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the berkeley rep magazine 2010–11 · Issue 4 Berkeley Rep moves its offices and shops · 8 A conversation with Mike Daisey · 14 Program and bios · 22 The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs in repertory with The Last Cargo Cult My life here Bette Ferguson, joined in 2006 My Life Here Is INDEPENDENT The people who live here are well-traveled and engaged with life. Their independent lifestyle is enhanced with our Continuing Care and contract options so they have all levels of healthcare under one roof. Find out why our established reputation as one of the very best not-for-profit communities is just one more reason people like Bette Ferguson know a good thing when they live it. To learn more, or for your personal visit, please call 510.891.8542. stpaulstowers-esc.org A fully accredited, non-denominational, not-for-profit community owned and operated by Episcopal Senior Communities Lic. No. 011400627 COA #92 EPSP570-01CH 011111 In this issue c alendar Docent presentations take place one hour before each Tuesday and Thursday performance. January 10 8 14 Prologue Report Feature A letter from the artistic director More for less: Berkeley Rep acquires Harrison Street building A conversation with Mike Daisey pag e 5 A letter from the managing director pag e 7 PAGE 14 PAGE 8 Educators connect at new Teacher Advisory Council PAGE 10 A legacy of artistic excellence PAGE 12 11 The Last Cargo Cult first preview, 8pm 12The Last Cargo Cult producer night dinner, 6:30pm, Bistro Liaison 12The Last Cargo Cult opening night, 8pm 14 Tasting: Via Pacifica Selections, 7pm 15 Tasting: Calstar Cellars, 7pm 20The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs first preview, 8pm 2130 Below, The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs, 8pm 21Teen Night, The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs, 8pm 23The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs opening night dinner, Bistro Liaison, 5pm 23The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs opening night, 7pm 27The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs post-show discussion, 8pm 28 Tasting: Kent Rasmussen Winery, 7pm 29 Tasting: PIQ, 7pm 30 Tasting: Oren’s Kitchen, 6pm 31Bret C. Harte Young Directors Fund Celebration, 7pm February Berkeley Rep Present s The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs pag e 2 2 The Last Cargo Cult pag e 2 3 Profiles pag e 2 4 Contributors About Berkeley Rep F YI Foundation, corporate, and in-kind sponsors Staff and affiliations pag e 32 Everything you need to know about Berkeley Rep’s box office, gift shop, seating policies, and more pag e 2 8 Individual donors to the Annual Fund Board of trustees and sustaining trustees pag e 33 Pag e 3 4 pag e 2 9 Michael Leibert Society pag e 3 0 40th Anniversary Campaign 2 Teen Council meeting, 5pm 4 Tasting: Raymond Vineyards, 7pm 5 Tasting: Artesa Vineyards & Winery, 7pm 6 Tasting: Kent Rasmussen Winery, 6pm 11 Tasting: Almare,7pm 11The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs post-show discussion, 8pm 12 Backstage Tour, 9am 12 Tasting: Peterson Winery, 7pm 13 Tasting: Semifreddi’s, 6pm 15The Last Cargo Cult post-show discussion, 8pm 15 On the Town: Next to Normal, 8pm 20The Last Cargo Cult final performance, 7pm 25 Teen Night, Ruined, 8pm 25 Ruined first preview, 8pm 27The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs final performance, 7pm School of Theatre event Donor appreciation event pag e 3 1 the berkele y rep m aga zine 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · i s s u e 4 The Berkeley Rep Magazine is published seven times per season. Editor Karen McKevitt For local advertising inquiries, please contact Ellen Felker at 510 548-0725 or [email protected]. Art Director Cheshire Isaacs Writers Ben Hanna Daria Hepps Karen McKevitt Madeleine Oldham 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] February 5–June 5, 2011 Isabelle de Borchgrave uses the medium of paper to form trompe l’oeil masterpieces inspired by the history of costume. Over 60 pieces will be included from Renaissance costumes and gowns worn by Elizabeth I and Marie-Antoinette to the grand couture creations of Dior, Chanel and Fortuny. The Legion of Honor is the first U.S. museum to host an overview of the artist’s work. Pulp Fashion: The Art of Isabelle de Borchgrave is organized by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and sponsored by Lonna Wais. Additional support is provided by Nathalie and Garry McGuire and Elizabeth W. Vobach. Collection Connections is made possible by The Annenberg Foundation. Image: Isabelle de Borchgrave, Maria de’ Medici (detail), 2006, inspired by a ca. 1555 portrait by Alessandro Allori in the collection of the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. Photo: Andreas von Einsiedel Lincoln Park, San Francisco 34th Avenue and Clement Street legionofhonor.org • 415.750.3600 prologue from the artistic direc tor mike daisey is a master at the art of exposing himself. Perched behind his little table, armed with only a few pints of water and the torrent of words that swim around in his considerable head, his performance feels utterly authentic and raw—combining the hysteria of a comedian, the intelligence of an essayist, the intensity of an actor, and the desperation of a raconteur. No subject is too sacred, no experience off limits. He simply finds a story that’s irresistible and then pursues it relentlessly until he has discovered something about himself and something about how the world works. The stories themselves are as improbable as they are true. During this visit to the Bay Area, he brings us two tales that are focused on the one current topic that none of us can stop talking about: money. But these shows are not dry treatises on the state of the economy or discursive examinations about unemployment, tax cuts, or the state of the mortgage industry. No, Mike’s strategy is to present the entire issue of global capitalism as part of his personal travelogue. The associations he makes, regardless of how vast and imposing the subject, are all filtered through the small prism of his singular personality. The results are spectacularly entertaining. In The Last Cargo Cult, he describes his visit to a tribe living on the island of Vanuatu in the South Pacific, whose members worship American capitalism and every material object it creates. In The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs, he takes us to China, where workers in the tech industry literally put their lives on the line for the privilege of having a job. In the end, it turns out that the age-old adage is true: nothing is stranger than reality. And the storyteller—especially this storyteller, equipped with his tools of emphasis and tone, with metaphor and irony, with embellishment and humor—the storyteller is the best person suited to describe that reality. Especially at its most absurd. It’s a pleasure to have Mike at the head of our campfire. Tony Taccone 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 5 January 2011 Volume 43, No. 4 KATHIE LONGINOTTI Realtor® Berkeley Rep Subscriber Since 1972 Paul Heppner Publisher Susan Peterson Design & Production Director 510.981.3032 www.AtHomeEastBay.com Ana Alvira, Kristi Atwood, Emily Busey, Deb Choat, Robin Kessler, Jana Rekosh Design and Production Artists Virginia Wright Online Editor Mike Hathaway Advertising Sales Director Brenda Senderoff Market Development Carol Davidson, Sherri Jarvey, Cherie Singer, Lenore Waldron Account Executives Denise Wong Sales Assistant Burgers • Salads • Hot Dogs Sandwiches • Sides • Beer on Tap • Wine No secret sauce or special seasonings, just fresh, never frozen, Niman Ranch Hormone and Antibiotic free, Natural or American Kobe Beef. We use 100% all natural ingredients prepared fresh to order. Enjoy our Vegan and Vegetarian selections too. BurgerMeister respects our environment by using 100% natural recyclable products. Jonathan Shipley Ad Services Coordinator Regional Sales Representatives Marilyn Kallins, Terri Reed, Alison Short San Francisco/Bay Area Paul Heppner President Mike Hathaway Vice President Save 15%! Show us your Berkeley Rep Ticket, Ticket Stub or Will Call Receipt and we’ll take 15% off the food bill. 2237 Shattuck at Kittredge Open late every day - 510-649-1700 Burgermeistersf.com (Sorry, we can’t discount Beer and Wine.) April Morgan Bookkeeper Deborah Greer Executive Assistant Jake Newman Associate Publisher – City Arts Scott Wagner Vice President – City Arts Mark Baumgarten Executive Editor – City Arts Jana Rekosh Project Manager/Graphic Design Virginia Wright Systems Administrator Artisan cocktails, handmade delicacies from local growers, house charcuterie, and thoughtfully prepared California food in a revived 1901 classic building just up the block from Berkeley Rep 2102 Shattuck at Addison · 510.549.9950 425 North 85th Street Seattle, WA 98103 206.443.0445 [email protected] 800.308.2898 x105 www.encoreartsprograms.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. ©2011 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 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 prologue from the M anaging direc tor included in this issue is a story about our new campus in West Berkeley. For the first time in almost 30 years, we’ve reunited all of our staff members who support the rehearsal process in one facility. It may seem counterintuitive, in an age of downsizing and belt-tightening, to announce the acquisition of a new building—but this move is, in fact, part of a cost-cutting program we’ve undertaken in recent years to reduce our fixed costs, improve operations, and protect against future inflation. A year ago we purchased the Nevo Education Center, which houses our School of Theatre, saving $150,000 annually in lease payments. The acquisition of our new campus on Harrison Street also brings economic benefits (see page 8). Over the years, we’ve had to relocate our offices, our rehearsal halls, our scene shop, and our storage facilities again and again. As property values have soared, buildings have been sold out from under us and rents have skyrocketed. We’ve struggled to find a space large enough to house rehearsals, yet still close enough to our costume and prop shops that our artisans could support the needs of actors and directors without losing valuable rehearsal time transporting materials. Every time we’ve moved, Berkeley Rep has spent hard-earned dollars outfitting new facilities – and, over the years, we’ve attempted to acquire almost every property adjacent to our Addison Street home in the hopes of creating an efficient campus. Each time, we’ve been outbid by those with deeper pockets than our own. As a result, we’ve operated in conditions that are completely contrary to the collaborative nature of our work. Our artistic team has been divided between two buildings for more than 15 years, and the administrative staff has been divided for 20. Our scene shop has been five miles away, and our storage facility two miles distant. We figured out how to provide more shop space for the folks who create costumes and props, but it meant dividing them between four different parts of the Addison facility. Employees housed here with the Thrust Stage often worked in counterproductive and inefficient conditions. Master Electrician Fred Geffken, for example, used to have an office tucked under the seats in which you’re sitting. He wasn’t able to work during performances or technical rehearsals because even a phone conversation would distract from the show—and he grew accustomed to standing up slowly so he didn’t hit his head. I am thrilled that we’ve finally found a way to change all of this. It is hard to imagine, when you see a show, that it is only the tip of an iceberg. Yet every show is supported by dozens of artisans, technicians, and administrative staff. You may never see them, but their work is evident in the quality of the productions you’ve come to expect from Berkeley Rep. Cutting costs while providing a more comfortable and collaborative work environment can only improve the quality of our work. By the time you read this, our shops and offices will be up and running at our new building. But the last and most important piece of this project will not yet be complete. Much as we wanted to open the Harrison Street campus with our rehearsal halls in place, we realized we could not do so without additional financial support. We will need the backing of some generous angels to complete this final task, the centerpiece of our new complex. The most important work of the theatre gets done in the rehearsal hall, and those rooms are where our artists create the powerful and imaginative productions you see every time you attend this theatre. Warmly, Take Berkeley Rep home with you! The Hoag Theatre Store in the Roda lobby offers wonderful Berkeley Rep gifts for you and all the theatre lovers in your life. Susan Medak 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 7 Report The growing years 1968: The Theatre is born in a storefront on College Avenue. 1980: The Thrust Stage on Addison Street is complete. 1990: As the company grows, many staff members move to rented office space. 2001: The Roda Theatre and Berkeley Rep School of Theatre on Addison Street are completed. 2005: An accidental fire destroys scene shop. 2010: Berkeley Rep purchases a new campus at 999 Harrison Street. Next: More audience amenities at the Thrust Stage. More for less Berkeley Rep acquires Harrison Street building B y K a r e n McK e v i t t 8 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 One building, six benefits Grades K-8 Cuts costs: Berkeley Rep pays 50% less for 50% more space. Enhances the audience experience: patrons at the Theatre will enjoy new amenities. Improves efficiency: consolidates functions handled at five different locations in two cities. Supports the local economy: brings all the Theatre’s employees back into Berkeley and upholds the tradition of light manufacturing in the west part of town. Traditional / Academic English / Math / Science / History / French / Latin / Music / Computers / Art / P.E. / After-school programs Increases autonomy: Berkeley Rep stops renting and owns all of its shop and office space. Fosters a collaborative, creative work environment: artists, artisans, and administrators all work under one roof in a spacious, attractive new campus. Applications now being accepted for the Fall 2011 school year. Call for a brochure and to schedule a tour. in 1980, we built the thrus t s tage. in 20 01 , we opened the roda Theatre and the School of Theatre. Now Berkeley Rep is in the midst of another enterprising expansion plan. In November, we announced the purchase of a 62,000-square-foot building at 999 Harrison Street in West Berkeley. In December, Berkeley Rep’s artisans and administrators moved in, united under one roof for the first time in decades. The new campus provides a permanent home for the costume shop, prop shop, scene shop, storage, and administrative offices, which were previously divided among five different locations in two cities. The purchase was made possible by a favorable real estate market and generous terms arranged because of Berkeley Rep’s long history serving the local community. After some essential improvements paid for with seed funding from the S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation and the Wayne & Gladys Valley Foundation, the new space will save the Theatre $250,000 each year. That’s 50% less expense for 50% more space. Of course, all performance-related functions will continue at the Theatre. The box office remains on Addison Street, as well as the School, and the sound, electrics, and wardrobe crews continue to work backstage—with a lot more space. Plus, Berkeley Rep audiences can look forward to new amenities we’re planning for the Thrust Stage. “It has long been our dream to reunite our staff under one roof,” says Artistic Director Tony Taccone. Besides improving staff efficiency, the Harrison Street campus fosters the kind of collaborative, creative work environment that Berkeley Rep’s artists, artisans, and administrators thrive on. “We’ve been forced to move our shops, our storage, and our offices several times over the years,” says Managing Director Susan Medak. “It was particularly difficult when our scene shop burned down in 2005, and we had to outfit a replacement space in West Oakland. When that lease expired, it became imperative to find a permanent location.” The Harrison campus allowed Berkeley Rep not only to bring the scene shop back to West Berkeley and uphold the area’s tradition of light manufacturing, but also to accomplish the larger goal of reuniting our staff and securing autonomy. Susan sums it up: “Say goodbye to the days of being bounced from one rented space to another.” www.theacademyk-8.com 510.549.0605 2722 Benvenue Ave., Berkeley, CA 94705 TAKING THE DRAMA OUT OF REAL ESTATE FOR THE PAST 26 YEARS! BROKERS Mary Canavan & Marilyn Pursley R E A LT O R S Martha Becker • Kathleen Curry Tracy Davis • Lee Goodwin • Lorri Holt Colleen Larkin • Sandy Parker Cameron Parkinson • Carol Parkinson Kathryn Stein • Joann Sullivan Helen Walker • Linda Wolan A LOCALLY OWNED & INDEPENDENTLY OPERATED BERKELEY BUSINESS 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 9 Report Members of the 2010–11 Teacher Advisory Council (l to r) Richard Silberg, Outreach Coordinator Dave Maier, Beth Daly, Marianne Philipp, Community Programs Manager Ben Hanna, and Jan Hunter Know a great teacher? Bring a Berkeley Rep workshop to your favorite K–12 classroom. Visit berkeleyrep.org/outreach for more information. Educators connect at new Teacher Advi By Benjamin hanna budget cuts, higher class sizes, increased pressure to teach to the test— it’s the unfortunate worry list facing educators today. Jan Hunter, director of the Performing Arts Academy at Skyline High School in Oakland, notes, “It seems like all of us are affected by this budget crunch. And it’s affecting all of this great stuff that’s been going on, like taking my students to Berkeley Rep’s student matinees or having teaching artists in my classroom.” Jan is one of nine enthusiastic teachers from across the Bay Area who comprise the Theatre’s newly formed Teacher Advisory Council, which meets three times each year. These meetings provide a place for teachers to connect and discuss topical issues in theatre education. “Teachers kept telling me they wanted a place to connect with other teachers who use theatre in the class1 0 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 room. They want a place to rejuvenate and talk about best practices in arts education,” says Dave Maier, Berkeley Rep’s Jan & Howard Oringer Outreach Coordinator. “We want to enhance the work they’re doing, not add to their workload. That’s why we created this new Council.” “Sometimes it feels isolating to be the lone teacher using theatre to teach in the classroom,” says Marianne Philipp from George Washington High School in San Francisco. “We’re looking forward to this Council. We want more teachers to get excited about this work.” The Council also helps inform curricular choices at Berkeley Rep’s School of Theatre and consults on the wide range of educational issues that arise out of the plays produced on its stages. These educators also help identify promising scholarship students for Berkeley Rep’s classes and the Summer Theatre Intensive. Rachel Fink, the director of the School of Theatre, adds, “Our goal is to support the teachers who advocate for us in their communities. Through their critical feedback we are better able to serve the needs of Bay Area teachers and students.” Berkeley Rep’s outreach workshops and student matinees have been an important part of many school theatre programs, and these educators are eager to keep the programs alive and thriving. “Coming to Berkeley Rep is good for my students,” explains Jan. “Meeting people who are professional artists makes them feel special. They think, ‘That could be me!’ It makes it possible. The Teacher Advisory Council will help shape and provide access to these kinds of experiences.” Bring theatre to classrooms! Help Berkeley Rep’s School of Theatre bring dynamic arts education and outreach programs to over 20,000 young people around the Bay Area. visory Council Make a gift to Berkeley Rep’s Annual Fund today— call 510 647-2907 or click berkeleyrep.org/give. Teacher Advisory Council Drea Beale Lighthouse Community Charter Julie Boe Amador Valley High School Amy Crawford Berkeley High School BCC.BerkeleyRep.MalagaCorp.080310.PRINT.pdf 8/5/2010 11:45:12 PM Beth Daly San Lorenzo High School Jan Hunter Skyline High School Marianne Philipp George Washington High School Richard Silberg Martin Luther King Middle School John Warren East Bay Arts High School Jordan Winer Berkeley High School C M Y CM MY CY CMY K 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 1 1 Report A legacy of artistic excellence These people are making great theatre their legacy. They’re all members of the Michael Leibert Society, which honors dedicated supporters who include Berkeley Rep in their estate plans. Rick Hoskins and Lynne Frame Attending together since 1995 Our parents took us to the theatre when we were growing up and our mutual love for theatre is part of what brought us together. Berkeley Rep consistently engages us by presenting innovative work that is often intellectually and philosophically challenging. Each year we get four subscriptions so that we can bring friends to every show, which inevitably leads to a stimulating post-show discussion. Berkeley Rep is included in our estate plan to help ensure the Theatre’s continuity for the benefit of our family and our community. Dale and Don Marshall Attending together since 2004 Berkeley Rep is a local jewel. It provides insights into life for the audience and for those who are touched by the educational outreach, which helps young people to make the transition from child to adult in a more meaningful way. Berkeley Rep is a part of our legacy, and we feel good that our children know of our support during our lifetime and beyond. 1 2 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 By making a gift through your estate, you can help to ensure that great theatre is available to your kids and your community for generations to come. Unless you specify otherwise, your gift will become a part of Berkeley Rep’s endowment, where it will provide income to the Theatre year after year. Your gift can cost you little or nothing now, may help reduce a tax burden on your family later, and will help artistic excellence flourish at Berkeley Rep forever. For tools, tips, and information about estate planning and about becoming a member of the Michael Leibert Society, please click berkeleyrep.org/ plannedgiving, or contact Daria Hepps at 510 647-2904 or [email protected]. t i c k e t s & ta b l e s o n s a l e n o w ! a deliciously theatrical gala to benefit berkeley Rep saturday, april 23, 2011 Four seasons san Francisco Tickets $500 each · Tables start at $5,000 Call Margo at 510 647-2909 to reserve Toni Mester Attending since 1985 Planned giving is not just for the wealthy. I have included Berkeley Rep as a beneficiary in my trust because theatre has enriched my life. Educating Clinicians to Society for Over 40 Years The Wright Institute offers a Doctor of Psychology in Clinical Psychology (PsyD) and a Master of Arts in Counseling Psychology (MFT licensure). 2728 Durant Avenue • Berkeley, California 94704 • 510.841.9230 [email protected] • www.wi.edu 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 1 3 1 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 A conversation with Mike Daisey (with a surprise guest appearance from Jean-Michele Gregory) by Madeleine Oldham You call what you do “extemporaneous monologuing.” I thought briefly about writing a piece about other performers who do this. But I ended up reading about Spalding Gray and ... Spalding Gray. Are there other people whom you consider ancestors? Well, there are two lenses we can look at this through: one is that there’s almost no one performing this way, so it’s a very strange and alien thing. On the other hand, you could say that everyone is performing this way and that, in fact, it’s the American theatre that’s the aberration. I perform extemporaneously, so I speak in the air and the words compose themselves in real time. This is the dominant form of human expression—everyone who teaches in a class is performing extemporaneously; everyone who preaches in a church, a synagogue, or a mosque anywhere in the world; almost all comedy; lawyers arguing their cases—all are performing extemporaneously. So you could say it’s the theatre, in its very structured, locked-up form, that’s the odd man out. But within the construct of the theatre there aren’t that many extemporaneous performers. So it can feel very strange, 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 1 5 you can feel very isolated. But then I just have to look at the world around me to realize I have many brothers and sisters. spreads across the entire world. It’s a system of dominance and submission that really controls how we conduct human exchanges. A huge amount of that is about the acquisition of You seem to have a tremendous appetite for new informastuff, and our love of objects and of tools. We’re very used to tion. Have you had that since you were a kid? criticizing how much we love our shit, but one of the reaI have always been interested in the world. The job of the sons we love it is that it is awesome. And that’s a legitimate monologue is fundamentally the pursuit of my obsessions: to thing—we love it because it’s awesome. That’s why we want illuminate them and to illuminate paths through them that an it so much, and why, in fact, every culture that is introduced audience can follow and can participate in. It’s a wonderful job to our awesome shit loves it as well. And that’s the axis that that I built for myself. I do tend to pick up obsessions with a lot the show revolves on. of vigor. I really enjoy the chase, and then discovering the conThe Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs is really that in nections between the pieces of each individual monologue, microcosm. It examines our technology through a very perand then also between the works from one to another. It’s one sonal kind of lens. It’s the stuff we actually mediate our minds of the reasons why doing these two shows in repertory was exthrough, especially in this age when we spend so much of our citing. When we’ve done pieces next to each other in the past, time on the net and on the web and communicating with one you learn a lot more about each of another virtually. Even you and I the pieces because of the way they are having this conversation by relate to each other. telephone. When we do this— You seem to have a when we use systems to destroy tremendous appetite Can you say anything about space so that people who are far for new information. how these two relate to each apart can connect to each other, Have you had that other, or do you not want to these are actually massive shifts since you were a kid? give that away? in human consciousness. And Sure. These are both about as we shift that way again and commerce and our own obsesagain we fetishize the objects I do tend to pick up obsessions sions. The Last Cargo Cult is enormously because they’re so about our economic system that important to us. with a lot of vigor. It’s one of the reasons why doing these two shows in repertory was exciting, because you learn a lot more about each of the pieces because of the way they relate to each other. 1 6 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 I regularly fall asleep with my iPhone in my bed—I have it right before bed and I fall asleep and in the morning I have to find it again. When I was younger, before cell phones, I never had an object—not my wallet, not my watch—I never had anything that I feel the way I feel about the iPhone. So I think it’s very important that we examine these objects and the circumstances under which they are actually built, which we are very, very unaware of. And even when we think we’re aware of it, we aren’t really fully aware. So I feel like the monologues speak to one another about our stuff and the importance of it and the power exchanges that happen in our culture. and our marriage are really the same braid—the strands are woven around one another. And I think that shows in the work. It’s very rare in the American theatre—normally directors stay with shows until they open, then they fly off to the next location. The actors are then left on their own, and I think that you lose something ineffable and vital when a director goes away. Jean-Michele and I work together on everything, and she’s been there for thousands of performances over the last 15 or so years. As a consequence, I feel like the quality of work would never be what it is now if she had not been devoted in that way. She is so exacting about what it means to have an image that’s precise and what it means to cut something just How does something go from being an idea to being a show? so. She is a fantastic editor, certainly the best editor, I think, Well, first, it isn’t really an idea in the traditional sense— in the American theatre. She has an amazing ability to see an it’s an obsession. When an obsession of mine might be related image clearly and then to divine from watching it in three dito or connected to a show, I can sort of feel that. Then it mensions, as it’s playing out on stage, what needs to be cut or gestates for a long period in my trimmed or sharpened to a point. mind, and I do research, and So it’s been a really fantastic one of the things I’m looking for collaboration and a fantastic marHow did you and your is another obsession. Because riage, and really for us those two wife/director discover generally where a monologue things are inseparable. that working together emerges is where two obsessions was a good thing? are colliding. It’s not enough for I think a lot about the separame alone to be obsessed. It’s tion between people’s work not enough even for me alone lives and their personal lives She is a fantastic editor, certainly to be obsessed and then to also and how those lines have feel like my culture is obsessed, gotten very blurry in recent the best editor, I think, in the because if that were true, I would years—for a lot of people it all American theatre. She has an just make instructional videos. blends together, particularly amazing ability to see an image Where two obsessions are in now when it’s so easy to work clearly and then to divine from collision is where it’s near the remotely and be accessible all watching it in three dimensions ignition point, and where it might the time. This somehow relates as it’s playing out on stage what be possible to make a monologue. in my mind to your appetite for needs to be cut or trimmed or So this generally involves a lot of technology and how you can sharpened to a point. research, and travel sometimes— operate on many different levels in the case of both of these at once... monologues, extensive travel as I do think people conceive well as personal journeys. Then their relationships in a wide variI collect all this information but ety of contexts. We spend more nothing actually gets written because the monologues are not time together than any other couple I’ve ever heard of. Ever. scripted. Nothing is written at all, including notes, until about So as a consequence I feel like we fall outside the normal bell 24 hours before the very first time the monologue is created curve of what people think of as constituting a collaboration. in performance. At that point I create an outline. It’s very tense At the same time I love it. We wouldn’t do it if it didn’t feed and very nerve-wracking—it’s a lot like giving birth, and then us. I’m confident that had we come together much later in life, I perform it for the first time, which tends to be a very monuwe’d have a very different relationship to the work, because mentous thing. Only after that do we begin to use the tools of when we came together we were both developing what kind the traditional theatre to shape it. of artists we were going to be. We were still finding our voices. I think that plays a role in the chorus that has emerged, and How did you and your wife/director discover that working I know that the work would not be anywhere near what it is together was a good thing? now without that collaboration. That’s incredibly clear. Not just That came about very early—on the very first monologue, aesthetically, but also economically and socially. The way the actually. We met doing really bad theatre—a terrible German American theatre works, no one can afford to hire a director to expressionist play in an awful production in Seattle that we be with you 24/7 that way. The only way you can do it is to do were both acting in. It was just a dreadful production, and in what we’ve done, which is basically like a commune, but it’s a that way that horrible theatre can bind people together for the commune of two. It may not be a perfect model, but given the rest of their lives, it did that for us and we found one another. way the arts are in my lifetime, this is the path we found to try It was really natural when we started working together and and realize our visions and make them as vivid and real as posthe relationship began around the same time, so things have sible. I think we’re able to achieve more together than we ever always been intertwined. Our work life and our personal life could have separately. 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 1 7 I’ve heard you say that you enjoy teaching. Why? toized that artist and that we’re no longer as interested in what I do love teaching very much, and I love the extemporanethat artist might have to say as we would be if that artist didn’t ous nature of teaching. It’s also very instructive because you have any kind of adjective attached to the front of his or her learn a lot about how you tell stories not just by doing it, but name. I feel like it’s the act of conscious citizens to be activalso by having to communicate to other people how you do ists. I think that if you have no activism in your life, if you have it. It’s very illuminating. The process of having to break down nothing you’re advocating for or fighting for, then you are not what you did into resonant metaphors that might afford the conscious. There is so much that needs work, there is so much possibility of shedding light on a creative process is actually a that cries out for people to have passion about, that I feel difficult undertaking. It’s really rewarding because first, if you like people need to be activists, they need to search for what succeed, even a little, there’s a chance you might have actutheir activism means. That’s an ongoing search to clarify and ally communicated. Which, I think, is why we go to the theatre constantly question what it is to stand for something and the night after night—in the hope, the dream, that someone might incredible pull and tug and battle in our hearts and minds over actually tell the truth. It happens so rarely that something what is right. leaps the gap and actually connects with us. When it does hapAnd we can’t rest on dogma: if the theatre is a living conpen, it’s like the sunlight pouring in—it’s a marvelous thing. struct, it is exactly the place where these things can actually And for it to happen in teaching, there’s that chance that you be wrestled with. Because in theatre, people have to physicould actually impart something cally come into a space together. that’s numinous, that goes on to There’s this fantastic communion I’ve heard you say that illuminate a variety of contexts, between what is happening on you enjoy teaching. Why? and I love that. Often it doesn’t the stage and what is happening happen. When we think back in in the audience. In my work, the our education there were lots of attempt is to dissolve as many It’s really rewarding because if days when we learned nothing, so boundaries as possible, so we’re you succeed, even a little, there’s it keeps you humble too. It keeps actually speaking to one another, a chance you might have actually you honest. You can’t actually be not from a script—we’re havilluminating every moment of eving this experience tonight and communicated. Which, I think, is ery day—people would burn out. tonight alone, and I feel like activwhy we go to the theatre night So I really enjoy trying to parse ism is a natural outgrowth of that. after night— in the hope, the that distance, and I feel like I learn When we speak about dream, that someone might a lot about my craft by doing that. charged circumstances, part of actually tell the truth. the attempt is obviously to incite Do you consider your work a the desire for change, but the form of journalism? ways in which people change Given the state of journalism the world, those are their own today I don’t know if I should be slightly insulted. (Laughs.) No, idioms. What prevents theatre from collapsing into didacticism I do actually. I think that journalism should be part of most art is the understanding that our job in the theatre is to present that we make. Because we should know what is happening in these charged circumstances and to work with the audience the world, we should know it in our bones and it should inform to reach toward catharsis, but that the catharsis is their own. our work. I feel like the impulse in the theatre, and in many They’re the ones that come to that place and they’re the other art forms, is to distance ourselves from the concerns ones who have to walk out owning what they’ve seen, so you of the day in an attempt to then get an overview of life, but I can’t actually preach, you can’t actually tell people what they think that’s a false dichotomy. I think that actually being cheek believe. Well, you can but it’s not going to work, not the way by jowl with life itself, with things that are actually happenyou want it to. It won’t work because it becomes aesthetically ing, affords us an opportunity to have a specific dialogue that rigid and unyielding and it doesn’t allow audience members to doesn’t exist otherwise. It lets us find these charged elements find their own paths, which may not be the same as your path. that can pull us along like a magnet and pull us somewhere Like the role I have as a monologuist—people sometimes find where catharsis is possible. So I do think journalism is a huge things in the shows that I wouldn’t agree with politically. But part of it. Journalism has a fantastic framework to live up to: that’s not my job. My job is to aesthetically moderate a path the attempt to actually transmit the truth even despite all the and create these opportunities and chances to reach for somedifficulties inherent to that undertaking. I find it very inspiring. thing that they may not have been able to get to on their own. A lot of my heroes are journalists. It’s not to dictate what that path contains and who they are in relation to that path. In performance terms, how do you see the relationship between journalism and activism? You’ve been accused of biting the hand that feeds you, I think that in the arts world we have a strong bias against most notably with regard to your piece called How Theater activism. We always say we don’t because that would seem Failed America. How do you respond to that? like we were uncaring. But we do, because if we say someone It’s the job of people who are citizens to stand up and is an activist artist, really what we mean is that we’ve ghetspeak responsibly in their own workplaces and be truthful. I 1 8 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 think a lot of the talk about biting hands that feed you evolves I’m most proud of are things that exist outside the traditional mostly out of a fundamental disconnect: we’re not used to aesthetic framework. I’m very proud of the teaching work hearing a performer of any kind speak about the working we’ve done. I’m really proud we’ve been able to carve out a life conditions of the American theatre. As a group, actors and arttogether as independent artists in the theatre. ists are so disenfranchised that they are effectively voiceless. I’m really proud that we had the opportunity to take The If I was a traditional actor, I certainly wouldn’t have been able Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs to India this summer. I got to make that monologue—I would never work again. One of to perform early versions of this show talking about China’s the ways we make people voiceless is that we criticize them. labor policies in the context of performing in India with Indian Wouldn’t you want people to bite the hand that feeds them if audiences who are having the same multinational corporations they care? I want to see us have a healthy, vibrant American move in and try to enforce the same labor standards. It was theatre that justifies its existence and creates works that are riveting to get to have these conversations late into the night transporting and transformative. Our theatre doesn’t do that with people and feel how this is a living story that really matoften enough. I get paid in the ters right now. theatre to make work, and it’s A small thing that often feeds my responsibility to speak up if I me is that after the shows I generIs there a moment in see things I think are wrong. If I ally go to the lobby. Unlike tradiyour career you’re remain silent out of some belief tional theatre, I feel like it’s importhe most proud of? that because I make my living tant for people to have an ability doing it this way that I should be to connect with me because of silent, then I’m actually perpetuatthe nature of the performance. I’m really proud that we had ing the problem. I’d actually argue Over many years I’ve gotten some the opportunity to take The that it’s a conspiracy of silence in wonderful opportunities to hear Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve the American theatre that leads people’s stories, because when Jobs to India this summer. I got to a lot of our problems. People you tell them a story, often they to talk about China’s labor don’t speak, and they even have feel inspired to share a story back policies with Indian audiences good reason not to speak because to you. That feeds me the way it who are having the same they will pay for it if they do. But encourages real human contact— multinational corporations nevertheless it’s going to require the way we’re actually talking to move in and try to enforce the bravery—people need to stand one another and the real way it same labor standards. It was up and say clearly what’s going pushes back the dark a little bit. I riveting to get to have these on, and when people speak that’s like that a lot. conversations late into the when the possibility of change begins to emerge. Do you think you will do this night with people and feel how kind of work forever and ever? this is a living story that really Are there people making work I think that I’ll be telling matters right now. right now that you think, “Yes, stories forever. I think we all will. we need more of this”? Storytelling is the only art form Oh yes. Particularly people built with language that is actually making ensemble-based work, intrinsic to human consciousdevised work. There’s a socioeconomic thread to it—I’m very ness—everyone in every culture can tell stories. That’s a interested in artists that control their own work and the cirremarkable thing if you think about it. I have no doubt that I’ll cumstances under which the work is made. I am really touched keep telling stories for the rest of my life, because if I was not, by The Civilians. Tim Crouch does a lot of fantastic work that I’d probably be dead. really connects with me that way. David Cromer’s Our Town was amazing. The people I get most excited about are the ones If you weren’t doing this, what would you be doing? who feel like they are in control of their own destinies—espeI’m obviously really passionate about monologue. I’m cially when they’re doing work that speaks to local concerns or probably more likely to transform the format of the work I do a constituency that actually gets to see and then participate in into other idioms. I write books and I make films and things, those shows. I find that all really exciting. but really the focus is this. Right now I’m working on a piece that’s a 24-hour monologue, a gigantic project that I’m deeply Is there a moment in your career you’re most proud of? invested in that’s about many things. It’s largely about the That’s such a good question. I can’t speak for both of us, history of Puritanism in America and how Puritanism functions and maybe after we’re done I’ll see if JM will chime in. You as an essential American value right down the center of our know, all the monologues end up feeling like your children, so country. It’s a huge project that transforms and explodes our it’s very hard to point to any one and be more proud of one traditional ideas about how long and large a piece can be and than another. But also I think parents actually do have favorwhat the boundaries are of performance. So I’m investigating ites, although they change from time to time, but you try not those sorts of things that are sufficiently outside the box of to tell anyone that you have favorites. The reality is that what what constitutes performance at the theatres I often work at. 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 1 9 Jean-Michele, do you have your own obsessions that make their way into the work? Do the two of you share obsessions? I function much more as an editor. I have my own obsessions, and if I were creating shows they’d probably be about very different things. I find that the gap in our obsessions is helpful. I’m very likely to go off in those sorts of directions. There’s been talk of and ideas about installations and large-scale happenings and things that sort of intensify the feeling that coming to the theatre is an event that happens once and once alone, and that this thing that happens is special and sort of sacred, and that we participate in it and realize it. It creates its own scarcity because once that event has happened, it is past. So I’m very interested in those things that work against the cookie-cutter mold where we make shows run for a certain amount of time and then repeat them, because I think they’re unrepeatable. Trying to find a balance between the art being realized and making it unrepeatable is part of the essential magic of theatre. (At this point, Mike wanted me to ask Jean-Michele the question I’d just asked him about what he’s most proud of. She got on the phone, and I did.) Jean-Michele: I think I’m always most proud of whatever we’re working on currently. Whatever the newest thing is, this is the one that has all my attention. But you know, we went to India this summer and we did a performance of The Agony and the Ecstasy at the Indian School of Business in Hyderabad. It was so cool because it was this hall packed with all these future business leaders, and I couldn’t believe the luck of getting to be there telling this story to these people, and then getting to talk to them afterwards and hearing their responses and their perspective on the situation. It’s a mixture of pride and luck, I guess. Mike and I were just talking about his obsessions and how they appear in the work. Do you have obsessions that make their way into the work? Do the two of you share obsessions? I function much more as an editor. I have my own obsessions, and if I were creating shows they’d probably be about very different things. What I’m trying to do is clarify his 2 0 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 vision and fully understand the story that he’s trying to tell and the point he’s trying to make, and to make him aware of when the message isn’t coming through clearly or if there’s something blocking the flow of it. I find that the gap in our obsessions is helpful. Like everything I know about tech is by virtue of having spent a lifetime with him. That’s not something that I would be natively interested in. And so it can be very helpful when he’s speaking about those things to have an outsider perspective. Is this situation something you look back on and think it makes sense how you got here, or is it completely surprising that this is how you’re making your living? Well, I think it makes total sense that this is what I’d be doing—the fact that we’re making a living at it is the surprising part. I started doing theatre when I was a kid and so I always knew theatre was going to be a big part of my life. I grew up in Seattle and just assumed that I would always have a day job and the theatre would be what I would do at night. Honestly, it never really seemed like it was even possible that one could make a living at it. So the fact that we have been able to do this as our job always feels to me like this crazy wonderful lucky rare thing, like we won the lottery but even better because we’re getting to do what we love to do. + = 20% off Upgrade and save! See both The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs and The Last Cargo Cult, and save 20% on tickets to your second show. Contact the box office at 510 647-2949 for personal service Tue–Sun noon–7pm. Left to right Oberon K.A. Adjepong and Tonye Patano ph otos co u r t e s y o f k e v in b er n e .co m Left to right Zainab Jah, Carla Duren, and Pascale Armand Next at Berkeley Rep: Ruined Lynn Nottage’s Pulitzer Prize–winning play provides a bleak yet beautiful look at the lives of women in the Congo. This intense and important tale, filled with humanity, hope, and unexpected humor, starts February 25 in the Roda Theatre. Berkeley Repertory Theatre presents The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs Created and Perfor med by Mike Daisey direc ted by Jean-Michele Gregory Set and Lighting Design by Seth Reiser January 11– February 27, 2011 · thrus t s tage Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are already naked. —Steve Jobs If you have money, you can make the ghosts and devils turn your grindstone. — Chinese proverb If you want to enjoy a good steak, don’t visit the slaughterhouse. —American proverb The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs has been developed with the support of the Sloan Foundation, Ensemble Studio Theatre, Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, the Cape Cod Theatre Project, Seattle Repertory Theatre, the US State Department Cultural Affairs program in India, the Chennai Hindu MetroPlus Theatre Festival, Vancouver’s PuSh International Festival, and the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art. This is a work of nonfiction. Some names and identities have been changed to protect sources. The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs and The Last Cargo Cult are produced thanks to the generous support of 2 2 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 B e rke le y Re pe rto ry Th e atre To ny Tacco n e , Artis tic D irec to r Susan M e dak , M anag in g D irec to r The Last Cargo Cult Created and Perfor med by Mike Daisey direc ted by Jean-Michele Gregory Set and Lighting Design by Seth Reiser January 11– February 27, 2011 · thrus t s tage MANI HEM I GUD LAIF. BUT MANI I MEKEM MAN I, STAP RAPEM BRATA MO SISTA BLONG HEN. BILIF IN UNION. IN CUSTOM, SPIRIT, STAMPA LAIF LONG WOL. GUD LAIF. —John Frum movement, traditional There is a war between the rich and poor A war between the man and the woman There is a war between the ones who say there is a war and the ones who say that there isn’t Why don’t you come on back to the war? That’s right, get in it Why don’t you come on back to the war? It’s just beginning —Leonard Cohen, traditional The Last Cargo Cult has been developed with the support of the Perth Literary Festival, the Victorian College of the Arts in Melbourne, Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, Penobscot Theatre, the Southampton Writers Conference, the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, the Richard Hugo House, the Public Theater, and the IRT Theater’s 3B Development Series. This is a work of nonfiction. Se a son producer s Wayne Jordan & Quinn Delaney Marjorie Randolph E xecutive Producer s The Strauch Kulhanjian Family a ssociate producer s Scott & Sherry Haber Zandra Faye LeDuff Len & Barbara Rand Richard A. Rubin & H. Marcia Smolens Co -sponsor Wealth Management at Mechanics Bank se a son sponsor s 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · 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 Mike Daisey c r e at o r / PER F ORMER Mike’s groundbreaking monologues weave together autobiography, gonzo journalism, and unscripted performance to tell hilarious and heartbreaking stories that cut to the bone, exposing secret histories and unexpected connections. His monologues include the critically acclaimed If You See Something Say Something, the controversial How Theater Failed America, the six-hour epic Great Men of Genius, the unrepeatable series All Stories Are Fiction, and the international sensation 21 Dog Years. He has performed in venues on five continents, ranging from off Broadway at The Public Theater to remote islands in the South Pacific, from the Sydney Opera House to abandoned theatres in post-Communist Tajikistan. He’s been a guest on the Late Show with David Letterman, as well as a commentator and contributor to the bbc, npr, Salon, Slate, Vanity Fair, and Wired. His first film, Layover, was shown at the Cannes Film Festival this year, and a feature film of his monologue If You See Something Say Something is currently in postproduction. His second book, Rough Magic, a collected anthology of his monologues, will be published next year. He has been nominated for two Drama League Awards and the Outer Critics Circle Award, and is the recipient of a MacDowell Fellowship, four Seattle Times Footlight Awards, and the Sloan Foundation’s Galileo Prize. Jean-Michele Gregory D I RE C TOR Jean-Michele works as a director, editor, and dramaturg, focusing on extemporaneous theatrical works that live in the moment they are told. Working primarily with solo artists, for the last decade she has collaborated with monologist Mike Daisey, directing at venues across the globe including American Repertory Theatre, the Barrow Street Theatre, Berkeley Rep, Cherry Lane Theater, Intiman Theatre, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, the Noorderzon Festival, Performance Space 122, The Public, the Spoleto Festival, the Sydney Opera House, the tba Festival, the Under the Radar Festival, Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, Yale Repertory Theatre, and many more. She has also directed New York storyteller Martin Dockery (The Surprise, Wanderlust) and the Seattle-based performer and writer Suzanne Morrison (Optimism, Yoga Bitch). Her productions have received four Seattle Times Footlight Awards (21 Dog Years, The Last Cargo Cult, Monopoly!, The Ugly American), the Bay Area Critics Circle Award (Great Men of Genius), and nominations from the Drama League and Outer Critics Circle (If You See Something Say Something). New York Magazine, TheaterMania, and Time Out New York ranked her shows among the best plays of 2009. Seth Reiser s e t & LI GHT I NG D ES I GN Seth is pleased to be making his Bay Area debut at Berkeley Rep on these two extraordinary pieces of theatre. His design credits include Apple Pie Order, below, and Happy Thoughts at Bard College; Mike Daisey’s Barring the Unforeseen at irt; Black Snow and NonPlay with the New Ensemble; Cactus Flower at Capital Repertory Theatre; Dutch AV at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club’s Under the Radar Festival; The Last Days of Judas Iscariot at Muhlenberg College; the Obie award-winning Lily’s Revenge at Here Arts (Henry Hewes Design Award nomination); middlemen with the Human Animals Collective; Radio Play with Tommy Smith and Reggie Watts; The Seagull PREMIER SERVICE FOR A PREMIER AUDIENCE Lorri Arazi Stina Charles-Harris Jack McPhail Leslie Avant Francine Di Palma Denise Milburn Norah Brower Leslie Easterday Carol Libby Neil Nacio Brown Gini Erck Bob & Carolyn Nelson Carla Buffington Jennie A. Flanigan Nancy Noman Cheryl Cahn Nancy Hinkley Amy Robeson Maria Cavallo-Merrion 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 24 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 1900 Mountain Boulevard Oakland, CA 94611 510.339.6460 at Columbia Stages; The Secret Lives of Coats at Whitman College; Transformations at Juilliard Opera; Transition at The Public Theater’s Under the Radar Festival; the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center’s Cabaret & Performance Conference; and Eryc Taylor Dance at Joyce SoHo. Seth received his mfa from New York University. He lives in Brooklyn with his wife Mary and daughter Marion. Visit sethreiserdesign.com. Tony Taccone ART I ST I C D I RE C TOR Tony is 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, Lemony Snicket, and Itamar Moses. Tony made his Broadway debut with Bridge & Tunnel, which was lauded by the critics and won a Tony Award for its star, Sarah Jones. In 2009, he returned to Broadway to direct Carrie Fisher’s Wishful Drinking, which set box-office records at Berkeley Rep before enjoying a six-city national tour. He commissioned Tony Kushner’s legendary Angels in America, co-directed its world premiere at the Mark Taper Forum, and has collaborated with Kushner on seven projects including Brundibar and the premiere of Tiny Kushner. Two of his recent shows transferred to London: Continental Divide played the Barbican in 2004, and Tiny Kushner played the Tricycle Theatre last fall. His many regional credits include Actors Theatre of Louisville, Arena Stage, the Eureka Theatre, the Guthrie Theater, the Huntington Theatre Company, The Public, Seattle Repertory Theatre, and Yale Rep. In 2011, two scripts penned by Tony will have their premieres. Susan Medak MANAG I NG D I RE C TOR Susan has served as Berkeley Rep’s managing director since 1990, leading the administration and operations of the Theatre. She is president of the League of Resident Theatres (lort), the management association that represents 75 of the nation’s largest nonprofit theatres. Susan has often served on program panels for the National Endowment for the Arts and chaired two panels for the Massachusetts Arts Council as well. She served two terms on the board of Theatre Communications Group, including three years as the organization’s treasurer. Closer to home, Susan chairs the Downtown Berkeley Business Improvement District. She is president of the Downtown Berkeley Association and founding chair of the Berkeley Arts in Education Steering Committee for Berkeley Unified School District and the Berkeley Cultural Trust. Susan serves on the faculty of Yale School of Drama and is a proud member of the Mont Blanc Ladies’ Literary Guild and Trekking Society. She lives in Berkeley with her husband and son. Les Waters ASSO C I ATE ART I ST I C D I RE C TOR Obie Award–winner Les Waters has served as associate artistic director of Berkeley Rep since 2003. In the last five years, his shows Bring Berkeley Rep to your classroom Interactive theatre workshops Serving K–12 students and teachers One FREE hour for every public school in the Bay Area* Click berkeleyrep.org/outreach *Based on availability. Limited to one teaching hour per K-12 public school in the nine Bay Area counties. MAYBECK HIGH sCHOOL Est 1972 Berkeley’s Independent College Preparatory High School NEW Location! 2727 College Ave, Berkeley www.maybeckhs.org 510/841-8489 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · 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 have ranked among the year’s best in the New York Times, The New Yorker, Time Magazine, Time Out New York, and usa Today. Les has a history of collaborating with prominent playwrights like Caryl Churchill, Charles Mee, and Wallace Shawn, and champions important new voices such as Will Eno, Jordan Harrison, Sarah Ruhl, and Anne Washburn. In 2009, he made his Broadway debut with In the Next Room (or the vibrator play), which began in Berkeley. His other productions at Berkeley Rep include the world premieres of Concerning Strange Devices from the Distant West, Fêtes de la Nuit, Finn in the Underworld, Girlfriend, 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 Lieutenant of Inishmore, The Pillowman, and Yellowman. Les has numerous credits in New York, his native England, and at theatres across America. He led the mfa directing program at ucsd and is an associate artist of The Civilians, a theatre group in New York. Karen Racanelli GENERAL MANAGER Karen joined Berkeley Rep in November 1993 as education director. Under her supervision, Berkeley Rep’s Programs for Education provided live theatre for more than 20,000 students annually. In November 1995, she became general manager, and since then has overseen the day-to-day operations of the Theatre, supervising the box office, company management, and IT. She has represented the League of Resident Theatres during negotiations with both Actors’ Equity Association and the Union of Stage Directors and Choreographers. Prior to her tenure at Berkeley Rep, Karen worked as executive director for a small San Francisco–based theatre company and served as sponsorship manager for the San Francisco Fair. She also worked for Theatre Bay Area as director of theatre services. As an independent producer, Karen produced plays and events for Climate Theater, Intersection for the Arts, Life on the Water, Overtone Theatre Company, and San Jose Stage Company. She has served on the boards of Climate Theater, Overtone Theatre Company, and Park Day School and is currently on the board of the Julia Morgan Center. Madeleine Oldham D RAMATURG/ LI TERARY MANAGER Madeleine is Berkeley Rep’s literary manager and resident dramaturg. As literary manager and associate dramaturg at Baltimore’s Centerstage, 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 26 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 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 act/Seattle, Austin Scriptworks, Crowded Fire Theatre Company, Geva Theatre Center, the Kennedy Center, the Neo-Futurists, and Portland Center Stage. of the Boy Scouts of America. His wife, Julie A. Kulhanjian, is an attending physician at Oakland Children’s Hospital. They have three teenage children. Wealth Management at Mechanics Bank PRO D U C T I ON CO - SPONSOR Amy is in her 20th season with Berkeley Rep. She has also had the pleasure of casting for act/Seattle, Arizona Theatre Company, Aurora Theatre Company, B Street Theatre, the Bay Area Playwrights Festival, Dallas Theatre Company, Marin Theatre Company, The Marsh, San Jose Repertory Theatre, Social Impact Productions Inc., and Traveling Jewish Theatre. Amy cast roles for the film Conceiving Ada, starring Tilda Swinton, as well as Josh Kornbluth’s Haiku Tunnel and his upcoming Love and Taxes. Amy received her mfa from Brandeis University, where she was also an artist-in-residence. She is a coach to hundreds of actors and teaches classes and workshops at Berkeley Rep’s School of Theatre and various other venues in the Bay Area. Founded in 1905, Mechanics Bank provides personal banking, business, and commercial banking, trust and estate services, and brokerage and wealth management services through 33 offices across Northern California. After four generations of local ownership, it remains fiercely independent and deeply committed to the Bank’s founding values of trust, lasting relationships, teamwork, genuine care, and pride in what it does. It demonstrates its values to the thousands of hardworking individuals and businesses who have chosen Mechanics Bank by providing personalized service with access to real people; by employing knowledgeable, tenured bankers who know your name and commit their personal best to you; and by investing in and giving back to our local communities. For more information, visit mechanicsbank.com or call 800 797-6324. Marjorie Randolph BART Marjorie is president of Berkeley Rep’s board of trustees and a longtime supporter of the Theatre. She currently lives in Los Angeles, where she heads up worldwide human resources for Walt Disney Studios, although she still considers Berkeley her home. During her tenure at Berkeley Rep, she has produced 10 plays. She is a member of the California Bar and a former president of California Women Lawyers. She serves on the National Advisory Panel of the Institute for Research on Women and Gender at Stanford University. Voted America’s No. 1 transit system in 2005, the Bay Area Rapid Transit District (bart) is a 104-mile, automated, rapid-transit system that serves more than 100 million passengers annually. bart is the backbone of the Bay Area transit network. bart trains travel up to 80 mph and connect the heart of San Francisco and Oakland’s financial districts with the Bay Area’s biggest airports along with 26 cities located throughout Alameda, Contra Costa, San Francisco, and San Mateo Counties. bart’s mission is to provide safe, reliable, affordable service that runs almost entirely on electricity made from hydro and other renewable energy sources. Since opening in September 1972, bart has safely carried more than 1.5 billion passengers more than 18 billion passenger miles. Amy Potozkin C AST I NG D I RE C TOR SEASON PRO D U C ER The Strauch Kulhanjian Family EXE C UT I VE PRO D U C ERS Roger Strauch is a former president of Berkeley Rep’s board of trustees and a current member. He is chairman of The Roda Group (rodagroup.com), a venture-development company based in Berkeley, best known for launching Ask.com, PolyServe, and Sightspeed. Roger serves on the boards of Cardstore.com, GameReady, and Ravenflow, all located in the East Bay, and his firm is the lead investor in Solazyme, a renewable-energy company based in South San Francisco. Roger is a member of the engineering dean’s college advisory boards of Cornell University and UC Berkeley. At Cal, he is also an executive member of the board of trustees for the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (msri) and a co-founder of the William Saroyan Program in Armenian Studies. He is also an executive member of the Piedmont Council SEASON SPONSOR Wells Fargo SEASON SPONSOR 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. Chutzpah list* Chef’s Special Pre-Theatre Menu If you’d like to donate any of these items, please contact the Theatre at 510 647-2901. 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 Seasonal. Inspired. Consciously Purveyed. 2327 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley ~ 510.540.5950 Reservations at venusrestaurant.net Scene Shop Electro-pounce machine Electromagnetic drill press Clean lumber Prop Shop Cargo van Antique furniture (in good condition) Bedazzler Small vintage items (in good condition) Unused lumber New hand/power tools: · 14v Dewalt cordless drills · Pneumatic pop-riveter · Plasma cutter · 18-volt Makita cordless drills Costumes Clothes dryer Lighting & Sound Pentium laptop computer 15˝ flat-screen computer monitors Education Video projector iPod docking stations Digital video camera (hard drive-based) Tripod Portable speakers Large dance mirrors Gymnastic mats Circus/clown props (scarves, rings, low wire, rolla bolla, Chinese yoyos, devil sticks, peacock feathers, trapeze) General Automatic transmission passenger vehicle or pick-up truck (in good condition) Good condition hand tools Working flashlights (batteries not required) Desk chairs Pro bono auto mechanic work Reference books for literary department Two-, three-, and four-drawer lateral file cabinets Stereo headphones (for the hearing-impaired description service) Dry-erase board (24˝ x 36˝or smaller) Dry-erase year-at-a-glance wall calendar General office help—filing/database *If we don’t ask for it, we probably won’t get it! Opening the doors to dream homes since 1906. 1495 Shattuck Avenue, Berkeley | 510.486.1495 | CaliforniaMoves.com ©2010 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker® is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Office Is Owned And Operated by NRT LLC. DRE License # 00313415 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 7 Contributors We acknowledge the following Annual Fund donors whose contributions from December 2009 through November 2010 helped to make possible the Theatre’s artistic and community outreach programs. Supporters noted with made gifts in-kind. Funders whose names are noted with have used a matching gift to double or triple their initial contribution. foundation sponsors Gif ts of $ 100,000 and above Gif t s of $25,000 –49,999 Gif ts of $5,000 –9,999 Doris Duke Charitable Foundation The William & Flora Hewlett Foundation The James Irvine Foundation The Shubert Foundation The Harold and Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation The Ira and Leonore Gershwin Philanthropic Fund The Mosse Foundation for the Arts and Education Wallis Foundation Woodlawn Foundation Berkeley Civic Arts Program Ann & Gordon Getty Foundation Ramsay Family Foundation Gif ts of $50,000 –99,999 Gif t s of $10,000 –24,999 Edgerton Foundation Koret Foundation The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation National Endowment for the Arts The Bernard Osher Foundation Anonymous The Frank H. & Eva B. Buck Foundation California Arts Council Margaret A. Cargill Foundation The Green Foundation Hellman Family Foundation The Thomas J. Long Foundation The San Francisco Foundation Gif ts of $1,000 –4,999 Alameda County Arts Commission Joyce & William Brantman Foundation Civic Foundation Dramatists Guild Fund Oakland Fund for the Arts corpor ate sponsors Sea son sponsors Gif t s of $12 ,000 –24,999 Gif ts of $1, 500 –5,999 The Morrison & Foerster Foundation Union Bank Vodafone Americas Foundation™ Wealth Management at Mechanics Bank 4U Field Hockey Bingham McCutchen LLP Gallagher Risk Management Services Macy’s, Inc. Ruegg & Ellsworth Gif t s of $6,000 –11,999 Gif ts of $50,000 and above Gif ts of $2 5,000 –49,999 Armanino McKenna LLP Bank of the West BluesCruise.com Charles Schwab & Co. Deloitte Genstar Capital LLC Heritage Capital Private Asset Management Howard Rice Nemerovski Canady Falk & Rabkin MBV Law LLP Meyer Sound Oliver & Company, Inc. Panoramic Interests Peet’s Coffee & Tea Seagate Properties Inc. SNR Denton US LLP STG Asset Management, Inc. UBS Financial Services Inc. U.S. Bank In - Kind sponsors 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. media sponsor s m atching gif t s 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. Amanda’s Feel Good Fresh Food Back to Earth Organic Catering Bobby G’s Pizzeria Bogatin, Corman & Gold Bucci’s Restaurant CASS, Inc. Darling Flower Shop Domaine Carneros Etc Catering eVe Restaurant Four Seasons San Francisco Gather Restaurant GHS Corporation Grace Street Catering H. Julien Designs Hotel Shattuck Plaza Ippuku Jazzcaffè/act Catering Kevin Berne Images La Note Left Coast Catering Paula LeDuc Fine Catering Patricia Motzkin Architecture Picante Catering Post Meridian Pyramid Breweries Revival Bar + Kitchen Ricola usa 2 8 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 Semifreddi’s Solstice Press TCHO Venus Restaurant Raymond Vineyards is the official wine purveyor of Berkeley Rep. Hotel Shattuck Plaza is the official hotel of Berkeley Rep. A & B Foundation · American Express · Amgen Foundation · Argonaut Group, Inc. · AT&T · Bank of America · Bank of the West · S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation · California HealthCare · Chevron · Clorox · The Doctors Company · First Quadrant · Franklin Templeton · Gap Foundation · Google · Hewlett Packard · IBM Corporation · Intuit Inc. · Irvine Foundation · Johnson & Johnson · JPMorgan Chase & Co. · Lawrence Livermore National Security · Levi Strauss Foundation · Lexis-Nexis · Macy’s, Inc. · Merrill Lynch & Co. · Microsoft · Morrison & Foerster Foundation · NORCAL Mutual Insurance Company · Oracle Corporation · Patagonia · Salesforce. com · Schwab Charitable Fund · Sony Corporation of America · Stuart Foundation · Sun Microsystems Foundation · UPS Foundation · VISA U.S.A., Inc. · John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Contributors Leg end in-kind gift matching gift Donor Circle Members Producer CIRCLE se a son producer s $ 5 0,0 0 0 & u p Anonymous Wayne Jordan & Quinn Delaney Marjorie Randolph e xecutive producer s $ 2 5,0 0 0 –49,9 9 9 Rena Bransten Bill Falik & Diana Cohen Wayne Jordan & Quinn Delaney John & Helen Meyer Mitch & Pam Nichter Beth & David Sawi Jack & Betty Schafer Dr. & Mrs. Philip D. Schild The Strauch Kulhanjian Family Jean & Michael Strunsky Julie M. Weinstein Felicia Woytak & Steve Rasmussen producer s $ 12 ,0 0 0 –2 4 ,9 9 9 David & Vicki Cox Thalia Dorwick Kerry Francis & John Jimerson Mary & Nicholas Graves Jack Klingelhofer Mary Ann & Lou Peoples president s $ 3,0 0 0 – 5,9 9 9 Anonymous (3) Neil & Gene Barth Tracy Brown & Gregory Holland Kimo Campbell Richard & Anita Davis Lois M. De Domenico Delia Fleishhacker Ehrlich Howard Grothe & Robert James Donor Advised Fund of Horizons Foundation Earl & Bonnie Hamlin Doug & Leni Herst James C. Hormel LeRoy Howard & Dana Buntrock Hurlbut-Johnson Foundation of the East Bay Community Foundation Barbara E. Jones in memory of William E. Jones Robert Kelling Leonard Merrill Kurz Nancy & George Leitmann Jennifer S. Lindsay Dixon Long Neil & Leah Mac Neil Naomi & Bruce Mann Charlotte & Adolph Martinelli Sandi & Dick Pantages Pease Family Fund David & Marilyn Pratt Ivy & Leigh Robinson David S. H. Rosenthal & Vicky Reich Ms. Riva Rubnitz Joyce & Jim Schnobrich Dr. & Mrs. Stephen Schoen Emily Shanks Laura Wais & Dorothee Pardys John & Pamela Walker Sheila Wishek Saul Zaentz Martin & Margaret Zankel direc tor s $ 1, 5 0 0 –2 ,9 9 9 Anonymous (7) L. Matthew Adams Pat Angell in memory of Gene Angell Ross E. Armstrong Nina Auerbach John Bacon Jane & Bill Bardin Edith Barschi Valerie Barth & Peter Wiley Leo P. Ruth & Deborah Dashow Ruth Patricia Sakai & Richard Shapiro Joan Sarnat & David Hoffman Sally Smith & Don Burns Michael & Sue Steinberg Karen Stevenson & William McClave Guy Tiphane Gail & Arne Wagner a ssociate producer s $ 6,0 0 0 – 11,9 9 9 Anonymous Anonymous, on behalf of Karen Grove The Alafi Family Foundation Shelley & Jonathan Bagg Stephen Belford & Bobby Minkler Carole B. Berg Stephen K. Cassidy & Rebecca L. Powlan Robert Council & Ann Parks-Council Robin & Rich Edwards Oz Erickson & Rina Alcalay William Espey & Margaret Hart Edwards John & Carol Field David & Vicki Fleishhacker Virginia & Timothy Foo Herb & Marianne Friedman Paul T. Friedman Steven, Jill, & Kevin Fugaro Bruce Golden & Michelle Mercer Fritzi Benesch Linden & Carl Berry Becky & Jeff Bleich Caroline Booth Broitman-Basri Family Drs. Don & Carol Anne Brown Thomas & Tecoah Bruce Jennifer Burden & Carren Shagley Tom Cantrell & Robert Lane Lynne Carmichael Jennifer Chaiken & Sam Hamilton Susan Chamberlin Mel & Hella Cheitlin Earl T. Cohen & Heidi M. Shale Karen & David Crommie Ed Cullen & Ann O’Connor John & Stephanie Dains Ilana Debare & Sam Schuchat Becky Draper Edward Durbin & Joan Morris Dirk Epperson Merle & Michael Fajans Nancy & Jerry Falk Cynthia A Farner Donald & Sylvia Fillman Ann & Shawn Fischer Hecht Linda Jo Fitz Kristina Flanagan Mort & Frannie Fleishhacker James Gala Karl & Kathleen Geier Dennis & Susan Johann Gilardi Marjorie Ginsburg & Howard Slyter Daniel & Hilary B. Goldstine Deborah & Howard Goodman Garrett Gruener & Amy Slater Richard & Lois Halliday Migsy & Jim Hamasaki David & Vera Hartford Gregg Hauser & Judy O’Young, MD Gail & Bob Hetler Harlan & Joanne Heydon Richard N. Hill & Nancy Lundeen Bill Hofmann & Robbie Welling Hilary & Tom Hoynes George & Leslie Hume Ron & Virginia Iverson Beth & Fred Karren Mary S. Kimball Pearl T. Kimura Lynn Eve Komaromi John Kouns & Anne Baele Kouns Scott & Sherry Haber Bob & Linda Harris Ms. Wendy E. Jordan Julie Matlof Kennedy & Patrick Kennedy Jean & Jack Knox Wanda Kownacki Ted & Carole Krumland Suzanne Lafetra Zandra Faye LeDuff Dale & Don Marshall Sandra & Ross McCandless Martin & Janis McNair Stephanie Mendel Steven & Patrece Mills Dugan Moore Eddie & Amy Orton Virginia Patterson Peter Pervere & Georgia Cassel Len & Barbara Rand Kaye & Randy Rosso Pat Rougeau Richard A. Rubin & H. Marcia Smolens Jodi Schiller & Ben Douglas Pat & Merrill Shanks Tides Foundation, recommended by an anonymous donor advised fund Ama Torrance & David Davies Steven & Linda Wolan Helen E. Land Randy Laroche & David Laudon Louise Laufersweiler & Warren Sharp Ellen & Barry Levine Bonnie Levinson & Dr. Donald Kay Tom Lockard & Alix Marduel Greg & Liz Lutz Peter & Melanie Maier Lois & Gary Marcus Sumner & Hermine Marshall Jill Matichak Judith & Kim Maxwell Miles & Mary Ellen McKey Scott McKinney & Sherrill Lavagnino Susan Medak & Greg Murphy Toby Mickelson & Donald Brody Roger & Satomi Miles John & Katrina Miottel Andy & June Monach Scott Montgomery & Marc Rand Judith & Richard Oken Tom & Kathy Pendleton Jonathan & Hillary Reinis Bill Reuter & Ruth Major James & Maxine Risley John & Jody Roberts Deborah Romer & William Tucker 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 Edie Silber & Steve Bomse Amrita Singhal & Michael Tubach Kae Skeels Sherry & David Smith Stephen & Cindy Snow Lorna & Cris Strotz Andrew & Jody Taylor Nancy & Fred Teichert Susan & David Terris Buddy & Jodi Warner Robin Williams Wendy Willrich Steven Winkel & Barbara Sahm George & Kathy Wolf Charles & Nancy Wolfram Sally Woolsey 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 9 Contributors Individual annual fund donor s pl ay wright s $ 1,0 0 0 –1, 49 9 Anonymous (3) · Bruce & Martha Atwater · Mary Bailey · Elizabeth Balderston · Helen C. Barber · Anonymous · Anonymous · David Beery & Norman Abramson · Linda Brandenburger · Ed & Lisa Chilton · Julie Harkness Cooke · James Cuthbertson · Barbara & Tim Daniels · Narsai & Venus David · Harry & Susan Dennis · Corinne & Mike Doyle · Betty Feinstein & Robert Henderson · Barbara & Marty Fishman · Kirk & Suanne Flatow · Thomas & Sharon Francis · Christopher R. Frostad · Judith & Alex Glass · Lauren Golden & Brian Hurst · Phyllis & Eugene Gottfried · Harriet Hamlin · Ruth Hennigar · Laurin Herr & Trisha Gorman · Dixie Hersh · Paula Hughmanick & Steven Berger · Harold & Lyn Isbell · Rosalind & Sung-Hou Kim · David Lincoln King & Tim Stevenson · Michael Kossman · Joel Krauska · Susan B. Levine & Jim Lauer · Ray Lifchez · Karen & John McGuinn · Alison McLean · Margo Murray · Jim Newman & Jane Ivory · Robert S. Newton · Barbara & Pier Oddone · Janet Ostler · Gerane Wharton Park · Bob & MaryJane Pauley · Allen Rabinovich · We gratefully recognize the following members of the Annual Fund whose contributions were received in November and December 2010. Boyard & Anne Rowe · Neal Shorstein, MD & Christopher Doane · In Memory of Nathan Andrew Sommers · Carl & Joan Strand · Marcia Tanner, in honor of Sally Smith & Don Burns · Pate & Judy Thomson · Michael Tubach & Amrita Singhal · Scott Wachter & Barbara Malina · Sallie Weissinger · Beth Weissman · Patricia & Jeffrey Williams · Lee Yearley & Sally Gressens · Sam & Joyce Zanze ac tor s $5 0 0 – 9 9 9 Anonymous (2o) · Gerry & Marcus Alexis · Marcia & George Argyris · Bryan Balazs · Barbara Jones Bambara & Massey J. Bambara · Michelle L. Barbour · Don & Gerry Beers · Cindy Beitmen · Mary Ann & Len Benson · Jonathan Berk & Rebecca Schwartz · Robert Berman & Jane Ginsburg · Dr. & Mrs. Gerald & Carol Block · Dr. Kevin & Mrs. Riva Bobrowsky · Marilyn Bray · Ronnie Caplane · Charles & Kristine Cardall · Bruce Carlton & Richard McCall · Paula Carrell · Dennis Cohen & Deborah Robison · Lawrence Crapo & Desiree Gillingham · Pat & Steve Davis · Jackie & Charles Desoer · Francine & Beppe Di Supporter s $ 2 5 0 –49 9 Kay Andersen · Peter Bransten · Dan Brekke · Terin Christensen · Michael Handler · Renee Hilpert · Bill & Jane Neilson · Margaret O’Connor · Carol Shen and Larry Dodge Contributor s $ 15 0 –2 49 Anonymous · Irwin & Rita Blitt · Johnny Chang · Ruth Conroy · Edwin Eng · Paul Goldstein & Dena Mossar · Janet King & Tom Corlett · Kim Walker Friends $ 75–149 Anonymous, in memory of Audrey Patterson, beloved friend · Keira Armstrong & Steve Thompson · Stephen Palma · Dan Dougherty · Drs. Nancy Ebbert & Adam Rochmes · Michael Ehrenzweig · Roger & Jane Emanuel · Gini Erck & David Petta · In honor of Kerry Francis · Harold & Alice C. Furst · Dorothy & Chuck Garber · Al Garren · Bonnie Goldsmith · Marcia Goodman & Hank Levy · Judy & Shel Greene · Glenn Hammonds · Mrs. Robert Hanscom · Kate Hartley & Mike Kass · Joe Hartzog · Richard L. Hay · Irene & Robert Hepps · Drs. Gareth & Ruth Hill · Elaine Hitchcock · John & Elise Holmgren · Robert & Linda Holub · Rebecca Hull & Joe Raabe · Lynda & Dr. J. Pearce Hurley · Helmut H. Kapczynski & Colleen Neff · Ken & Karen Keller · Drs. Mary Kemeny & Paul Feigenbaum · Jack & Birthe Kirsch · John Kruse & Gary Beuschel · Woof Kurtzman & Elizabeth Hertz · William & Adair Langston · Mr. & Mrs. S. J. Lapporte · Mr. & Mrs. David Leonetti · John & Karen Levy · Mary A. Mackey · Vonnie Madigan · Joan & Roger Mann · Gus Manning · John E. Matthews · Nancy McCormick · John McGehee · Caryl & Peter Mezey · Jerry Mosher · Ron Nakayama · Markus Niebanck · Claire Noonan & Peter Landsberger · Robyn & David Owen · Stephen E. Palmer · Richard Pearson & Jean Hart · Lewis B. Perry, Jr. · Edward & Nancy Pike · Regina Phelps · Beth Polland · Paul Popenoe · Chuck & Kati Quibell · David & Mary Ramos · Paul & Phyllis Robbins · Horacio Rodriguez · Rick & Stephanie Rogers · Ronald & Karen Rose · Dorothy & George Saxe · Cynthia & William Schaff · Mark Schoenrock & Claudia Fenelon · Teddy & Bruce Schwab · Randee & Joseph Seiger · Brenda Shank, MD PhD · Steve & Susan Shortell · Paul Silva · Dave & Lori Simpson · Jerry & Dick Smallwood · Dr. Scott & Mrs. Alice So · Louis & Bonnie Spiesberger · Robert & Naomi Stamper · Annie Stenzel · Rocky & Gretchen Stone · Monroe W. Strickberger · Karen Tiedemann & Geoff Piller · Emil Valkov · Deborah & Bob Van Nest · William van Dyk & Margi Sullivan · Jane Walker · Louise & Larry Walker · Mark Wasserman & Judy Freeman · Dave Wedding Dress · Judith & Malcolm Weintraub · Jonathan & Kiyo Weiss · Dr. Ben & Mrs. Carolyn Werner · Fred Winslow & Barbara Baratta · Margaret L. Wu & Ciara Cox, in honor of Kerry Francis & John Jimerson · The Glea G. Wylie Charitable Fund Brandon · James Cardella · Redell Clark · Maheesh Jain · Anthony Kosky · Michele Martinez · Michael Montoya · M. Norris · Otis Paul · Ms. Rose M. Ray · Raeshma Razvi · Sandra Ried · Helaine & Marc Schweitzer · Darin Smith · Steve Spellman Anne Dorsey · Diane Douglas · Steven Eisenhauer · Roy Eyal · Karina Foote · Daniel Frysinger · Marlyn Gershuny · Annette Greiner · Jeannette Grogan · Esther Gulli · Lauren Gunderson · Kenneth Harris · Nancy Herrera · Mr. and Mrs. Peter Hoban · William Hodgson · Wanda R. Hundley · Lois Anne Indorf · Grace Jimenez · Cynthia Kane · Saila Kariat · Karen Kelley · Eva M. Kertesz · John Kiszla · Cecilia Lindsay · Dorian Lok · Gary Mattingly · Timothy McClure · Robert McIntosh · Robert Miller · Lucas Milliken · Hercules Morphopoulos · Jim Nelson · Satoru Nitta, in memory of Pearl Kimura · Gael Pardi · Christine Peterson · Dorit Raviv · Dorina Reid · Katrina ScottGeorge · Valerie Sinzdak · Mark Tanaka · MC Taylor · Kalvin Vangaasbeck · Steven Vosen · Richard Watson · Lyuba Zarsky Patrons Anonymous · Laurie Adams · Wayne Archer · Raymond Baker · Kathy Bales · Gizelle Barany · Anne F. Battersby · Mary Bayless · Jon Bendich · Michele Benjamin · Robert Bernhard · Herman & Elaine Binger · Martha Blake · Mr. & Mrs. Robert Brewer · Amy Brooks · Carol Brown · Leslie Burton · Cathy Carrig · Douglas Carruth · Lisa Cohen · Barbara Cohrssen-Powell · Mary & Matthew Connors · Gabriela Crane · Peter B. Dahl · Ray Delgado · Mary deLuna · Susan Dickey · The Society welcomes the following new members: Douglas J. Hill Sustaining members as of December 2010: Anonymous Ken & Joni Avery Nancy Axelrod Carole B. Berg Estate of Nelly Berteaux Linda Brandenburger Bruce Carlton & Richard G. McCall Stephen K. Cassidy Estate of Nancy Croley Andrew Daly & Jody Taylor Rich & Robin Edwards William Espey & Margaret Hart Edwards Carol & John Field Dr. Stephen E. Follansbee & Dr. Richard A. Wolitz Kerry Francis Dr. Harvey & Deana Freedman Marjorie Ginsburg & Howard Slyter Mary & Nicholas Graves Richard & Lois Halliday Linda & Bob Harris Fred Hartwick Hoskins/Frame Family Trust Zandra Faye LeDuff Estate of John E. & Helen A. Manning Richard Markell Dale & Don Marshall Sumner & Hermine Marshall Rebecca Martinez & Peter Sloss Suzanne & Charles McCulloch Susan Medak & Greg Murphy Toni Mester Sharon Ott Amy Pearl Parodi Barbara Peterson Margaret Phillips Estate of Margaret Purvine Marjorie Randolph Betty & Jack Schafer Michael & Sue Steinberg Karen Stevenson Dr. Douglas & Anne Stewart Jean Strunsky Phillip & Melody Trapp Dorothy Walker Grace Williams Karen & Henry Work Martin & Margaret Zankel Members of this Society, which is named in honor of Founding Director Michael W. Leibert, have designated Berkeley Rep in their estate plans. Unless the donor specifies otherwise, planned gifts become a part of Berkeley Rep’s endowment, where they will provide the 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, year after year, in perpetuity. For more information on becoming a member, visit our website at berkeleyrep.org or contact Daria Hepps at 510 647-2904 or [email protected]. 3 0 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 Named funds Dale Elliot Fund Bret C. Harte Young Directors Fund Jan & Howard Oringer Outreach Coordinator Position The Bernard Osher Foundation New Play Development Program Peter F. Sloss Dramaturgy & Literary Fund The Strauch Kulhanjian Artistic Innovation Fund We acknowledge the following donors for their generous support of the 40th Anniversary Campaign: Inve s to r s circle Anonymous Wayne Jordan & Quinn Delaney The Bernard Osher Foundation The Strauch Kulhanjian Family s e a so n pro d uce r s Circle Doris Duke Charitable Foundation Ira & Leonore Gershwin Philanthropic Fund Marjorie Randolph Jean & Michael Strunsky pro d u ce r s 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 Joan Sarnat & David Hoffman Betty & Jack Schafer Felicia Woytak & Steve Rasmussen Martin & Margaret Zankel a sso ciate pro d uce r s 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. William & Flora Hewlett Foundation Koret Foundation Sarah McArthur & Michael LeValley Sandra & Ross McCandless Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Dugan Moore Mary Ann & Lou Peoples Peter Pervere & Georgia Cassel Richard A. Rubin & H. Marcia Smolens Cynthia & William Schaff Michael & Sue Steinberg The Harold & Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust Guy Tiphane Wayne & Gladys Valley Foundation presid e nt s Circle American Express Philanthropic Foundation 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 direc tor s Circle Rena Bransten John & Carol Field Susan Medak & Greg Murphy Len & Barbara Rand Stephen & Cindy Snow The Tournesol Project Arne & Gail Wagner Woodlawn Foundation pl ay wrig ht s circle Anonymous (2) Stephen K. Cassidy Mel & Hella Cheitlin East Bay Community Foundation Kristina Flanagan Tom Hanks & Rita Wilson Bob & Linda Harris Roger & Silvija Hoag Patrick & Holly O’Dea Patricia Sakai & Richard Shapiro Kae Skeels Douglas Tilden Wells Fargo Foundation We thank these additional donors for their support of the 40th Anniversary Campaign: Anonymous (3) Pat Angell in memory of Gene Angell Susan & Barry Baskin Alvin Baum Harry & Suzie Blount Lynne Carmichael Kristin Carpenter In memory of Julie Evelyn Chandler Susan Chamberlin Harry & Susan Dennis Alex Edwards Entrekin Foundation Cynthia A Farner Steven, Jill, & Kevin Fugaro Mary Hamilton Earl & Bonnie Hamlin Harlan & Joanne Heydon Deborah & David Kirshman Jack Klingelhofer Lynn Eve Komaromi Zandra Faye LeDuff Nancy & George Leitmann Ellen & Barry Levine George I. Lythcott, III Neil & Leah Mac Neil Helen Marcus & David Williamson Miles & Mary Ellen McKey Ron Nakayama Barbara & Pier Oddone Judith & Richard Oken Regina Phelps Aaron Phillips James & Maxine Risley Barbara & Richard Rosenberg Sarlo Foundation of the Jewish Community Endowment Fund, in honor of Rebecca Martinez Dr. & Mrs. Philip D. Schild Sherry & David Smith Theresa Nelson & Bernard Smits Mr. Leon Van Steen Dave Wedding Dress Julie M. Weinstein Alexis Wong To learn more about the 40th Anniversary Campaign, contact Lynn Eve Komaromi, Director of Development, at 510 647-2903 or [email protected]. 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 3 1 About Berkeley Rep S taff and affiliations Artistic Director Tony Taccone Managing Director Susan Medak General Manager Karen Racanelli artis tic Associate Artistic Director Les Waters Artistic Associate & Casting Director Amy Potozkin Literary Manager/Dramaturg Madeleine Oldham Artists under Commission David Adjmi Glen Berger Marcus Gardley Dan LeFranc Tarell McCraney Rita Moreno Dominic Orlando Dael Orlandersmith Stew/Heidi Rodewald cos tum es Costume Shop Director Maggi Yule Draper Kitty Muntzel Tailor Kathy Kellner Griffith First Hand Janet Conery Wardrobe Supervisor Barbara Blair patro n s e rvices Patron Services Manager Katrena Jackson House Manager Debra Selman Assistant House Managers Cayley Carroll Octavia Driscoll Aleta George Abigail Hanson Kiki Poe Usha Reddy Concessionaires Michelle Baron Amy Bobeda Samantha Budd Alex Friedman Jamaica Montgomery-Glenn Wendi Gross Emily Hartman Champagne Hughes Kimberly “Mik” Jew Zoe Kalionzes Devon LaBelle Margot Leonard Ellen Maloney Candice McDowell Krys Ritchie Rachel Steinberg Kate Vangeloff Katherine Wepler Allison Whorton Jennifer M. Wills Usher Coordinators Nelson & Marilyn Goodman pro d uc tio n Production Manager Tom Pearl Associate Production Manager Amanda Williams O’Steen Company Manager Megan Wygant s tag e m anag e m e nt Production Stage Manager Michael Suenkel Stage Managers Cynthia Cahill Nicole Dickerson Karen Szpaller Kimberly Mark Webb Production Assistants Megan McClintock Leslie M. Radin 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 sce n e s h o p Technical Director Jim Smith Associate Technical Director Ryan O’Steen Shop Foreman Sam McKnight Master Carpenter Colin Babcock Carpenter Stephanie Shipman sce nic art Charge Scenic Artist Lisa Lázár elec tric s Master Electrician Frederick C. Geffken Production Electricians Christine Cochrane soun d Sound Supervisor James Ballen Sound Engineer Angela Don adminis tr atio n Controller Suzanne Pettigrew Director of Technology Gustav Davila Associate Managing Director Meghan Pressman Executive Assistant Andrew Susskind Bookkeeper Kristin Cato Human Resources Manager David Lorenc Human Resources Consultant Laurel Leichter Database Manager Diana Amezquita Managing Director Fellow Kate Liberman d e velo pm e nt Director of Development Lynn Eve Komaromi Associate Director of Development Daria Hepps Special Events Manager Margo Chilless Individual Giving Manager Laura Fichtenberg Institutional Grants Manager Amanda Margulies Development Database Coordinator Jane Voytek Development Associate Sarah Nowicki 3 2 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 box o ffice Ticket Services Director Christine Bond Subscription Manager & Associate Sales Manager Laurie Barnes Box Office Supervisor Terry Goulette Box Office Agents Destiny Askin D. Mark Blank Crystal Chen Christina Cone Tom Toro Michael Woo m arke ting & com munic 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 Manager Cari Turley Communications Manager Karen McKevitt Marketing Manager & Multimedia Producer Pauline Luppert Webmaster Christina Cone Program Advertising Ellen Felker o pe r atio n s Facilities Director Emiel Koehler Facilities Coordinator Lauren Shorofsky Maintenance Technician Johnny Van Chang Facilities Assistants Kevin Barry Sonny Hudson Sophie Li Lamont Rodriguez b e rkele y re p sch o ol o f the atre Associate General Manager & Director of the School of Theatre Rachel L. Fink Associate Director MaryBeth Cavanaugh Jan & Howard Oringer Outreach Coordinator Dave Maier Community Programs Manager Benjamin Hanna School Administrator Emika Abe Registrar Katie Riemann Faculty Aleph Ayin Erica Blue Jon Burnett Rebecca Castelli Paul Cello Robert Ernst Deborah Eubanks Nancy Gold Gary Graves Marvin Greene Ben Hanna Ben Johnson Devon LaBelle Dave Maier Marilet Martinez Alex Moggridge Ryan O’Donnell Madeleine Oldham Robert Parsons Christopher Peak Lisa Anne Porter Amy Potozkin Diane Rachel Elyse Shafarman Rebecca Stockley Tony Taccone James Wagner Les Waters Outreach Teaching Artists Gendell Hing-Hernández Devon LaBelle Marilet Martinez Alex Moggridge Ryan O’Donnell Carla Pantoja Harold Pierce Tommy Shepherd Caron Treger Meja Tyehimba Elena Wright Teacher Advisory Council Drea Beale Julie Boe Amy Crawford Beth Daly Jan Hunter Marianne Phillip Richard Silberg John Warren Jordan Winer Docent Committee Thalia Dorwick, chair Charlotte Martinelli, co-chair Docents Dee Kursch Joy Lancaster Lori Miller Marc Seleznow Barry Walter 2010 –11 B e rke le y Re p Fellows hip s Bret C. Harte Directing Fellow Jennifer M. Wills Company/Theatre Management Fellow Champagne Hughes Costume Fellow Amy Bobeda Development Fellow Wendi Gross Education Fellows Candice Renee McDowell Allison Whorton Graphic Design Fellow Samantha Budd Lighting / Electrics Fellow Daniela Becerra Marketing & Communications Fellow Kate Vangeloff Peter F. Sloss Literary/ Dramaturgy Fellow Rachel Steinberg Production Management Fellow Krys Ritchie Properties Fellow Jamaica Montgomery-Glenn Scenic Art Fellow Margot Leonard Scene Shop Fellow Lindsay Cramond Sound Fellow Leandro Marques Stage Management Fellow Amanda Warner 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. Board of TRustees Marjorie Randolph Bill Falik Vice President Sandra R. McCandless Vice President David Cox Tre a surer Scott Haber Secretary Kerry Francis Chair , Trus tees Com mit tee Peter Pervere Chair , Audit com mit tee 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 Richard A. Rubin Edwin C. Shiver Roger A. Strauch Warren Widener Martin Zankel WORLD PREMIERE Board Memb er s President Richard A. Rubin a national new play network/global age project Thalia Dorwick, PhD William T. Espey John Field Lisa Finer David Fleishhacker David Hoffman Wayne Jordan Julie Matlof Kennedy Carole S. Krumland Dale Rogers Marshall Susan Medak Helen Meyer Pamela Nichter Mary Ann Peoples Len Rand Patricia Sakai Jack Schafer Emily Shanks Sally Smith Roger Strauch Jean Strunsky Tony Taccone Felicia Woytak Sus taining advisor s Carole B. Berg Rena Bransten Stephen Cassidy Diana Cohen Nicholas Graves Rick Hoskins Dugan Moore Pat Rougeau Richard Shapiro Michael Steinberg Michael Strunsky Phillip Trapp Martin Zankel Directed by Jessica Heidt January 28 - March 6, 2011 Only 2 doors east of Berkeley Rep - visit us and mention code BRC5 for $5 off tickets! 510.843.4822 www.auroratheatre.org eileeN Fisher TiaNello ciTroN FlaX CONTEMPORARY CLOTHING plus sizes for women Founding Director Michael W. Leibert 5937 college ave, oaKlaND 510.654.5144 www.infullswing.com 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 3 3 ENCORE 1-6 4-C_FNL.indd 1 10/20/10 12:03 PM IFS F YI Latecomers Latecomers will be seated at the discretion of the house manager. Theatre – On The Square Visit our website! Theatre info Click berkeleyrep.org—you can buy tickets and plan your visit, read our blog, watch video, 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 email accounts, please authorize berkeleyrep@ berkeleyrep.pmail.us. Tickets/box office Larkspur Hotels & Restaurants offers unique hospitality and urban excitement in the heart of San Francisco’s theatre district. Enjoy a night on the town – dine at our very own Kuleto’s or Bar Norcini, see one of many nearby shows, and then stay comfortably at one of our three hotels – just steps from Union Square. 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 2010/11 ticket prices date/ tim e previews tue 8 pm , wed 7pm , thu 2pm*, sat 2pm thu 8 pm , su n 2 & 7pm fri 8 pm sat 8 pm prem a $43 $38 54 46 59 65 73 53 59 65 b $29 34 39 47 54 *No Thursday matinees for Limited Engagement shows For reservations at any of our three Union Square hotels – call 866.823.4669 or visit us at LarkspurHotels.com Under 30? Half-price advance tickets! For anyone under the age of 30, based on availability. Proof of age required. Some restrictions apply. 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 showtime. Proof of eligibility required. Subject to availability. Sorry, we can’t give refunds or offer retroactive discounts. Theatre maps LAR 072909 theatre 1_3v.pdf 3 4 · t h e b e r k e le y r e p m ag a z i n e · 2 0 1 0 – 1 1 · iss u e 4 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 Bring Berkeley Rep to your school! Call the School of Theatre at 510 647-2972 for information about free and low-cost workshops for elementary, middle, and high schools. Call Cari Turley at 510 647-2918 for $10 student-matinee tickets. Call the box office at 510 647-2949 for information on discounted subscriptions for preschool and K–12 educators. Theatre store Berkeley Rep merchandise and show-related books are available in the Hoag Theatre Store in the Roda Theatre and 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. Phones / electronics / recordings Please make sure your cell phone, pager, 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. OIA 020510 copier 1_2h.pdf bistro French food for the soul Open 7 days a week Walking distance to the theatre 10% discount for Berkeley Rep patrons Full bar 1849 Shattuck at Hearst · 510 849-2155 · liaisonbistro.com Berkeley Rep patron discount not to be combined with any other offer The art of performance draws our eyes to the stage Our community's commitment to arts and culture says a lot about where we live. Theater brings us together from the moment the lights go down and the curtains come up. Berkeley Rep, we applaud this production. University • 2460 Bancroft Way • 510-464-2266 Berkeley Main • 2144 Shattuck Avenue • 510-649-3630 North Berkeley • 1800 Solano Avenue • 510-558-2800 West Berkeley Business Center • 2929 7th Street • 510-647-1055 wellsfargo.com © 2010 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. All rights reserved. Member FDIC. 122939 11/10