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20 11 The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess YOUR GUIDE TO OFFICIAL SEASON 2010/11 PRINT SPONSOR Welcome The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess At the A.R.T. The moment is finally here for the American Repertory Theater’s production of The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess. This special guide will immerse you in the incredible history of this iconic American masterpiece, while giving you a behind-the> Diane Paulus, scenes look at our production. Inside, you Artistic Director Photo: Dario Acosta will find interviews with the creative team, an overview of the production history of Porgy and Bess, personal stories from the A.R.T. cast members, and all the details you need to buy your tickets and secure your seats. Porgy and Bess has a special relationship to Boston. On September 30th, 1935, Porgy and Bess premiered at the Colonial Theatre on Boylston Street, right near the Boston Common, where George Gershwin famously walked after opening night and made forty-five minutes of cuts to the production. Now, seventy-six years later, Porgy and Bess returns to Boston for the next chapter in the history of this masterwork. I have spent the past year working on Porgy and Bess alongside two incredibly accomplished women—Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Suzan-Lori Parks and OBIE Award-winning composer Diedre Murray. Joining our creative team is the acclaimed choreographer Ronald K. Brown, who has developed a dance vocabulary for the production that brings this moving story to life onstage. Our version of Porgy and Bess takes this work out of the opera house and brings it to the musical theater stage, where we will focus on creating an intimate experience that puts the spotlight on the characters and the story. Of course, the Gershwins’ unforgettable score remains the centerpiece and we are fortunate to have some of the greatest stars of Broadway performing it. On behalf of everyone at the A.R.T., welcome to The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess! A.R.T. BOARD OF TRUSTEES Donald Ware, Chairman Philip Burling Paul Buttenwieser Kevin Cole Costin Mike Dreese Michael Feinstein Lori Gross Ann Gund Sarah Hancock Provost Alan M. Garber Fumi Matsumoto Rebecca Milikowsky Ward Mooney Diane Paulus James Rhee Diana Sorensen Lisbeth Tarlow Teal Wicks and Daniel Jenkins in The Blue Flower, 2010/11 Season World Premiere Photo: Marcus Stern A.R.T. BOARD OF ADVISORS Kathleen Connor, Co-Chair Rachael Goldfarb, Co-Chair Frances Shtull Adams Joseph Auerbach* Page Bingham Greg Carr Antonia Handler Chayes* Susan Cohen Susan Edgman-Levitan Erin Gilligan Barbara Grossman Horace H. Irvine, II Dan Mathieu Natalie Reed Ellen Gordon Reeves Linda U. Sanger Founding Director Robert Brustein Maggie Seelig John A. Shane Michael Shinagel Sam Weisman Alfred Wojciechowski Yuriko Young *Emeriti 02_ART SEASON Catfish Row Reimagined: A team of leading artists from American theater, music, dance and design has gathered at the American Repertory Theater to reimagine DuBose and Dorothy Heyward’s and the Gershwin brothers’ fictional waterfront community of Catfish Row, South Carolina. Meet the Creative Team Suzan-Lori Parks Adapter / Additional Scenes Suzan-Lori is a MacArthur “Genius” Award recipient and the first African-American woman to receive a Pulitzer Prize in drama, for her play Topdog/Underdog. Interview on page 7 caption: Picnic time: “Oh, I Can’t Sit Down” (Vandamm Studio, NYC) courtesy of Ira and Leonore Gershwin Trusts Diedre Murray Musical Adapter Riccardo Hernandez Set Designer Riccardo’s stunning set designs have been featured at the A.R.T. for over a decade, most recently for Prometheus Bound and The Seagull. ESosa Costume Designer Diedre is a Pulitzer Prize finalist, two-time OBIE Award-winner and acclaimed cellist. Interview on page 25 A finalist on Project Runway, ESosa’s fashion and costume designs are known for their classic silhouettes and modern sensibility. ESosa’s costumes made their A.R.T. debut in Best of Both Worlds. Diane Paulus Director Christopher Akerlind Lighting Designer Diane’s groundbreaking productions of theater and opera have garnered numerous awards, including the 2009 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Musical (HAIR). Interview on page 14 Christopher is a frequent A.R.T. collaborator and recipient of numerous awards, including a Tony Award for The Light In The Piazza and an OBIE Award for Sustained Excellence in Lighting Design. Ronald K. Brown Choreographer Nevin Steinberg Sound Designer Ron’s body of work marries the high-impact immediacy of modern dance with the beauty of traditional African forms and rhythms. His world-renowned troupe Evidence, A Dance Company, uses movement to express the struggles, tragedies and epiphanies that make up the human experience. In conjunction with Acme Sound Partners, Nevin has worked for eleven years on Broadway and regional productions, including Johnny Baseball at the A.R.T. Interview with Suzan-Lori Parks Writing to the Rhythm A.R.T. Outreach and Education Associate Brendan Shea speaks with Suzan-Lori Parks, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and adapter of Porgy and Bess. D I S C O V E R HARVARD SQUARE Brendan Shea: How well did you know Porgy and Bess before working on it? > Suzan-Lori Parks Suzan-Lori Parks: I had heard about the piece. I knew it was performed a lot, but I never had a desire to actually go and see it. Diane [Paulus] sent me the libretto and the music, and my first real experience with it was listening to the music and following along with the script. I fell in love with it right away. Through 8/ 31 THINK PINK, DRINK PINK, SHOP PINK Breast Cancer Campaign September 18 October 22-23 THE 47TH ANNUAL HEAD OF THE CHARLES REGATTA THE 3RD ANNUAL URBAN-AG FESTIVAL October 28-31 September 18 November 1- 31 THE 8TH ANNUAL RIVERSING HARVARD SCARE FOLK MUSIC MONTH October 2 THE 33RD ANNUAL OKTOBERFEST AND HONK PARARDE Harvard Square Business Association For more information about these events and Harvard Square Shops, Restaurants, Hotels and Culture… www.harvardsquare.com BS: As you did this, did anything jump out as something that needed to be adapted or changed? SP: Different things need to be adapted and changed for different reasons. There are several what I would consider “anthropological moments” in the original, meaning moments created by people who were probably not deeply familiar with any African-American community. So, there are several moments in the original that serve to create an understanding or familiarity, as the original audiences for Porgy and Bess were probably not predominantly African-American either. These days our culture is more inclusive and familiar across the board so those “anthropological moments” aren’t as necessary. And there are moments that need additions/rewrites/ tweaks for pure dramaturgical reasons. Sometimes I’m restructuring a sequence of action, sometimes rewriting an entire scene, sometimes I’m inventing whole new scenes or excavating deeply underwritten original moments, sometimes strengthening the plot line and individual character through-lines, sometimes, you know, “fleshing out” and “unpacking” emotional beats; sometimes I just had to add a few words to help something click. For example, “I Got Plenty of Nothing” needed to make solid dramatic sense. Disturbingly, this moment often came across as Porgy singing one of those stereotypical “happy darkie” songs. I realized very quickly that the song needed to be grounded in an actual dramatic context to work more effectively. I added a few words to contextualize the moment, and now the song is about something vital and joyous that’s going on in the action of the play. continued> right > The 1994 A.R.T. production of Suzan-Lori Parks’ The America Play, directed by Marcus Stern. From left: Kim Brockington, Terry Alexander, Royal Miller Ronald K. Brown: “Our job is to discover and excavate who these characters are. When we are looking at grief within the piece, we look at dances that have grief in them. When we look at how the characters celebrate, we ask: where would the remnants of celebration be in their bodies? From Africa, but also from their new world, here in the U.S.A. These characters are not brand new. They were not created from the atmosphere. They’re rooted in something. And we’re not coming up on top of it and telling you who they are. We are discovering who they are.” Photo: Richard Feldman Inside the Movement of The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess BS: Have you had to adjust the way you write when scripting words that will be sung? You talk about being influenced by jazz and classical music. SP: I write to a rhythm. I write to a beat. With most of my writing, I’m writing to music that doesn’t exist. But here, I’m writing to music that’s written. When I put in alterations, different lines, I just count out the beats, or sing the tune, and change the line accordingly. BS: So in a way, you’re collaborating with Gershwin’s score. SP: Right. I’m collaborating with an existing score, and the adaptation of it that Diedre [Murray] has provided. BS: Has anything that Diedre said about rearranging the score inspired you to look again at another passage or another song? SP: Working with Diedre has been wonderful. And I like what she says about how we’re “modernizing without disturbing.” It’s not as if we are trying to put our thumbprints all over it; what we are doing is appreciating what is there, then trying to make what’s there into a viable show for today’s musical theater stage. BS: What you’re saying reminds me of one of the core elements of your style, the idea of “repetition and revision.” SP: Yes, we are revising a classic. It’s along the same lines—not the same thing, but along the same lines—as doing a riff on The Scarlet Letter, as I did in my plays F***ing A and In The Blood. Or having the Abraham Lincoln impersonator appear in The America Play and having him appear again in Topdog/Underdog. Or having the character of Grace be in Topdog/ Underdog unseen, and then have her be the centerpiece of The Book of Grace. Repetition and Revision. Yes. As I work on Porgy and Bess, I work along these lines. And that’s probably why I was attracted to this project, too, because it really is like working on an historical artifact. BS: And Porgy and Bess are considered great American cultural icons, alongside Hester Prynne and Abraham Lincoln. SP: Exactly. It’s right up my alley. And it’s been a lot of fun. Brendan Shea is the A.R.T.’s Outreach and Education Associate. By Jenna Clark Embrey Courtesy of Ira and Leonore Gershwin Trusts An American Odyssey: Porgy and Bess Through the Years When the American Repertory Theater reinvents this classic on stage in the summer of 2011, the production will stand in a century of trailblazing footsteps. The epic opera first stretched its legs seventy-six years ago at a tryout in Boston, with the largest all-black cast seen on an American stage. After its premiere at Boston’s Colonial Theatre on September 30, 1935, George Gershwin received a fifteen-minute ovation. The presidents of MIT, Wellesley, and Harvard leapt to their feet to applaud, and tickets for the week-long run were impossible to obtain. Historian Robert Rushmore remarked, “To the eternal credit of the city of Boston, the audience and critics were not confused by this strange new kind of folk opera and recognized its greatness.” After this trial run, Porgy and Bess moved to the Great White Way—Broadway. The official premiere came on October 10, 1935, at the Alvin Theatre in New York. Rouben Mamoulian, who would later go on to direct the films Blood and Sand and The Mask of Zorro, directed the production. Opera singers Todd Duncan and Anne Brown performed the title roles, and comedian John W. Bubbles took on the role of Sportin’ Life. As he could not read music, he compensated by learning the complex rhythm through tap dancing. Despite reviews from Boston that hailed Porgy and Bess as having reached “the ultimate in theatrical production,” the New York critics sat on the fence, neither approving nor dismissing. The mixed reception forced the show to close after a disappointing 124 performances. The Gershwins, writer DuBose Heyward, and their backers lost their financial investments. continued> above> John Bubbles and Anne Brown in 1935: Sportin’ Life lures Bess to New York below> Scan with a smartphone to hear the original Porgy and Bess: Todd Duncan and Anne Brown Winnie Klotz, photographer, Metropolitan Opera Association, Inc., Lincoln Center, New York, NY 10023 “This was something unique: famous white American performers had appeared at [Milan’s] La Scala, but never blacks. Both audience and company were tense. Every member of the cast was coiled tight like a spring, wound taut for a shattering release. The moment the curtain opened, the singers pulled the elegant first-night audience into the harshness of black Southern life. The love story unfolded with such tenderness that the singers wept visible tears.” Maya Angelou, Featured Dancer, 1952 -1956 Porgy and Bess World Tour 1935 Boston, Broadway, and Beyond Despite receiving glowing reviews in Boston, Gershwin and director Rouben Mamoulian knew that, at nearly four hours in length, cuts had to be made. Gershwin, Mamoulian, and vocal director Alexander Smallens walked around Boston Common until three in the morning, arguing over edits. Mamoulian and Smallens suggested three numbers be cut. Gershwin painfully agreed. Two days before the Broadway premiere, Gershwin presented Mamoulian with a birthday present: pages of the score tied with a red ribbon. The composer handed the gift to his director and said, “Thank you for making me take out all that stuff in Boston.” The production opened on Broadway at the Alvin Theatre on October 10, 1935. Subsequently, the production toured to Philadelphia, Chicago, Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C. Todd Duncan, a longtime resident of Washington, D.C., knew that the National Theatre had long refused entry to non-white patrons. Upon learning that Duncan and his co-star Anne Brown refused to perform in a segregated playhouse, the manager of the National Theatre, S.E. Cochran, approached Duncan with a compromise: Wednesday and Saturday matinees could be opened to black audiences. Duncan said no. Cochran returned with a second offer: black patrons could sit in the second balcony at any performance. Duncan said no. Unless every seat be made available to any patron, regardless of the color of their skin, Todd Duncan and Anne Brown would not be satisfied. Finally, Cochran relented, and the National Theatre became de-segregated for the first time in its history. When the national tour took off in 1936, Porgy and Bess ignited social change. After stops in Philadelphia, Chicago, and Pittsburgh, the opera was scheduled to finish at Washington D.C.’s National Theatre. Anne Brown recalled, “As expected we were told that the National Theatre would be a segregated house. Todd and I refused to perform and were threatened by the Theatre Guild who said we had to sing or there would be reprisals. We cared less. We were adamant.” The theater relented. Whites and blacks sat side-by-side for the first time in the theater’s history. Despite the success of the tour, directors, scared by the disappointing box office receipts of the Broadway premiere, hesitated to restage Porgy and Bess. Finally, producer and director Cheryl Crawford opened a streamlined Broadway revival of the opera in 1942. She cut minor characters, turned the recitatives into spoken dialogue, and reduced the orchestra to half its size. The result was a musical theater version, and ticket sales reflected the audience’s approval. The production ran for 286 performances (at the time a record for a Broadway revival), left on an eighteen-month tour across the country, and returned to New York for a two-week, sold-out run. As affection for Porgy and Bess boomed in America, the opera made its way across the Atlantic. On March 23, 1943, the Danish Royal Opera premiered the work in Copenhagen with an all-white cast in blackface to enthusiastic audiences. Despite its success, the Nazis tried to close the production. The theater refused, and for twenty-one sold-out performances, police surrounded the building. When the Nazis threatened to bomb the theater, managers ended the run. After the Second World War, Porgy and Bess found its way back to Europe under the guidance of Robert Breen and Blevins Davis. With financing from the U.S. Department of State, Breen and Davis restored several songs cut from previous productions. The production boasted an allstar cast with Leontyne Price as Bess and William Warfield as Porgy. Cab Calloway took on Sportin’ Life, a part written with him in mind, and a young Maya Angelou stepped in as a featured dancer. In December 1955, Porgy and Bess navigated a jungle of Cold War hostility to travel to the Soviet Union. Audiences in Moscow adored the production, the first show performed by Americans since the Bolshevik Revolution. With its sweeping success on the international stage, Porgy and Bess became a hot commodity in Hollywood. In 1959, renowned producer Samuel Goldwyn offered Sidney Poitier the role of Porgy. Offended by the portrayal of AfricanAmericans in the script, Poitier turned it down. Goldwyn, however, exerted pressure on above> Todd Duncan and Anne Brown above> Fifty years after the premiere, Anne Brown and Todd Duncan meet with the leads, Simon Estes and Grace Bumbry, of the Metropolitan Opera production, 1985 Poitier who ultimately accepted the role. With Poitier on board, Dorothy Dandridge agreed to play Bess, and Sammy Davis, Jr. lobbied hard to play Sportin’ Life. Diahann Carroll and Pearl Bailey took the roles of Clara and Maria. Despite a stellar cast, the film ran into trouble. Early in production, a suspicious fire destroyed the set. Director Rouben Mamoulian was fired as a result of artistic disagreements between him and Goldwyn. The popular Hollywood musicals of the day—such as Singing in the Rain, Brigadoon, and Kismet—favored a more happy-go-lucky tone. Mamoulian, by contrast, wanted the film of Porgy and Bess to reflect an authentic, historical Charleston. Goldwyn ultimately replaced him with director Otto Preminger. After the tumultuous filming process, critics lambasted the film’s set as overly lavish and the action as monotonous. When Goldwyn’s fifteen-year lease on the film rights expired, the Gershwin and Heyward estates blocked the movie from further distribution. In 1976, the Houston Grand Opera assembled the first production of Porgy and 1943 Danish Royal Opera Porgy and Bess became a symbol of resistance to Nazi occupation of Denmark; radio stations would play “It Ain’t Necessarily So” after Nazi broadcasts. Bess to use the score from before Gershwin made his first round of cuts after the opening in Boston. However, because union laws mandated overtime for a show that surpassed three hours, directors John DeMain and Jack O’Brien had to make edits. Snipping away reprises and short lines, they finished with a production that ran two hours and fifty-eight minutes. The show, the only opera to receive a Tony Award, was hailed in the New York Daily News as “the most musical, moving, and profoundly beautiful production playing in New York.” As Porgy and Bess continues its odyssey and returns to Boston, it does so with a renewed energy in the present moment. Each restaging of Porgy and Bess carries the music of a nation, the history of a people, and the voice of an ever-changing America. Jenna Clark Embrey is a second-year dramaturgy student at the A.R.T./MXAT Institute for Advanced Theater Training at Harvard University. The show played in seventy cities in twenty-nine countries around the world. Truman Capote chronicled this government-sponsored production’s tour to the Soviet Union in The Muses are Heard. 1959 Film Version Staring Sidney Poitier, Dorothy Dandridge, and Sammy Davis, Jr. 1970 Charleston, South Carolina Porgy and Bess played for the first time in Charleston. 1976 Houston Grand Opera This mostly uncut production of Porgy and Bess won a Tony Award for best revival of a musical as well as a Grammy for its recording. 1985 Metropolitan Opera On the fiftieth anniversary of its premiere, the Met produced Porgy and Bess for the first time. 1986 Glyndebourne Festival Trevor Nunn directed an almost four-hour, uncut version of the opera, featuring the London Philharmonic Orchestra. The production was scenically expanded and filmed for television in 1993. 1995 Cape Town Opera This South African production was set in the 1970s in Cape Town, during apartheid. 2006 Savoy Theatre, SUPPORT AL P Cheryl Crawford directed the first attempt at transforming the opera into a musical theater work. 1952-1956 Breen-Davis “Americans Abroad” Tour N Courtesy of Ira and Leonore Gershwin Trusts RIGIN THE O CTIO RODU 1942 Broadway Revival The creative legacy of George and Ira Gershwin and DuBose and Dorothy Heyward lives on in the A.R.T.’s new adaptation of this work. Help ensure the A.R.T.’s future ability to undertake important projects like this, through your planned support. Please call the Development Office at 617-496-2000 X8838 to discuss gift options. London Trevor Nunn transforms his celebrated Glyndebourne production into a West End musical. Histor Production y different musical forms. Diedre has the perfect musical background to immerse herself completely in Gershwin’s cathedral of ideas. RM: Had you ever seen Porgy and Bess before you began working on this project? At the Heart of an American Masterpiece A.R.T. Dramaturg Ryan McKittrick talks with Diane Paulus, Artistic Director of the A.R.T. and director of The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess Ryan McKittrick: Could you describe the way the creative team is adapting Porgy and Bess? Diane Paulus: We are trying to create a more dramatically complete version of Porgy and Bess that will be the most powerful experience in terms of story and character for a twenty-first-century audience. There have been many different versions of Porgy and Bess. It is a living, breathing, enormous masterpiece that Gershwin was still working on when he died in 1937, just two years after it premiered on Broadway. Within this massive creation lived many potentials, and we are trying to fully realize the impulses in the story and the characters. Porgy and Bess has always had a hybrid energy that fuses jazz and classical music, but for the past forty years it has been known primarily as an opera. We are creating a version for the musical stage that is less operatic and epic, and more focused and intimate. RM: Why did you want to work with the playwright Suzan-Lori Parks on this project? DP: Suzan-Lori Parks was the first person I thought of when the Gershwin estate asked me to suggest a writer for our production. I have been an admirer of her work for years, and while we knew each other socially, we had never worked together before. Not only is she deeply gifted as a playwright, with a vast dramaturgical knowledge, she is also an amazing human being, thinker, and philosopher. What’s incredible about Suzan-Lori is that while she is able to look at the larger context of the work, she writes from the inside of the hearts of the characters. I’ve been so struck with how she puts herself inside every single character. RM: This spring you and Marjorie Garber cotaught a course at Harvard on Porgy and Bess. Has anything from that course influenced this production? DP: Getting to know Porgy, DuBose Heyward’s novel that was the inspiration for Porgy and Bess. It is important to understand the context in which the novel was written. Heyward was from a white aristocratic family looking as an outsider at a community that surrounded him. But he was listening and absorbing, as any artist does. So the novel is a window—albeit through the eyes of a particular author—into the time period. It has been very interesting to read some of the details about the characters in the novel; they spark the imagination. So the novel has become a source for us in the rehearsal room. And the play that DuBose Heyward co-wrote with his wife, Dorothy, after the novel was published has also been a source. Even Sidney Poitier’s comments about below, l to r> George Gershwin, DuBose Heyward, and Ira Gershwin RM: You’ve collaborated with the composer Diedre Murray on a number of projects over the years. Why did you want her on board as the musical adapter for this project? DP: I knew that Diedre would be the right person for this project because of her background in classical music and jazz. She has the versatility to understand all the musical impulses in Porgy and Bess. Gershwin was way ahead of his time. He was interested in mashing up all these Photofest, New York above, l to r> Diedre Murray, Diane Paulus, and Suzan-Lori Parks Interview with Diane Paulus DP: I had only seen it once, at the New York City Opera. I was staggered by the number of hit songs. It was shocking to me to hear hit after hit after hit. And I also remember being deeply moved in the second scene, during “My Man’s Gone,” when Serena is mourning the death of her husband. I remember thinking that this is a great drama with big emotions and incredible music. “George played with the most beatific smile on his face. He seemed to float on the waves of his own music with the Southern sun shining on him. Ira sang—he threw his head back with abandon, his eyes closed, and sang like a nightingale! In the middle of the song George couldn’t bear it any longer and took over the singing from him. To describe George’s face while he sang ‘Summertime’ is something that is beyond my capacity as a writer. Nirvana might be the word!” Rouben Mamoulian, director of the original production of Porgy and Bess, on hearing the Gershwin brothers play through the score for the first time. regretting making the 1959 film have become a source of inspiration for us, because we have been discussing what it means to play Porgy and how the character can be interpreted in new ways. So exploring the history of Porgy and Bess has really informed the choices we’re making in the rehearsal room. presenting buildings and shutters and gates, we’re focusing on the important relationships and dynamics of the community. We’re also working with an incredible choreographer, Ron K. Brown, who is helping us express the narrative and dramatic tension in the performers’ bodies. RM: Where have you decided to set the production? Ryan McKittrick is the A.R.T.’s Dramaturg and co-head of the Dramaturgy Department of the A.R.T./MXAT Institute for Advanced Theater Training at Harvard University. DP: In Charleston, South Carolina, in the late 1930s. The production design breaks free from the tradition of large sets representing real architecture. This production will zoom in on the individuals in the community. So rather than The Gershwins and the Heywards On Their Way to Porgy and Bess Gershwin Collection An essay by Gershwin expert Robert Kimball unique contribution to Porgy and Bess included the lyrics to “Summertime” and “My Man’s Gone Now.” The collaboration was a fruitful and amicable one for all concerned. 1933 was not an easy year for the Gershwins. Their musical comedy Pardon My English and their political satire Let ‘Em Eat Cake, the sequel to their Pulitzer Prize-winner Of Thee I Sing, for all their strengths, were both commercial failures. But as the year drew to a close, things started looking up. In early November 1933 the Theatre Guild announced that it would produce the operatic version of Porgy. (The Metropolitan Opera, whose board chairman, Otto Kahn, was a good friend of George’s, had expressed interest earlier in an opera based on Porgy. Mrs. Ira Gershwin recalled Ira telling her that George and Kahn had spoken about it by telephone. Kahn offered the possibility of two Met performances, but George and Ira both felt that the culmination of their efforts should not be limited to such a brief run, even at the prestigious opera house.) By late 1933, George was not only at work on the opera (for which he had already done some preliminary composition), but he also found time to write his “Variations on I Got Rhythm,” which he dedicated to his brother Ira. The virtuoso piece for piano and orchestra was premiered in Boston on January 14, 1934, at the first stop of a whirlwind American tour during which George and the Leo Reisman Orchestra, conducted by Charles Previn, played 28 concerts in 28 days in as many cities. The barnstormer was a huge critical success BLOG Edwin DuBose Heyward was born into an aristocratic Charleston, South Carolina, family on August 31, 1885. He left school early to take a job on the waterfront. At eighteen Heyward was stricken with polio and during his recovery began writing — poetry at first and later novels and plays. In 1924 Heyward wrote his first book and greatest success, Porgy. The idea for the story he found in a newspaper article about a maimed black man who committed murder at the height of passion. Heyward drew upon his early experience on the waterfront, re-creating the teeming life of Catfish Row. In 1926 George Gershwin read Porgy and immediately wrote Heyward about his wish to compose an opera based on it. It was not until nine years later, however, that Heyward and Gershwin collaborated on Porgy and Bess. In March 1932 George again wrote DuBose Heyward of his desire to set Porgy to music. They had met in 1926 at the time of the original Theatre Guild production of the Heywards’ play, Porgy —a stage adaptation of the novel, which DuBose had co-written with his wife, Dorothy. When Heyward informed George that the operatic rights to Porgy were “free and clear,” George then informed Heyward that it would take at least a year for him to write the music for the opera. In the meantime, Heyward began working on the libretto for George. From the beginning Ira [Gershwin] was a collaborator on Porgy and Bess. The lyrics to Act I are by Heyward, the lyrics to Acts II and III are by Ira and Heyward. Ira’s greater experience as a lyric writer was of enormous help to Heyward, whose own above> George Gershwin in his studio after the premiere of Porgy and Bess and a remarkable testament to George’s prodigious physical stamina: he played the “Concerto in F,” “Rhapsody in Blue,” “Variations on I Got Rhythm” and several of his songs at each of the concerts. During the 20 months it took George to compose and orchestrate Porgy and Bess—he began in late 1933 and finished in September 1935—Ira had the opportunity to write lyrics for two Broadway revues: Life Begins at 8:40 (1934) with E.Y. Harburg and Harold Arlen and the Ziegfeld Follies of 1936 with Vernon Duke. Both were successful, and their excellent scores can be heard today. There is no question in my mind that Gershwin was not finished with the score of Porgy and Bess when he died tragically of a brain tumor just two years after the Broadway premiere. In the years since its first performance in 1935 at Boston’s Colonial Theatre on September 30, the work has been performed in theaters, opera houses, and concert halls all over the world. It has been recorded several times and is constantly being reappraised. As someone who has known and loved the work for nearly 60 years and who was a friend to Ira Gershwin, many of the original cast members including Todd Duncan, Anne Brown and John W. Bubbles, and many others close to the opera, I look forward with excitement to the American Repertory Theater’s new version of Porgy and Bess. Robert Kimball is the Artistic Advisor to the Ira and Leonore Gershwin Trusts and author of numerous books on music including a biography titled The Gershwins. Learn more about the legendary Gershwin brothers at americanrepertorytheater.org/blog. I think where I am now in my life is that…I’ve lived a bit. I’m 40, I’ve lived a lot. Bess is someone who is looking to make a change in her life and doesn’t know how to go about doing it. She realizes this can end one of two ways—either she is going to get out, or the situation is going to kill her. [Bess is] someone looking to find the truth of who they are, to rise from a bad situation and use their own strength to move on. As an African-American divorced single mother, there’s a lot I can identify with in Bess. I mean, I’ve never been a prostitute or done ‘happy dust’ or anything like that! But looking for self-worth, finding it within one’s self and battling one’s demons. “ Norm Lewis I hope to honor the history of the show, the Porgy and Bess of the past and, hopefully, of the future. Todd Duncan, who was the very first Porgy, refused to go on stage in Washington, D.C., unless it was an integrated audience. Duncan would not go on, no matter how they pressured him and threatened him…he still stayed true. And they integrated the audience. [Duncan] got his way. I want to honor what he—and the Gershwins—did for us. Norm Lewis as Porgy Porgy and Me Audra McDonald as Bess “ Audra McDonald ” Joshua Henry as Jake Nikki Renée Daniels as Clara Phillip Boykin as Crown David Alan Grier as Sporting Life ” BO STO N ’S B Traditionally, Sporting Life is a song-and-dance guy. He comes in, and then he goes out. But in this version, we’re working on who Sporting Life is. He comes from that community. He’s from Catfish Row. He grew up there. Everyone knows him. He’s probably the most well-traveled and worldliest person there, because he’s gone away from that community and he’s found his niche…drugs and prostitution. But they all know him from the neighborhood. In previous productions, this hasn’t been fully dealt with. Sporting Life is a more rooted character in this production, and the stakes are much higher for him. ” “ Philip Boykin When I was a little boy, my uncle had the album of Porgy and Bess with Leontyne Price and William Warfield on it. As a poor child growing up in West Greenville, South Carolina, I looked at these two wonderful black African-American people on the cover of an album, and something in me just turned on right away. And I thought: if they can be on the cover of an album singing opera—I didn’t know what it was at that time— then I can do it. And I always wanted a better tomorrow. So it’s really ironic that a Porgy and Bess album cover started my career. And here I am. It’s a wonderful gift. ” BLOG “ David Alan Grier “ Nikki Renée Daniels People know more about [Porgy and Bess] than they think. You have pop stars today on American Idol singing ‘Summertime.’ I think the score is going to stand on its own forever. But in this new production, people will get to know the story, the characters, and the stories behind the songs. I used to sing ‘Summertime’ in vocal competitions when I was in high school. Now, I’m getting more towards that point in life where I want to have a family, and I can definitely relate to Clara on that level. I got married two years ago. That strong love between her and Jake—that she would do anything for him—I relate to that today more than I ever did. ” “ Joshua Henry I love that it’s a slice of AfricanAmerican life in the 1930s. It seems like I’m always around the ‘30s—my last show was Scottsboro Boys, which is set in 1939. It was a period of change and moving forward for this community. It’s very exciting that this production focuses on the authenticity of the people [of Catfish Row]. It’s also a dream come true to be working with this caliber of talent. It’s a rare time when you feel that there’s something very special on your hands, and that’s how I feel right now. I’m blessed to be here. ” Meet more of the cast (and watch some awe-inspiring performances) on our blog, at americanrepertorytheater.org/blog. EST DIS CO DA N CE PAR TY EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT! OBERON, 2 ARROW ST. TICKETS from $25 617.547.8300 americanrepertorytheater.org By Brendan Shea > Billie Holiday Porgy and Bess Hits the Charts The score of Porgy and Bess is considered one of the greatest entries in the American musical canon. George Gershwin’s inventive arrangements, which Diedre Murray characterizes as a “hybrid” of jazz and classical music, have helped shape the landscape of contemporary American music—R&B, soul music, modern jazz, even Top 40 pop owe a debt to Porgy and Bess. The proof? “Summertime” is among the most recorded songs of all time, with thousands of versions rendered in a wide variety of styles: from Willie Nelson to Kenny G, from Sam Cooke to Sublime. Below are a few of the landmark recordings of Porgy and Bess tunes: Clockwise from top left 1) 1972 Sony Music Entertainment Inc. 2) 2010 Walt Disney Records 3) 1958, 1959 Sony Music Entertainment Inc. 5) 2006 Motown Records, a Division of UMG Recordings, Inc. 6) 2010 Hallmark • Selections from George Gershwin’s Folk Opera Porgy and Bess (1940) Members of the Broadway cast of Porgy and Bess, including Todd Duncan and Anne Brown, came together to record songs from the original production. • Billie Holiday (1936) Billie Holiday’s recording of “Summertime” was the first song from Porgy and Bess to break into the U.S. pop charts, reaching #12. • Masterworks Heritage Edition—Gershwin: Porgy and Bess (1951) The standard performing version in 1951. While it is not the complete opera, it did restore some parts of the opera that had been initially cut. • Ella and Louis (1957) Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong sang a collection of songs from Porgy and Bess—the recording marked the final pairing of these two iconic jazz vocalists. • Miles and Gil (1958) Miles Davis and Gil Evans’ Porgy and Bess album was recorded in anticipation of the Hollywood film—in the late ‘50s, “jazz versions” of film scores were in vogue. Davis’s incredible trumpet work on this album (along with his pioneering use of modal improvisation) cemented its place in history as one of the finest jazz collaborations of all time. • The Film Soundtrack (1959) Although Sidney Poitier and Dorothy Dandridge starred in the film as Porgy and Bess respectively, Robert McFerrin and Adele Addison sang the title roles for the film, as well as for the soundtrack. Clara, played on-screen by the great Diahann Carroll, was dubbed by Loulie Jean Norman, a white coloratura soprano. Sammy Davis, Jr., who played Sportin’ Life, sang in the film, but could not appear on the soundtrack as he was already committed to record a Porgy and Bess album with another recording company. Cab Calloway sang the role instead. • Nina Simone (1958) Always the iconoclast, Nina Simone performed a cover of a cover of “I Loves You Porgy”—her 1958 recording was a riff on Billie Holiday’s 1936 jazz rendition of the ballad. continued> • Billy Stewart (1966) > Nina Simone • Janis Joplin (1968) Janis Joplin’s psychedelic rock version of “Summertime” captured the zeitgeist of late ‘60s counterculture. It appears on Big Brother and the Holding Company’s 1968 album Cheap Thrills. • The Doors (1970) At the spectacularly rowdy Live in Boston performance, frontman Jim Morrison sang a seven-minute rendition of “Summertime” as a coda to The Doors’ hit song “Light My Fire.” • Diana Ross (1974) Diana Ross performed a lively, upbeat lounge version of “I Loves You Porgy” on her album Live at Caesar’s Palace. • Bronski Beat (1984) The electronic pop group Bronski Beat’s New Wave cover of “It Ain’t Necessarily So” is featured on their 1984 album The Age of Consent. The song’s theme of doubting certain statements in the Bible supported the album’s anti-homophobic message. • Sublime (1997) The alternative hip-hop/ska band Sublime wrote a loose cover of “Summertime” for their self-titled third album. “Doin’ BLOG Counter-clockwise from top 1) 1998 Sony 2) 1996 London Records 90 Ltd. 6) 1958 The Verve Music Group, a Division of UMG Recordings, Inc. 7) 1997 MCA This radical R&B reinterpretation of “Summertime” remains the most successful on the U.S. pop charts—it reached #10. Time” samples a bossa nova version of “Summertime” by jazz flautist Herbie Mann, which plays under a hip-hop beat and lyrics comparing a failed relationship to life in prison. • Cher (1998) Cher lends her iconic vocal style to a rendition of “It Ain’t Necessarily So” on the star-studded compilation The Glory of Gershwin. • Fantasia Barrino (2004) Fantasia’s standout performance of “Summertime” rocketed her into the finals of American Idol’s third season. • Brian Wilson (2010) The former Beach Boy applied his knack for lush pop arrangements and vocal harmonies to a number of Gershwin songs on his album Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin. Listen to the whole playlist—and add your favorite Porgy and Bess rendition— at americanrepertorytheater.org/blog. Interview with Diedre Murray In Harmony with History A.R.T. Dramaturg Ryan McKittrick speaks with Porgy and Bess musical adapter Diedre Murray above> Diedre Murray Ryan McKittrick: What made you want to work on this project as the musical adapter? Diedre Murray: Listening to Porgy and Bess is like being in church all day with the most beautiful music ever written. Each day of this project has been like that for me. I think Gershwin wrote Porgy and Bess as a kind of valentine to black people. Here was a Jewish guy in the 1930s who was saying, “Check this out: they have great loves, great desires, great passions, and you’re going to listen. And it’s going to be sublime.” But he was also on the outside of the African-American experience. So I believe I can offer an insider’s look at some of the same information. My father came from a small fishing village on the eastern shore of Virginia, so I can relate to those characters, those people. RM: Could you describe your process? DM: I spent of a lot of time studying Gershwin’s tastes. When you’re arranging you have to be able to think like that person. So I studied anything I could find that may have influenced him. I listened to other operas and classical music. And then I started listening to as many recordings and covers of Porgy and Bess as I could find. I noticed that there were a lot made in the 1960s—it was as if all those great jazz musicians suddenly discovered Porgy and Bess thirty years after it had premiered. Porgy and Bess is classical music, but in many ways it looks like a jazz score. There’s music in there that foreshadows McCoy Tyner and Thelonious Monk. continued> below> Angel Blue as Clara in the San Francisco Opera 2009 production continued from 25> on orchestrating Porgy and Bess “Some folk attain their life’s ambition by scaling Kilimanjaro or swimming the English Channel. But we couldn’t conceive a greater challenge for a contemporary orchestrator than to re-imagine Gershwin’s own complex and vast orchestral setting for Porgy and Bess. Our initial reaction to this commission was a concerted gasp (in unison). How to even begin climbing that mountain! But there were three artists mapping the way and urging us on: Diane, Suzan-Lori, and Diedre with their totally fresh concept that triggered the course we took. Their fertile imagining led us to instrumental gestures that both speak in the language of the original and in the subtle tones of today. We fondly hope this 18-instrument offering resonates with their elegant vision.” DM: It’s a hybrid. There’s such a wide range of influences and sounds in Porgy and Bess. Gershwin used to go up to Harlem to hear jazz, and then he also spent time on the islands in South Carolina. I also think there’s a lot of Puccini and Bizet in there. And Wagnerian flourishes. And ragtime. I even hear R&B and rap. That’s one reason why I’m so attracted to the piece—because I’m also a crossover artist. I’m a composer and cellist with a background in jazz, opera, and classical music. And I think that’s part of what makes Porgy and Bess so modern. Hybrid is where we live now. Everything is hybrid. The world is smaller. Everything is coming closer together. RM: Could you give some examples of how you’re reworking some of the songs? DM: At the beginning of the show, Clara is singing “Summertime” to her baby. But when I listened to it, I asked myself, “Why is she singing so high? That would wake the baby up. It has to be a lullaby.” So I took the whole thing down. And then I decided that I wanted to use an accordion, because whenever I hear an accordion it always transports me someplace else—a folkloric place that doesn’t have machines. So the show now opens with Clara singing “Summertime” as a duet with the accordion. And then it opens up into those luscious melodies with the strings. I also put the “Doctor Jesus” music into a form modern African-Americans and others would recognize from a real church today. In some songs I made the blues elements more manifest. In others I emphasized the swing elements. And I changed some of the harmonic structures inside of the pieces to make them more modern. Of course my own voice sneaks in through my choices, but I Courtesy of Ira and Leonore Gershwin Trusts William David Brohn and Christopher Jahnke RM: Porgy and Bess premiered in a Broadway house in 1935, but it’s also been staged in opera houses. Gershwin called it an “American folk opera.” How would you describe Porgy and Bess? “Jazz is the spontaneous expression of the nervous energy of modern American life...its power in the depiction of American sentiment has been brought to life. The discord of jazz is today no mere succession of meaningless and ugly grunts and wheezes. That these are still there is no doubt true, but then modern life is, alas! not expressed by smooth phrases. We are living in an age of staccato, not legato... No one who knows America can doubt that jazz has its important place in the national consciousness.” George Gershwin, Theatre Magazine, 1925 ultimately have tremendous respect for Gershwin, because the music is timeless and sublime. RM: What makes it sublime? DM: Gershwin knew how to write a great tune. A lot of composers today are afraid of melody. They’re afraid of sentimentality. You can’t be afraid to simply say “I love you, I need you” through music. “I Loves You Porgy,” “Bess, You Is My Woman Now,” and “Summertime”—you can’t get any better than that. I sit and look at the score and I’m just in awe of how great it is. It is just visionary. Direct from its sold-out run at the New York Theatre Workshop THREE PIANOS A lively romp inspired by Schubert’s Winterreise "Just the cure for seasonal affective disorder conceived with hedonistic gusto. Three Pianos is a fast festive ode to a somber work of art." ON SALE NOW TO MEMBERS & SUBSCRIBERS ON SALE TO PUBLIC: OCT. 11 STARTS DEC. 7 Ben Brantley, The New York Times Ryan McKittrick is the A.R.T.’s Dramaturg and co-head of the Dramaturgy Department of the A.R.T./MXAT Institute for Advanced Theater Training at Harvard University. left> Lobby card from the 1959 Samuel Goldwyn film: Pearl Bailey and Sammy Davis, Jr. VISIT: americanrepertorytheater.org CALL: 617.547.8300 Henry Louis Gates, Jr. on Reimagining Porgy and Bess in the 21st Century My first exposure to Porgy and Bess was through the music—“Summertime” specifically. I was sixteen when I heard Billy Stewart’s 1966 version; it was a huge hit in Piedmont, West Virginia, and beyond. After that, I heard Janis Joplin’s version in 1968, and finally, Miles Davis’s sublime rendition while I was in college at Yale. Miles’s Porgy and Bess album was a decade old by then, but to me it was brand new. I had left West Virginia for New Haven in the age of Black Power, with the most profound faith in black art and black artists. Miles Davis was at the top of that list. No one played like him; no one was as new and exciting as Miles. Although I’d heard the song before—it is one of the most recorded songs in history!—I was transformed. But Porgy and Bess? The story was a relic of an ugly past—not the real past of AfricanAmericans, but rather the Hollywood-imagined past of black folks. The coke fiends, the pimps, the broken black man at the center of the film—no thank you. I was with Harold Cruse, the eminent black sociologist, who wrote: “Porgy and Bess belongs in a museum and no self-respecting AfricanAmerican should want to see it, or be seen in it.” I was with Duke Ellington, too, who said, “The times are here to debunk Gershwin’s lampblack Negroisms.” I don’t share those views anymore, and now I see a character like Sportin’ Life, who used to make my skin crawl, as being in a long line of tricksters—a figure whose performance of duplicity, whose “shuckin’ and jivin’,” is very much part of the African-American literary tradition, and even part of a history of resistance. George Gershwin wanted to write an American opera—a piece that would infuse classical musical tradition with what he considered the vigor of blues and jazz, two distinctly American musical forms. This could only be done, he felt, on the shoulders of a truly American story, and he found that story continued> Images clockwise from top left: 1) Institute on the Federal Theatre Project and New Deal Culture, George Mason University; 2) Theatre Collection, Museum of the City of New York; 3) Courtesy of Wilva Davis Breen; 4) Institute on the Federal Theatre Project and New Deal Culture, George Mason University; 5) Institute on the Federal Theatre Project and New Deal Culture, George Mason University; 6) The George and Ira Gershwin Collection, Library of Congress; 7) Courtesy of Robin Thompson above, clockwise from top left> 1952 Breen-Davis Tour poster from Berlin to London, 1935 Theatre Guild Production, 1953 Breen-Davis Tour painting for program cover, 1952 Breen-Davis Tour Chicago, 1956 Breen-Davis Tour Warsaw poster, 1959 Porgy and Bess film poster, 1976 Houston Grand Opera below> Henry Louis Gates, Jr. BLOG in Porgy, a 1925 novel by Charleston, South Carolina, native DuBose Heyward. Heyward and his wife Dorothy dramatized Porgy as a straight play in 1927; in it, one can see the Gullah culture and African-American vernacular with which they were intimate even in the segregated world of Charleston. After years of preparation, George Gershwin as composer, Heyward as librettist, and Heyward and Ira Gershwin as lyricists debuted Porgy and Bess at Boston’s Colonial Theatre in 1935. When it opened on Broadway later that year, the “American folk opera” of which Gershwin had dreamed, and for which he also had immersed himself in Gullah culture while he wrote, met with mixed reviews, with some critics celebrating the characters as humane and real and others reviling them as base stereotypes. The music, too, met with mixed reviews, with some reviewers enjoying the hybrid music composed by Gershwin and others detesting its “impurities.” Despite its initial mixed success, Porgy and Bess played in Washington, D.C., in 1936 at the National Theatre; it was revived on Broadway in 1942, and premiered in Europe in 1943. In 1952, the play embarked on a major tour that took it around the world, and to triumphs in Moscow and Milan. After it was largely absent from the stage in the 1960s and ‘70s, it reemerged in a landmark production at the Houston Grand Opera, winning both a Tony and a Grammy Award and establishing its status as a foundational American opera. Major black stars of the stage and screen have been attached to Porgy and Bess throughout its history, including Todd Duncan, Anne Brown, Leontyne Price, and William Warfield. The 1959 film version starred Sidney Poitier, Dorothy Dandridge, Sammy Davis, Jr., Diahann Carroll, and Brock Peters. But in 1959, many blacks—including the film’s stars, Poitier and Carroll—were not in the mood for the world the film created. It would seem that the story—whether one saw it as a profound human exploration or offensive and base exploitation—was out of place in the political whirlwind of the late 1950s. The film was a commercial failure and was largely forgotten. As I watched the film of Porgy and Bess, it struck me that Zora Neale Hurston had written a similar story in Their Eyes Were Watching God: the Gullah culture, the devotion to black vernacular, the porches and back > John McCurry (Crown) during the 1952 European tour alleys, the fast-talking men, and the heroine who takes three lovers—all reminded me of Hurston’s masterpiece. Written in 1937, two years after the Gershwins’ and Heyward’s Porgy and Bess debuted, was Their Eyes a reclamation of a black world Hurston thought these white writers had ill-served? We can’t know for sure, but we have some interesting evidence to suggest that Gershwin and Porgy and Bess were very much on Hurston’s mind at times. In Harlem in the 1920s, at the height of the Harlem Renaissance, Hurston seemed excited by the direction theater was taking, according to the great Hurston scholar Carla Kaplan. All-black theatrical productions were all the rage in New York, and their roster included the Heywards’ Porgy in 1927. Hurston’s discontent with the white writers behind these productions only surfaced in her letters and reported remarks in the early 1940s, when she was co-writing her own play, Polk County, with Dorothy Waring. Hurston’s biographer, Robert Hemenway, wrote that when Waring, a white woman, “urged Zora to keep ‘a sort of Gershwinesque feeling’ about their [musical comedy], Zora’s reply was ‘You don’t know what the hell you’re talking about.’” As early as 1928, Hurston wrote to Alain Locke about her worries that white folklorists “had beat us to it in the matter of songs.” But, she continued, “my one consolation [is] that they never do it right and so there is still a chance for us.” In 1944, writing to the editor Claude Barnet, she complained that Porgy and Bess “is not true to our lives and I want to do something more penetrating.” This was the same year that she was writing Polk County; it isn’t far-fetched to think that this play was an attempt to correct what she saw as the missteps and misappropriations of Porgy and Bess. What Hurston objected to in Porgy and Bess and other white-authored black performances was what she saw as “an oversimplification of the Negro. He is either happy or low, miserable and crying. The Negro’s life is neither of these,” she continued in an interview. “Rather, it is in-between and above and below these pictures.” Is Janie Crawford a reimagining of Bess? Is the novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, a reimagining of the opera, Porgy and Bess? Perhaps. I’d like to think so. But if perhaps Hurston didn’t get there in 1937, it is now high time that we see the world of Porgy and Bess reimagined, as Suzan-Lori Parks, Diedre Murray, and Diane Paulus have done. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. is the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and Director of the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and AfricanAmerican Research at Harvard University. These remarks were given as part of a larger discussion sponsored by the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute. Watch the full “Reimagining Porgy and Bess in the 21st Century” panel discussion on our blog, at americanrepertorytheater.org/blog. THE ENTIRE SEASON IS AVAILABLE WITH A SUBSCRIPTION OR MEMBERSHIP GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY! VISIT: AMERICANREPERTORYTHEATER.ORG CALL: 617.547.8300 THE GERSHWINS’ PORGY AND BESS Loeb Drama Center STARTS AUGUST 17, 2011 SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT 8/14 8/15 8/16 8/17 7:30P 8/18 7:30P 8/19 7:30P 8/20 7:30P 8/21 7:30P 8/22 8/23 7:30P 8/24 7:30P 8/25 7:30P 8/26 7:30P 8/27 2:00P 7:30P 8/28 2:00P 8/29 8/30 7:30P 8/31 7:00P 9/1 7:30P 9/2 7:30P 9/3 2:00P 7:30P 9/4 2:00P 9/5 9/6 7:30P 9/7 2:00Pt 7:30P 9/8 7:30P 9/9 7:30P 9/10 1:00P 6:30P* 9/11 2:00P 9/12 9/13 7:30P 9/14 2:00Pt 7:30P 9/15 7:30P 9/16 7:30P 9/17 2:00Pt 7:30P 9/18 2:00P 9/19 9/20 7:30P 9/21 2:00Pt 7:30P 9/22 7:30P 9/23 7:30P 9/24 2:00Pt 7:30P 9/25 2:00P 9/26 9/27 7:30P 9/28 2:00Pt 7:30P 9/29 7:30P 9/30 7:30P 10/1 2:00P 7:30P 10/2 2:00P 10/3 10/4 10/5 10/6 10/7 10/8 INDICATES PREVIEW INDICATES OPENING NIGHT t INDICATES POST-SHOW TALKBACK * GALA PERFORMANCE BOTH THE LOEB DRAMA CENTER & OBERON ARE FULLY ACCESSIBLE. ASSISTIVE LISTENING DEVICES ARE AVAILABLE AT ALL PERFORMANCES AT BOTH VENUES. LARGE PRINT LARGE PRINT PROGRAMS ARE AVAILABLE FOR USE DURING EVERY A.R.T. PERFORMANCE. THE A.R.T. OFFERS ASL INTERPRETATION AT DESIGNATED PERFORMANCES OF PORGY AND BESS. EMAIL: [email protected] FOR TICKETS P DISCOUNTED PARKING IS AVAILABLE AT CHARLES SQUARE GARAGE (ONE BENNETT ST.) & UNIVERSITY PLACE GARAGE (UNIVERSITY RD) FOR BOTH VENUES ADVANCED PURCHASE PERMIT PARKING IS AVAILABLE AT THE 1033 MASS. AVE LOT FOR OBERON REFRESHMENTS ARE AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE AT ALL A.R.T. PERFORMANCES LOOKING TO DINE BEFORE OR AFTER A SHOW? VISIT: AMERICANREPERTORYTHEATER.ORG/DISCOUNTS FOR OUR RESTAURANT PARTNERS AND THEIR GREAT DEALS. BOX OFFICE ADDRESS: 64 BRATTLE ST., CAMBRIDGE HOURS: TUE-SUN, NOON-5 P.M. OR 1/2 HOUR BEFORE CURTAIN BOOK A GROUP: AMERICANREPERTORYTHEATER.ORG/GROUPS WHAT’S NEXT AT THE A.R.T. THE SEASON Three Pianos By Rick Burkhardt, Alec Duffy, and Dave Malloy Directed by Rachel Chavkin Hilarity and heartbreak unfold on a blustery winter night, when three friends come upon a copy of Schubert’s song cycle Winterreise. starts 12/7 As You Like It By William Shakespeare Directed by David Hammond Featuring The A.R.T./MXAT Institute Class of 2012 An unconventional romance, with everything from wrestling matches to cross-dressed shepherds, culminating in a finale so joyful that spring will seem just around the corner. starts 1/18 Wild Swans By Jung Chang Adapted by Alexandra Wood Directed by Sacha Wares As change sweeps over 20th century China, a family endures their hardships through sacrifice, courage, and love. starts 2/11 — WORLD PREMIERE Futurity: A Musical by The Lisps Music and lyrics by César Alvarez with The Lisps Book by Molly Rice and César Alvarez Directed by Sarah Benson Blending American indie-folk music with dreams of invention, Futurity follows a civil war soldier exploring a world where utopia seems within reach. starts 3/16 — WORLD PREMIERE AT OBERON OBERON IS THE SECOND STAGE OF THE A.R.T.—A DESTINATION FOR THEATER & NIGHTLIFE ON THE FRINGE OF HARVARD SQUARE. 2 ARROW ST. In addition to A.R.T. season programming, OBERON is a thriving incubator for local and emerging artists. Attracting national attention for its groundbreaking model of programming, the immersive experience at OBERON makes the audience a partner in the theatrical event. Check out what’s up next: WWW.CLUBOBERON.COM The Donkey Show Directed by Diane Paulus A magical romp inspired by Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Join the party under the disco ball on the dance floor to all the 70s hits you know by heart as the show unfolds around you. NOW PLAYING — EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT FAMILY FUN The Snow Queen By Hans Christian Andersen Directed by Allegra Libonati Adapted by Tyler Monroe Featuring The A.R.T./MXAT Institute Class of 2012 Hans Christian Andersen’s exuberant ode to childhood comes to life in this new adaptation of The Snow Queen. starts 12/10 — WINTER ADD-ON Our institutional partners help make the theater’s programs possible: Woody Sez The Life and Music of Woody Guthrie Devised by David M. Lutken with Nick Corley An inspired, toe-tapping, and heartfelt theatrical portrait that weaves Woody’s words and songs, including “This Land is Your Land” and “Bound for Glory,” into a compelling narrative of his life and times. starts 5/5 LOVE US? Facebook: americanrepertorytheater Twitter: americanrep Blog: americanrepertorytheater.org/blog Give: americanrepertorytheater.org/support Custom publising by Dig Publishing LLC 242 East Berkeley St. 5th Fl. Boston, MA 02118 For sales e-mail [email protected]