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PORTLANDCENTERSTAGE Presents Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike By Christopher Durang Directed by Rose Riordan January 10 – February 8, 2015 Artistic Director | Chris Coleman 1 PORTLANDCENTERSTAGE Presents Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike By Christopher Durang DIRECTED BY ROSE RIORDAN Scenic and Lighting Designer Daniel Meeker Costume Designer Mike Floyd Sound Designer Casi Pacilio Composer Jana Crenshaw Stage Manager Kelsey Daye Lutz Production Assistant Stephen Kriz Gardner Casting Rose Riordan and Brandon Woolley Hirschhorn, Joan Raffe/Jhett Tolentino, Martin Platt & David Elliot, Pat Flicker Addiss, Catherine Adler, John O’Boyle, Joshua Goodman, Jamie deRoy/Richard Winkler, Cricket Hooper, Jiranek/Michael Palitz, Mark S. Golub & David S. Golub, Radio Mouse Entertainment, Shawdowcatcher Entertainment, Mary Cossette/Barbara Manocherian, Megan Savage/Meredith Lynsey Schade, Hugh Hysell/Richard Jordan, 2 Cheryl Wiesenfeld/Ron Simons, S.D. Wagner, John Johnson in association with McCarter Theater Center and Lincoln Center Theater. Originally commissioned and produced by McCarter Center Theater, Princeton, N.J., Emily Mann, Artistic Director; Timothy J. Shields, Managing Director; Mara Isaacs, Producing Director; and produced by Lincoln Center Theater, New York City under the direction of Andre Bishop and Bernard Gersten in 2012. Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike is presented by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, Inc., New York. “Here Comes the Sun” Written by George Harrison Published by Harrisongs, Ltd. (ASCAP) Used by permission. All rights reserved. Performed with one intermission. The videotaping or other video or audio recording of this production is strictly prohibited. The Actors and Stage Manager employed in this production are members of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. 3 CAST Andrew Sellon…………………Vanya Sharonlee McLean……………..Sonia Carol Halstead…………………Masha Nick Ballard……………………Spike Eden Malyn……………………Nina Olivia Negron………………….Cassandra “You can multitask, how wonderful. You can tweet. You twitter and tweet, you email and text, your life is abuzz with electrical communication. I know older people always think the past was better, but really – instead of a text with all these lower case letters, and no punctuation, what about a nicely crafted letter, sent through the post office?” -Vanya in Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike 4 Christopher Durang’s character Vanya is speaking toward the end of the play when this thought spills out of his frustrated mouth. It’s the beginning of an avalanche of thoughts about modern culture, contemporary behavior and Dinah Shore. And it comes as a bit of a shock at that point in a story that has felt as light and tangy as lemon meringue. We come to feel and understand that Mr. Durang has had a lot of things on his mind and they come barreling out in a monologue all at once furious, well-argued and sidesplitting. It’s a monologue I have heard in my head before, though never formed as eloquently as it is here. In Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, one of our most gifted satirists chooses the world of Chekhov, that famous Russian observer of life, as the canvas for his latest comedic exposé. Why, you might ask? This is the author who broke out famously in the 80s with Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All For You – a scaldingly funny romp through Catholic school, led by the wholly un-PC and somewhat fascistic Sister Mary. This is the guy who, with Betty’s Summer Vacation, created an aggressively twisted world in which the seemingly innocuous turns savage. Why take up Chekhov? Who knows? But what it allows him to explore is a privileged family that has lost its momentum; a pair of narcissists hypnotized by their own reflection; and a series of visions of the future that keep rearing their heads. It’s a wild ride, and ultimately excavates some of the biggest questions we have about where our culture is heading. 5 Nick Ballard Spike Nick is so excited to be a part of this amazing play in this great city. Originally from Louisiana, he now lives in Los Angeles where it never rains and doesn’t get below 50 degrees. Some of his favorite performances include the Los Angeles premieres of Dog Sees God (GLAAD Media Award/Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle/LA Weekly nominations) and Anita Bryant Died For Your Sins (GLAAD Media Award nomination), world premieres of Heavier Than… and John Michael LaChiusa’s Sukie and Sue, and Sexual Perversity in Chicago. You can currently see him in The Weinstein Company’s film Operation Barn Owl and the Ron Howard/Brian Grazer-produced film The Rose Window. TV credits include recurring roles on Days of Our Lives and Holliston, also roles on on MTV’s Happyland, Bones, 90210, Clover’s Life (pilot), CSI:NY and Valentine. He would like to thank his wife Natalie for her never-ending support. Carol Halstead Masha Carol is delighted to be back in Portland where she played the shoe-loving Haley in Bad Dates, Olivia in Twelfth Night and Queen Elizabeth in The Beard of Avon. She appeared on Broadway in Gore Vidal's The Best Man. Off-Broadway: The Duchess of Malfi, Pericles, Walking Down Broadway, Easter Candy, The Mask, Alan Ball's The Amazing Adventures of Tense Guy. Recent regional: The Mousetrap and Clybourne Park (Dorset Theatre Festival), A Song at Twilight (Portland Stage 6 Company), Good People (The Old Globe), August: Osage County (Fulton Theatre), God of Carnage (Hudson Stage), The Clean House (Syracuse Stage), Private Lives (The Kitchen). Other work at The Shakespeare Theatre Company, Baltimore’s Center Stage, Cleveland Play House, Kansas City Repertory Theatre, San Jose Repertory Theatre (West Coast premiere of Teresa Rebeck's Bad Dates, Dean Goodman Choice Award for Best Solo Performance), over 20 productions with Denver Center Theatre Company. Carol is an ongoing guest artist and yoga/meditation teacher with The Chautauqua Theater Company. Television and film: Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Jonny Zero, As the World Turns, All My Children, Towel Head and The Whipper Snapper. Carol lives in NYC where she trains as a third degree black belt in Seido Karate. Eden Malyn Nina Eden Malyn is thrilled to be making her Portland Center Stage debut. Past theater credits include work shopping the role of Donna Ruth for Center Theatre Group’s Different Words for the Same Thing, originating the role of Cambria at Theatre 80 in New York in the new musical Behind Closed Doors: A 2nd Class Cabaret, and a handful of parts at awesome little theaters around Los Angeles, where she resides. You might know her as Zanna from season two of Showtime’s House of Lies, from little TV spots here and there, from a dozen or so national commercials, or as Emily in the cult classic zombie comedy DeadHeads. Look for her recurring role as Erin Sikowitz in season three of the Netflix original, Orange is the New Black this spring, as well as a starring role in the new indie feature Maybe Someday. Eden would like to thank her wonderful and supportive fiancé, 7 Christopher Rivas, without whom there isn’t much point, her amazing manager Avi Simon, who’s always on her side and never says NO, and her wonderful mentor Jamison Jones, for his brilliant tutelage, constant inspiration and encouragement. Sharonlee McLean Sonia This production marks Sharonlee’s 23rd here at PCS. She also completed her 10th summer participation in JAW last summer – as part of the cast of Adam Bock’s play A Life. Throughout the years, here in Portland, there have been projects performed at theaters like Artists Repertory Theatre, CoHo Productions, Portland Playhouse, Clackamas Repertory and Portland Repertory Theatre. Her last feature film: Extraordinary Measures playing Sheri Thompson, Harrison Ford’s secretary. Her last television series: guest starring as Mrs. Cox on Leverage. Drammy Awards: A Question of Mercy at Artists Repertory Theatre (1999), The Thugs at Portland Center Stage (2007), The Receptionist at Portland Center Stage (2009), Body Awareness at CoHo Productions (2013). PAMTA Awards: nomination for Fiddler on the Roof at Portland Center Stage (2014). Sharonlee comes to Portland from Hollywood. In her 30 something years she did her share of film, television and stage. Nominated for a Daytime Emmy for the role of Annie Degeralamo on the soap Santa Barbara. Olivia Negron Cassandra Broadway: Cuba and His Teddy Bear with Robert De Niro, Serious Money (by Caryl Churchill) with Alec Baldwin. OffBroadway: Circle Repertory, La MaMa, Henry Street 8 Settlement, HB Studios, TheatreSource and Women’s Interart. Regional: Canon Theater, Beverly Hills (The Vagina Monologues with Nancy Travis, Doris Roberts and Marcia Wallace), Mark Taper Forum (Living Out by Lisa Loomer), Atlanta’s Alliance Theatre, Philadelphia Theatre Company, South Coast Repertory (Birds by Lisa Loomer), Coconut Grove Playhouse, Merrimack Repertory Theatre and TheatreWorks (The Clean House). Film: Outliving Emily (2015 release), Everything Relative (Sundance Film Festival, 1996) and Captivity (with Elisha Cuthbert). Television: Devious Maids, Law & Order, Without a Trace, Law & Order: SVU and The Rock (series regular). New Media: Patricia Madrazo in Grand Theft Auto V. Ms. Negron is the artistic director of Young Shakespeareans, producers of children’s Shakespeare festivals. Andrew Sellon Vanya Andrew most recently starred as Charlie in a 30th anniversary revival of The Foreigner at the Maltz Jupiter Theatre. Last winter, he performed three extremely different roles in productions for Asolo Repertory Company: Jim Casy in The Grapes of Wrath, Vanya in Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, and Canon O’Byrne in Philadelphia, Here I Come!. Other favorite New York and regional roles include: Nikola Tesla in The Dangers of Electric Lighting (New York premiere), Clown in The 39 Steps, Gidger in The Violet Hour (first New York revival), all 35 roles in I Am My Own Wife, the Fool in King Lear, Dr. Rance in What the Butler Saw, Bazzard in The Mystery of Edwin Drood and Vladimir in Waiting for Godot. Film: Begin Again, The Smurfs, Mamarosh. TV: The Mysteries of Laura, The Blacklist. 9 Education: B.A. in English from Harvard, M.F.A. in Acting from The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he also taught acting for two years. Andrew is deeply grateful for the ongoing support of his extended family and especially his husband, Tim. Web site: www.andrewsellon.com It’s safe to say that Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike is one of the hottest plays on American stages this season. After winning the 2013 Tony Award for Best New Play – along with a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Play and the New York Drama Critic’s Circle Award – it quickly became the mostproduced new play in America this season. During one of the many recent productions on stages across the country, playwright Christopher Durang sat down with dramaturg Danielle Mages Amato to muse about his new hit play: Where did the idea behind this play come from? Why Chekhov? I lived in New York for 22 years, and in 1996, with my partner John Augustine, I moved to Bucks County, Pennsylvania. We live on a little hill, overlooking a pond, and a blue heron does come there. My house, it’s a farmhouse, pretty and a little 10 quaint, and it made me think of the Chekhov plays, like The Seagull and Uncle Vanya, where the people who live in the country are rather unhappy. They feel that their lives are boring; there’s no stimulation for them. Then there are characters like the glamorous actress Madame Arkadina in The Seagull, who are wandering about living in cities and being in plays and having affairs. I suddenly realized that I was now the age of the older characters in Chekhov. I’d mostly seen and read the plays in my 20s and 30s, and I certainly had empathy for the older characters, but they felt very distant from my experience. And now I thought, “Oh my gosh, I’m the same age as Uncle Vanya.” (Actually, I went back and looked up how old Vanya is in the play, and he’s 47! I’m a lot older than that. But aging was different back then, and most of the great actors who’ve played that role are older.) Even though I was now the age of Chekhov’s older characters, and I lived in a place in the country, I realized that I didn’t feel bitter in the way that the Chekhov characters did—I’d been in the city, and I actually wanted to get out of the city. But I thought to myself: What if I had only gone away from home briefly, and I hadn’t pursued the things that interested me? What if my fictional sister and I had ended up taking care of our parents through a very prolonged illness, and so on. I realized it was a “what if” play. What if you, yourself, had been a character in a Chekhov play? Yes—what if my real life had been like one of those Chekhov characters. Chekhov was a definite jumping-off point for the 11 play, but it’s very much not a parody of Chekhov. I’ve done parodies in the past, and this is much more its own thing. And I did my very best to write it so that you don’t have to know Chekhov to respond to it. I thought I was going to have much more about unrequited love, which is a theme that comes up in Chekhov so much. But it became much more about disappointment with how your life has gone. That’s a theme that isn’t unique to Chekhov. And it doesn’t sound like a comedy at all. But it is a comedy! This interview is courtesy of our friends at the The Old Globe Theatre. To read the rest of Durang’s chat with their Literary Manager/Dramaturg Danielle Mages Amato visit www.pcs.org/Durang-on-VSMS. Tell us what you think of the show! Find us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. Christopher Durang Playwright Christopher Durang’s plays include A History of the American Film (Tony nomination, Best Book of a Musical), The Actor’s Nightmare, Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All For You (Obie Award, Off-Broadway run, 1981-83), Beyond Therapy (on Broadway in 1982, with Dianne Wiest and John Lithgow), Baby with the Bathwater (Playwrights Horizons, 1983), The Marriage 12 of Bette and Boo (Public Theater, 1985; Obie Award, Dramatists Guild Hull Warriner Award), Laughing Wild (Playwrights Horizons, 1987) and Durang Durang (an evening of six plays at Manhattan Theatre Club, 1994, including the Tennessee Williams parody For Whom The Southern Belle Tolls). In 1996, he was commissioned by the Rodgers and Hammerstein Foundation to write a new book for the popular musical Babes in Arms. Sex and Longing was commissioned by Lincoln Center Theater and was presented on Broadway in fall 1996 starring Sigourney Weaver. The Idiots Karamazov, a full-length play with music written with Albert Innaurato, was revived at the American Repertory Theatre. His play Betty’s Summer Vacation (Drama Desk Award nomination) had its world premiere at Playwrights Horizons in February 1999 to great critical acclaim and sold-out houses and was extended three times. It was the recipient of four Obie Awards, for distinguished playwriting, directing, acting and set design. His musical (with music by Peter Melnick) Adrift in Macao premiered at New York Stage and Film in the summer of 2002. Mrs. Bob Cratchit’s Wild Christmas Binge was commissioned by Pittsburgh’s City Theater and had its world premiere in November 2002. In the early '80s, he and Sigourney Weaver co-wrote and performed in their acclaimed Brecht-Weill parody Das Lusitania Songspiel and were both nominated for Drama Desk Awards for Best Performer in a Musical. In 1993, he sang and tried to dance in the five-person Off-Broadway Sondheim revue Putting it Together, with Julie Andrews at Manhattan Theatre Club. And he played a singing congressman in Call Me Madam with Tyne Daly as part of “Encores.” He can be heard on cast recordings of both productions. In movies, he has appeared in The Secret of my Success, Mr. North, The Butcher's Wife, Housesitter, The 13 Cowboy Way, The Object of my Affection, Simply Irresistible and The Out of Towners, among others. For television, he wrote for a Carol Burnett special called Carol and Robin and Whoopi and Carl; and for PBS’ series Trying Times, he wrote a teleplay called The Visit starring Swoosie Kurtz as Wanda, the upsetting houseguest. He’s written several screenplays, including The House of Husbands (co-authored with Wendy Wasserstein), The Adventures of Lola for Tri-Star and director Herbert Ross, The Nun who Shot Liberty Valance and his own adaptation of Sister Mary … which aired on Showtime with Diane Keaton in the title role; and two sitcom pilots, Billy and Meg (for Fox Television) and Dysfunction! – The TV Show for Warner Brothers. He hopes one day they will be produced, perhaps in heaven. He has an M.F.A. from the Yale School of Drama. Early in his career, he won a Guggenheim, a Rockefeller, the CBS Playwriting Fellowship, the Lecompte du Nouy Foundation grant and the Kenyon Festival Theatre Playwriting Prize. In 1995, he won the prestigious three-year Lila Wallace Readers Digest Award; as part of his grant, he ran a writing workshop for adult children of alcoholics. Since 1994, he has been co-chair with Marsha Norman of the Playwriting Program at the Juilliard School in Manhattan. He is a member of the Dramatists Guild Council. Rose Riordan Director Rose is in her 17th season at Portland Center Stage, where she serves as associate artistic director. At PCS she has directed The Typographer’s Dream, LIZZIE, A Small Fire, The Mountaintop, The People’s Republic of Portland, The Whipping Man, The North Plan, Red, One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s 14 Nest, A Christmas Story, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, The Receptionist, A Christmas Carol, Frost/Nixon, How to Disappear Completely and Never Be Found, Doubt, The Underpants, The Pillowman and The Thugs, which won four Drammy Awards, including Best Ensemble and Best Director. She has also recently directed, for various other theaters, Adam Bock’s Phaedra, The Passion Play, Telethon and The Receptionist. In 1999 she founded Portland Center Stage’s annual JAW: A Playwrights Festival. JAW has been instrumental in developing new work for the PCS repertory: Bo-Nita, The People’s Republic of Portland, The Body of an American, The North Plan, Anna Karenina, Outrage, Flesh and Blood, Another Fine Mess, O Lovely Glowworm, Celebrity Row, Act a Lady, The Thugs and A Feminine Ending. Rose has also directed some of the staged readings for JAW festivals—The Thugs (2005), Telethon (2006), A Story About a Girl (2007), 99 Ways to F*** a Swan (2009), The North Plan (2010), San Diego (2012), The People’s Republic of Portland (2012), Mai Dang Lao (2013) and A Life (2014). She enjoys being part of a company committed to new work and having a beautiful building in which to work. Daniel Meeker Scenic and Lighting Designer Previously at PCS, Dan designed the set for The People's Republic of Portland and Red (Drammy Award), the lighting for Twist Your Dickens and I Love to Eat, and the set and lighting for The Typographer’s Dream, LIZZIE, The Last Five Years, Bo-Nita, The Mountaintop, The Real Americans and Mike's Incredible Indian Adventure. Other recent credits include 15 lighting design for the Pickathon Festival; set and lighting design for The Light in the Piazza, Detroit, Mother Teresa is Dead, The Huntsmen and Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson at Portland Playhouse; set design for Fancy Nancy and The Stinky Cheese Man for Oregon Children's Theatre; and set design for The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at the Pioneer Theatre Company. Upcoming projects include The Other Place at Portland Playhouse, Ramona Quimby for Oregon Children's Theatre and The People’s Republic of Portland for Portland Center Stage. Daniel is a member of the faculty of Portland State University. He is a graduate of Ithaca College and the Yale School of Drama and a member of United Scenic Artists. Mike Floyd Costume Designer Mike is excited to be designing costumes for this production of Vanya … at PCS, while also managing the costume shop which creates the hundreds of outfits needed for this season’s calendar. On Broadway, he has worked on the recent productions of Newsies; Priscilla Queen of the Desert (Tony Award for Best Costumes); Fela! (Tony Award for Best Costumes); and Twyla Tharp’s Come Fly Away. In New York, his work has been seen at the Public Theater; the Acting Company; New York Theatre Workshop; and the New York Classical Theatre. Regionally, he has worked with Actors Theatre of Louisville, Paper Mill Playhouse, Nashville Opera, among others. He has taught or designed at the Brown/Trinity Rep Consortium; Rutgers and Northwestern universities; Colby, Providence, Colgate colleges; and the University of California Irvine. Mike received his M.F.A. in design from the Yale School of Drama and his B.A. 16 from Kenyon College. He is a member of USA 829, the union for stage designers. Casi Pacilio Sound Designer Casi keeps busy with a variety of work and play in Portland and around the country. PCS credits include Dreamgirls, The Last Five Years, Othello, A Small Fire, Chinglish, Twist Your Dickens (2013 and 2014), The Mountaintop, Fiddler on the Roof, Oklahoma!, The North Plan, Shakespeare’s Amazing Cymbeline, Black Pearl Sings!, Opus, futura (with composer Jana Losey), Ragtime (PAMTA Award 2010), The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, Alfred Hitchcock’s The 39 Steps, Snow Falling on Cedars, Crazy Enough, The Little Dog Laughed, Sometimes a Great Notion, Cabaret, The Pillowman, I Am My Own Wife, West Side Story, Celebrity Row and eight seasons of JAW. National shows: Holcombe Waller Surfacing and Wayfinders; Hand2Mouth Theatre credits: Left Hand of Darkness, My Mind is Like an Open Meadow (Drammy Award 2011), Something’s Got Ahold Of My Heart and PEP TALK. Other theatrical credits include Squonk Opera’s Bigsmorgasbord-WunderWerk (Broadway, PS122, national and international touring); I Am My Own Wife, I Think I Like Girls (La Jolla Playhouse); Playland, 10 Fingers and Lips Together, Teeth Apart (City Theatre, PA). Film credits include Creation of Destiny, Out of Our Time and A Powerful Thang. Recordings: Glitterfruit’s fruit snacks. 17 Kelsey Daye Lutz Stage Manager Kelsey Daye is a North Carolinian dairy farmer’s daughter. New York credits include Off-Broadway work with The Actors Company Theatre; off-off-Broadway work with Theatre for the New City and The Internationalists. Regional credits include stage manager for The Typographer’s Dream, The Last Five Years and A Small Fire and production assistant for Clybourne Park, Venus in Fur, Midsummer Night’s Dream, The North Plan and Anna Karenina at PCS; stage management intern for Hard Weather Boating Party, Shipwrecked, A Raisin in the Sun and 43 Plays for 43 Presidents at Actors Theatre of Louisville; and assistant stage manager for A Beautiful Star and A Christmas Carol at Triad Stage. She would like to thank her boys for all their unconditional love, and Shamus for being wonderful. Stephen Kriz Gardner Production Assistant Previously at Portland Center Stage, Stephen was the production assistant for Othello, Chinglish, Twist Your Dickens (2013 and 2014), The Mountaintop and Somewhere in Time. In Portland, he has also worked as the stage manager for Oregon Children's Theatre on Pinkalicious (remount), The Magic School Bus: Climate Challenge and Locomotion, as well as assistant stage managed Pinkalicious and Duck for President. In addition, Stephen stage managed Spring Awakening, and more recently The Rocky Horror Show with Live On Stage Theatre Company. Credits outside of Portland include stage managing Black Comedy for No Rules Theatre Company in Washington DC and assisting on Camp Wanatachi at La MaMa Experimental Theatre in New York. He has been a production assistant on One 18 Singular Sensation: Celebrating Marvin Hamlisch, Sondheim! The Birthday Concert and Company at Lincoln Center. Internship credits include the Goodman Theatre (Candide and A Christmas Carol) and Broadway's Wicked. Chris Coleman Artistic Director Chris joined Portland Center Stage as artistic director in May 2000. Before coming to Portland, he was artistic director at Actor’s Express in Atlanta, a company he co-founded in the basement of an old church in 1988. Chris recently returned to Atlanta to direct Phylicia Rashad and Kenny Leon in Same Time Next Year. Favorite PCS directing assignments include Dreamgirls, Othello, Fiddler on the Roof, Clybourne Park, Sweeney Todd, Shakespeare’s Amazing Cymbeline (which he also adapted), Anna Karenina, Oklahoma!, Snow Falling on Cedars, Ragtime, Crazy Enough, Beard of Avon, Cabaret, King Lear, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Man and Superman, Outrage, Flesh and Blood and The Devils. Chris has directed at theaters across the country, including Actor’s Theater of Louisville, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, ACT-Seattle, The Alliance, Dallas Theatre Center, Pittsburgh Public Theatre, New York Theatre Workshop and Center Stage in Baltimore. A native Atlantan, Chris holds a B.F.A. from Baylor University and an M.F.A. from Carnegie Mellon. He is currently the board president for the Cultural Advocacy Coalition. Chris and his husband, Rodney, are the proud parents of an 18 lb Jack Russell/Lab mix, and a 110 lb English Blockhead Yellow lab. 19 Scenic Painters Loren Hillman Shawn Mallory Props Artisans Shawn Mallory Teresa Pilar Huarte Draper Lisa Logan Stitchers Susi Jenkins Foggy Bell Sound Programmer and Engineer Scott Thorson Special Thanks: The ReBuilding Center Lead Corporate Champion Umpqua Bank From the lead actor to the light technician, from the front seats to the back row, we’re proud to support every inch of Portland Center Stage. Of course we’re writing this in hope that, as a 20 fellow lover of the theater, you’ll come and visit us. But for now, sit back, enjoy the show and cheers for the season! Keith and Sharon Barnes Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike won the 2013 Tony Award for best play and we are delighted to help PCS bring this Chekhov-centric comedy to Portland audiences. 21