinate which piece goes where and when. Timing is everything, and the timer counting down to first preview is always ticking. “They don’t teach you this in art school,” she sighs. “A scenic painter really must be a jack-of-all-trades,” she explains. “Everything we make is a prototype, and each set requires a different set of skills—including sculpting, plastering, graffiti, lettering, or transforming a set designer’s handmade paintings into 40-foot murals and backdrops.” Not to mention, every floor you see is handmade and handstained to precise specifications for the stage. All wallpaper is painted, and fake concrete surfaces are made by sculpting and painting pulp from recycled newsprint. Everything you see must also be strong enough to withstand the abuse of eight-show weeks, where gestures must often be larger than life. And, as many Berkeley Rep productions transfer to other theatres, the sets are built to be broken apart and shipped. Lisa and her department document every step of the creation process, making a “kit” for each set that contains photos, paint samples, and recipes to recreate exactly each color they’ve used. “It’s physically hard work,” Lisa points out, “and there are a lot of personalities involved, so you have to find the joy in it.” For example, taking pleasure in watching a beautiful and intricate pattern of Victorian wallpaper emerge after hours of stenciling on one’s hands and knees. Or getting fired up as she tries to figure out which surfaces won’t get stained by stage blood, or how to make fake, flame-proof grass. “It’s done—wistful pause—until the designer says it isn’t!” is a phrase Lisa repeats often. Throughout the construction process, the scene shop shares work samples with designers, but occasionally the alchemy just doesn’t work when the set finally appears on stage under the lights with actors in 8 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 K E V I N B ER N E CO NTIN UED O N PAGE 35 REPORT l to r: Spencer Fortin, Amalia Mesa-Gustin, and Kim Fischer perform Joey Buttafuoco Eats a Pastrami Sandwich in the Target® Teen One Acts Festival. Inside out Teens take charge in the the Target® Teen One Acts Festival BY ELISSA DUNN K E V I N B ER N E “ this is work that come s from you,” Kendra Vaculin explains to a gathered group of high school students, “This isn’t from a playwright you’ve never heard of, or that’s dead. It’s by you and for you.” A member of Berkeley Rep’s Teen Council, Kendra’s talking about the annual Target® Teen One Acts Festival —and why it’s important for her peers to get involved. The Teen Council is a program for local teens who love theatre. They meet regularly to see local shows, attend workshops with Berkeley Rep’s artists, and plan special events like Target® Teen Night. In January, they gathered to begin preparations for the annual One Acts Festival. Each year, the Council chooses two plays from submissions by local high school students, which are then directed, performed, and produced by local teens under the mentorship of Berkeley Rep staff. “When I did the Festival last year, I realized I wasn’t alone with this weird interest in theatre. I discovered that there were other kids who shared the same passion,” says Roxie Perkins, a senior at Albany High. Roxie wrote and directed El Soldado for last year’s festival. This year she’s playing with abstract storytelling in To All the Ideas I’ve Loved Before, Pt. 1, where the action takes place inside her main character’s body. When asked how last year’s experience as a writer and director had influenced her new piece, she answers, “I wanted to see what it would be like, instead of having ten characters filling the stage with noise, to have three characters who never leave the stage at all, filling the space with silence and empty words. By setting the current play inside the protagonist’s body, I was hoping to prepare the audience for the fact that reality is not the truth in this play. It’s the interior that counts.” Scott White, a junior at The Branson School, was an actor in El Soldado. “I had been in a Berkeley Rep summer program before and really enjoyed it, so I figured ‘Why not, let’s try this out,’” Scott says. “I went to the audition, and “...I wasn’t alone with this weird interest in theatre...other kids shared the same passion.” about three weeks later I got a call from Roxie. It was a really spontaneous way to get involved.” This year he’s turned writer, providing another one-act, El Centro Basco. “I never would have thought that I was capable of writing a play until I was in the show last year and saw other kids doing it. I thought, ‘I can do that, too.’” El Centro Basco examines 13 years of friendship between two basketball players who put their sense of connection above all else, even their dreams of success. When asked what he wanted to say with El Centro Basco, Scott explains, “I really wanted to explore that transition from a comfort zone to the real world that everyone has to make at some point. I wanted to stress that there’s no single way to get to a certain result. In other words, it’s not really about where you end up, or who you end up with, but rather the process of getting there —adapting during times of adversity, and being able to make tough decisions without hesitation.” My life here Bonnie Killip, joined in 2005 Enjoy a PERSONAL VISIT Followed by Dinner. “I only wish I moved here sooner” is often said by our residents. And we’ll be happy to show you why. You’re invited for a personal visit to meet wonderful people, and experience the service and amenities that make us the East Bay’s leading senior living community. Reserve early. Call now 510.891.8542. St. Paul’s Towers www.stpaulstowers-esc.org ® Target Teen One Acts performances will take place April 3, 4, 5, 10, and 11. To get involved, call the Berkeley Rep School of Theatre at 510 647-2974 or click berkeleyrep.org/school. A fully accredited, non-denominational, not-for-profit community owned and operated by Episcopal Senior Communities License No. 011400627 COA #92 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 9 REPORT Sharon Ott & Berkeley Rep—a history 1988 In March, Sharon initiates a long and fruitful association with playwright Philip Kan Gotanda when she directs the world premiere of Yankee Dawg You Die—“a significant step in the Rep’s development of a multi-ethnic identity,” according to the East Bay Express. The show extends its Berkeley run and transfers to the Los Angeles Theatre Center, and then to Playwrights Horizons in Manhattan. 1990 Sharon directs the world premiere of The Woman Warrior, which is based on the writings of Maxine Hong Kingston. It becomes the most highly-attended production in the Theatre’s 26-year history. The smash hit travels to Boston and then Los Angeles—and usa Today declares it “Best Play of the Year”! BY PAU LI N E LU P P E R T This production of Crime and Punishment represents a significant reunion for Berkeley Repertory Theatre and director Sharon Ott—the first time she’s directed here in 11 years. From 1984 to 1997 Sharon Ott served as Berkeley Rep’s artistic director, presiding over an extraordinarily rich and fertile chapter of the Theatre’s history in whichthe Theatre —as the Oakland Tribune put it —evolved from a competent but predictable regional company to an artistic groundbreaker often basking in the national spotlight.” Here are some of the highlights of that journey. 1984 1984 Sharon Ott assumes the artistic helm at Berkeley Rep. Previously based in Milwaukee, the young artist has already worked in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Seattle, as well as in Europe and Japan. 1985 1986 1985 Sharon and Richard E.T. White rock the house with their jointly-directed production of Sam Shepard’s The Tooth of Crime. The show is so successful in its initial incarnation that it returns over the summer. 1985 Pushing the Theatre’s commitment towards greater diversity, Sharon’s first production—Amlin Gray’s Kingdom Come—casts actors from a wide variety of races to portray a community of Norwegian farmers. 1 0 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 1988 1990 1986 While she is widely recognized as a champion of new plays, Sharon also celebrates Shakespeare. Her future successor, Tony Taccone, insists, “Her Twelfth Night was one of the greatest Shakespeare productions I’ve ever seen: whimsical, effortless, smart, really exciting.” 1994 1992 Sharon directs Berkeley Rep’s first commissioned play, McTeague: a Tale of San Francisco. The show is quickly followed by two more commissioned world premieres— The Convict’s Return by Geoff Hoyle and Dragonwings by Laurence Yep. These three shows lay the groundwork for what is today a rich tradition of new work from Berkeley Rep. Left to right Chiron Alston, Geneva Baskerville, and Marc Hayashi rehearse with Sharon Ott for Kingdom Come; Howard Swain and Charles Dean in The Tooth of Crime; Lydia Look, Yunjin Kim, Xi Reng Jiang, and Lisa Lu in The Woman Warrior; Chris Tashima and Radmar Agana Jao in Dragonwings by Laurence Yep; Ken Ruta and Francesca Faridany in Heartbreak House; Tony Taccone, Susie Medak, and Sharon Ott at the Tony Awards. PH OTOS BY K EN FRIED M A N Awaken your 1996 The season opener for the 1996–97 season provides a preview of what will be a spectacular, historic year. Critic Robert Hurwitt calls Sharon’s Heartbreak House “funny, furious, brutally acute and suffused with passionate foreboding, this Heartbreak is an awesome experience. It’s a 3½-hour dramatic symphony, brilliantly performed by a superb ensemble, conducted—as much as directed —by Ott…it also serves as a stunning example of how far the company has come in the 13 years since Ott became its artistic director” 1996 1997 1996 Once again, Sharon collaborates with playwright Philip Kan Gotanda on The Ballad of Yachiyo, which moves from Berkeley Rep to South Coast Repertory, and then to The Public Theater in New York. “Visually exquisite,” declares the LA Times. “Director Sharon Ott orchestrates the play’s visual flow with a poet’s sense of pace and rhythm.” 1996 Sharon directs Anna Deavere Smith in Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992, which is based on the events surrounding Rodney King trial. The production’s national tour plays in Boston, Houston, New Haven, and Seattle, culminating in Washington, DC with a production attended by President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore. 1997 Flanked by Tony and Managing Director Susie Medak, Sharon caps a magical season and an extraordinary tenure by accepting a Tony Award for “Outstanding Regional Theatre” on behalf of Berkeley Rep. Spring classes for all ages begin April 6. Dreaming of summer already? Register now for Summer Theatre Intensive for grades 6 –12. 1997 Sharon accepts the position of artistic director at Seattle Repertory Theatre to pursue new challenges. A national search ultimately finds the perfect successor right here in Berkeley: Tony Taccone, the Theatre’s associate artistic director. Call 510 647-2972 or click berkeleyrep.org/school The Mosse M e Foundation for the Arts and Ed Education cation 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 1 1 REPORT Supporters in the spotlight: Jan & Howard Oringer “We believe that theatre provides a truly personal experience that can make an impact in the lives of young people.” BY L AUR A FICHTENBERG j a n a n d h owa r d l i v e i n s a n Francisco, have been Berkeley Rep subscribers for 17 years, and support Berkeley Rep’s 40th-Anniversary Campaign, which helps advance the Theatre’s outreach and education initiatives. What has been your favorite Berkeley Rep show? We’ve attended performances at Berkeley Rep for over 15 years and have enjoyed most of them —but we do have some favorites! We loved Mary Zimmerman’s Metamorphoses: the set and choreography were great. Also The People’s Temple, about Jim Jones and Jonestown, was unforgettable. Its large cast and unique set brought us back in time. We particularly appreciate Berkeley Rep’s diversity of plays and the opportunity for us to see new playwrights. Tell us about your most memorable theatre experience. Seeing Hair in New York in the late sixties. The show really was an expression of its time. People were trying to open up a little, and let out their feelings. We had the chance to go on stage for the finale, and actually getting to be part of the performance was an incredible experience. Some of our other favorite memories away from Berkeley Rep are from shows at Shakespeare Santa Cruz. The grove provides such a great setting for those timeless plays. Why do you give to Berkeley Rep? One of our primary reasons is to support the educational programs and youth outreach initiatives of the School of Theatre. Theatre is such a powerful medium. It’s a great vehicle to connect with young people and at-risk youth. After we retired, we established the Omnia Foundation to provide grants to California nongovernmental organizations in the areas of prisoner re-entry and immigrant integration. Our mission CO NTIN UED O N PAGE 35 PREMIER SERVICE FOR A PREMIER AUDIENCE Lorri Arazi Francine Di Palma Jack McPhail Leslie Avant Leslie Easterday Denise Milburn Norah Brower Gini Erck Bob & Carolyn Nelson Nacio Brown Jennie A. Flanigan Nancy Noman Carla Buffington Nancy Hinkley Amy Robeson Cheryl Cahn Maureen Kennedy Diane Verducci Serving Berkeley, Albany, Kensington, El Cerrito, Emeryville, Oakland and Piedmont www.pacunion.com 1625 Shattuck Avenue Berkeley, CA 94709 510.982.4400 1 2 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 1900 Mountain Boulevard Oakland, CA 94611 510.339.6460 Chutzpah list* If you’d like to donate any of these items, please contact the Theatre at 510 647-2900. Offices & Shops Computers (working Pentium iii or higher PC systems) Laser printer—color or b&w lcd monitors Marketing Letter-folder Portable desktop multimedia projector Portable audiovisual screen Slide scanner Scene Shop Industrial metal punch/shear Electro-pounce machine Prop Shop Cargo van Antique furniture (in good condition) Bedazzler Small vintage items (in good condition) Unused lumber Database management system New hand/power tools: · 14v Dewalt cordless drills · Pneumatic pop-riveter · mig welders · Plasma cutter Lighting & Sound Pentium laptop computer 15˝ flat-screen computer monitors Education Piano bench Children’s books and plays Electric keyboard (with 61+ piano-sized keys) General Passenger vehicle or pick-up truck (in good condition) Office desk chairs Pro bono auto mechanic work Reference books for literary department Stacking in/out trays Two-drawer lateral file cabinet Stereo headphones (for the hearing impaired description service) Dry-erase board (24˝ x 36˝or smaller) Dry-erase “year at a glance” wall calendar Oc`RmdbcoDinodopo`j`mn\ ?j^ojmjaKnt^cjgjbtdi >gdid^\gKnt^cjgjbt#Knt?$\i_\ H\no`mja<mondi>jpin`gdib Knt^cjgjbt#HAOgd^`inpm`$) @_p^\odib>gdid^d\inojNj^d`otajm/+T`\mn 2728 Durant Avenue • Berkeley, California 94704 • 510.841.9230 [email protected] • www.wrightinst.edu Creative Foods And Carefully Selected Wines Dinner Nightly • Reservations Suggested 1539 Solano Ave, Berkeley, Ca 94707 510.526.2542 www.rivolirestaurant.com *If we don’t ask for it, we probably won’t get it! 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 1 3 Fyodor Dostoevsky 1 4 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 A conversation with adaptors Marilyn Campbell and Curt Columbus Literary & dramaturgy intern Alex Rosenthal chats with Marilyn and Curt about distilling one very long novel into a sparse yet rich theatrical experience. Alex Rosenthal: How did your collaboration come about? Marilyn: The piece really started with Writers’ Theatre in Glencoe, Illinois, where I’m a co-founder. We do a lot of adaptations of classical literature, and our artistic director, Michael Halberstam, was very interested in Crime and Punishment and originally asked if I could adapt the novel. He gave me parameters, which were that he really wanted to center it around the murder aspect of the story, and center it around Raskolnikov and Porfiry. So I started researching the novel, and soon realized that you couldn’t tell the story without Sonia —it really needed that female voice of redemption in there —so I insisted that she be added in as a character and set out again to adapt the novel. When I finished it about a year, later we had seven characters and two hours, 45 minutes worth of material. And then we toyed around with it for another year. We did a reading, but we really wanted to take this leap and let the narration go, and had come up against a wall as to how to do that. That’s when Michael decided that Curt, who speaks Russian, would be a perfect match for us. Curt: I said, “Well, really I’m not interested in doing a large-scale production; I’m only interested in working on a three-character version.” Because for me, Crime and Punishment is one of the greatest novels ever written. It survives being taken out of its native language and being turned into other languages, and it’s still one of the greatest novels ever written across the world. An adaptation in the theatre has to go whizzing past your head like a bunch of bullets. If you just want the experience of the novel, read the novel. How did you know at that point that you wanted to write a threecharacter adaptation? Curt: Because the only question that I’m interested in within Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment is whether God exists in man. There’s an old Russian icon painting representing the idea of the trinity as an iconic number in Christian theology—it’s this beautiful trinity of father, son, and holy ghost. The idea was always rattling around in my brain that these are the Crime and Punishment characters. In fact, you can play out about seven different trinities in Crime and Punishment, it’s all about triples. And so that was always in my head when thinking of the novel. And Marilyn immediately took to the idea. Marilyn: When the script came back it was about 45 minutes long, but Curt had captured the essence of what we wanted to do, and when I read that first line —“Do you believe in Lazarus rising from the dead?”—I knew we had something brilliant. Curt: Marilyn had done the original heavy lifting of the adaptation. I went back and retranslated certain passages because I didn’t feel the translation she was working from was quite vivid enough, and then we continued to refine in response to what the actors said to us. We got into a room with the three actors who ultimately did the first production, and it really changed the shape of the play. 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 1 5 “In this country we tend to hide behind this mask of righteousness, and say if you made a mistake you’re just nothing. But people do commit wrong acts and are still good people at heart. People are more complex than just black and white or good and bad.” What do you find thrilling about the process of adaptation? Marilyn: Shining a light on material that has sort of been lost or passed over—relevant material that speaks to us today that still echoes from all those years ago. People are still saying the same things; they’re still asking us the same questions. It’s also exciting to me to see people hear these words for the first time. It’s great to let people just sit and listen and watch them think, “I never would have come up with that” or “I never would have been able to read it that way or understand it that way.” Curt: I always find creating theatre thrilling because you get in a room with other people and together you make something ineffable happen—which is not the easiest thing in the world to do. We’ve all seen flat-footed people doing theatre, and the experience of that versus the experience of wonder you can have when “Oh my gosh, look at all these people in a room together, and look at what they’re making me feel and what they’re making me do” is kind of extraordinary. I think the adaptation thrill is the same as the theatre thrill, which is when you’re taking something that’s a text and making it alive. I love text and I love reading, but I also love the live experience. In what ways does this adaptation diverge from the novel? Curt: Well, here’s the simplistic answer: the novel is novelistic, and hopefully the play is dramatic. That’s sort of shorthand, but the novel is 697 pages, and part of its joy is its texture and its heft—that kind of dense, almost tapestry-like quality of the little details, such as that Porfiry is wearing his little slippers and this little robe. That, and the sweep, and the characters, and St. Petersburg, which is truly a character in the novel. The play is definitely more concerned with the themes 1 6 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 and with the dramatic interactions. Our adaptation definitely can and should be performed in a very spare way. Marilyn: One of the things that made our adaptation special was that Curt took it out of linear time. My original adaptation was written like the novel—it started with the murder. So Curt put it in Raskolnikov’s head, and that gave us this complete freedom to tell the story any way that we wanted. How does the story get us to empathize with a murderer? Marilyn: At heart Raskolnikov’s a good guy—he loves his mother, he loves his sister, he loves his family, they care for him, and that love enables him to care for Sonia, and her father and mother. In this country we tend to hide behind this mask of righteousness, and say if you made a mistake you’re just nothing. But people do commit wrong acts and are still good people at heart. People are more complex than just black and white or good and bad. Is there anything significant in the character names that we might miss as non-Russian speakers? Curt: Well, the name Raskolnikov comes from Raskol in Russian, meaning schism or break, so he is the man of the break or the schism—the split, if you will. The Raskolniks were the people who wanted to split from the central body of the Orthodox Christian church. Sonia is from Sofia, which means wisdom in Greek. Is all of the dialogue in the play lifted from the text, or is there original dialogue? Curt: There’s a lot of original dialogue. There’s also a lot that’s lifted straight out—or example the horse dream speech, which is in the novel, but the way it is in the play is very much from our play, and only from our play. Parsing a Russian name When you write original dialogue do you make attempts to tie it to the original text or language in any way? Curt: I try to listen to the rhythms of it. For example, when I’m translating Chekhov, I try to translate it so that the music of the original is present in the music of the translation. Which is why when people talk about literal translation there is no such thing. I get that all the time from people who say, “When you do your Chekhov plays do you work from an original translation?” What does that mean, a literal translation? Nothing literally means anything else, you know, all words can be used with implication so they don’t literally mean the thing that you think they mean. So do you see translation and adaptation as two elements on the same spectrum? Curt: Yes, definitely. Because it is always the translator’s job to translate the setting for her or his audience. Sometimes with translation the main thing that you have to provide is context. Well that immediately is adaptation, because the context is assumed or implied for the audience in the original language. A translation is always fluid, and people think that they’re looking for a translation that’s accurate, but what they’re looking for is a translation that sings. You’re not going to want to watch a completely “faithful” translation, and you’re certainly not going to want to listen to it. So there’s always adaptation of some kind. Curt, you mentioned your work translating Chekhov—what keeps you coming back to 19th- century Russian literature? Curt: (Laughs.) Neurosis? Is it just a kind of fatal laziness? I have no idea. I have absolutely no idea. You’re not the first person to ask me that, and I wish I had a better answer, except that I do know: I feel like all of the questions that were being asked at the end of the 19th century are questions that are just as vivid for us right now, and perhaps it’s that kind of centennial moment, but the literature really speaks to me. russians typically have three names: a given first name, a patronymic, and a family name. The given first name is the one given to a child by his or her parents. Sonia and Porfiry are given first names. A patronymic is a name derived from a father’s name. The patronymic is formed by taking a father’s given first name and adding the suffix -ovich for a male child and -ovna for a female child. So Raskolnikov’s father’s first name, Roman, with the suffix -ovich added, gives Raskolnikov the patronymic Romanovich. The family name is passed identically from father to child, with the addition of an “a” ending for female family members. Sonia’s family name, Marmeladova, is derived from her father’s family name, Marmeladov. given name patronymic family name Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov Sonia Semyonovna Marmeladova Porfiry Petrovich (not known) What would you say is timeless about Crime and Punishment? Marilyn: I think it relates totally to modern audiences. Asking for forgiveness is a very hard thing to do, and I think it definitely echoes with everybody, this idea of redemption and can we be forgiven for the things that we’ve done. It’s a very Christian idea. Curt: Since the dawn of time we’ve all wondered about whether God exists within us. And Dostoevsky’s basically just posing the question that whatever you call god—man’s capacity to be good—whatever it is, do we have that in us? And when it gets perverted is it forever perverted? Can you rise again? Anyone who’s struggled with alcohol or drugs, or any addiction knows what this is; anyone who has committed a crime and said, “I will reform,” has struggled with this idea. That’s why it’s universal. Do you think that Dostoevsky was simply interested in raising the question of whether God exists in man, or was he positing an answer? Curt: Well, he was mad, you know, profoundly mad. I don’t know, I think he thought he found an answer, because the end of the book there definitely is a period at the end of a sentence—Raskolnikov finds Christ, and he becomes the man with God in him. I think I’m more interested in the question, because the play ends with a question mark. 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 1 7 Thought in turbulent times 19th-century Russia and Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment BY MADELEINE OLDHAM just as the death of a loved one can motivate an individual to confront his or her own mortality, war and turmoil can at times elicit a reflective national mood. The second half of the 19th century saw great unrest in Russia, but with it came a remarkable period of intellectual discourse. At the same time that Russia fought with its neighbors and began losing its foothold as a formidable presence in the global landscape, philosophical movements flourished, and literary giants Turgenev, Tolstoy, and Dostoevsky produced their best work. Russia’s thinkers and writers ensured that their country did not completely disappear into the background while it began to topple from its pinnacle of influence. From 1853 to 1856, the Crimean War pitted the Russian Empire against Turkey, France, the United Kingdom, and Sardinia (and included pressure from Austria and Prussia). Standing alone, Russia did not fare well, and the war dislodged its status as the dominant power of Southeastern Europe. It took decades to recover from the human and economic losses incurred both at home and abroad. The Emancipation Reform of 1861 abolished serfdom, and though well-intended and relatively well-planned, fell down in its execution because many peasants remained unsatisfied by its terms. Often compared to the United States’ freeing of slaves, the legislation failed to create an appropriate transition from servitude to liberation, and left room for long-repressed anger to bubble over into violence and strife. The Narodnik movement quickly rose up and gained momentum, calling for peasants to overthrow the government. (The Narodniks also embraced the Great Man theory that Dostoevsky made a pivotal part of Crime and Punishment, which asserted that the 1 8 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 men who affect the course of history are unafraid to challenge or disregard the same rules that govern other men.) Between 1863 and 1865, conflict arose in Western Russia with the January Uprising, where large numbers of young Polish men refused to be drafted by the Russian army. Though largely unsuccessful, their guerilla tactics persisted in creating a distraction for the Russian government and further delaying the nation’s restrengthening after the devastating losses of the Crimean War. During this tumultuous time when the seeds of 1917’s Russian Revolution were being planted, philosophy began to rise from the shadows of what is sometimes known as the philosophical dark age of Russia, from about 1825 to 1860. Tsar Nicholas I, feeling that foreign ideas and intellectual stimulation led to revolt, placed restrictions on access to higher education and passed far-reaching censorship laws with harsh penalties. Unsatisfied, he outlawed all travel outside the Russian Empire and went on to eradicate philosophy departments in universities. Perhaps as a result of government intervention and suppression, Russian philosophy never attained the exalted status of its European counterparts. But despite the hostile atmosphere, the exchange of ideas among men of letters and intellectuals could not be squelched. Just as the Tsar had feared, the foreign influence of thinkers like Hegel and later Nietzsche crept into the Russian conversation, and lively debates about theological attitudes and what man was meant to do on this earth buzzed throughout the Empire. Dostoevsky meanwhile, having spent most of the tumultuous ’50s in prison and Siberia, and the early ’60s Some Key Events in 19th Century Russia 1821 Dostoevsky born 1825 Tsar Nicholas I takes the throne 1825 The Decembrist revolt protests Nicholas’ ascension 1850 All teaching of philosophy banned in public universities until 1889 1853–56 Crimean War 1855 Tsar Alexander II takes the throne 1861 Emancipation of the serfs 1861 The Narodnik movement calls for peasant overthrow of the government 1862 The term “nihilism” coined by Turgenev in his novel Fathers and Sons 1863 January Uprising 1865 Tolstoy’s War and Peace published 1866 Crime and Punishment published 1867 Russia sells Alaska to the US 1869 The Idiot published 1872 The Possessed published 1873–77 Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina published in installments in The Russian Messenger 1880 The Brothers Karamazov published 1881 Dostoevsky dies Ornate onion domes of Russian churches trying to solidify his financial footing and reputation as a writer, also turned his thoughts toward increasingly expansive ideas. His questions gathered depth, his work grew in scope, and in 1866 he wrote the first of his four great novels, Crime and Punishment. Crime and Punishment started out in Dostoevsky’s mind as a short novella about a theory he’d been pondering: that people have an innate moral compulsion to seek out punishment for their sins, and that this compulsion can’t be mastered or overridden. At the same time he was also writing a novel he was calling The Drunkards, about the Russian epidemic of “drunkenness” and the havoc it could wreak on families and loved ones. He urgently desired to finish and publish this novel expeditiously in hopes of securing payment that would help him quell his mounting debts. The first publisher he approached turned him down, and he swallowed his pride and wrote to Mikhail Katkov, editor of the hugely influential journal, The Russian Messenger. The writings of Turgenev and Tolstoy had already appeared multiple times, but Dostoevsky and Katkov had a prickly relationship, carrying on a sustained public exchange of heated ideological dialogue. Though they vehemently disagreed on many ideas, Katkov respected Dostoevsky as both a thinker and a writer, and agreed to furnish him with an advance and publish the story. Dostoevsky told Katkov that it would be finished in a few weeks, a month at most. Shortly thereafter, he threw out his first draft that he completed in November for a December deadline, and his two story ideas merged into one. The Drunkards morphed into the Marmeladov storyline inside the larger novel, and he adjusted his narration from first to third person. He ended up publishing the substantial and significant work in monthly installments throughout 1866. In the second half of his life, Dostoevsky embraced his faith in Christianity and the Russian Orthodox Church. He spurned the Western ideas that were infiltrating his country, and with Crime and Punishment, refuted many of the popular ideological movements of the time. These included utilitarianism, a philosophy with socialist leanings that put forth ideas about the collective good and ends justifying means; rational egoism, which purported that human beings exist to seek pleasure and to perpetuate self-interest; and nihilism, which declared human life meaningless and lacking any kind of purpose. He instead infused into the novel his beliefs that God does exist and can be found in human beings, and that the way to God is through great suffering that will eventually lead to forgiveness. His focus on man’s part of the equation earned him a reputation as one of the forerunners of existentialism—a movement that centered on questions regarding the nature of human existence. In his book Twilight of the Idols, the most famous existentialist, Friedrich Nietzsche, said of Dostoevsky that he was “the only psychologist from whom I have anything to learn.” In a recent article in The Guardian newspaper of London, writer Michael Billington notes of Dostoevsky that “his four great books pose a troubling question: If God does not exist, then is everything permissible?” With these kinds of probing yet sweeping inquiries that dive straight to the nerve center of human curiosity, Dostoevsky offered his turbulent country a reminder to pause and reflect, giving a great gift of introspection to a vulnerable nation. 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 1 9 The life and times of Fyodor Mikhaylovich Dostoevsky BY MADELEINE OLDHAM rarely is it easy to pinpoint the precise places where a writer’s life and art mingle and diverge. However, there’s little question that the events of Fyodor Mikhaylovich Dostoevsky’s life significantly impacted his work. Dostoevsky, a thinking man with an intense drive to make sense of the world around him, relentlessly examined his own life in relationship to the meaning and purpose of human existence. His worldview shifted and changed in response to what transpired around him, but his intellectual rigor remained steadfast throughout the course of his life. Born in 1821, Dostoevsky grew up in Moscow the second of seven children. His mother died of tuberculosis when he was 15, and his father under mysterious circumstances two years later. His father’s death was recorded as being of natural causes, but it is commonly believed that he was murdered by his own serfs in reaction to his violent temper and harsh treatment of those around him. (If true, this perhaps also signified the burgeoning discontent that eventually resulted in the Emancipation Reform of 1861 that gave serfs their freedom.) Dostoevsky’s father also had a well-documented problem with alcohol abuse. Shortly before his father’s death Dostoevsky was sent to military engineering school in St. Petersburg. He received a commission as a second lieutenant in 1842, but left one year later to launch a writing career. A small income from his father’s estate may have allowed him to pursue his literary leanings. He published his first novel, Poor Folk, in 1846 to a warm critical reception, gaining early national recognition for his talents. Dostoevsky quickly fell in with a group of intellectual dissidents known as the Petrashevsky Circle (named for its founder Mikhail Petrashevsky), delighted by their lively discussion of Western ideas and writings like those of French socialist Fourier and German philosopher Hegel. The Russian government considered this material dangerously provocative and traitorous, and consequently declared any reading, writing, or possession of it illegal. The Circle disregarded such mandates and continued to meet and dream about a complete overhaul of the current social order. Dostoevsky did not embrace revolutionary action as much as revolutionary thought—he was more interested in utopia than uprising. His mind thrilled to confront big ideas about what is best for society at large, but he displayed little desire to act on what he might come up with, other than to write about it in a theoretical fashion. Though this proved the case for many members of the Circle and its offshoots, the government 2 0 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 considered their activities hostile and threatening, and eventually arrested and imprisoned them. Thus began a major turning point in Dostoevsky’s life. After their arrest in 1849, Tsar Nicholas I sentenced the intellectuals to execution. Semyonovsky Square was prepared, the firing squad readied, and the prisoners marched out to meet their doom. A messenger arrived with a reprieve at the eleventh hour, and the event was revealed to be nothing but an elaborate staging of a lesson the Tsar wanted to teach them. It’s said that one prisoner’s fragile mental state could not bear the fear elicited by his perceived imminent demise, and he went insane. Dostoevsky maintained his sanity, but gained a new understanding of the meaning of fortitude. Disillusioned after his traumatic experience, he turned his thoughts away from surreptitious Western influences and toward his own people. He gave up his revolutionary leanings and joined his sympathies with Slavophilia, a pro-Russian intellectual movement that celebrated the roots of its nation and believed it was every citizen’s duty to contribute to Russia’s cultural legacy. Following his reprieve he was sent to finish out the remaining five years of his sentence in a prison in Siberia, and upon his release was forced to join the Siberian military. There, in one bright spot in an otherwise dismal period for Dosteovsky, he met his future wife, whom he married in 1857. He returned to St. Petersburg in 1859 and floundered somewhat while trying to establish a writing life that would generate income. He founded several failed literary journals and wrote a couple of less well-received novels, barely staying afloat. Things took a turn for the worse in 1864 when his wife died, and shortly thereafter his brother Mikhail, with whom he was very close. Though Dostoevsky had no reliable source of earnings, he took on the responsibilities of settling his brother’s considerable debts and caring for his family. Dostoevsky racked up huge debts of his own due to a depression-fueled gambling addiction, and found himself in a relatively hopeless financial situation. Fortunately his writing career began to gather steam. He committed himself to writing near-impossible quantities of text in short amounts of time and yet managed to produce some of his best work under those constricted circumstances. In 1867 he married his second wife, his stenographer Anna Grigorevna Snitkina. His reputation grew more venerable as the years went on, and upon his death in 1881 he was already considered a Russian national treasure and one of the greatest writers and thinkers the world had ever seen. emirates.com/usa Non-stop sanctuary. Sip a fine vintage. Relish a gourmet meal. Tune in to over 1,000 channels of on-demand entertainment. And exhale in your own First Class Private Suite on Emirates’ Boeing-777. Discover more at emirates.com/usa Non-stop San Francisco to Dubai. Fly Emirates. Keep discovering. 400 international awards and over 100 destinations worldwide. For more details contact Emirates at 800-777-3999. Discover frequent flyer benefits at skywards.com BY MARTIN MCDONAGH DIRECTED BY LES WATERS APRIL 17–M AY 17 · RODA THEATRE CLICK BERKELEYREP.ORG CALL 510 647-2949 · 888 4-BRT-TIX Berkeley Repertory Theatre presents the world premiere of WRIT TEN BY FYODOR DOSTOEVSK Y ADAPTED BY MARILYN CAMPBELL & CURT COLUMBUS B E RKE LE Y RE PE RTO RY TH E ATRE TO NY TACCO N E , ARTIS TIC D IREC TO R SUS IE M E DAK , M ANAG IN G D IREC TO R C A ST (IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE) Raskolnikov Tyler Pierce Porfiry, Marmelodov, J.R. Horne and a Tradesman Sonia, Alyona, Delia MacDougall Mother, and Lizaveta DIREC TED BY SHARON OT T PRODUC TION STAFF Scenic Design Christopher Barreca FEBRUARY 27– MARCH 29, 2009 THRUST STAGE · LIMITED SEASON CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IS PERFOR MED IN ONE AC T WITH NO INTER MISSION . Crime and Punishment is possible thanks to the support of EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS John & Helen Meyer Richard A. Rubin & H. Marcia Smolens PRODUCER S Neil & Leah Mac Neil Michael & Sue Steinberg Costume Design Lydia Tanji Lighting Design Stephen Strawbridge Sound Design Cliff Caruthers Stage Manager Heath Belden Casting Amy Potozkin Elissa Meyers Casing The actors and stage manager in this production are members of Actors Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. Produced by special arrangement with Dramatic Publishing, Woodstock, Illinois. A SSOCIATE PRODUCER S Anonymous Becky & Jeff Bleich Mary & Nicholas Graves Migsy & Jim Hamasaki Pat Rougeau The commissioning and development of this production has been supported in part by PRODUC TION SPONSOR SE A SON SPONSOR S 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 3 BERKELEY REP PRESENTS PROFILES J.R. Horne Tyler Pierce Curt Columbus P O R F I RY, M A R M E LO D OV & A TRADESMAN R A S KO LN I KOV A DA P T O R Tyler is proud to make his Berkeley Rep debut in Crime and Punishment. He has toured in Barriers, Legends with Joan Collins and Linda Evans, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream. His regional theatre credits include A Christmas Carol and Dracula at Actors Theatre of Louisville; the regional premieres of Fat Pig and The Internationalist at The Studio Theatre in Washington, D.C.; Lorenzaccio, Macbeth, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Pericles, and The Tempest with The Shakespeare Theatre Company; the world premiere of The Night is a Child by Charles Randolph Wright at Milwaukee Repertory Theater; and the Youth Ink Festival at McCarter Theatre Center. His off-Broadway credits include work at Atlantic Theatre Company, Atlantic Theatre Studio, Circle Rep East, here Arts Center, New Dramatists, New Georges Lark Theatre, New York Classical Theatre, and Theatre for a New Audience. Tyler has also been in the films Alchera, Modern Day Arranged Marriage, and The Rub, and the television shows Asteroid, Guiding Light, Kidnapped, and Third Watch, as well as the pilot of Runner. Curt currently serves as artistic director of Trinity Repertory Company. Before that, he was the associate artistic director of Steppenwolf Theatre Company, artistic director of the Chicago Park District’s Theater on the Lake, and an artistic associate at Victory Gardens Theater. While at Steppenwolf, Curt provided translations for Cherry Orchard and Uncle Vanya; his recently published volume of translations entitled Chekhov: The Four Major Plays includes these scripts as well as The Seagull and Three Sisters, the latter of which won a Joseph Jefferson Award for Best New Adaptation. Curt’s latest project, a re-imagining of Sophocles’ Antigone called The House of Antigone, made its world premiere at Trinity Rep this past fall. J.R. was most recently in Ethan Coen’s Almost an Evening at Atlantic Theater Company and Charles Busch’s Our Leading Lady at Manhattan Theatre Club. His Broadway credits include Abe Lincoln in Illinois at Lincoln Center Theater, The Crucible with Liam Neeson and Laura Linney, Inherit the Wind with George C. Scott, and The Show-Off at Roundabout Theatre Company; his many off-Broadway credits include Tim Blake Nelson’s Anadarko, Eugene O’Neill’s Hughie, The Joy of Going Somewhere Definite, The Night Hank Williams Died, and Rhinoceros. J.R.’s regional credits include productions at Long Wharf Theatre, PlayMakers Repertory Company, Studio Arena Theatre in Buffalo, and Syracuse Stage. His last Berkeley Rep appearance was in Hydriotaphia. On TV, J.R. has been a guest star on Ed, Hope and Faith, Kate and Allie, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, and Whoopi; he’s also been in the films Dark Water, Die Hard: With a Vengeance, Turk 182, and the Coen Brothers’ Burn After Reading and O Brother, Where Art Thou? J.R. plays Keanu Reeves’ father in the soon-to-bereleased Pippa Lee. In real life, he is the father of actor Devin Horne. Delia MacDougall S O N I A , A LYO N A , M O T H E R & LI Z AV E TA Delia last appeared at Berkeley Rep in Tony Kushner’s Hydriotaphia; other productions here include The Beaux’ Stratagem, Mad Forest, Pentecost, The Rivals, and Serious Money. Most recently Delia appeared in Tom Stoppard’s Rock ‘n’ Roll at both American Conservatory Theater and The Huntington Theatre Company. Delia’s other Bay Area credits include the a.c.t. productions of After The War, The Government Inspector, and The Learned Ladies; 11 productions for California Shakespeare Theater including Man and Superman, The Merry Wives of Windsor, and Nicholas Nickleby Parts 1 and 2, and work with The Aurora Theatre, The Magic Theatre, Marin Theatre Company, and San Jose Repertory Theatre. Her regional credits include work at the Alley Theatre, Intiman Theatre, La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club, Pittsburgh Public Theater, San Diego Repertory Theatre, and others. Delia is an actor and director for Campo Santo; and an actor, director, and charter member of Word for Word. 24 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 Fyodor Dostoevsky WRITER Fyodor Dostoevsky was born in Moscow in 1821 to a lower-middle-class Russian family and died in 1881. His literary legacy includes Poor Folk (1846), Netcochka Nezvanova (1849), The Insulted and the Injured (1861), The House of the Dead (1862), Notes from the Underground (1864), Crime and Punishment (1866), The Gambler (1867), The Idiot (1868), Demons (1872), The Raw Youth (1875), The Brothers Karamazov (1880), and a number of novellas and short stories. His works have been translated into many languages and have been the subjects of numerous film and theatrical adaptations. Marilyn Campbell A DA P T O R Marilyn is an actress and playwright, as well as the co-founder and artistic associate of Writers’ Theatre in Glencoe, Illinois. She was the producer of Chicago’s Estrogen Fest 2003 and 2005, and has won several awards for her acting work. She also received the 2003 Joseph Jefferson Award for this co-adaptation of Crime and Punishment. In addition to Crime and Punishment, Marilyn is the author of The Beats, The Gospel According to Mark Twain, and My Own Stranger. She is currently working on a retelling of the Frankenstein tale called The Monster’s Lullaby and writing the libretto for a new musical based on the 1928 Mae West play, The Pleasure Man. Sharon Ott DIREC TOR Sharon has been a leading figure in American theatre for 25 years—including 13 years as Berkeley Rep’s artistic director, during which the company achieved national prestige and a Tony award for outstanding regional theatre. Following her tenure in Berkeley, Sharon served Seattle Repertory Theatre as its artistic director for nine years. Her New York credits include work at mtc, Playwrights Horizons, and The Public Theater; she has worked regionally at Arena Stage, the Huntington, the Mark Taper Forum, Opera Colorado, San Diego Opera, Seattle Opera, South Coast Repertory, and many others. In these theatres, she has collaborated with contemporary American artists including Ricardo Chavira, Willem Dafoe, and Anna Deavere Smith; directors Joe Mantello, Stephen Wadsworth, George C. Wolfe, and Mary Zimmerman; and authors Nilo Cruz, Amy Freed, Philip Kan Gotanda, Beth Henley, and August Wilson. She is the recipient of multiple Bay Area Critics Circle and Dramalogue Awards, an Elliot Norton Award, an Obie Award, and the Paine Knickerbocker Award for Lifetime Achievement. Sharon is currently a professor at the Savannah College of Art and Design and serves on the national executive board of the Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers. Heath Belden S TAG E M A N AG E R Heath has stage-managed The Full Monty and Little Shop of Horrors for American Musical Theatre of San Jose, Once Upon a Mattress for 42nd Street Moon, The Subject Tonight Is Love and A Streetcar Named Desire for Marin Theatre Company, four seasons with Marin Shakespeare Company, five operas with Pocket Opera, and seven productions at a.c.t. Heath has worked on such new plays as Jane Anderson’s The Quality of Life, John Guare’s Rich and Famous, Charles L. Mee’s Wintertime, and Ken Weitzman’s Spin Moves. He has an mfa degree from UC San Diego. Christopher Barreca Cliff Caruthers SCENIC DESIGN SOUND DESIGN Christopher has designed The Birds, The Caucasian Chalk Circle, The First 100 Years, The Illusion, Macbeth, Man and Superman, The Oresteia, Rhinoceros, Skylight, Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992 for Berkeley Rep. He has also designed more than 200 productions internationally, on Broadway, off Broadway, in regional theatre, opera, dance, and film. He continues to enjoy the process. Christopher is currently the head of the scenic design program at the California Institute of the Arts. Cliff has created soundscapes and music for over a hundred Bay Area productions, including Joe Turner’s Come and Gone and tragedy: a tragedy for Berkeley Rep, Anna Bella Eema for Crowded Fire Theater Company, Bone to Pick for the Cutting Ball Theater, Brainpeople for a.c.t., Bug for SF Playhouse, and Caroline, or Change for TheatreWorks. He is an artistic associate at Cutting Ball, a company member of Crowded Fire, and the resident sound designer for TheatreWorks. Outside the theatre world, Cliff is co-curator of the San Francisco Tape Music Center and technical director for the San Francisco Electronic Music Festival (sfemf). His electronic music has been performed at 964 Natoma, the 2007 Prague Quadrennial, Deep Wireless, Noise Pancakes, sfemf, sftmf, and the Society for Electroacoustic Music in the United States. Upcoming projects include Dead Man’s Cell Phone for SF Playhouse, Distracted for TheatreWorks, Drip for Crowded Fire, and Pelléas and Mélisande for Cutting Ball. Lydia Tanji CO S T U M E D E S I G N Lydia designed the costumes for Ballad of Yachiyo, The Glass Menagerie, Homebody / Kabul, Honour, Master Class, Our Town, Slavs, and many other shows at Berkeley Rep. At a.c.t. she recently designed costumes for After the War, Brain People, Curse of the Starving Class, and The Rainmaker. Her other regional credits include Golden Child, Pygmalion, and The Sisters Matsumoto at Seattle Rep with Sharon Ott; The Merry Wives of Windsor at Cal Shakes; and The Wind Cries Mary at San Jose Rep. She has also worked at Arena Stage, the Aurora, The Children’s Theatre Company, East West Players, Geva Theatre Center, the Huntington, Indiana Repertory Theatre, The Laguna Playhouse, the Taper, mtc, Portland Center Stage, The Public, Pan Asian Repertory Theatre, South Coast Rep, and Syracuse Stage. She has received six Bay Area Theatre Critics Circle Awards and two Dramalogue Awards. Lydia’s film credits include Dim Sum, Hot Summer Winds, The Joy Luck Club, Life Tastes Good, A Thousand Pieces of Gold, and The Wash. Tony Taccone ARTISTIC DIREC TOR Tony is in his 12th year as artistic director of Berkeley Rep, where he has staged more than 35 shows—including world premieres by Culture Clash, Rinde Eckert, David Edgar, Danny Hoch, Geoff Hoyle, Quincy Long, and Itamar Moses. At present, he has two shows touring the nation: Danny Hoch’s Taking Over and Carrie Fisher’s Wishful Drinking. Tony made his Broadway debut with Bridge & Tunnel, which was lauded by the critics and won a Tony Award for its star, Sarah Jones. He commissioned Tony Kushner’s legendary Angels in America, co-directed its world premiere at the Taper, and has collaborated with Kushner on six projects. In 2004, his production of Continental Divide transferred to the Barbican in London after playing the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Berkeley Rep, La Jolla Playhouse, and England’s Birmingham Rep. His many regional credits include shows at atl, Arena Stage, Arizona Repertory Theatre, the Eureka Theatre, Hartford Stage, the Huntington, the Kirk Douglas Theatre, The Public, San Jose Rep, Seattle Rep, and Yale Rep. Susie Medak M A N AG I N G D I R E C T O R Susie has served as Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s managing director since 1990, leading the administration and operations of the Theatre. She is president of the League of Resident Theatres (lort) and has been an officer on the board of Theatre Communica- Stephen Strawbridge LI G H T I N G D E S I G N Stephen has designed lighting for productions on and off Broadway, at most of the leading regional theatre and opera companies in the US, and for major premieres in Bergen, Copenhagen, The Hague, Hong Kong, Munich, Sao Paulo, Stockholm, and Vienna. His recent work includes The Glorious Ones and The House of Bernarda Alba for Lincoln Center, Coming Home at Long Wharf, The Evildoers and Passion Play at Yale Repertory Theatre, Prayer for My Enemy at Playwrights Horizons, Shipwrecked at Primary Stages, and Souls of Naples at the Mercadante in Naples, Italy and tfana. He has been nominated or won awards from the American Theatre Wing, Bay Area Critics Circle, Dallas Theater Critics Forum, Helen Hayes, and Lucille Lortel. He is co-chair of the design department at Yale School of Drama and resident lighting designer at Yale Rep. Join the Club Become a member of the Annual Fund today— and enjoy behind-the-scenes access and members-only opportunities to get behind the scenes. Your membership gift keeps theatre alive on our stages and in our classrooms. Your Gift. Your Community. Your Theatre. Click berkeleyrep.org/give or call 510 647-2907 to join the club today. 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 5 BERKELEY REP PRESENTS PROFILES tions Group. Susie is currently on the faculty of Yale School of Drama. She has served in an advisory capacity for the Joyce Foundation, and has participated extensively on panels for the National Endowment for the Arts as well as for the Massachusetts Arts Council. Closer to home, she is a commissioner of the Downtown Business Improvement District, former vice president of the Downtown Berkeley Association, and the founding chair of the Berkeley Arts in Education Steering Committee for Berkeley Unified School District and the Berkeley Cultural Trust. Susie is a proud member of the Mont Blanc Ladies’ Literary Guild and Trekking Society. Les Waters A S S O C I AT E A R T I S T I C D I R E C T O R The East Bay Specialists 1.800.Hi.Berkeley www.berkhills.com Obie Award-winner Les Waters has been the associate artistic director of Berkeley Rep for six years. His shows ranked among the Top 10 Plays of 2007 in Time Magazine, 2006 in the New York Times, and 2005 in TimeOut New York. Les has a history of collaborating with prominent playwrights like Caryl Churchill and Charles Mee, and champions important new voices such as Will Eno, Jordan Harrison, Sarah Ruhl, and Anne Washburn. His Berkeley productions include the world premieres of Fêtes de la Nuit, Finn in the Underworld, In the Next Room (or the vibrator play) and To the Lighthouse; the American premiere of tragedy: a tragedy; the West Coast premiere of Eurydice; and extended runs of The Glass Menagerie, The Pillowman, and Yellowman. Waters has numerous credits in New York, his native England, and at theatres in Boston, Chicago, La Jolla, Louisville, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, New Haven, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington, DC. He led the mfa directing program at UC San Diego, serves on the board of tcg, and is an associate artist of The Civilians, a theatre group based in New York. Madeleine Oldham D R A M AT U R G Madeleine is Berkeley Rep’s literary manager and resident dramaturg. As literary manager and associate dramaturg at Baltimore’s Center Stage, she produced the First Look reading series, and headed up its young audience initiative. Before moving to Baltimore, she was the literary manager at Seattle Children’s Theatre, where she oversaw an extensive commissioning program. She also acted as assistant and interim literary manager at Seattle’s Intiman Theatre. Madeleine recently completed four years of service on the Executive Committee of Literary Managers and Dramaturgs of the Americas, and has also worked with A Contemporary Theatre (act/Seattle), Austin Scriptworks, Crowded Fire, Geva Theatre, the Kennedy Center the Neo-Futurists, and Portland Center Stage. 26 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 Amy Potozkin C A STING DIREC TOR Amy is in her 19th season with Berkeley Rep, where she serves as artistic associate and casting director. She has also had the pleasure of casting for act/Seattle, Aurora Theatre Company, Arizona Theatre Company, B Street Theatre, The Bay Area Playwrights Festival, Dallas Theatre Company, Marin Theatre Company, San Jose Rep, Social Impact Productions Inc, Traveling Jewish Theatre, and Charlie Varon’s play Ralph Nader is Missing at the Marsh. Amy cast roles in the films Conceiving Ada, starring Tilda Swinton, and Josh Kornbluth’s Haiku Tunnel. She has been a coach to hundreds of Bay Area actors and led organizational team-building workshops for Biotech Partners and Maxxcomm. She received her mfa from Brandeis University, where she was also an artist-in-residence. John & Helen Meyer EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS John and Helen have been Berkeley Rep subscribers for over 25 years. They own and operate Meyer Sound, a Berkeley-based company that designs and manufactures professional audio equipment and provides electro-acoustical architectural services. Meyer Sound employs over 350 people in their offices in Berkeley, Nashville, Canada, Germany, Mexico and Australia. Helen Meyer has served on the Berkeley Rep board of trustees for the past ten years, She also serves on the board of the Mark Morris Dance Group as well as the Alameda County Workforce Investment Board. John Meyer is a fellow of the Audio Engineering Society and was recently awarded the Silver Award for outstanding technical contributions to his field. He is also the recipient of an R&D 100 award for measurement technology. The Meyers are delighted to play a part in outstanding theatre here at Berkeley Rep. Richard A. Rubin & H. Marcia Smolens EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS Richard and Marcia are long-time theatre and musical arts supporters. A lawyer by training, Richard heads a San Francisco public affairs management firm. He is a member of the state bar board of governors, a trustee of Kenyon College, and, though a “conscientious” Democrat, was appointed by Governor Schwartzenegger to the California Workforce Investment Board. He is a visiting professor at usf’s Fromm Institute, where he teaches a course on presidential and congressional campaigns and writes a bi-weekly column on political issues for the Marin Independent Journal. Marcia heads a government relations firm which operates in the Bay Area, and is a baseball and jazz enthusiast. She serves on the board of directors of both the Exploratorium and the Metta Fund. The couple resides in Marin County, and Richard’s five daughters fill out the supporting cast. Neil & Leah Mac Neil PRODUCERS Neil and Leah take great pleasure in supporting theatre and symphony in the Bay Area. Neil founded Spiral Binding Company in 1952 and developed the business as a full-service venue for the graphic arts. Now, he enjoys limited involvement as his son takes over management. Leah contributes financial expertise to the business and is active with Mills College Alumnae Association, where she serves as the travel chair. Michael & Sue Steinberg Lake Park ~ The Right Place ~ The Right Choice PRODUCERS Michael and Sue have been interested in the arts since they met, and enjoy music, ballet and live theatre. Michael, who recently retired as chairman and chief executive officer of Macy’s West, served on Berkeley Rep’s board of trustees from 1999 to 2006 and currently serves on the board of directors of The Jewish Museum and ucsf Foundation. Sue serves on the board of the San Francisco-based Smuin Ballet. The Steinbergs have always enjoyed regional theatre, and are delighted to produce Crime and Punishment. The Bernard Osher Foundation CO - S P O N S O R The Bernard Osher Foundation was founded in 1977 by Bernard Osher, a respected businessman and community leader. The Foundation provides scholarship funding nationally to selected colleges and universities and funds integrative medicine centers at Harvard University, the University of California at San Francisco, and the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm. It also supports a growing network of lifelong learning institutes for seasoned adults located at 122 colleges and universities from Maine to Hawaii and Alaska. Arts and humanities grants are made to non-profit organizations principally in the San Francisco Bay Area and the state of Maine. The Honorable Barbro Osher, consul general of Sweden in San Francisco, serves as chairman of the Foundation’s board of directors. C hoose living at Lake Park Retirement Residence and you’ll find the right place at the right time to answer the “What-if’s” of the future. Now’s the perfect time to find the kind of residence that meets your needs; the kind of diverse community that provides you with life-enriching surroundings. And, you’ll appreciate the benefits of Continuing Care knowing life’s challenges can be met right where you live. LAKE PARK RETIREMENT RESIDENCE A Community of California-Nevada Methodist Homes 1850 Alice Street • Oakland, CA 94612 (510) 835-5511 Toll Free 1 (866) 384-3130 Fax (510) 273-0529 Lic. # 0011400369 COA #080 -!9"%#+ ()'(3#(//, %34 Berkeley’s Independent College Preparatory High School "ANCROFT7AY"ERKELEY WWWMAYBECKHSORG 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 7 Berkeley Montessori School www.bmsonline.org Inspiring Scholars Thespians Poets Arstists Musicians Since 1963 BMS Middle School’s 2008 Production of “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” BERKELEY REP PRESENTS PROFILES bart SEASON SPONSOR Voted America’s number one transit system in 2005, the Bay Area Rapid Transit District is a 104-mile, automated rapid-transit system that serves over three million people. Fortythree bart stations are located in Alameda, Contra Costa, San Francisco, and San Mateo Counties. Trains traveling up to 80 mph now connect San Francisco to sfo, as well as other San Mateo County destinations. The East Bay communities that bart serves stretch north to Richmond, east to Pittsburg/Bay Point, west to Dublin/Pleasanton, and south to Fremont. bart’s mission is to provide safe, reliable, economical, and energy-efficient means of transportation. Since opening in September 1972, bart has safely carried more than 1.5 billion passengers more than 18 billion passenger-miles. bart stations are fully accessible to disabled persons. bart’s current weekday ridership is approximately 320,000. Wells Fargo SEASON SPONSOR contact Paula Farmer, Director of Admission, to schedule a tour [email protected] or 510-665-8800 x.103 As a top corporate giver to Bay Area nonprofits for many years, Wells Fargo recognizes Berkeley Repertory Theatre for its leadership in supporting the performing arts and its programs. As the oldest and largest financial services company headquartered in California, Wells Fargo has top financial professionals providing business banking, investments, brokerage, trust, mortgage, insurance, commercial and consumer finance, and much more. Talk to a Wells Fargo banker today to see how we can help you become more financially successful. Additional support and thanks Research Assistant Daniel Troyano Russian pronounciation Zara Kamraz Fight director Dave Maier Wardrobe Alex Zeek Scenic Carpenters Russell Facente Kimberly Jew Lara Shimasaki Stage Carpenter Liza Wakeman 2 8 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 Community partner. Distinguished tradition. Wells Fargo is proud to continue our tradition of strong community partnership. Since 1852 Wells Fargo & Company has helped generations of families with complex financial needs realize their dreams. Solutions include: N N N N N Private Banking Trust and Estate Services Brokerage Services through Wells Fargo Investments, LLC Investment Management Life Insurance To learn more about how we can partner with you, contact: Christopher Castro Regional Private Banker 1 Montgomery Street, 1st Floor San Francisco, CA 94104 415.222.8996 Then. Now. For generations to come. Private Client Services provides financial products and services through various banking and brokerage affiliates of Wells Fargo & Company including Wells Fargo Investments, LLC (member SIPC). Wells Fargo makes insurance available through Wells Fargo Insurance, Inc. or licensed affiliates. CA license #0831603. © 2009 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. Member FDIC We acknowledge the following Annual Fund donors whose contributions from January 2008 through January 2009 helped to make possible the Theatre’s artistic and community outreach programs. Supporters noted with Ê made gifts in-kind. Funders whose names are noted with have used a matching gift to double or triple their initial contribution. CONTRIBUTORS FOUNDATION SPONSORS GIF T S OF $ 100,000 AND ABOVE GIF T S OF $2 5,000 –49,999 GIF TS OF $5,000 –9,999 Doris Duke Charitable Foundation The William Randolph Hearst Foundation The Ira and Leonore Gershwin Philanthropic Fund The William & Flora Hewlett Foundation The James Irvine Foundation The Koret Foundation The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation The Shubert Foundation The Harold and Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation The Mosse Foundation for the Arts and Education National Endowment for the Arts The San Francisco Foundation Wallis Foundation Woodlawn Foundation Berkeley Civic Arts Program and Commission Ann & Gordon Getty Foundation David B. Gold Foundation Oakland Fund for the Arts Ramsay Family Foundation The Morris Stulsaft Foundation van Löben Sels/RembeRock Foundation GIF TS OF $50,000 –99,999 Edgerton Foundation The Bernard Osher Foundation GIF T S OF $10,000 –24,999 GIF TS OF $1,000 –4,999 Anonymous The Frank H. & Eva B. Buck Foundation California Arts Council Crescent Porter Hale Foundation The Green Foundation J.M. Long Foundation The Thomas J. Long Foundation UC Berkeley Chancellor’s Community Partnership Fund Alameda County Arts Commission Joyce & William Brantman Foundation Civic Foundation Dramatists Guild Fund Kazan, McClain, Abrams, Fernandez, Lyons, Farrise, and Greenwood Foundation Martin Sosin Stratton-Petit Foundation Bernard E. & Alba Witkin Charitable Foundation GIF T S OF $10,000 –24,999 GIF TS OF $1,000 –4,999 Bank of the West BluesCruise.com Citi Foundation The Morrison & Foerster Foundation Peet’s Coffee & Tea Pixar Animation Studios Seagate Properties Inc. Wealth Management at The Mechanics Bank Bell Investment Advisors, Inc. Bingham McCutchen LLP Constitution Square The Men’s Wearhouse Reed Smith LLP Sybase Inc. CORPOR ATE SPONSOR S SEA SON SPONSORS GIF TS OF $25,000 AND ABOVE GIF T S OF $5,000 –9,999 Armanino McKenna LLP Bayer USA Foundation Clif Bar Inc. Deloitte Financial Advisory Services LLP Foley & Lardner LLP Genstar Capital LLC MBV Law LLP Meyer Sound Panoramic Interests Ruegg & Ellsworth Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP STG Asset Management, Inc. UBS Financial Services Inc. IN - KIND SPONSOR S Is your company a Corporate Sponsor? Berkeley Rep’s Corporate Partnership program offers excellent opportunities to network, entertain clients, reward employees, increase visibility and support the arts and arts education in the community. For details visit berkeleyrep.org or call Daria Hepps at 510 647-2904. M ATCHING GIF TS The following companies have matched their employees’ contributions to Berkeley Rep. Please call the development department at 510 647-2907 to find out if your company matches gifts. Bobby G’s Pizzeria Bowzer’s Pizza Bogatin, Corman & Gold Café Clem Darling Flower Shop downtown restaurant Etc Catering Grace Street Catering Kevin Berne Images La Note Restaurant Provençal Oliveto Restaurant Post Meridian Ricola USA The Ritz-Carlton, San Francisco Rivoli Restaurant RM Production Firm, Inc. Semifreddi’s Scharffen Berger Chocolate Maker Shorenstein Hays—Nederlander Theatres LLC Solstice Press Trattoria Corso Tomatina Venus Restaurant Raymond Vineyards is the official wine purveyor of Berkeley Repertory Theatre. 3 0 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 A&B Foundation · Adobe Systems Inc. · American Express · Argonaut Group, Inc. · Bank of America Matching Gift Program · Charles Schwab Corporation Foundation · Chevron Matching Grants Program · Clorox Company Foundation · Federated Department Stores, Inc. · First Quadrant · Franklin Templeton · Fremont Group Foundation · GlaxoSmithKline Foundation · Hewlett Packard Employee Charitable Giving Program · IBM Corp. Matching Grants Program · John Wiley & Sons, Inc. · Johnson & Johnson · Lawrence Livermore National Security · Levi Strauss Foundation · Macy’s West · Merrill Lynch & Co. Foundation, Inc. · Microsoft Matching Gifts Program · Oracle Corporation · PG&E · SBC Foundation · Sun Microsystems Foundation · Union Bank of California Foundation · VISA USA, Inc. · Washington Mutual Foundation CONTRIBUTORS LEG END Êin-kind gift matching gift INDIVIDUAL ANNUAL FUND DONOR S DONOR CIRCLE SEA SON PRODUCERS $5 0,0 0 0 & U P Anonymous EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS $2 5,0 0 0 – 49,9 9 9 Rena Bransten Bill Falik & Diana Cohen Wayne Jordan & Quinn Delaney John & Helen Meyer Rita Moreno & Leonard Gordon Ê Eddie & Amy Orton A SSOCIATE PRODUCER S $ 6,0 0 0 – 11,9 9 9 Anonymous Anonymous, on behalf of Karen Grove Carole B. Berg Becky & Jeff Bleich Stephen K. Cassidy & Rebecca L. Powlan Robert Council & Ann Parks-Council Narsai & Venus DavidÊ Robin & Rich Edwards William Espey & Margaret Hart Edwards John & Carol Field David & Vicki Fleishhacker Virginia & Timothy Foo Kerry Francis & John Jimerson Mary & Nicholas Graves Scott & Sherry Haber Migsy & Jim Hamasaki Bob & Linda Harris The Hellman Family Foundation Ms. Wendy E. Jordan Julie Matlof Kennedy & Patrick Kennedy, Panoramic Interests Jean & Jack Knox Wanda Kownacki Ted & Carole Krumland Suzanne Lafetra Zandra Faye LeDuff Dale & Don Marshall Sandra & Ross McCandless Martin & Janis McNair Stephanie Mendel Laura Onopchenko & Martin Dragomirecky Virginia Patterson Kaye & Randy Rosso Pat Rougeau Jodi Schiller & Ben Douglas Douglas Tilden Wendy Williams Sheila Wishek Steven & Linda Wolan Martin & Margaret Zankel PRESIDENT S $ 3,0 0 0 – 5,9 9 9 Anonymous (3) Anonymous, through the JEC Foundation Neil & Gene Barth Tracy Brown & Greg Holland Drs. Don & Carol Anne Brown Bill Byrne Jr. Lois M. De Domenico Delia Fleishhacker Ehrlich Nancy & Jerry Falk Steven, Jill, & Kevin Fugaro Gifts of Tamsin Lynn & Don Glaser Howard Grothe & Robert James Donor Advised Fund of Horizons Foundation Earl & Bonnie Hamlin Doug Herst Barbara E. Jones in memory of William E. Jones Kanbar Charitable Trust, Jewish Community Endowment Fund Peter Pervere & Georgia Cassel Ê Marjorie Randolph Richard A. Rubin & H. Marcia Smolens Betty & Jack Schafer Dr. & Mrs. Philip D. Schild The Strauch Kulhanjian Family Jean & Michael Strunsky Felicia Woytak & Steve Rasmussen PRODUCERS $ 12 ,0 0 0 – 2 4,9 9 9 David & Vicki Cox Thalia Dorwick Rick Hoskins & Lynne Frame Robert Kelling Leonard Merrill Kurz John & Karen Levy Jennifer S. Lindsay Dixon Long Michelle Mercer & Bruce Golden Steven & Patrece Mills Ronald MorrisonÊ Sandi & Dick Pantages Norman & Janet Pease David & Marilyn Pratt Ivy & Leigh Robinson David S. H. Rosenthal Ms. Riva Rubnitz Isabella Salaverry & Spreck Rosekrans Beth & David Sawi Liliane & Ed Schneider Family Foundation Joyce & Jim Schnobrich Dr. & Mrs. Stephen Schoen Laura Wais Saul Zaentz DIREC TOR S $ 1, 5 0 0 –2 ,9 9 9 Anonymous (6) Pat Angell in memory of Gene Angell Ross E. Armstrong Nina Auerbach Ken & Joni Avery Bryan Balazs Jane & Bill Bardin Edith Barschi Stephen Belford Linden & Carl Berry Caroline Booth Broitman-Basri Family Thomas & Tecoah Bruce Kimo Campbell Lynne Carmichael Jennifer Chaiken & Sam Hamilton Susan Chamberlin Mel & Hella Cheitlin Earl T. Cohen & Heidi M. ShaleÊ Barbara Comer Ed Cullen & Ann O’Connor John & Stephanie Dains Andrew Daly & Jody Taylor Ilana Debare & Sam Schuchat Corinne & Mike Doyle Iwona & J. Keith Dunne Margareta & Staffan Encrantz Merle & Michael Fajans Cynthia Farner Don & Sylvia Fillman Kristina Flanagan Mort & Frannie Fleishhacker Herb & Marianne Friedman James Gala Karl & Kathleen Geier Dennis & Susan Johann Gilardi Marjorie Ginsburg & Howard Slyter Lauren Golden Daniel & Hilary B. Goldstine Garrett Gruener & Amy Slater David & Vera Hartford Neil & Leah Mac Neil Dugan Moore Mary Ann & Lou Peoples Len & Barbara Rand Deborah & Leo Ruth Patricia Sakai & Richard Shapiro Joan Sarnat & David Hoffman Sally Smith & Don Burns Stephen & Cindy Snow Michael & Sue Steinberg Guy Tiphane Gail & Arne Wagner Ann & Shawn Fischer Hecht Dr. Christina Herdell Gail & Bob Hetler Mr. & Mrs. Harlan Heydon Jennifer Heyneman & Christophe Schuhmann Richard N. Hill & Nancy Lundeen Michael & Marites HornÊ Leslie & George Hume Helmut H. Kapczynski & Colleen Neff John Kouns & Anne Baele Kouns Helen E. Land Louise Laufersweiler & Warren Sharp Nancy & George Leitmann Ellen & Barry Levine Tom Lockard & Alix Marduel Lois & Gary Marcus Sumner & Hermine Marshall Charlotte & Adolph Martinelli Jill Matichak Judith & Kim Maxwell Miles & Mary Ellen McKey Susie Medak & Greg Murphy Suzanne Mellard & Lon O’Neil Toby Mickelson & Donald Brody Roger Miles Marlene & Stephen MillerÊ John & Katrina Miottel Mr. David Mish Andy & June Monach Scott Montgomery & Marc Rand Eleanor Moore Margo Murray Pamela & Mitchell Nichter Jan & Howard Oringer Nancy T. Park Tom & Kathy Pendleton Wil & Joyce Pinney Bonnie Raitt Jonathan & Hillary ReinisÊ Bill Reuter & Ruth Major John & Jody Roberts Enid & Alan Rubin Mitzi Sales & John Argue Lisa Salomon & Scott Forrest Monica Salusky & John K. Sutherland Jeane & Roger Samuelsen Stephen C. Schaefer Jackie & Paul Schaeffer Linda & Nathan Schultz Barbara & Irving Schwartz Edie Silber & Steve Bomse Nat Simons & Laura Baxter-Simons Kae Skeels Sherry & David Smith Susan & David Terris Ama Torrance & David Davies Marco A. Vidal Fund, in memory of Jean K. Jones John & Pamela Walker J. Weinstein Robert & Sheila Weisblatt Wendy Willrich Laura & Ernest Winslow Steven Winkel & Barbara Sahm Charles & Nancy Wolfram 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 3 1 PL AY WRIGHT S $ 1,0 0 0 –1, 49 9 Anonymous (5) Denise Abrams & David Harrington Shirley & Lew Albright Bruce & Martha Atwater Helen C. Barber Sandra Barkdull & Richard Cleveland Valerie Barth & Peter Wiley Jan Onne Bodenstab, in memory of Bernard Petrie Marilyn Bray Ed & Lisa Chilton Florence Cohen, in honor of Dugan Moore Constance Crawford Barbara & Tim Daniels Richard & Anita Davis David & Monika Eisenbud Martin & Barbara Fishman Linda Jo Fitz Rick Fitzgerald & Marilyn MacGregor Kirk & Suanne Flatow Sara Fousekis Patricia Fraher Nancy Francis Don & Janie Friend Paul T. Friedman Frank & Sarah Fuller Deborah & Howard Goodman Phyllis & Eugene Gottfried Robert & Helga Grabske Dick & Lois Halliday Gregg Hauser & Judy O’Young, MD Hilary & Tom Hoynes Eric, Justin & Gavin Hughes & Priscilla Wanerus Paula Hughmanick & Steven Berger Harold & Lyn Isbell Robert T. Jones Jr. & Claiborne S. Jones Beth & Fred Karren Pearl T. Kimura Angelos Kottas & Phyra McCandless Randy LaRoche & David Loudon Susan B. Levine David Lincoln King & Timothy Stevenson Marsyas Fund at the Tides Foundation Bennett & Wendy Markel Match Vineyards Karen & John McGuinn Pamela Mead & Wolf Larson Jerry Mosher Jim Newman & Jane Ivory Robert S. Newton Richard & Lenore Niles Judith & Richard Oken Bernard & Barbro Osher, in honor of Mr. & Mrs. Martin Zankel’s 150th Birthday Gerane Wharton Park Brian D. Parsons Bob & MaryJane Pauley Paul & Suzanne Peterson Chris & Karen Pohl We gratefully recognize the following members of the Annual Fund whose contributions were received in January 2009. SUPPORTER S $ 2 5 0 –49 9 Anonymous (7) · Terry Pink Alexander · Robert Z. & Evelyn L. Apte · Barbara & Jeff Beck · Elizabeth Brady · Michael & Sheila Cooper · Lawrence Crapo & Desiree Gillingham · James Cuthbertson · David Eimerl · Bill & Susan Epstein · Jacqueline & Christian Erdman · Nancy Ferguson · Jane Gottesman & Geoffrey Biddle · Peter & Florence Hart, in honor of John L. Field · Teresa Hickey · Ken & Karen Keller · Robert McDowell · Joanne M. Medak · Charles Pollack & Joanna Cooper · Beth Polland · Phyllis Pottish-Lewis & Adam Lewis · Mary & Matthew Powell · Kent Rasmussen · Geri Rossen · Marc Scruggs · Emily D. Sexton · Carol Shen · Elizabeth Short · Paul Silva · Helen Vurek · Neil & Madeline Weinstein · The Wellsfry-Porat Family · Marilyn & Ted Westphal · George & Kathleen Wolf Susan & Eric Poncelet Pugh Family Foundation Donald D. Roberts, in memory of Donna Roberts Boyard & Anne Rowe Mr. & Mrs. Robert Schiller Georgia P. Swanson Julia Sze Steven & Heidi Tanner Alison Teeman & Michael Yovino-Young Pate & Judy Thomson Len Weiler & Alice Collins Beth Weissman Mary Ann Wight Greg Willenborg Grace Williams & Bernice Strube Sally Woolsey Sam & Joyce Zanze AC TOR S $5 0 0 – 9 9 9 Anonymous (22) Geraldine & Marcus Alexis Laurence Anderson Marcia & George Argyris Susan Babuka Mary Bailey Barbara Jones Bambara & Massey J. Bambara Elizabeth Balderston Susan & Barry Baskin Richard & Katherine K. Berman Robert Berman & Jane Ginsburg Howard & Estelle Bern The Blackman Family Laura Blair & Mitchell Zeemont Dr. & Mrs. Gerald Block Mr. & Mrs. Darl E. Bowers Linda Brandenburger Melody Burns Bruce Carlton & Richard McCall Carolle Carter & Jess Kitchens Ê Jan ChambersÊ Earl T. Cohen & Heidi M. Shale Ê Sue Cook & Mark Solle Karen & David Crommie Drs. Michael Darby & Toni Martin Pat & Steve Davis Jennifer DeGolia Harry & Susan Dennis Francine & Beppe Di Palma Noah & Sandra Doyle Nancy Ebbert Roger & Jane Emanuel Gini Erck & David Petta Don Erickson Kathleen Evans & Bruce Bagnell Betty I. Feinstein Brigitte & Louis Fisher Mr. Michael Flora Stephen Follansbee & Richard Wolitz Georgina Franco Dorothy & Chuck Garber Marilee Gardner Susan Berger & John Gertz Gregory Giska Judith & Alex Glass Stuart Gold Marcia Goodman & Hank Levy Drs. Lloyd & Rochelle Gordon John & Diane Gossard Gilbert & Sally Gradinger Bonnie & Sy Grossman Lawrence & Helen Grossman Karen Grove & Julian Cortella Hatti Hamlin Glenn Hammonds Alan Harper & Carol Baird Joe Hartzog Richard L. Hay Drs. Gareth & Ruth Hill Elaine Hitchcock Ms. Joy Hoge Rebecca Hull & Joe Raabe Lynda & Dr. J. Pearce Hurley, in honor of the teaching of Michael Navarra Leonard & Flora Isaacson Mr.& Mrs. Harold S. Johnston Richard & Shirley Jones Pat & Chris Kenber Christopher Killian & Carole Ungvarsky Rosalind & Sung-Hou Kim Jack Klingelhofer Carole & Henry Klyce John Kruse & Gary Beuschel Henry & Natalie Lagorio Winston & Elaine Lambert Wayne & Dena Lamprey William & Adair Langston Mr. & Mrs. S.J. Lapporte Maribelle & Stephen Leavitt Bonnie Levinson & Dr. Donald Kay Nashormeh & Delroy Lindo Mary A. Mackey Vonnie Madigan Joan & Roger Mann Emily & Larry Mannion John E. Matthews Doug & Jill McCoy C. Alison McLean Winton & Margaret D. McKibben Don & Mara Melandry Caryl & Peter Mezey Julie Montanari Patricia Motzkin & Richard Feldman Ron Nakayama Markus Niebanck Claire Noonan & Peter Landsberger Barbara & Pier Oddone CONTRIBUTOR S FRIENDS $ 15 0 –2 49 $ 75 –149 Anonymous (4) · Robert & Gertrude Allen · Mr. & Mrs. Charles Bataille · Stephen Bicknese · Stephen J. Bischoff · Bertel Borowsky · Esta Brand · Caitlin Cain · Annabelle Cloner · Joyce S. Cross · Jackie & Charles Desoer · Bridget Dobbins · Thomas W. Edwards & Rebecca Parlette-Edwards · Meredith & Harry Endsley · Mary Fishman · Mr. & Mrs. Steven Fredman · Arlene Getz · Joyce Hawkins & Jack Sweitzer · John Heller & Emily Payne · Belle Huang · Margaret Kendall · Mary Tolman Kent · Lindy Khan & Amiram Givon · Doris Kinsley · Jeff Klingman · Harvey & Margaret Kokka · Susan J. Lane · Thomas LaQueur · Howard & Siesel Maibach · Avalon B. Master · The Medress Family Fund of the Jewish Community Foundation · Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Neumiller · Charles Olson & Yoko Watanabe · Felicia Oldfather · Michael & Davida Rabbino · Daniel & Barbara Radin · Marie Radke · Marc A. Rieffel · Bruce & Marie Rosenblatt · L. M. Rubinoff · Paul E. Russell · Dana & Peggy Shultz · Martha Sirgo · Teresa & Patrick Sullivan · Rosalinda Taymor · Susan & Bradford Wait · David Walsh · John & Janet Williams Anonymous (6) · Wilhelmina Abraham · Daniel & Nancy Altman · Deanne Amaden · Susan Andrews · Howard & Selma Aslin · Celia Bakke · Sarah Ballard · Alice Bartholomew · Jan Bass & David Wallace · Richard & Carol Bee · David Beery · Charles Benedict · Ruth Ann Binder · Mary Ellen & George Boyet · James Bradshaw · Barbara A. Brenner & Suzanne Lampert · Sandra Briggs · Alice Brown · Donald Brown · Lisa Burkett · Betsy Collins · Tracu Creer · Colleen Crook · Monica & Gary David · Debra Davis · Anita C. 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Hammes · Jeff Haney · Lona Hardy · Mae Harms · Signe Harnett · Anne Haskel · Julie Hayes · Sharon Hayes-Watts · Kathleen Heath · Linda Helman · Susan Helmrich · Ms. Ruth Henrich · Karla Herndon · Robert Herreshoff · Jocelynn Herrick Stone & Rick Stone · Ms. Ellen J. Hershey · Jerry Oyarzo Hickey · Bette Hirsch, in honor of the work of Thalia Dorwick · Sara & Allen Hirsch · Kristina Holland · Christopher Hoover · Frederika Horton · Timothy Howe · Hector Huang · Estie Sid Hudes · John Hulls · Carol Hum · Geralyn Hurney · Joanne Jacobs · Carla Javits · Kristen Jensen · Edward & Shirley Jochim · Leonard Johnson · Ray Johnson · Ronald Johnson · Doris Johnston · Nathan Johnston · Robert Jolda · Mark & Cynthia Jordan · Deborah Joseph · Vivian Kane · Warren Kaplan · Mary Ann Kassier · MICHAEL LEIBERT SOCIETY Members of this society, which is named in honor of Founding Director Michael W. Leibert, have designated Berkeley Rep in their estate plans. Planned gifts sustain Berkeley Rep’s Endowment Fund unless the donor specifies otherwise. The Endowment Fund provides financial stability that enables Berkeley Rep to maintain the highest standards of artistic excellence, support new work, and serve the community with innovative education and outreach programs. For more information on becoming a member, visit our website at berkeleyrep.org or contact Lynn Eve Komaromi, Director of Development, at 510 647-2903 or [email protected]. Michael Katz · Martha Jane Kaufman · Ms. Elizabeth Kavaler · James Keller · Lee Kempf · Patricia Kernighan & Paul Gordon · June Kim · Lisa King · Kathleen Kirby · Christopher Klein · Kimiko Klein · Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. 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Papa · Katherine Papoe · Laura Buzzo Paratore · Rachel Payne · Danette Peltier · Jagoda PerichAnderson · Kari Peterson · Nick Peterson · Ross Peterson · John R. Petrovsky · Linda Phillips · Joan Piaget · Michael & Judith Piazza · Judith Piper · Tora Poeter · George & Pamela Pogojeff · Daniel Polikoff · Paul & Christine Prusiner · Senta Pugh Chamberlain · Pam Qualley · George Queeley · Carolyn Queener · Darlene Quinn · Salvador Ramirez · Mark Rampton · Danny Rand · Reenie Raschke · Valerie Raymor · Patricia & John Rea · Guadalupe Reardon · Douglas Reeves · Kevin Reidy · Marie Rhein · Nora Richardson · Dr. Michael Rizzo · Laura K. Roberts & Aaron Loeb · Ms. Zona L. Roberts · Cayen & Tom Robertson · Will Rockafellow · Patricia Rockeman · Karla Rodriguez · Walter Roos · Karen Rosenak · Scott Rosenberg · Hugh Ross · Catherine Roth · Stephanie Roth · Roberta Rothman · Jerry Rowe · Kathy Rowland · Juanita Ruff · Steven Russell · Terry Saltz · Hadley Salz · Bonnie Sanders · John & Melanie Sandler · Ardena Sandmeyer · Marie Sanner · Herminia S. Sayre · Ron Schloss · Sarah & Wayne Schneider · Betty Schrohe · Erin Schultz · Roger Schwab · Roberta Sears · Jon Seidel · Joanell Sera · Ms. Diane Sharken · Bonnie Shaw · Jennifer L. Shaw · Jonathan Shaw · Marlene Shigekawa · David Shipp · Richard Shipps · Frederica Shockley · Jeff & Mardi Sicular-Mertens · Mr. & Mrs. Adam Seigman · Kevin Simmons · Judy Simons · Andres Sinohui · Ms. Nancy M. Skinner · Sandra Slater · Barbara Slemmons · Brian Smith · Elaine Smith · Dr. Cherrill Spencer · William Statsky · Lousie Stevens · Anne Stiles-Heller · Allison Stone · Paula Street · Anne Struck · Robert & Jane Sullwold · Sue Hee Sung · Howard & Nelda Sussman · Renee Swayne · Erin Sweeney · Karen Swezey · Virginia Sykes · Rosalee Szabo · Ellen Tarby · Ryan Tasker · Ranzo Taylor · Frankie Taylor · Michael Tedesco · Stephanie Thomas · David Thompson · Keith Thompson · Kim Todd · Kelli Frostad Toledo · Ed & Barbara Tonningsen · Rebecca Trachtenberg · Hoanganh Tran · Ruby Trauner · Harriet Tucker · James Tucker · Cindy Valentine · John Vallerga · Molly Van Etten · Hiromi Vardy · Henry Velasco · Mary Visher · Helen Wallis · Andrea Walt · Lisa Ward · Sarah Ward · Jennifer Warila · Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Warner · Joan Strawder Webster & Bill Webster · Phyllis Weinstock · Stan Weisner · Edith Wells · Richard West · Kathi Whalin · Kathy White · Vivian Wiitala · Gail Wilkinson · Michael & Karen Willcox · Anthony Williams & Anne Brodzky · Barbara Williamson · Mr. & Mrs. Wilson · Olly & Elouise Wilson · Thomas Wilson · David Winn · Molly Wintroub · Victoria Wong · Patricia Wood · Scott Worthge · Pam Woy · Sylvia Wu · Gen Yaduda · Dara Yazdani · Bob & Judi Yeager · Donna & Clifford Yokomizo · Elizabeth Zarlengo · Marilyn Zatz · Mary E. Zehr · Morris Zeldtich · Donald Zimmerman The following individuals have generously provided for Berkeley Rep in their estate plans: Zandra Faye LeDuff Dale & Don Marshall Sumner & Hermine Marshall Rebecca Martinez & Peter Sloss Suzanne & Charles McCulloch Susie Medak & Greg Murphy Amy Pearl Parodi Margaret Phillips The Estate of Margaret Purvine Marjorie Randolph Betty & Jack Schafer Stephen & Cindy Snow Michael & Sue Steinberg Dr. Douglas & Anne Stewart Jean Strunsky Phillip & Melody Trapp Dorothy Walker Grace Williams Karen & Henry Work Anonymous Ken & Joni Avery Nancy Axelrod Carole B. Berg The Estate of Nelly Berteaux Bruce Carlton & Richard G. McCall Stephen K. Cassidy The Estate of Nancy Croley Andrew Daly & Jody Taylor William Espey & Margaret Hart Edwards Carol & John Field Mary & Nicholas Graves Fred Hartwick Hoskins/Frame Family Trust 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 3 3 Named funds Dale Elliot Fund Bret C. Harte Young Directors Fund Mosse Foundation Artistic Development Fund Jan & Howard Oringer Outreach Coordinator Position The Bernard Osher Foundation New Play Development Program The Strauch Kulhanjian Artistic Innovation Fund We acknowledge the following donors for their generous support of the 40th Anniversary Campaign: INVESTORS CIRCLE Anonymous* Wayne Jordan & Quinn Delaney* The Bernard Osher Foundation The Strauch Kulhanjian Family* The Harold & Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust Guy Tiphane* Wayne & Gladys Valley Foundation SEASON PRODUCERS CIRCLE Doris Duke Charitable Foundation Ira & Leonore Gershwin Philanthropic Fund Jean & Michael Strunsky* PRODUCERS CIRCLE Anonymous* S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation David & Vicki Cox* Walter & Elise Haas Fund Rick Hoskins & Lynne Frame* The James Irvine Foundation John & Helen Meyer* Jan & Howard Oringer* Marjorie Randolph* Joan Sarnat & David Hoffman* Betty & Jack Schafer* Felicia Woytak & Steve Rasmussen* Martin & Margaret Zankel* ASSOCIATE PRODUCERS CIRCLE Shelley & Jonathan Bagg Becky & Jeff Bleich Thalia Dorwick Robin & Rich Edwards Bill Falik & Diana Cohen* Kerry Francis & John Jimerson Mary & Nicholas Graves The Hearst Foundation, Inc. Sarah McArthur & Michael LeValley Sandra & Ross McCandless Dugan Moore Mary Ann & Lou Peoples* Peter Pervere & Georgia Cassel Richard A. Rubin & H. Marcia Smolens Cynthia & William Schaff Michael & Sue Steinberg* PRESIDENTS CIRCLE Ken & Joni Avery Kimo Campbell Jennifer Chaiken & Sam Hamilton William Espey & Margaret Hart Edwards David & Vicki Fleishhacker in memory of Peter Sloss Scott & Sherry Haber Julie Matlof Kennedy & Patrick Kennedy Wanda Kownacki Carole & Ted Krumland Dixon Long David & Connie Lowe Dale & Don Marshall Eddie & Amy Orton Beth & David Sawi DIRECTORS CIRCLE Rena Bransten John & Carol Field Susie Medak & Greg Murphy Len & Barbara Rand Stephen & Cindy Snow The Tournesol Project Arne & Gail Wagner Woodlawn Foundation PLAYWRIGHTS CIRCLE Anonymwous (2) Stephen K. Cassidy Mel & Hella Cheitlin East Bay Community Foundation Kristina Flanagan Tom Hanks & Rita Wilson Roger & Silvija Hoag Patrick & Holly O’Dea Patricia Sakai & Richard Shapiro Dr. & Mrs. Phillip D. Schild Kae Skeels Wells Fargo Foundation The following contributors made gifts to the 40th Anniversary Campaign between January 2008 and January 2009. Anonymous (3) Pat Angell in memory of Gene Angell Susan & Barry Baskin Harry & Suzie Blount Charles & Kristine Cardall Kristin Carpenter Susan Chamberlin Constance Crawford Harry & Susan Dennis Adam Edlavitch, Seth Edlavitch, Helen Siegel & Sherry Smith in honor of David Smith Alex Edwards Entrekin Foundation Cynthia Farner Harvey & Deana Freedman Steven, Jill & Kevin Fugaro Diana Graham & Jack Zimmermann Helen Goldsmith Amanda & Raymond Haas Mary Hamilton Earl & Bonnie Hamlin Bob & Linda Harris Mr. & Mrs. Harlan Heydon Bruce Koch Woof Kurtzman & Elizabeth Hertz Clara Lai Zandra Faye LeDuff Nancy & George Leitmann Ellen & Barry Levine Nashormeh & Delroy Lindo Thomas J. & Gail W. Lowry Neil & Leah Mac Neil Miles & Mary Ellen McKey Ron Nakayama Hua & Nga Ngo Barbara & Pier Oddone Judith & Richard Oken James & Susan Penrod Regina Phelps Richard & Barbara Rosenberg Hans Schoepflin Douglas Tilden Wendy Williams David Williamson & Helen Marcus Supporters denoted with an asterisk are members of the Artistic Innovators Club40. Club40 is a new donor program of 40 investors who make a combined commitment to the Annual Fund and 40th Anniversary Campaign of $250,000 or more over five years. Club40 has a maximum membership of 40 donors. Only 23 spaces remain. To learn more about the 40th Anniversary Campaign or Club40, contact Lynn Eve Komaromi, Director of Development, at 510 647-2903 or [email protected]. 3 4 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 Jan & Howard Oringer CO NTIN U ED FROM PAGE 12 is to help politically, economically, and socially disadvantaged people become more self-sufficient and productive in their lives and communities. We also work with children of the incarcerated, empowering them and offering them opportunities to change their lives. We believe that theatre provides a truly personal experience that can make an impact in the lives of young people. We also want to support Berkeley Rep’s excellent programs for new plays from new playwrights, allowing us to stretch ourselves intellectually and emotionally. Lastly, we give because of Tony Taccone and his great leadership. KATHIE LONGINOTTI REALTOR® & GRAMMY NOMINEE 510.981.3032 www.AtHomeEastBay.com bistro Visit berkeleyrep.org to learn more about the 40th Anniversary Campaign and the artistic and educational programs it supports. French food for the soul Scenic paint Walking distance to Berkeley Rep. Full bar, weekend brunch. CO NTIN U ED FROM PAGE 8 costume. Problems must quickly be solved, and sometimes elements that have been slaved over must be cut. Like a great Zen master, Lisa finds a way to enjoy the transience of her work. “It can be liberating that the set is temporary,” she says. “It isn’t destined for a museum, it’s not going to be chalked up as my legacy. It exists in memory and nowhere else.” Scenic painters must be ready to make giant leaps into the unknown and think quickly on their feet. They have to be incredibly organized and extremely flexible. As she eyes her hard-working crew from across the shop, Lisa explains, “Experience helps, but it takes a long time to build these skills, which is why it’s really important that the Bay Area continue to provide enough work for artisans. We want them to stick around.” Berkeley Rep employs over 85 local theatre artisans each season. Your patronage and support of the Theatre directly ensures that high-quality artistic work, such as scenic painting, remains vibrant and alive in our community. To help ensure this work continues, click berkeleyrep.org/give. Join Chef Todd on a culinary adventure in southwest France to explore the rich history, breathtaking countryside, and local cuisine. For more information, visit liaisonbistro.com 1849 Shattuck Avenue (corner of Hearst & Shattuck) Berkeley, CA 94709 · 510 849-2155 There are great artists in every field. We invite you to call one of ours! 1495 Shattuck Avenue, CA • 510.486.1495 www.CaliforniaMoves.com RESIDENTIAL BROKERAGE 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 35 ABOUT BERKELEY REP S TAFF AND AFFILIATIONS Artistic Director Tony Taccone Managing Director Susie Medak General Manager Karen Racanelli ARTIS TIC Associate Artistic Director Les Waters Artistic Associate & Casting Director Amy Potozkin Literary Manager/Dramaturg Madeleine Oldham SCE N E SH O P Technical Director Jim Smith Associate Technical Director Ryan O’Steen Shop Foreman Sam McKnight Master Carpenter Colin Babcock Carpenters E.T. Hazzard Stephanie Shipman Shop Intern Christopher Chauvet Database Manager Diana Amezquita Receptionist Barbra Ritchison Managing Director Fellow Shin Hyoung Sohn Bret C. Harte Directing Intern Mina Morita Literary/Dramaturgy Intern Alex Rosenthal Artists under Commission David Adjmi Glen Berger Marcus Gardley Rinne Groff Jordan Harrison Naomi Iizuka Dan LeFranc Tarell McCraney Rita Moreno Carlos Murillo Sharon Ott Sarah Ruhl Stew/Heidi Rodewald SCE NIC ART Charge Scenic Artist Lisa Lázár Scenic Art Intern Michael Fink PRO D U C TIO N Production Manager Tom Aberger Associate Production Manager Amanda Williams O’Steen Production Management Intern Octavia Driscoll Company Manager Christopher Jenkins Company & General Management Intern Jamie Caplan COS TUM ES Costume Shop Manager Maggi Yule Assistant Costume Designer Maggie Whitaker Draper Kitty Muntzel Tailor Kathy Kellner Griffith First Hand Janet Conery Wardrobe Supervisor Barbara Blair Costume Intern Lauren Fischer S TAG E M ANAG E M E NT Production Stage Manager Michael Suenkel Stage Manager Heath Belden Production Assistants Megan McClintock Leslie M. Radin ELEC TRIC S Master Electrician Frederick C. Geffken Production Electricians Christine Cochrane Zoltan DeWitt Electrics Intern Masha Tsimring Stage Management Interns Lee Helms Ryuji Suzkida S TAG E O PE R ATIO N S Stage Supervisor Julia Englehorn PRO PE RTIE S Properties Manager Ashley Dawn Assistant Properties Managers Gretta Grazier Jillian A. Green Properties Artisan Sarah Lowe Properties Intern Lisa Mei Ling Fong SOUND Sound Supervisor Heather Bradley Sound Engineers James Ballen Robyn Bykofsky Sound Intern Jocelyn Thompson ADMINIS TR ATIO N Controller Suzanne Pettigrew Director of Technology Gustav Davila Executive Assistant Andrew Susskind Human Resources Manager Eric Ipsen Bookkeeper Kristin Cato Human Resources Consultant Laurel Leichter 3 6 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 DE V E LO PM E NT Director of Development Lynn Eve Komaromi Corporate & Leadership Gifts Director Daria Hepps Special Events Manager Margo B. Chilless Individual Giving Manager Laura Fichtenberg Institutional Grants Manager Elisabeth Millican Development Assistant Catrina Kaupat Development Database Coordinator Jane Voytek Gifts Entry Associate Siobhan Doherty Development Intern Angèle Rodgers PATRON SERVICES Patron Services Manager John Gay House Manager Katrena S. Jackson Sub House Managers Cayley Carroll Octavia Driscoll Aleta George Ellen G. Maloney Kiki Poe Concessionaires Joan Anderson Michelle R. Baron Christopher Fan Lauren Fischer Abby Hanson Zoe Kalionzes Sydney Katz Devon LaBelle Angèle Rodgers Alex Rosenthal Jocelyn Thompson Usher Coordinators Nelson & Marilyn Goodman BOX OFFICE Ticket Services Director Christine Bond Subscription Manager & Associate Sales Manager Laurie Barnes Box Office Supervisor Terry Goulette Box Office Agents D. Mark Blank Christina Cone Leah Kaplan Elana McKernan Michael Woo M ARKE TING & COM MU NIC ATIO N S Director of Marketing & Communications Robert Sweibel Director of Public Relations / Associate Director of Marketing & Communications Terence Keane Art Director Cheshire Isaacs Audience Development & Events Manager Elissa Dunn Marketing & Multimedia Manager Pauline Luppert Communications Manager Megan Wygant Webmaster Christina Cone Graphic Design Intern Abigail Hanson Marketing & Box Office Intern Joan Anderson Program Advertising Ellen Felker O PE R ATIO N S Director of Operations Alex Edwards Facilities Manager Christopher Dawe Maintance Technician Johnny Van Chang Facilities Assistants Kevin Barry Greg Hall Lemun Lawson B E RKE LE Y RE P SCH O OL O F TH E ATRE Associate General Manager & Director of the School of Theatre Rachel L. Fink Associate Director MaryBeth Cavanaugh Jan & Howard Oringer Outreach Coordinator Dave Maier Education Associate Gendell Hernández Administrator Amelia Bird Education Intern Devon LaBelle Teen Council Co-Directors Christina Novakov-Ritchey Elizabeth DeLuna Teen Council Chairs Roxie Perkins Kendra Vaculin Marnina Wirtschafter Affiliations The director and choreographer are members of the Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers, Inc., an independent national labor union. The Scenic, Costume, Lighting, and Sound Designers in lort Theatres are represented by United Scenic Artists Local usa-829, iatse. SCH O OL O F THE ATRE FACULT Y Mothering on the Edge of Art Witches and Wizards (grades K-1) Erica Blue Performance Ensemble Jon Burnett Gendell Hernández Theatre of Sweat Ron Campbell Musical Theatre: Swing, Song, and Shakespeare (grades 6–9) Rebecca Castelli Improvisation (grades 6–9) Laura Derry Acting Techniques for Confidence and Persuasive Communication in Corporate and Courtroom Worlds Lura Dolas Creating Original Physical Theatre James Donlon Teen Performance Lab: Tennessee Williams (grades 9–12) Voice for Emerging and Working Actors Deborah Eubanks Acting Up: Showtime! (grades 2–4) Nancy Gold Playwriting Gary Graves Acting, intermediate Marvin Greene Acting, beginning Brian Herndon Acting Violence: Broadsword (age 16 and up) Acting Violence: Unarmed (age 16 and up) Dave Maier Performance Workshop (grades 4–5) Marilet Martinez Acting Shakespeare Today Shakespeare Lab: Romeo and Juliet (grades 9–12) Andy Murray Dialects and IPA Lisa Anne Porter Audition Amy Potozkin Improvisation Performance Lab Improvisation, intermediate Diane Rachel Improvisation, beginning Rebecca Stockley Acting: Imagination and Specificity, advanced Stephen Barker Turner BOARD OF TRUSTEES BOARD MEMBERS Richard A. Rubin PRESIDENT Marjorie Randolph E XECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT Patricia Sakai VICE PRESIDENT Felicia Woytak VICE PRESIDENT Phillip Trapp TRE A SURER Scott R. Haber SECRETARY Dale Rogers Marshall CHAIR , TRUS TEES COM MIT TEE Rick Hoskins PRESIDENT EMERITUS PA S T PRESIDENT S Helen C. Barber A. George Battle Carole B. Berg Robert W. Burt Shih-Tso Chen Narsai M. David Nicholas M. Graves Rick Hoskins Jean Knox Robert M. Oliver Harlan M. Richter Edwin C. Shiver Roger A. Strauch Warren Widener Martin Zankel Becky Bleich David Cox Thalia Dorwick Oz Erickson William T. Espey William Falik John Field David Fleishhacker Kerry L. Francis Robert G. Harris David Hoffman Rick Hoskins Wayne Jordan Julie Matlof Kennedy Carole S. Krumland Sandra McCandless Susie Medak Helen Meyer Dugan Moore Laura Onopchenko Mary Ann Peoples Peter Pervere Len Rand Jack Schafer Stephen Snow Tony Taccone SUS TAINING TRUS TEES Ken Avery Carole B. Berg Rena Bransten Stephen Cassidy Diana Cohen Nicholas Graves Pat Rougeau Richard Shapiro Michael Steinberg Roger A. Strauch Jean Z. Strunsky Michael Strunsky Martin Zankel Founding Director Michael W. Leibert 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B E R 5 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 3 7 F YI Latecomers Latecomers will be seated at the discretion of the house manager. Visit our website! Theatre info Click berkeleyrep.org—you can buy tickets and plan your visit, read our blog, sign up for classes, donate to the Theatre, and explore Berkeley Rep. Emergency exits Please note the nearest exit. In an emergency, walk—do not run—to the nearest exit. Accessibility Both theatres offer wheelchair seating and special services for those with vision- or hearing-impairment. Infrared listening devices are available at no charge in both theatre lobbies. Audio descriptions are available in the box office; please request these materials at least two days in advance. Request information To request mailings or change your address, write to Berkeley Rep, 2025 Addison Street, Berkeley, CA 94704; call 510 647-2949; email [email protected]; or click berkeleyrep.org/joinourlist. If you use Hotmail, Yahoo, or other online mail accounts, please authorize berkeleyrep@ berkeleyrep.pmail.us. Tickets/box office Box office hours: noon–7pm, Tue–Sun Call 510 647-2949, toll free: 888 4-brt-tix Click berkeleyrep.org anytime Fax: 510 647-2975 Groups (10+) call 510 647-2918 DATE/ TIM E PRE VIE WS TUE 8 PM , WED 7PM , THU 2PM*, SAT 2PM THU 8 PM , SU N 2 & 7PM FRI 8 PM SAT 8 PM PRE M A $39 $34 52 45 57 63 71 51 57 63 B $27 33 37 45 51 Ticket exchange Only subscribers may exchange their tickets for another performance of the same show. Exchanges can be made online until midnight (or 7pm by phone) the day preceding the scheduled performance. Exchanges are made on a seat-available basis. Educators Call 510 647-2972 for information about $10 student matinee tickets, classroom visits and teaching artist residencies, teacher training workshops, post-show discussions, teacher study guides, backstage tours, and more. Call 510 647-2949 for information on discount subscriptions for preschool and k-12 educators. *No Thursday matinees for Limited Engagement shows Special discount tickets Under 30 discount Half-price advance tickets for anyone under the age of 30 for all shows, based on availability. Proof of age required. Student matinee Tickets are just $10 each. Call the Berkeley Rep School of Theatre at 510 647-2972. Senior/student rush Full-time students and seniors 65+ save $10 on sections A and B. One ticket per ID, one hour before show time. Proof of eligibility required. Subject to availability. Sorry, we can’t give refunds or offer retroactive discounts. Theatre maps 3 8 · T H E B E R K E LE Y R E P M AG A Z I N E · 2 0 0 8– 0 9 · N U M B ER 5 Theatre store Show-related books and Berkeley Rep merchandise are available in the Hoag Theatre Store in the Roda Theatre or our kiosk in the Thrust Stage lobby. Considerations Please keep perfume to a minimum Many patrons are sensitive to the use of perfumes and other scents. Recycle and compost your waste Help us be more green by using the recycling and compost containers found throughout the Theatre. Beepers / phones / recordings Please make sure your pager, cell phone, or watch alarm will not beep. Doctors may check pagers with the house manager and give seat location for messages. Use of recording equipment or taking of photographs in the theatre is strictly prohibited. Please do not touch the set or props You are welcome to take a closer look at the set, but please don’t step onto the stage. Some of the props can be fragile, and are placed precisely. No children under seven Many Berkeley Rep productions are unsuitable for young children. Please inquire before bringing children to the Theatre. SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF MODERN ART PRESENTS “Magical!” — The New York Times March 24–28 Project Artaud Theater, San Francisco Opening Night Benefit Performance 3/25 Produced by Pacific Operaworks, Seattle // Musical direction by Stephen Stubbs // Featuring the Handspring Puppet Company of South Africa Presented in conjunction with the exhibition William Kentridge: Five Themes, on view at SFMOMA March 14–May 31. www.sfmoma.org/kentridgeopera or William Kentridge: Five Themes is organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Norton Museum of Art. Generous support for the exhibition is provided by the Koret Foundation. Additional support is provided by the National Endowment for the Arts. 800.745.3000 The Return of Ulysses is made possible by generous support from the Koret Foundation, Doris and Donald Fisher, the Mimi and Peter Haas Fund, and Nancy and Steven H. Oliver. Virgin America is the official airline of this production. Support for Live Art at SFMOMA is provided by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. Major support for the opening night of The Return of Ulysses is provided by KPMG LLP. Additional support is provided by Peggy and Willis Newton. The San Francisco presentation of the exhibition is made possible by generous support from Doris and Donald Fisher, the Mimi and Peter Haas Fund, and Nancy and Steven H. Oliver. Image: The Return of Ulysses, production still; photo: John Hodgkiss, © Handspring Puppet Company Special thanks to our wine sponsor, Napa Valley Vintners. We can also ensure your relaxation. T R AV E L A G E N C Y DISCOUNTS ROAD SERVICE AUTO INSURANCE AAA believes you deserve unparalleled value and service at home — and away. So, for over 60 years, AAA Travel has been providing peace of mind far beyond 24-hour Road Service. Our trip planning expertise is rivaled only by our comprehensive AAA Auto, Home and Life Insurance. 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