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PORTLANDCENTERSTAGE Presents Three Days of Rain By Richard Greenberg Directed by Chris Coleman May 17 – June 21, 2015 Artistic Director | Chris Coleman PORTLANDCENTERSTAGE Presents Three Days of Rain By Richard Greenberg DIRECTED BY CHRIS COLEMAN Scenic Designer Scott Fyfe Costume Designer Alison Heryer Lighting Designer Diane Ferry Williams Sound Designer Casi Pacilio Stage Manager Liam Kaas-Lentz Production Assistant Kristen Mun Casting Rose Riordan and Brandon Woolley CAST LIST Silas Weir Mitchell…………..…Walker Janeway/Ned Janeway Lisa Datz……………………………...……..Nan Janeway/Lina Sasha Roiz…………………………….Pip Wexler/Theo Wexler Three Days of Rain was originally produced in New York City by the Manhattan Theatre Club on October 21, 1997. Commissioned and first produced by South Coast Repertory. Three Days of Rain is presented by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, Inc., New York. Performed with one intermission. Videotaping or other photo 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. FROM THE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR By Chris Coleman In Richard Greenberg’s story, Three Days of Rain, the yearning to understand the father also stands at the center of the action. As the play travels through time from its starting point in 1995, back to its end in 1960, the characters (and the audience) find themselves yearning to place the accurate puzzle pieces together that will illuminate what has been, fundamentally, a mysterious relationship with a towering figure who was both a father and one of the great architects of the 20th century. Why this play? Why now? It’s really Sasha’s fault. I read a few years ago in The Pearl magazine that Sasha Roiz (who plays Pip and Theo) had purchased a condo in the Pearl District and one of the things he enjoyed was attending Portland Center Stage. Ahem. Interesting. I tracked down his email address and invited him for coffee. We hit it off and began brainstorming about projects we might work on together. It took a while to get schedules lined up, but in the 18 months that followed, he introduced me to Silas Weir Mitchell and we read several pieces that the two of them might work on together. Three Days of Rain interested us all because it is both challenging and intriguing, offers great opportunities for each of them, and tells a completely fascinating story. CAST BIOGRAPHIES Lisa Datz Nan Janeway/Lina Lisa Datz’s theatrical roles include Madeleine Astor in the Tony-winning production of Titanic on Broadway; Pam Lukowski in the Tony-nominated production of The Full Monty; Yitzhak in the Off-Broadway production of Hedwig and the Angry Inch with John Cameron-Mitchell; and Violet in Violet (Jeff Award nomination). Recently, Datz guest starred as Mackenzie Solloway on Bones (FOX); as Mary Fuchs on Castle (ABC); in the feature film Time Out of Mind, directed by Oscar nominee Oren Moverman and starring Richard Gere; and Sponge Bob 2 with Antonio Banderas. Other film credits include Melody Oates in The Perfect Holiday with Gabrielle Union and Terrence Howard. In Los Angeles, she performed with Grammy-winning composer Frank Wildhorn in Frank Wildhorn & Friends at the Pantages Theatre. She played leading roles in the critically acclaimed For the Record series in Los Angeles and at the SXSW Film Festival. In New York, she performed the role of Rowena opposite rock legends Joe Jackson and Todd Rundgren in the 20th anniversary concert of Up Against It at The Public Theatre. Other film credits include Ghost Town (Paramount), leads in the indie films Stumptown and Fractured, and Spectropia (Lincoln Center Film Festival). Other television credits include Law & Order, Law & Order: Trial by Jury, The West Wing, Hope & Faith, Guiding Light, All My Children, One Life to Live, As the World Turns and Blue’s Clues. Regional theatre credits include Meg in Crimes of the Heart, Julia in The Two Gentlemen of Verona, Kari in The Pavilion and Ace at The Old Globe. Datz is an avid equestrian, former competitive figure skater, hip hop dancer, Star Wars/Downton Abbey geek and Chicago native who currently divides her time between Los Angeles and New York. She attended the Boston University Theatre Institute and received her B.F.A from The University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre and Dance. She extends her heartfelt thanks to Chris, Sasha and Silas and dedicates this to her endlessly supportive friends and to her amazing parents. @lisadatz, lisadatz.com Silas Weir Mitchell Walker Janeway/Ned Janeway Silas Weir Mitchell currently stars in NBC’s fantastical mystery/crime show Grimm, playing Portland's own vegan horologist, Monroe. Prior to Grimm, Mr. Mitchell was most widely known for his recurring role on the tautly paced FOX drama Prison Break, starring as lead actor Wentworth Miller's deeply unstable cellmate, Charles "Haywire" Patoshik. He is also known for the role of Donny Jones, (another) ex-con and friend of the title character played by Jason Lee in the NBC comedy My Name Is Earl. Other TV includes NYPD Blue, The X-Files, ER, Cold Case, The Mentalist, 24, Law & Order: SVU, The Closer, CSI, CSI: Miami, CSI: NY, Burn Notice, Dexter, Monk, Six Feet Under, Boomtown, The Shield, Portlandia. Films include: The Patriot (Steven Seagal); Inferno (Jean-Claude Van Damme); Rat Race; The Whole Ten Yards. After graduating from Brown University with degrees in both Theatre Arts and Religious Studies, Silas went on to earn his M.F.A. at the University of California, San Diego. From there, he moved to New York and did a few plays (including Tennessee Williams' Tiger Tail at Harold Clurman Theater and Whenever I Fall at Your Feet at HERE Theatre). Thence to L.A., where he started to get film and TV jobs, as well as continuing to make his own work acting and directing in theater. L.A. directing credits: The Water Principle by Eliza Anderson (also producer) at The Complex; Three Sisters (also Tuzenbach and producer) at The Stella Adler Theatre; Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune at The Hudson Theatre; Bus Stop (also producer) at The MET Theatre, where he was artistic director from 2001-2005. Acting includes: Hurlyburly (Eddie), Amerikafka (Kafka); Gatsby in Hollywood (S.J. Perelman) all at the MET. Blood! Love! Madness! and The Women of Lockerbie at The Actors' Gang; Lascivious Something and The Chinese Massacre at Circle X. Silas would like to express deep gratitude to his acting mentor of many years, Harry Mastrogeorge, for imparting perennial wisdom in such an egoless, penetrating way. He is delighted to be back on stage, and to be making his first appearance at PCS. silasweirmitchell.com Sasha Roiz Pip Wexler/Theo Wexler Sasha Roiz is about to begin his 5th season on the Portlandbased NBC hit supernatural drama Grimm. Roiz plays the mysterious, part-royal, part-creature Police Captain Sean Renard. Prior to Grimm, Roiz portrayed the role of the brutal mob enforcer Sam Adama on the acclaimed science fiction drama Caprica (with Eric Stoltz and Polly Walker). Roiz has worked extensively in television. Some of his credits include: CSI, The Mentalist, House M.D., Castle, Warehouse 13, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia and NCIS. Last year, Roiz played the role of the formidable Roman centurian, Marcus Proculus, in the blockbuster film Pompeii (alongside Kit Harington and Kiefer Sutherland). Other film credits include: The Day After Tomorrow (with Jake Gyllenhaal), 16 Blocks (Bruce Willis), Man of the Year (Robin Williams) and Unthinkable (Samuel L. Jackson). Roiz's first starring film role was in the independent science fiction thriller Extracted, which premiered at the South by Southwest (SXSW) Film Festival in 2012. Roiz is delighted to return to the theater and is grateful to Chris Coleman and PCS for this opportunity. Select theater work includes: Past/Perfect at Centaur Theatre Company, Montreal, Canada (Best Supporting Actor nominee at Les Masques Awards); Vinci at Centaur Theatre Company and Travels with My Aunt at Knowlton Theater, Quebec. Roiz trained theatrically at Dawson College in his home town of Montreal, Canada; as well as at the Guildford School of Acting conservatoire in Guildford, England. Roiz came to Portland by way of Los Angeles, where he spent several years. Grimm brought him to Portland, which he now proudly calls home. He is an active member of this community and just this past year spearheaded the Grimm Gala, which raised over $300,000 for the Grimmster Endowment at the Doernbecher Children's Hospital. Sasha would like to thank the Portland community for its continued support and hospitality. FEATURE I Traveling through time with Three Days of Rain “Richard Greenberg may be the best, most prolific American dramatist you've never heard of,” proclaimed The Telegraph in 2009, the year it praised his play Three Days of Rain as “one of the finest American plays of recent years.” With over 25 plays and many successful Broadway productions under his belt, Greenberg certainly is prolific – he’s been known to pen plays in just three days. One of the scripts produced in such a burst of writing just happens to be Three Days of Rain. Prior to writing this script, Greenberg had been focused solely on writing for film. One day, while walking home in the rain, he ran into playwright, novelist and film director Peter Hedges. As Greenberg reported to American Theatre Magazine: “We started talking, and we got excited about writing plays again - which neither one of us had been doing at that moment. It started this flurry of activity that has made me write like crazy.” Three Days of Rain was one of the first plays he penned in this newly inspired swirl of writing, and Greenberg later dedicated the play to Hedges. The title of the play comes from a line in W. S. Merwin's poem, For the Anniversary of My Death: As today writing after three days of rain Hearing the wren sing and the falling cease And bowing not knowing to what In Three Days of Rain, Greenberg plays with time and perception by setting the first act in 1995 and going backwards to a previous generation for the second act, with the actors playing their characters’ own parents in 1960. “The first act is the present dreaming the past, and the second act is the past dreaming the future. The play is really about the gulf between those two ideas,” Greenberg said in an interview with Playbill in 1997 prior to the world premiere of Three Days of Rain. He toys with the constructs of time in several of his other plays as well, including his most recent Broadway hit, The Assembled Parties, in which the second act takes place 20 years after the first. Greenberg credits the hugely popular 1967 BBC television adaptation of John Galsworthy’s The Forsyte Saga for his fascination with time. "That television experience was the foundation of my sensibilities," Greenberg told the Los Angeles Times prior to a revival of Three Days of Rain at South Coast Repertory where the play was first produced, "I want to get an entire life onstage while conveying a sense of how time feels, how unstoppable it is, and how we don't really know what's going on because as we're trying to weave, it's weaving us." This production marks the debut of a Richard Greenberg play at Portland Center Stage, as well as the exciting debuts of all three actors performing the multi-generational roles: Silas Weir Mitchell, Sasha Roiz and Lisa Datz. Much like Greenberg, we’re big fans of playing with time at PCS. The traversing of ages in Greenberg’s script provides a particularly exciting opportunity for the local artisans we’ve gathered to create the 1995 and 1960’s Manhattan worlds you’ll witness in this production. All told, over 25 professional craftspeople have joined these actors and the creative team to assemble this production. The scenery and props were built in PCS’s scene shop in NW Portland; an army of painters was assembled to hand-paint the brick walls of the set; the costume shop located here in the Armory has been busy whipping up the fashions of 1995 and 1960; a crew of fifteen skilled stage hands helped bring all the technical elements together, including props, lights and sound; and a stage manager, wardrobe and run crew are on site right now supporting the actors at this performance. There have been many productions of Three Days of Rain nationally and internationally since its world premiere in 1997, but one of the great things about local theater is that this production has been designed and created specifically for these actors, in this space, at this time, in this rainy city, to be enjoyed by you, our community. - Claudie Jean Fisher, Public Relations and Publications Manager Tell us what you think of the show! Find us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. CREATIVE TEAM BIOGRAPHIES Richard Greenberg Playwright Richard Greenberg is the author of Take Me Out (Drama Desk Award; NY Drama Critics Circle Award; Outer Critics Circle Award; Lucille Lortel Award; Tony Award for Best Play), which moved to Broadway after successful runs at The Public Theater in New York City and The Donmar Warehouse on London’s West End. Other works include The Violet Hour, The Dazzle (Outer Critics Circle Award; John Gassner, Lucille Lortel nominations), Everett Beekin, Three Days of Rain (L.A. Drama Critics Award; Pulitzer finalist; Olivier, Drama Desk, Hull-Warriner nominations), Hurrah at Last, Night and her Stars, The American Plan, Life Under Water and The Author’s Voice, among many other plays. His adaptation of Strindberg's Dance of Death was seen on Broadway starring Ian McKellen, Helen Mirren and David Straithairn. Greenberg received the Oppenheimer Award for a new playwright as well as the first PEN/Laura Pels Award for a playwright in mid-career. He is an associate artist at South Coast Repertory and a member of Ensemble Studio Theater. Chris Coleman 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 the world premiere of Edward Foote at Alliance Theatre. He also directed Phylicia Rashad and Kenny Leon in Same Time Next Year at True Colors Theatre Company in Atlanta in 2014. Favorite PCS directing assignments include Threesome, 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. Scenic Designer Scott Fyfe Scott Fyfe holds a B.F.A. in sculpture from S.U.N.Y. New Paltz. Scenic design highlights include Portland Center Stage’s production of Othello and Village Theatre main stage productions of Million Dollar Quartet, Stunt Girl, Chasing Nicolette, Anne of Green Gables (Footlight Award), Take Me America, Big River, Les Misérables (Gypsy Rose Lee Award nominee, Gregory Award nominee), The Tutor and Mary Poppins. Scott is thrilled to be back working with the exceptional production team here at PCS. Alison Heryer Costume Designer Alison Heryer is a costume designer for theater, film and print. She is thrilled to be returning to Portland Center Stage, after recently designing costumes for Threesome. Other theater credits include The Bluest Eye (New Victory Theater); The Fall to Earth, A Lesson Before Dying, Orange Flower Water and World Set Free (Steppenwolf Theatre Company); Pippin, The Whipping Man, A Little More Alive and The Who and The What (Kansas City Repertory Theatre); The King and I, 33 Variations, RENT and Doubt (ZACH Theatre), Jackie and Me at (Indiana Repertory Theatre), Bum Philips All-American Opera (La MaMa) and The Price at Artists Repertory Theatre. Recent awards include the Austin Critics Table Award and the ArtsKC Inspiration Grant. Alison is a faculty member at Portland State University. She is a graduate of Washington University in St. Louis and The University of Texas at Austin and a member of United Scenic Artists. Diane Ferry Williams Lighting Designer Diane Ferry Williams is pleased to be returning to Portland. Diane has worked for many theaters around the country and abroad. Her most recent design is a national tour of How to Succeed beginning in Beijing, China. In the US, she has worked for many theaters around the country, including the Marriott Theatre in Chicago, Alliance Theatre, Theatre Under the Stars, Goodspeed, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Goodman Theatre, Pittsburgh Public Theater, ACT-Seattle, Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Ford’s Theatre, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago and Regional Dance America. Other international work includes The Harlem Gospel Singers in Paris and the European tour, and Die Shone Und Das Biest in Berlin and the European tour. She has also lit several national tours and premieres. Awards include a Jeff Award, an After Dark Award, a Carbonelle Award, five Drammy Awards (the most recent being The Whipping Man) and seven Jeff nominations. Diane has an M.F.A in Theatrical Design from Northwestern University. Casi Pacilio Sound Designer Casi keeps busy with a variety of work and play in Portland and around the country. PCS credits include Cyrano, The People’s Republic of Portland (2013 and 2015), Other Desert Cities, Threesome, Dreamgirls, The Last Five Years, Othello, A Small Fire, Twist Your Dickens (2013 and 2014), The Mountaintop, Fiddler on the Roof, Oklahoma!, The North Plan, Shakespeare’s Amazing Cymbeline, Black Pearl Sings!, Opus, Ragtime (PAMTA Award 2010), The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, 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 and Celebrity Row; Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, Chinglish and futura with composer Jana Losey; 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. Jana Losey Crenshaw Composer Jana Losey Crenshaw is a singer-songwriter originally from rural Pennsylvania. With a history that includes Broadway, international touring, a solo career, and a reality TV show, she has recently resurfaced in the Portland music scene. Recent theater projects include: Please Validate Your Identity, a devised theater piece for Fertile Ground Festival; composing the score for Hand2Mouth Theatre's production of Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guinn; composing and arranging for Liminal's recent production of Our Town at The Headwaters Theatre; and composing musical transitions for Portland Center Stage's futura, Chinglish, Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike and Other Desert Cities. See more at janacrenshaw.com. Mary McDonald-Lewis Dialect Coach Mary McDonald-Lewis has been a working artist since 1979 as SAG-AFTRA voice actor and on-camera performer, and in theater for much longer as an actor and director. MaryMac has been a dialect coach since 1999, and is house coach for Hallmark Hall of Fame, the series Leverage, Grimm and others. Film, television and stage clients range from overnight sensations to Drammy, Obie, Emmy and Oscar winners, and include a Knight of the British Empire. She is blessed to be resident artist, speech and text director at Artists Repertory Theatre and house coach at Portland Center Stage, and is just thrilled to say this is her 23rd show as coach at PCS. MaryMac thanks Finnegan, Sullivan and Flynn for always wagging their tails when she comes home from telling her tales. marymac.com Liam Kaas-Lentz Stage Manager Liam is a native of Bellingham, WA. He is an ensemble member of Sojourn Theatre, having served as their stage and production manager for the past ten years and thirteen productions. He has also stage managed for Hand2Mouth Theatre, Portland Playhouse, Artists Repertory Theatre, the Pacific Conservatory for the Performing Arts, Geva Theatre Center, Oregon Children's Theatre, Pixie Dust Productions, The Kitchen, River to River Festival, Teatro Milagro and many others. He received his B.F.A. in stage management from Southern Oregon University and his M.Ed. in curriculum and instruction from Portland State University. Liam has also taught stage and production management with a focus on ensemble, devised, and site-specific contexts and methodologies at Georgetown University, Northwestern University, Portland State University, Reed College and Lewis and Clark College. He is a proud member of Actors’ Equity Association, and lives with his wife and two cats in southeast Portland. Kristen Mun Production Assistant Kristen Mun is originally from Hawaii and graduated from Southern Oregon University with a B.F.A. in Stage Management. Previous Portland Center Stage credits include production assistant on Threesome, Lizzie and 2nd production assistant on Fiddler on the Roof. Outside of Portland she has worked at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Idaho Repertory Theatre and Actors Theater of Louisville. In Portland she has worked as a production assistant and stage manager with other theater companies such as Artists Repertory Theatre (And So It Goes …, Red Herring), Oregon Children’s Theatre (A Year With Frog and Toad, Charlotte’s Web, Ivy and Bean), Northwest Classical Theatre Company (King John, Measure for Measure, As You Like It), and Post5 Theatre (Hamlet). Outside of stage managing, Kristen is also a fight choreographer and stage combat teacher. Barbara Hort, Ph.D. Dramaturg Barbara Hort, Ph.D., has maintained a private practice in Portland for over 25 years, working primarily from the psychological perspective developed by the Swiss psychoanalyst Carl Jung. At the invitation of Chris Coleman, Dr. Hort has served as a dramaturg on the PCS productions of Sweeney Todd, Clybourne Park, the 2013 JAW festival, Fiddler on the Roof, Othello, Dreamgirls, Threesome and now Three Days of Rain, providing material on the psychological dynamics of the play that can be used by the artists who are creating the performance. FOR THIS PRODUCTION Painters Elecia Beebe Lauren Newey Shawn Mallory Kiona McAlister Sean Casey Props Artisans Teresa Pilar Huarte Shawn Mallory Sound Programmer and Engineer Scott Thorson Associate Sound Designer Em Gustason Sound Board Operator Molly Gardner Additional Set Construction OMSI SPONSOR STATEMENTS Argyle Winery Argyle Winery and Portland Center Stage have a lot in common. We both celebrate the art of storytelling, we both value being part of the community, and we both are an enduring part of many happy memories. Cheers to Portland Center Stage on another successful season! Keep doing what you are doing. Berry Wealth Strategies It is our founder’s daughter who is responsible for Berry Wealth Strategies’ sponsorship in this performance here at Portland Center Stage. Her passion for theater blossomed into a love affair with the performing arts that is now shared by the entire family. So when Berry Wealth Strategies began looking for a venue to express our appreciation for the trust our clients place in us, the decision was an easy one. Enjoy the performance. Drs. Ann Smith Sehdev & Paul Sehdev We are pleased to continue our support of Portland Center Stage and encourage everyone to get out and enjoy the show! Stoel Rives LLP We believe theater plays a critical role in stimulating creativity and ensuring a vibrant community. For more than 25 years, Portland Center Stage has entertained, challenged and inspired us by bringing stories to life in unexpected ways. Stoel Rives applauds PCS for its amazing work, and eagerly looks forward to more.