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* WILMABILL *ALSO AT WILMATHEATER.ORG Working on Tony Kushner’s Angels in America is a privilege. Tony is a smart, well read, imaginative, passionate, and politically engaged playwright. Millennium Approaches brought the world and characters of the play into a crisis; in Perestroika the characters wrestle with the past, their losses, and pain. Some are defeated, but others find a sort of grace, as they begin the painful process of change and become engaged in rebuilding their lives and their world. FROM THE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR BLANKA ZIZKA Last year, the staff at the Wilma, like the characters in Perestroika, had to deal with a great loss. With Jiri Zizka’s death this January, the Wilma lost a founding Artistic Director, who had the vision to bring the Wilma to Broad Street, and whose productions were audaciously ambitious and visually spectacular. Jiri was a dreamer who strived to make the impossible happen. He was inventive and imaginative, and he was also smart and cunning in looking for unorthodox ways to realize his ideas. Looking ahead, I want to find new ways for the Wilma to honor that spirit of imagination and inventiveness. I want to find ways that allow the Wilma time for artistic evolution and experimentation. Two new projects mark a beginning of this search. Over the next two years I will be working with Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Paula Vogel, the Wilma’s dramaturg Walter Bilderback, vocal teacher Jean-René Toussaint, and a company of actors, to create a piece about US veterans coming home from the current US wars. This will be a completely new experiment where content and form will be developed simultaneously. In order to build a common vocabulary for actors who perform at the Wilma, we are investing in the professional development of Philadelphia actors through a series of workshops with internationally known master teachers and directors. Actors, who are invited to take part in the workshops are financially compensated for their time, as actors of any resident company would be. It’s my desire to create around the Wilma a fluid company of actors with a common technique and understanding of the process that I’m exploring at the Wilma. As the Angel announces to Prior Walter at the end of Millennium Approaches: “The Great Work Begins.” I hope you will enjoy Perestroika and follow us on this bold new step into the future. FROM THE MANAGING DIRECTOR JAMES HASKINS I write this having just participated in the first rehearsal of Perestroika. Actors, returning after a five-week hiatus following the closing of Millennium Approaches, comment that it feels like the first day of school after summer vacation. To me, it feels like a reunion of a warm and generous community of artists continuing a shared mission. Everyone in the room – from actor to administrator – sits in a circle and simply reads from one line to the next, focused purely on Tony Kushner’s words. Together, we reveal his powerfully moving, fantastical, and surprisingly funny story. Each production builds its own momentary community, from first rehearsal to opening night to the closing, when we traditionally bid farewell with a champagne toast. It’s rare that we have the fortune to re-assemble a company of artists, and to build a community that endures beyond the life of one play. This is the future of the Wilma. As Blanka describes, we seek to build on the talents of Philadelphia theater artists through our laboratory workshops and through our long-term play development project with Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Paula Vogel. We extend our community to include our resident dance company BalletX and the Bearded Ladies Cabaret, and by taking over management of a shared software and database system that serves a consortium of 13 performing arts organizations across the region. And we welcome students throughout the region with our Wilmagination and Wilma Classroom programs, reaching inner city high schools as well as urban and suburban colleges and universities. Welcome to the Wilma community. We now share the culmination of our offstage work with you through our production of Angels in America. Take a seat and join in the story. *SEASON SPONSORS *HONORARY PRODUCER DANIEL BERGER *OPENING NIGHT SPONSORS With additional support from the Charlotte Cushman Foundation in memory of Jiri Zizka. The Wilma Theater is grateful for significant support provided by: The Horace Goldsmith Foundation Wyncote Foundation Blanka Zizka Artistic Director under the direction of presents James Haskins Managing Director TONY KUSHNER’S directed by Blanka Zizka featuring Kate Czajkowski, Aubrey Deeker, Maia DeSanti, James Ijames, Stephen Novelli, Benjamin Pelteson, Mary Elizabeth Scallen, Luigi Sottile Set Designer Costume Designer Matt Saunders Oana Botez Lighting Designer Russell H. Champa Dramaturg Walter Bilderback Sound and Original Music Christopher Colucci Casting David Stradley Hair and Makeup Designer Jon Carter Dialect Coach Lynne Innerst Voice Coach Jean-René Toussaint Production Manager Clayton Tejada Resident Stage Manager Patreshettarlini Adams Flying by FOY The Actors and Stage Manager employed Produced through special arrangement with Broadway Play Publishing Inc. The script to this play may be purchased from BPPI at in this production are members of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of http://www.BroadwayPlayPubl.com. Perestroika was first performed as a staged reading in May 1991 by the Eureka Theatre Company. The play was workshopped at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles in May, 1992. The World Premiere of Perestroika was presented by the Mark Taper Forum in November, 1992. Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. This theater operates under an agreement between the League of Resident Theatres and Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. CAST Kate Czajkowski............................................................Harper, Martin Heller, Angel Africanii Aubrey Deeker..............................................................................Prior Walter, Man in the Park Maia DeSanti........................ Emily, Sister Ella Chapter, The Woman in the South Bronx, Angel, Voice of Orrin, Mormon Mother James Ijames..............................................Belize, Mr. Lies, Voice of Caleb, Angel Oceania Stephen Novelli...............................................................Roy Cohn, Prior 2, Angel Antarctica Benjamin Pelteson....................................................................................Louis, Angel Australia Mary Elizabeth Scallen...................................................................Hannah, Ethel Rosenberg, Rabbi Chemelwitz, Henry, Alexii Antedilluvianovich Prelapsarianov, Angel Asiatica Luigi Sottile................................Joe, Prior 1, The Eskimo, Mormon Father, Angel Europa Part One: Millennium Approaches Part Two: Perestroika Act One: Bad News End of October-Third Week of November, 1985 Act One: Spooj December, 1985 Intermission Act Two: The Anti-Migratory Epistle January, 1986 Act Two: In Vitro First Three Weeks of December, 1985 Act Three: Borborygmi January, 1986 Intermission Intermission Act Three: Not-Yet-Conscious, Forward Dawning 3 Days After the End of Act Two Act Four: John Brown’s Body 2 Days After the End of Act Three Millennium Approaches was first performed in a workshop production presented by Center Theatre Group/Mark Taper Forum, May 1990. The World Premiere of Millennium Approaches was presented by the Eureka Theatre Company, May 1991. Intermission Act Five: Heaven, I’m in Heaven January, 1986 Epilogue: Bethesda January, 1990 The Wilma Theater is a member of the following organizations: Greater Philadelphia Cultural Alliance, League of Resident Theatres, Rittenhouse Row, and Theatre Communications Group, Inc. Please note Photography or sound recording inside the theater, without the written permission of the management, is prohibited by law. Violators may be asked to leave the theater and may be liable for financial charges. Children Policy Some subject matter may be deemed objectionable for children; therefore, children under 12 will not be permitted in the theater. Distracting Noise and Light The noise of cellular phones and candy wrappers, and the light from electronic devices are distracting to both audiences and actors. Please turn off all cellular phones and electronic devices. Also, please be sure that your watch alarm does not sound during the performance. Smoking, eating, and drinking are prohibited inside the theater. *THE ARTISTS TONY KUSHNER (PLAYWRIGHT) plays include A Bright Room Called Day; Angels in America, Parts One and Two; Slavs!; Homebody/Kabul; Caroline, or Change, a musical with composer Jeanine Tesori; and The Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide To Capitalism And Socialism With A Key To The Scriptures. He wrote the libretto for the opera A Blizzard on Marblehead Neck, also with Ms. Tesori. He has adapted and translated Pierre Corneille’s The Illusion, S.Y. Ansky’s The Dybbuk, Bertolt Brecht’s The Good Person of Sezuan and Mother Courage and Her Children, and the English-language libretto for the opera Brundibár by Hans Krasa. He wrote the screenplays for Mike Nichols’ film of Angels in America and Steven Spielberg’s Munich. His books include Brundibár, with illustrations by Maurice Sendak; The Art of Maurice Sendak, 1980 to the Present; and Wrestling With Zion: Progressive Jewish-American Responses to the Palestinian/Israeli Conflict, co-edited with Alisa Solomon. Kushner is the recipient of a Pultizer Prize, two Tony Awards, three Obie Awards, two Evening Standard Awards, an Olivier Award, an Emmy Award and an Oscar nomination, among other honors. In 2008, he was the first recipient of the Steinberg Distinguished Playwright Award. He lives in Manhattan with his husband, Mark Harris. BLANKA ZIZKA (DIRECTOR) has been Founding Artistic Director of The Wilma Theater since 1981. Last fall Blanka received the Zelda Fichandler Award from the Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation, which recognizes an outstanding director or choreographer transforming the regional arts landscape. Most recently, Blanka directed Tadeusz Słobodzianek’s Our Class, Sarah Ruhl’s In the Next Room, which received eight Barrymore awards, and Macbeth, which included an original score by Czech composer and percussionist Pavel Fajt. Blanka has directed over 60 plays and musicals at the Wilma. Her recent favorite productions are Wajdi Mouawad’s Scorched, Tom Stoppard’s Rock ’n’ Roll, Sarah Ruhl’s Eurydice (which featured an original score by composer Toby Twining, now available from Cantaloupe Records), Brecht’s The Life of Galileo, Athol Fugard’s Coming Home and My Children! My Africa!, and Caryl Churchill’s Cloud 9. She collaborated closely with Dael Orlandersmith on her plays Raw Boys and Yellowman, which was co-produced by McCarter Theatre and the Wilma and also performed at ACT Seattle, Long Wharf, and Manhattan Theatre Club. Blanka was also privileged to direct Rosemary Harris and John Cullum in Ariel Dorfman’s The Other Side at MTC. For the Academy of Vocal Arts, she directed the opera Kát’a Kabanová by Leoš Janácek. She has collaborated with many playwrights including Yussef El Guindi, Doug Wright, Sarah Ruhl, Tom Stoppard, Linda Griffiths, Polly Pen, Dael Orlandersmith, Laurence Klavan, Lillian Groag, Jason Sherman, Amy Freed, Robert Sherwood, and Chay Yew. Her favorite productions are, even after all these years, Tom Stoppard’s The Invention of Love and Jim Cartwright’s Road. KATE CZAJKOWSKI (HARPER) previously appeared on the Wilma’s stage as Rachelka/Marianna in Our Class and In The Next Room, or the vibrator play as Sabrina Daldry, a role that earned her a Barrymore nomination for ‘Best Supporting Actress’. Regional credits include: Sissy Hankshaw in Even Cowgirls Get the Blues (world premiere) at Book-It Rep, Marina in Pericles at Seattle Shakespeare Co., Annamae Dickie in Louis Slotin Sonata (world premiere) at Empty Space, and Annie Sullivan in The Miracle Worker (national tour) for the Montana Rep. A recent graduate of the MFA Acting program at Temple University, Kate played several roles in Temple Rep’s two summer seasons: Masha in Three Sisters, Elmire in Tartuffe, and Marianna in Measure for Measure. She is thrilled to be playing Harper—one of her favorite characters of all time. Thank you Blanka for the opportunity, and immense gratitude to Mom and Dad for the endless support. Love to M. AUBREY DEEKER (PRIOR) International: Royal Shakespeare Company: Love’s Labour’s Lost. Regional: 13 productions as an affiliated artist at the Tony Award winning Shakespeare Theatre Company in Washington, DC, including Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet, Stacey Keach’s King Lear directed by Bob Falls, and the world premiere of The Liar by David Ives. Other favorite credits include Ken Ludwig’s A Fox on the Fairway (world premiere) at Signature Theatre, Raskolnikov in Crime and Punishment at Round House Theatre, Boom at Woolly Mammoth (Helen Hayes Nomination), The Walworth Farce at Studio Theatre (Helen Hayes Nomination), and productions at The Kennedy Center, Lincoln Center, Folger Theatre, Ford’s Theatre, Olney Theatre, and Theater Alliance, among others. Television: HBO’s True Blood and The Wire, CBS’s NCIS. Film: Leave No Marine Behind, The Seer (short). Training: North Carolina School of the Arts. MAIA DESANTI (ANGEL) is a recent transplant to Philadelphia and is thrilled to be making her Wilma debut in Angels. Most recently, she appeared as Chavez in MicroCrisis with InterAct and as Anne in All My Sons with Delaware Theatre Company. Other regional credits include Arena Stage, Folger Theatre, Kennedy Center, NY State Theatre Institute, Olney Theatre Center, Round House Theatre, Shakespeare Theater Co., and Woolly Mammoth, among others. She has been a creative collaborator with Happenstance Theatre and Word Dance Theatre, performing original works in the NY Clown Theatre Festival, the Capital Fringe Festival, Intersections Festival and the Piccolo Spoleto Festival. She is a graduate of the National Shakespeare Conservatory. JAMES IJAMES (BELIZE) is thrilled to be making his Wilma Theater debut in this exciting production with this amazing cast! Some of his credits include: One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, Gossamer, Shipwrecked (PLTC), An Empty Plate in the Cafe du Grand Boeuf, Romeo and Juliet, Superior Donuts, and The Whipping Man (Arden Theatre), Grey Gardens, Ruined (PTC), The Threshing Floor (Mauckingbird Theatre Company), and Ponies (Gloucester Stage Company). James received a Barrymore Award for Supporting Actor in a Play for Superior Donuts with the Arden Theatre Company. He is the 2011 recipient of the F. Otto Haas Emerging Artist Award. Many thanks to Blanka and the entire Wilma Family. STEPHEN NOVELLI (ROY) last appeared on the Wilma stage as the Father in Sarah Ruhl’s Eurydice directed by Blanka Zizka. Recent roles: Halvard Solness in The Masterbuilder at People’s Light & Theatre, Mick Dowd in A Skull in Connemara at The Lantern Theatre and Gloucester in King Lear at People’s Light. A member of the Resident Ensemble of Artists at People’s Light since 1974, he’s played roles ranging from the title role in Hamlet to Jimmy, the Boston beekeeper, in the recent world premiere production of Kenneth Lin’s Fallow. He also directed a variety of plays including Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure and David Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross. Stephen is honored to be reunited with Blanka and to be working with a terrific ensemble on this important play. BENJAMIN PELTESON (LOUIS) is thrilled to be making his Wilma and Philadelphia debut. Theater: Photograph 51, Asking for Trouble (EST); The Mines of Sulphur (City Opera/Lincoln Center); The Wikipedia Plays (Ars Nova); Merchant of Venice (Shakespeare Theatre Company); Murder of Isaac (Baltimore Centerstage); Lady Windermere’s Fan dir. Moisés Kaufman (Williamstown); The Tempest (McCarter - tour); Laramie Project (Pittsburgh Public); The Man Who Came to Dinner, Laughter on the 23rd Floor (Northern Stage); Comedy of Errors (Shakespeare on the Sound); Love’s Labors Lost (Vineyard Playhouse). Readings and Workshops: Public/NYSF, EST, Primary Stages, Lark, Epic, Rattlestick, others. TV: Homeland, Law & Order, Unforgettable, and the ESPN 30 for 30 film Silly Little Game. Training: B.F.A., Carnegie Mellon; Moscow Art Theater. www.benjaminpelteson.com. MARY ELIZABETH SCALLEN (HANNAH) has worked in Philadelphia theatre since 1987. A grad of Temple University’s MFA in Acting program, she has been a company member at People’s Light in Malvern, PA for 21 years. Recent appearances there include Elizabeth in Fallow, Sam the boss in Hatchetman, and Olivia in Legacy of Light. She’s also worked with Act II Playhouse, Lantern, InterAct, Arden, Philadelphia Shakespeare Festival, and PlayPenn, as well as The NC Shakespeare Festival, Mill Mountain Theatre (VA) and Weston Playhouse (VT). She teaches acting at Penn, and consults on communication skills for FAIMER, an international medical education foundation. Love to TShot. LUIGI SOTTILE (JOE) Recently: Angels in America: Part I (Joe) at the Wilma. Previously at the Wilma: (w/ BalletX) Proliferation of the Imagination (Husband), In the Next Room, or the vibrator play (Leo)-Barrymore Nomination, Macbeth (Malcolm), Leaving (Victor); Arden: Cyrano (Christian); People’s Light: The Return of Don Quixote (Sampson), Kidnapped (Alan Breck), King Lear (France), Snow White Panto (Smith), Nathan the Wise (Templar); Act II: The Mystery of Irma Vep (Lord Edgar, Jane, etc.); Azuka: Whiskey Neat (Handsome); Shakespeare in Clark Park: Comedy of Errors (Antipholus of Syracuse); Lantern: The Government Inspector (Khlestakov), The Hothouse (Lush), Othello (Cassio), The School for Wives (Horace), The Lonesome West (Father Welsh). Up next: An Ideal Husband (Lord Goring) at Walnut Street Theatre. Thanks to Blanka and the cast. Much love to my parents and Victoria. MATT SAUNDERS (SET DESIGNER) is a Barrymore Award winning performer, scenic designer, and a creator of new performance work proudly based in Philadelphia. Matt is a founding member, and Associate Artistic Director of the OBIE Award winning experimental theatre company New Paradise Laboratories. He has been involved in the creation of all of NPL’s work through both scenic design and performance. This work has included The Fab 4 Reach the Pearly Gates, performed at P.S. 122 in NYC as well as the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Prom, a co-production with the Tony Award-Winning Children’s Theatre Company in Minneapolis, and BATCH, at the 2007 Humana Festival for New American Plays at Actor’s Theatre of Louisville. Most recently for NPL, Matt co-created and designed Fatebook, which was selected for the United States’ professional pavilion at the Prague Quadrennial 2011. Outside of NPL, Matt has designed over seventy shows for such companies as Walnut St. Theatre, Arden Theatre Company, InterAct Theatre Company, Theatre Exile, 1812 Productions, Headlong Dance Theatre, Pig Iron Theatre Company, People’s Light and Theater, Yale Repertory Theatre, Berkeley Repertory Theatre, and here at The Wilma Theater. Mr Saunders is the Assistant Professor of Design in the Department of Theater at Swarthmore College. www.mattsaunders.net OANA BOTEZ (COSTUME DESIGNER) a native of Romania, has designed for major theater, opera, and dance companies, including The National Theater of Bucharest and was involved in different international theater festivals such as the Quadrennial Scenography Show in Prague. Oana is part of the first Romanian theater design catalogue, Scenografica. Since 1999, when she moved to New York, her collaborators in theater, opera, film and dance include Robert Woodruff, Richard Foreman, Maya Beiser, Richard Schechner, Andrei Serban, Blanka Zizka, Brian Kulick, Zelda Fichlander, AnnieB Parson & Paul Lazar, Razvan Dinca, Karin Coonrod, Jay Scheib, Kristin Marting, Evan Ziporyn, Eduardo Machado, Gus Solomon Jr. & Paradigm, Carmen De Lavallade, Jackson Gay, Dusan Tynek, Rania Ajami, Gisela Cardenas, Tony Speciale, Pavol Liska & Kelly Copper, Matthew Neenan, Molissa Fenley, Zishan Ugurlu, Michael Sexton, Michael Barakiva, Pig Iron Company, Play Company, Charles Moulton, Ripe Time, among others. MFA in Design from NYU/Tisch School of the Arts. Princess Grace Recipient, NEA/TCG Career Development Program. Barrymore Award. RUSSELL H. CHAMPA (LIGHTING DESIGNER) Previous projects at the Wilma include: Language Rooms, Age Of Arousal, I Am My Own Wife, Raw Boys, Embarrassments, Yellowman, Red, and Quills. Recent and current projects: Scorched and Maple + Vine (American Conservatory Theater), Ah Wilderness (Arena Stage), Completeness (Playwright’s Horizons), Timon of Athens (The Public Theater), The Grand Mariner (Lincoln Center Theater), On Broadway, Mr. Champa has designed In The Next Room, or the vibrator play at the Lyceum Theater and Julia Sweeney’s God Said “HA!” also at the Lyceum. Other New York credits include Manhattan Theater Club, 2nd Stage, The Vineyard Theater, Classic Stage Company, New York Stage & Film, and La MaMa E.T.C. Regionally, Mr. Champa has designed for The Mark Taper Forum, CenterStage, Berkeley Rep, Hartford Stage Company, Seattle Rep, Trinity Rep, Calshakes, McCarter Theater, Campo Santo, Williamstown Theatre Festival, the Actors’ Gang, and the Kennedy Center. Thanks J + J. PEACE. CHRISTOPHER COLUCCI (SOUND DESIGN AND ORIGINAL MUSIC) makes sound and music as a theater artist, composer and guitarist. During the 2011-2012 season he worked on over a dozen productions including: The Whipping Man and Charlotte’s Web (Arden), Of Mice and Men and Mr. Hart and Mr. Brown (People’s Light & Theater), How I Learned to Drive (Theatre Horizon), The Mousetrap (Walnut), Knives in Hens (Theater Exile), Private Lives (Lantern), The Morini Strad (Portland Center Stage) as well as both Angels in America and Curse of the Starving Class here at the Wilma. Since 2008, he has received 11 Barrymore Award nominations for Outstanding Original Music and Sound Design. Christopher would like to thank the Philadelphia Theatre Initiative for professional development opportunities pivotal to his work on Angels. Thank you, Blanka. Thank you Clayton, Ashley, Pat. Go Team Wilma! For more sounds please visit http://soundcloud.com/cmsound. DAVID STRADLEY (CASTING) is the Artistic Director of Delaware Shakespeare Festival. As a casting director, he has worked for Philadelphia Young Playwrights and Delaware Theatre Company. As a director, David has directed for Delaware Theatre Company (8 productions), Walnut Street Theatre, Delaware Shakespeare Festival, and Philadelphia Shakespeare Theatre. As an educator, David has worked for all of the above companies as well as for the Wilma, Folger Shakespeare Library, and People’s Light and Theatre Company. BFA Theatre Performance, University of Evansville; MFA Acting, Asolo Conservatory/Florida State University. Many thanks to Blanka and Jamie for the opportunity. Much love to Michelle. For more information, please see davidstradley.com. JON CARTER (HAIR AND MAKEUP DESIGN) is delighted to return to the Wilma for his eleventh show. BROADWAY: Joe Turner’s Come and Gone, makeup designs for In the Next Room, or the vibrator play, A Tale of Two Cities and Xanadu. OFF BROADWAY: 3C (Rattlestick), Blood & Gifts (Lincoln Center), Orange, Hat & Grace (Soho Rep), When The Rain Stops Falling (Lincoln Center), The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter (New York Theater Workshop), So Help Me God (Mint Theater), The Good Negro (Public Theater), Chair (Theater for a New Audience), Endgame (BAM). REGIONAL: Arena Stage, Kennedy Center, Centerstage, Dallas Theatre Center, Kansas City Rep, The Wilma Theater, Philadelphia Theatre Co., Walnut Street Theatre, Prince Music Theater, Delaware Theatre Co., Arden Theatre Co. OPERA: Opera Boston, Gotham Chamber Opera, Curtis Institute. LYNNE INNERST (DIALECT COACH) joined the theater faculty at Temple University in 2006 and has been working in the lively and exciting professional Philadelphia community since she arrived. Recent credits include Arden, Theater Exile, Lantern, People’s Light, Act II and the Wilma. Lynne has served on the faculties of Carnegie Mellon University, The University of New Mexico, California State University at Long Beach, and Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. She is a master teacher and founding member of the Fitzmaurice voice group. She has worked as an actress and coach in film, television, regional, repertory, theater, and voice-overs. She holds an MFA from The University of Southern California. She is delighted to be back at the Wilma once again. MICHAEL COSENZA (FIGHT COORDINATOR) has been working as a fight director in and around Philadelphia for the last 6 years, and is thrilled to be back at The Wilma Theater. In addition to having choreographed more than a dozen productions here, his work has been featured on the stages of Philadelphia Shakespeare Theatre, Luna Theater Company, The Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, Red Heel Theater Company, Simpatico Theatre Company, Arcadia University, Temple University, Swarthmore College, Lehigh University, and LaSalle. This fall, he will return to both Flashpoint Theatre Company and The Philadelphia Shakespeare Theatre to put together some very violent moments. He would like to thank his production team, his actors for all their hard work, his family for their support, and as always, love to Natalie. JEAN-RENÉ TOUSSAINT (VOICE COACH) is a Frenchborn director, actor, and voice teacher. He is the creator of a distinct school of vocal training for performing artists and therapists - a technique he has dubbed Stemwerk in Dutch and is the founder and head of a training center in Rotterdam in the Netherlands and in Avanos-Cappadocie in Turkey. He has been professionally active in theater since 1973, and has worked with major theatrical companies and artists such as the Living Theatre, the Roy Hart Theatre, Robert Wilson, and the Polish Laboratory Theatre. His vocal theory and technique are inspired by the work of Antonin Artaud, Jerzy Grotowski, and Roy Hart, which are all defining figures in contemporary theater and, in the cases of Grotowski and Hart, of voice technique. Toussaint has traveled through parts of Asia and India, studying diverse ancient vocal practices, from Afghan Sufi to Mongolian, Tibetan, and Japanese vocal traditions. PATRESHETTARLINI ADAMS (RESIDENT STAGE MANAGER/AEA) has been the production stage manager at The Wilma Theater since the theater made its new home on the Avenue of the Arts in 1996. She has captained all but three productions in her tenure here and is very happy to be a part of the Philadelphia theater community. “Pat” is celebrating season #17 at the fabulous Wilma! Prior to her coming home to Philly, Pat was stage manager at the Tony Award winning Crossroads Theatre in New Brunswick, NJ. In past years, Pat has worked the National Black Arts Festival in Atlanta, GA and the National Black Theater Festival in Winston-Salem, NC. When not at the Wilma, she has found herself traveling the world with critically-acclaimed dance company Noche Flamenca! Most recently, she is using all her free time to spoil her grandsons, Isaiah and Elijah. God Is Good! WALTER BILDERBACK (DRAMATURG) is beginning his ninth season with The Wilma Theater, and is delighted to start the season working on Perestroika. Walter reviewed Approaching the Millennium, a volume of critical essays on Angels in America, and Tony Kushner in Conversation, for American Theatre magazine, and interviewed Mr. Kushner in the Wilma lobby two years ago. He recently began work with Blanka Zizka and Paula Vogel on a major project for the Wilma’s 2013-14 season. Some personal angels to remember: Charles Ludlam, John Hirsch, Dennis Scott, James Carroll, Adam Muzzy, Stephen Petty, and Stella (John) Mifsud. CLAYTON TEJADA (PRODUCTION MANAGER) is in his second year as Production Manager after serving the Wilma as Technical Director for the previous seven years. Clayton started his professional career as an Apprentice at Arden Theatre, and then worked there for several years as Stage Supervisor. Before coming to the Wilma, he worked as a freelance Technical Director or Production Manager for 1812 Productions, Mum Puppettheatre, Lantern Theater, and Azuka Theatre. Clayton is a graduate of the Theater Arts program at The University of Puget Sound. He is proud to make Philadelphia his professional and artistic home. Many thanks to his sweet Kate and Alex the rascal. JAMES HASKINS (MANAGING DIRECTOR) joined the staff of The Wilma Theater as Managing Director in June 2006. He began his work in theater administration as Box Office Manager of Circle Repertory Company and went on to work with a number of New York theaters, including National Shakespeare Company, Symphony Space, Provincetown Playhouse, Actor’s Playhouse, Triplex Performing Arts Center and Astor Place Theatre. In Seattle, he served as Business Manager of Seattle Group Theatre and worked for Ticket/Ticket, Seattle’s half-price ticket booth. In 1999, James moved to Philadelphia and worked as Managing Director of InterAct Theatre Company, while also serving for three years on the Board of the Theatre Alliance of Greater Philadelphia as Chair of the Barrymore Awards Oversight Committee. He later moved into the Executive Director position of the Theatre Alliance. Also an actor and director, James holds an MFA from the University of Washington and a BA from the College of Wooster (Ohio), where he currently serves as President of his alumni class. James is honored to serve on Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter’s Cultural Advisory Council. *PRODUCTION CREW *STAFF Fight Coordinator............................Michael Cosenza Assistant Director.........................Allison Heishman Assistant Stage Manager..........Leonard J. Luvera Assistant Set Designer.....................Colin McIlvaine Assistant Costume Designer..............Karen Boyer Assistant Lighting Designer...............Oona Curley Dani Clifford Properties Master...................Kimitha Anne Cashin Light Board Programmer & Operator ........................................... Ashley W. Mills Assistant Master Electrician............................Georgia Schlessman Sound and Video Operator...........Ashley D. Turner Wardrobe Supervisor............................Regina Rizzo Dresser...........................................................Alyssa Cole Running Crew: Benjamin Henry, George R. Spencer, Phil Haberek, Elliot Greer Carpenters: Lance Kniskern, Elliot Greer, Stuart Bartlett, Alison Levy, Alyssa Cole, Nelson Barre, Georgia Schlessman, Ryan Ehrlichman, Benjamin Henry, Phil Haberek Electricians: Catherine Lee, Jacks Katz, Sarah Middledorf, Melanie Leeds, Nicole Rolo, Lucas Nguyen, Debby Lau, Dom Chacon, Chris Richards, Ani Leonhart, Jana Gillenwater, Georgia Schlessman Costume Construction: Douglas Earl, Glenda Beck, Ashley Gardner, Becca Austin, Thomas Sirkot Scenery Construction: American Repertory Theater Scene Shop, Upstage Right Productions Angel Wings Constructed: John Kristiansen New York Inc. *SPECIAL THANKS Arden Theatre Company Dr. Peter Katsufrakis, M.D. Dr. Gene Bischaq The Ira Brand School of Theater Arts, University of the Arts *HOW TO REACH US The Wilma Theater 265 S. Broad Street Philadelphia, PA 19107 Box Office: 215.546.7824 Admin: 215.893.9456 Fax: 215.893.0895 wilmatheater.org ARTISTIC DIRECTOR: Blanka Zizka MANAGING DIRECTOR: James Haskins ARTISTIC Dramaturg/Literary Manager - Walter Bilderback Literary/Artistic Assistant - William Steinberger Literary Interns - Emma Boettcher, Kevin Dorff, Charlotte Dow, Nicole McGarry, Alison Ruth EDUCATION Education Director - Anne K. Holmes Teaching Artists- Ashley Alter, Mike Dees, Katharine Clark Gray, Elizabeth Greene, John Jarboe, Kathryn MacMillan, Emily Peters, Ed Swidey, Davon Williams MARKETING Marketing Director - Aaron Immediato Public Relations Manager - Johnny Van Heest Marketing and Group Sales Coordinator Jennifer R. Burrini Public Relations Intern - Jacquelin Grillo DEVELOPMENT Development Director - Iain Campbell Grants Manager - Justin Bauer Development Assistant - Debby Lau Development Interns - Kaylyn Syvret, Brianna Rooney BUSINESS General Manager - Maggie Arbogast Office Manager - Andrea Sotzing PRODUCTION Production Manager - Clayton Tejada Technical Director - Matthew Zumbo Resident Stage Manager - Patreshettarlini Adams Facilities Manager - Kenneth Deprez Master Electrician - Ashley W. Mills Sound Engineer - Ashley Turner Wardrobe Supervisor - Regina Rizzo Production Fellow - George R. Spencer Stage Management Fellow - Leonard J. Luvera Production Interns - Ryan Ehrlichman, Jill Klecha FRONT OF HOUSE Box Office Manager - James Specht Assistant Box Office Manager - Crystal Whybark Box Office Staff - Amanda Grove, Rich Rubin, Samantha Tower, Hillary Asare House Manager - Javier Mojica SERVICES Photographer - Alexander Iziliaev Catering - Chef’s Market, J. Cabot Catering Co. Technology Services - NPower PA Auditors - Horty & Horty, P.A. Cleaning Service - 1010 Cleaning, Squeaky Clean and Green Insurance Brokers - Gallagher Benefits Services, SKCG Group, Inc. NBERGER BY WALTER BILDERBACK ADDITIONAL TEXT BY WILLIAM STEI OPEN STAGES “BECAUSE THE SOUL IS PROGRESSIVE, IT NEVER QUITE REPEATS ITSELF, BUT IN EVERY ACT ATTEMPTS THE PRODUCTION OF A NEW AND FAIRER WHOLE.” Tony Kushner uses this quote from Ralph Waldo Emerson as the epigraph for Perestroika. The title of the second half of Kushner’s “Gay Fantasia on National Themes” refers to Mikhail Gorbachev’s “restructuring” (the meaning of “perestroika”) of the now-defunct Soviet Union. We get glimpses of the Soviet Union in its dotage in Perestroika, but the relationships of all the characters undergo restructuring as well. As Tony Kushner writes about the two halves: “Millennium Approaches is a play about security and certainty being blown apart, while Perestroika is about danger and possibility following the explosion. The events in Perestroika proceed from the wreckage made by the Angel’s traumatic entry at the end of Millennium. A membrane has broken.” The idea of “membrane” is important. Skin, and the body (both individual and politic), echo through Millennium Approaches as emblems of identity, along with the related themes of movement and stasis. Here they come to the fore. How do people and societies change? Especially in the midst of the “mad swirling planetary disorganization” that has seemed to characterize our world for the past quarter-century? The culmination of Angels in America takes each of its characters’ soul to places never imagined, asking them (and us, the audience) to imagine “a new and fairer whole” - which the Emersonian epigraph reminds us has been perhaps the most important moral project of the United States since its founding. THE STORY UP TO NOW ... A SYNOPSIS OF MILLENNIUM APPROACHES Prior Walter, a gay man living in New York City, has been diagnosed with AIDS. Unable to deal with the challenge, his lover Louis Ironson has left him, and is beginning a tentative relationship with the closeted Mormon Republican lawyer Joe Pitt. Joe’s wife Harper, who suffers from a mild valium addiction, has encountered Prior in a hallucinatory scene she refers to as “threshold of revelation.” Traumatized by the discovery of Joe’s lies, Harper has fled their apartment after a fight, and is in a dream Antarctica with the imaginary travel agent Mr. Lies. Joe’s mother, Hannah, has sold her house in Salt Lake City and come to New York after Joe tells her he’s gay. Meanwhile, Joe’s mentor, the rightwing fixer and shady lawyer Roy Cohn, has also been diagnosed with AIDS and is facing disbarment. After a series of severe abdominal spasms, he has been visited by the ghost of Ethel Rosenberg, whom he helped execute in the 1950s. Ethel has called an ambulance for him. Meanwhile, Prior has been seeking help from his friend Belize, a male nurse, because of Louis and because he’s having visions and hearing strange voices that make him fear he’s losing his mind. Millennium Approaches ends with an Angel bursting through the ceiling of Prior’s apartment and announcing: “GREETINGS, PROPHET! THE GREAT WORK BEGINS: THE MESSENGER HAS ARRIVED.” In a 1994 interview with The New York Times, Kushner explains that “The aleph (pictured above) is the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet, the seed word, the God letter. This is why, in the play, God is referred to by the Angel as ‘the Aleph Glyph.’ The real name of God is, of course, unutterable.” At left are Senator Joseph McCarthy and Roy Cohn, his chief counsel, at the ArmyMcCarthy hearings on April 26, 1956. This photo comes four days after the hearings, which led to McCarthy’s downfall, were first broadcast publicly. Cohn was 29 years old. *ONSTAGE CONVERSATIONS 09/20 - Stay after the performance to discuss the play with a member of the Wilma’s artistic staff. 09/27 - Stay after the performance to discuss the play with the cast. 10/10 - Stay after the matinee performance to discuss the play with a member of the Wilma’s artistic staff in the lobby with complimentary coffee. FOLLOW US TIMELINE Sept 22, 1823 - The angel Moroni appears to seventeen-year-old Joseph Smith in a series of visions which lead him, on the same date in 1827, to a set of golden plates buried at the Hill Cumorah in upstate New York. These tablets will become The Book of Mormon, the foundation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. July 20, 1847 - Brigham Young establishes Salt Lake City on the shores of the Great Salt Lake as a haven for the Mormon faith after a three-month, one thousand mile exodus from Iowa. 1859 - Abolitionist John Brown, intending to spark a slave revolt, leads an integrated raiding party that briefly captures the U.S. Arsenal at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia. U.S. troops under Robert E. Lee defeat Brown’s force, and he is hanged for treason. 1951 - As a young Assistant U.S. Attorney, Roy Cohn helps in the prosecution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, a married couple accused of participating in a spy ring responsible for transmitting details of the atomic bomb to the Soviet Union during World War II. June 19, 1953 - The Rosenbergs are electrocuted at Sing Sing Prison, New York. Ethel is only the second woman executed by the U.S. government in history. Shortly before her death, Ethel writes to her attorney: “Know then, you warped, gross eaters of dust, your abominations upon this beauteous earth…The savage reprisal you visited upon me shall pursue you to the edge of your graves and beyond, and your names shall be anathema wherever love is the First Commandment!” July 27, 1969 - Gay patrons at the Stonewall Inn in New York’s Greenwich Village decide to fight back in response to police and public harassment. The incident sparks three days of rioting and the emergence of Gay Liberation in the United States. 1980 - A mysterious constellation of diseases in forty-one different patients is discovered. The patients are all gay men living in New York, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta publishes a report on the outbreaks of Kaposi’s sarcoma (KS) and pneumocystic carinii pneumonia (PCP). Jan 1981 - Ronald Wilson Reagan is inaugurated as the 40th President of the United States. July 27, 1982 - The CDC in Atlanta officially designates the epidemic “AIDS” (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome). 634 cases of AIDS have been diagnosed, with 260 deaths reported. $1 million has been spent on research, compared to $9 million spent within a month of the 1976 outbreak of Legionnaire’s Disease, which killed 29 people. March 3, 1983 - Larry Kramer’s article on the AIDS epidemic, “1,112 and Counting” is published by the New York Native. It lambastes political leaders, government agencies, mainstream media, and the gay community for lack of action against AIDS. 485 deaths have been reported. June 1983 - Researchers at France’s Pasteur Institute discover a retrovirus – the Human Immuno-deficiency Virus (HIV) – they believe to be the cause of AIDS. 1,641 cases, and 644 deaths, have been reported. Sept 1983 - President Reagan’s budget proposes a $300,000 cut in AIDS funding for the coming year. 3,515 cases, and 1,506 deaths, reported. Nov 1984 - Ronald Reagan is re-elected President in a landslide. More than 7,000 cases of AIDS have been reported. Mar 11, 1985 - Mikhail Gorbachev takes power in the Soviet Union following the death of Konstantin Chernenko. Gorbachev begins his policies on Glasnost [“new openness”] and Perestroika [“restructuring”]. AIDS has now been reported on every populated continent of the earth. U.S. cases surpass 9,000, with 4,300 deaths. Sept 1985 - Four years after the outbreak of the epidemic, Ronald Reagan publicly utters the word “AIDS” for the first time, although he does not make a statement on the issue itself. More than 12,000 cases have been reported in the U.S., with nearly 6,000 deaths. Oct 1985 - An Antarctic research team confirms a thirty percent depletion in the ozone layer over an area the size of the United States. Early 1986 - The pharmaceutical company Burroughs Wellcome and the NIH begin testing of the drug AZT to test its efficacy against AIDS. 282 gay men are chosen for the test. August 1986 - The existence of a secret White House project selling arms to the Islamist government of Iran in order to fund operations against the Communist government of Nicaragua is discovered. It becomes the Iran-Contra Scandal. Oct 1986 - Surgeon General C. Everett Koop encourages AIDS education in public schools. There are 27,000 diagnosed cases of AIDS. Mar 1987 - ACT UP (AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power) is founded. In the following months, the group stages a series of confrontative demonstrations at Wall Street and other locations to shock the public into awareness of AIDS. May 31, 1987 - President Ronald Reagan makes his first speech on AIDS. There are now 36,058 diagnosed cases and 20,849 deaths. Oct 1987 - A fifty percent depletion in the ozone layer over Antarctica is recorded. 1989-90 - The activist group Queer Nation is founded to aggressively call attention to a huge rise in anti-gay violence. A LONGER TIMELINE AND MORE CAN BE FOUND AT WILMATHEATER.ORG/BLOG At left is an iconic image of the Stonewall riots, where gay patrons of the Stonewall Inn fought back against the NYPD’s harassment. Above is prominent contemporary Mormon artist Liz Lemon’s portrayal of a young Joseph Smith, age 14 or 15, at his first vision in upstate New York. Mikhail Gorbachev on the cover of Time, March 25, 1985, two weeks after inheriting the position of General Secretary of the Communist Party from Konstantin Chernenko, following the latter’s death. President Ronald Reagan. BOARD OF DIRECTORS Lewis H. Johnston John D. Rollins A.E. (Ted) Wolf Officers David U’Prichard, PhD, Board Members Arjun Bedi Chair Kathryn Doyle David E. Loder, Janice Giannini Vice Chair Esq. Linda Glickstein Clare D’Agostino, , Robert E. Linck Secretary Thomas Mahoney, Sissie Lipton James F. McGillin Treasurer Reginald J. Middleton Marlene S. Molinoff Chair’s Council Esq. Donald F. Parman Mark S. Dichter, Esq. Allen Sabinson Herman C. Fala, Brian Seaman, Esq. Peggy Greenawalt Dianne L. Semingson Jeff Harbison Ellen B. Solms Jeffrey M. Sparling Evelyn G. Spritz Gillian Wakely Mark Wennell Jeanne P. Wrobleski, Esq. Florence Zeller Ex-Officio James Haskins Blanka Zizka Emeritus Harvey Kimmel Dr. R. J. Wallner A Special Note to Our Donors This list acknowledges all donations of $150 or above from 6/1/11-8/1/12. If your name has been omitted or misprinted, please accept our apologies. Notify us of any changes by contacting Iain Campbell, Development Director, at 215.893.9456 x109. FOUNDATION, GOVERNMENT & CORPORATE DONORS Anonymous Arronson Foundation Arts Consulting Group Asian Mosaic Fund Beatrice Fox Auerbach Fund of the Jewish Community Foundation The Barra Foundation The Corrine and Henry Bower Trust of the PNC Charitable Trusts The Louis N. Cassett Foundation Charlotte Cushman Foundation The CHG Charitable Trust Connelly Foundation Cozen O’Connor The Dolfinger-McMahon Foundation DoubleTree by Hilton, Philadelphia Center City Drexel University Fund for Children of The Philadelphia Foundation GlaxoSmithKline The Hamilton Family Foundation The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Independence Foundation The Jacob and Malka Goldfarb Charitable Foundation Janney Montgomery Scott, Inc. Virginia and Harvey Kimmel Arts Education Fund of The Philadelphia Foundation KPMG LLP Lincoln Financial Foundation Christian R. and Mary F. Lindback Foundation Lobro Associates The National Endowment for the Arts Norfolk Southern Foundation ParenteBeard PECO Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, a state agency The Pew Charitable Trusts The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage through the Philadelphia Cultural Management Initiative The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage through the Philadelphia Theatre Initiative The Philadelphia Cultural Fund The Rosenlund Family Foundation The Caroline J. Sanders Trust #2 The Shubert Foundation, Inc. Ethel Sergeant Clark Smith Memorial Fund The Sporting Club at the Bellevue, the preferred fitness center of The Wilma Theater Tasty Baking Company The TJX Foundation United Way of Greater Philadelphia and Southern New Jersey Verizon Reads, Inc. The Victory Foundation Virginia Brown Martin Fund of The Philadelphia Foundation Wells Fargo Foundation Wallace Foundation Walter J. Miller Trust The William Penn Foundation The Wyncote Foundation The Zeldin Family Foundation IN-KIND DONORS Adornamenti Mr. Heath Allen Anthropologie Arden Theatre Company Barefoot Wine Mr. Justin Bauer Buca DiBeppo Cabot Creamery CakeLab Studio Clear Channel Clear Day Creative, LLC Cozen O’Connor Dan Brody Photography Druid Consulting, LLC East Lynne Theater Company Peggy and Rich Greenawalt Hatboro Beverages Jay Michael Salon and Spa and Mr. Bruce duBois Loews Philadelphia Hotel Manhattan Theatre Club Marathon Grill Morgan Lewis & Bockius, LLP Oggi Salon and Spa Opera Company of Philadelphia Mr. and Ms. Donald F. Parman PBS Kids Sprout Pennsylvania Academy of Ballet Philadelphia Sports Clubs Philadelphia Chamber Music Society People’s Light and Theatre Company Positano Coast The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Q BBQ and Tequila Rembrandt’s Restaurant and Bar The Rock School of Dance Education Show of Hands Gallery Stowe Area Association Mattson Tomlin TRIA Walnut Street Theatre WXPN 88.5 OPENING NIGHT DONORS Cabot Cheese Hatboro Beverages MATCHING GIFT DONORS ACE INA Foundation Ally Easy Match ExxonMobil Foundation FMC Corporation Mr. Eugene M. Fluder Jr. FMC Corporation GlaxoSmithKline Foundation IBM Matching Gifts Johnson & Johnson Family of Companies Merck Partnership for Giving Moody’s Foundation Norfolk Southern Foundation The Pew Charitable Trusts Matching Gift Program PNC Foundation ProQuest Prudential Foundation Matching Gifts Verizon Foundation INDIVIDUAL DONORS Stephen and Florence Zeller+ The Premiere Circle is a group of our area’s leaders who demonstrate their love of the performing arts through their gifts of $1,000 or more. The benefits of the Premiere Circle are designed to bring members closer to the artists whose work they make possible. For more information please contact Iain Campbell, Development Director, at 215.893.9456 x109. A plus sign (+) denotes five-year consecutive donors. $1,000 to $2,499 Mr. David W. Anstice and Mrs. Ana-Maria M. Zaugg Theodora Wheeler Ashmead, in honor of Jiri Zizka Ms. Susan Basile+ Peter Benoliel and Willo Carey+ Louis Bluver+ Lois G. Brodsky+ Tom Bunting and Sallie Greisman Mr. Joseph Dante + Matthew and Marie Garfield+ Eduardo Glandt+ Naomi Grabel and Neil Kutner James Haskins and Michael Whistler+ Richard and Dortha Haskins Mr. and Mrs. Alan Hirsig Robert and Sally Huxley+ Kenneth and Eve Klothen+ Megan and Lou Minella+ Mary Rucci Allen C. Sabinson Vesna and Howard Sacks Dr. Patricia Saddier The Estate of Harold and Stella Sadofsky Dr. Nathan and Dolly Beechman Schnall+ Brian Seaman and Jeffrey Kummer Mr. Lou Seitchik and Ms. Kanani Titchen Mari and Peter Shaw Ms. Patricia Henriques and Mr. Fred P. Slack+ Kathleen Stephenson+ Charles and Melissa Thorne+ Robert and Barbara Tiffany+ Mr. and Ms. Mark Wennell $5,000 and above Valerie A. Arkoosh and Jeffrey T. Harbison+ Daniel Berger+ Mark and Tobey Dichter+ Michael J. Finney+ Linda and David Glickstein+ Peggy and Rich Greenawalt+ Harvey and Virginia Kimmel+ Mrs. Patricia Kind+, In memory of Jiri Zizka Josephine Klein+ Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Linck+ Tom and Betsy Mahoney+ Don and Barbara Parman+ The Suzanne F. Roberts Cultural Development Fund+ John and Theresa Rollins+ Ellen B. Solms+ David and Lisa U’Prichard Ted and Stevie Wolf+ Wyncote Foundation recommended by Leonard C. Haas+ Blanka Zizka+ $2,500 to $4,999 Anonymous Ms. Autumn R. Bayles+ Paula and Arjun Bedi Clare D’Agostino, Esq.+ Herman and Helen Fala+ Jane and Joe Goldblum Mr. and Mrs. Richard V. Holmes+ Lewis and Ellen Johnston+ Gay and Donald Kimelman+ Sissie and Herb Lipton+ David E. Loder+ Tom and Betsy Mahoney+ James and Eleanor McGillin+ Marlene S. Molinoff Don and Barbara Parman+ Dianne L. Semingson and Craig Lewis+ Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey M. Sparling Ms. Evelyn G. Spritz+ Gillian Wakely Dr. R. J. Wallner+ Andy and Sally Williams+ The June and Steve Wolfson Family Foundation+ Jeanne Wrobleski, Esq.+ Annual Fund A plus sign (+) denotes fiveyear consecutive donors. $750 to $999 Ms. Marilyn Benshetler+ Mr. William Hanson $500 to $749 Anonymous Anonymous+ Peter Arger Al and Marilyn Blatter Mrs. Jacqueline Bodin Ruth E. Brown Mr. James Bryson Mrs. Carol Caswell+ Abbie and Patrick Dean Mr. Robert Kirkwood+ Chris and Becky Leise William Lake Leonard+ David Lerman and Shelley Wallock+ Mr. William A. Loeb+ Frank and Sally Mallory Edward J. and Regina I. Mitchell Frank and Fiona Murray+ Mr. Jerome Napson+ Quan A. Nguyen and Jessica Lynn Geyer+ Ms. Barbara Oldenhoff+ Elizabeth and Jerome Pontillo+ Jerry Rojo+ Karen Scholnick Christine J. Shamborsky+ The Sheller Family Foundation, in memory of Jiri Zizka Dr. William Sigmund and Mr. Vito Izzo David and Gayle Smith Ms. Lenore Steiner and Mr. Perry Lerner Gene Bishop and Andrew Stone+ Mr. and Mrs. Stuart A. Taylor Sallie and James Warden+ Barbara and Richard Woods+ $250 to $499 Anonymous+ Anonymous Howard A. Aaronson Ms. Natalie Abbott Phyllis and Charles Adams+ Charlotte and Dirk Ave Amy Branch and Jeff Benoliel Barry and Marilyn Bevacque+ Merri Lee Newby and Chris Bozman Donald E. and Hana Callaghan Nona and Darrell Cira Harriet and Tony Crane+ Mr. and Mrs. Granville Crothers, Sr. Mr. Robert M. Dever Dr. Joel K. Edelstein and Ms. Elizabeth McKinstry+ Ms. Wendy E. Wilson and Mr. Bruce McKittrick+ Susan J. Ellis+ John Erickson and Harry Zaleznik Felipe Figueroa and Kenneth Cirka Ralph and Carol Flood John R. and Karen S. Fulton W. Roderick and Pamela Gagne Mr. Dan Gannon Drs. Mark and Vivian Greenberg+ Ms. Elizabeth Higginbotham+ Ms. Terry Hirshorn John Hogan and Kathy Quinn Mike and Lis Kalogris Mr. Kenneth D. Kopple+ Mr. Allen J. Kuharski, Ph.D. Eva and Michael Leeds Mrs. Kimberly Leichtner Ms. Kimberlee Marino Saifuddin and Robin Mama+ Gordon and Louise Marshall+ Julie Mayer and Barry Jacobs Dr. Ruth Morelli Ruth Perlmutter Ms. Mary Jo Reilly Kurt and Mary-Ann Reiss+ Mr. and Mrs. Milton Riseman Gordon and Karen Rose+ Dr. Joel and Joan Rosenbloom Barbara and Dan Rottenberg Andrew Sacksteder and Colleen Murphy+ Mr. and Mrs. William Schwarze+ Ms. Judy Sciaky Ms. Toni Sciallo Gerald and Linda Senker+ Dea C. Silbertrust and Wayne Welsh Mr. David Slovic and Ms. Ligia Reva-Slovic Ms. Gretchen Snethen Carol Baker and Mark Stein Pat and Elaine Sweeney+ The Toner Family Hella and Lewis Volgenau+ Bob Weinberg and Eleanor Wilner+ Wendy, Larry and Miriam White+ Harry and Mary Ann Woodcock+ Mr. F. Gordon Yasinov Askold Zagars Thomas and Jacqueline Zemaitis+ $150 to $249 Anonymous+ Anonymous (5) Mr. and Mrs. Reid Addis James and Sandra Andrews+ Dr. Donald Bakove and Margaret G. McLaughlin Dr. Sharon Barton Mr. Richard Banyard Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Bernard Ms. Sandra M. Berwind Io and Tom Betley+ Denise Billen-Mejia Dr. Martin Black and Dr. Hester Sonder Ann and Tom Blackburn+ Stephen Strahs and Kathleen Blandford+ Allen Bonner The Borowsky Family Foundation Ann and David Brownlee Mr. Michael Boyle+ David L. Buchbinder Ms. Carol Buettger Susan Davidson and John V. R. Bull Barbara and Bruce Byrne Katie and Iain Campbell Mrs. Carol Caswell+ Mr. Patrick Cassidy Mr. Frank Cebula Mr. and Mrs. Nick Cernansky+ Mr. and Mrs. Scott Childress+ Ms. Joan I. Coale+ Mr. and Mrs. Blaise H. Coco, Jr. Renate Colton Bruce Conrad+ James F. Conway James D. Crawford and Judith N. Dean Marc Deitch Erike De Veyra John and Audrey Fatula Gilbert Feinberg and Nadeen Van Tuyle Barbara Frazier Mr. Charles Fuller Ms. Deborah E. Glass Judy and Alan Gordon Rebecca Hutto and David Gottlieb Philip and Karen Glick+ Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Gluckman Michael and Anne Greenwald+ Peggy Grip+ Bill and Helen Groft Ira and Jane Grushow+ Mr. and Mrs. L. Guercio Laurent Guy and Pamela Duke Kenneth Hallahan Johan and Susan Hansen-Flaschen Karen and Bruce Harrison Birgitte Haselgrove In memory of Chris Hayes Ms. Marion V. Heacock+ Jim Heenehan Mr. Edward Hillis Marjorie E. Johnson and Edward J. Hochreiter+ Kathryn Hopkins and Connie Lloyd Mrs. Madeline Janowski+ Erik Jensen and Jessica Blank Ian Kirschemann Agency LTD, Moorestown, NJ Mr. Ross Kardon+ Ms. Margaret A. Keller Mr. Larry Kirschner Charles and Lucinda Landreth+ Daniel T. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Lee, Jr. Dr. and Ms. Rafael Levites Mr. and Mrs. Howard H. Lewis+ Greg and Cyndi Line Brett and Lori Linson Will and Sandra Lock Ann T. Loftus, Esquire and Eileen M. Talone+ Christine Lussier and Robert Hamill Richard and Sandra Malkin Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Manko Warren and Hitomi Matthews Ms. Lynne Maxwell Rosalie Matzkin Ilene W. McCaffrey+ Richard McCracken and Ed Bradley Larry Meehan and Susan Tomita+ Mr. and Mrs. David Miller+ Carol B. Moody Jim and Joan Moore Sue and Steve Munzer Virginia Pappas Milton and Ruth Parnes+ Mr. and Mrs. Philip Paul+ Mr. and Mrs. Guido Pasquel Marcelle Pick+ Harriet Potashnick Bill and Mary Jo Potter Claire Rocco Barbara and Tony Rooklin+ Mr. and Ms. Leon Rozinsky+ John F. Sanford+ Lee and Linda Jean Schneider Tom and Elinor Seaman+ Christopher Serata Mr. Samuel J. Serata, Esq.+ Antoinette Seymour Paul and Nancy Shallers Sharon and Irv Shapiro Parvin and Jean Sharpless Mary and Tom Short Robert and Susan Simon In Memory of Arnold Franklin Stanton Barbara and Richard Solly Richard and Elizabeth Soltan Ms. Louisa Spottswood+ Peter Stambler Harold and Emily Starr+ Jonathan and Judith Stein+ Mark Steinberger and Ann Lebowitz+ Barbara Stoebenau Kathleen Ross and Daniel Szyld Ms. Nina Tafel+ Karen Tidmarsh+ Mr. and Mrs. Harold S. Torrance Walt Vail Nadine Weiner Arnold Weiss+ Barbara and Peter Westergaard+ Drs. James and Jenette Wheeler+ Merry and Bob Woodruff Barrie and Eugene Zenone Peter Zutter and Tom Murphy+ The Wilma Theater’s in-school residency program WILMAGINATION is made possible with the support of Student Sunday Evenings This program is generously underwritten by the Virginia and Harvey Kimmel Arts Education Fund of the Philadelphia Foundation. This program provides $10 tickets to students. Excellence We are a proud supporter of The Wilma Theater and their production of Angels In America, Part II: Perestroika. www.pwc.com © 2012 PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, a Delaware limited liability partnership. All rights reserved. 912 ways to stay inspired No one understands what makes you feel happy and healthy more than you. At The Hill at Whitemarsh, you define what your wellness focus will be and the range of activities you want to pursue. We provide the support and guidance; you provide the interests. So from continuing education to art exhibits to wine club, you can continue staying as active as you want to be. And the only things that feel retired are your worries. Call 215-402-8725 for more information. 4000 Fox Hound Drive | Lafayette Hill, PA 19444 | 215-402-8725 | thehillatwhitemarsh.org