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The American Century Theater presents About The American Century Theater The American Century Theater was founded in 1994. We are a professional nonprofit theater company dedicated to presenting great, important, and worthy American plays of the twentieth century—what Henry Luce called “the American Century.” The company’s mission is one of rediscovery, enlightenment, and perspective, not nostalgia or preservation. Americans must not lose the extraordinary vision and wisdom of past playwrights, nor can we afford to surrender the moorings to our shared cultural heritage. Our mission is also driven by a conviction that communities need theater, and theater needs audiences. To those ends, this company is committed to producing plays that challenge and move all Americans, of all ages, origins, and points of view. In particular, we strive to create theatrical experiences that entire families can watch, enjoy, and discuss long afterward. Board of Directors Chair Vice-Chair Treasurer Secretary Board Staff Jack Marshall Sherri L. Perper Jason Beagle Rip Claassen Brian Crane Ellen Dempsey Kate Dorrell Tom Fuller Wendy Kenney Ann Marie Plubell Kimberly Ginn Peri Mahaley David T. Austern, Richard Barton, Elizabeth Borgen, Rebecca Christy, Vivian Kallen, Jack Marshall CEO and Artistic Director Producing Director Rhonda Hill Gloria Holder Lesley Irminger Steven Scott Mazzola David Olmsted Ginny Tarris Jessica D’Arcy, Kristen Northrop, Erin Shannahan, Interns Sandra Lindamood, Solomon Lomax, Yorktown High School Interns Become a fan of The American Century Theater on Facebook. Keep up with shows, auditions, volunteer opportunities, podcasts, videos, and more. www.AmericanCentury.org The American Century Theater presents March 26–April 17, 2010 Gunston Theater II 2700 South Lang Street, Arlington VA Director William Aitken Producing Director Sherri L. Perper Stage Manager Bob Pierce Set Design Anndi Daleske Technical Director/ Master Carpenter Jameson Shroyer Costume Design Rip Claassen Lighting Design Cheryl Ann Gnerlich Sound Design Ian Armstrong Properties Design Ceci Albert Scene synopsis A barracks of Stalag 17, somewhere in Germany during World War II Act 1 Scene 1—December 23, 1944, early morning Scene 2—Later that evening Act 2 Scene 1—Afternoon the next day Scene 2—Later that night Act 3 Scene 1—Christmas 1944, afternoon Scene 2—That night There will be one 15-minute intermission. There will be cigarette smoking onstage and loud noises. Please—Silence cell phones and other sound-producing devices. The use of recording equipment and/or the taking of photographs during the performance are strictly prohibited. Stalag 17 is produced by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, Inc. Cast S.S. Captain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Karl Bittner Stosh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . John Stange Harry Shapiro . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Donald L. Osborne Price . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jon Townson Herb Gordon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tom Eisman Hoffman (Hoffy) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bill Gordon Sefton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tony Bullock Duke . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gabriel J. Swee McCarthy, S.S. Guard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Matthew Meixler Horney . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . David Olmsted Marko . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jay Hardee Corporal Shultz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hans Dettmar Dunbar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . James Finley Reed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Steve Lebens Geneva Man . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . James Svatko Production staff Producing Director . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sherri L. Perper Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . William Aitken Stage Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bob Pierce Assistant Stage Managers . . . . Rachel Loose, Jim Vincent, Larissa Norris Set Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Anndi Daleske Technical Director/Master Carpenter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jameson Shroyer Costume Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rip Claassen Lighting Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cheryl Ann Gnerlich Sound Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ian Armstrong Properties Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ceci Albert Fight Choreography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Casey Kaleba Fight Captain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jon Townson Sound Board Operator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jim Callery Wardrobe Mistress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jessica Branch Program Design and Cover Art . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Michael Sherman Production Photography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dennis Deloria Marketing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lesley Irminger, Jessica D’Arcy (intern) Dramaturgy Intern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Erin Shannahan Development Intern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kristen Northrop Archivist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kim-Scott Miller Special thanks to— Chris Anderson Backstage, Inc. Don Barton Cassatt’s Kiwi Café & Gallery Deborah Rinn Critzer Brian Dettling, Stage Armament Solutions Lorraine Hitchcock Richard Kamenitzer Stalag 17 (1951) by Donald Bevan and Edmund Trzcinski Following shortly after the Vietnam War memory play, A Piece of My Heart, in the 2009–2010 TACT season, Stalag 17 is a World War II drama—and one that solves the difficult problem of portraying war on stage very differently. A Piece of My Heart uses a collage of sights, sounds, and narration to evoke the chaos of war as psychological damage. Stalag 17, in contrast, aims at literal realism in its evocation of existence at the famous German prisonerof-war camp. More importantly, however, it uses the physical limitations of the stage to recreate the psychological impact of confinement on men with little in common except their shared plight. Stalag 17 thus signals that it is more than a war play: It is a “men in a box” play. Men-in-a-box plays are, more than anything else, about men: how they relate to strangers they can’t avoid, how they deal with rivals they don’t like, how they approach stress, how they handle impulses like bias, bigotry, jealousy, hate, pity, and violence, and how all of it is influenced by testosterone and male egos. These are not plays for the indulgence of nontraditional casting: if there is a woman in such plays at all, she appears only to show how the men in the box react to one. To a great extent, the characters in a men-in-a-box play are the playwright’s lab rats, as he or she (although virtually every such play has a male author or, in the case of Stalag 17, two) introduces various stimuli and watches how his creations respond while they are simultaneously given a problem to solve. Reginald Rose, in the ultimate men-in-a-box play, Twelve Angry Men, injected bigotry and bias into his jury box of men trying to settle on a verdict in a murder trial. In Jason Miller’s That Championship Season, the men in the box have to reconcile reality with frozen memories while trying to preserve their personal integrity. The men trapped in the floating coffin of the Pequod in Moby Dick Rehearsed must try to do their jobs while in the clutches of a mad captain, as the actors portraying them must somehow tell the whalers’ story while confined to a bare rehearsal room. In Stalag 17, continued Special thanks, continued George Mason University, MA in Arts Management Program Elizabeth Malone Scott Parfumi Bridget Serchak Studio Theatre Yorktown High School Office of Transition Services the main variable is distrust: How does a group of men, dependent on each other to survive, deal with the knowledge that there is a traitor in their box? Rehearsing a men-in-a-box play is unique, far closer to the atmosphere on an athletic team or in a locker room than a normal rehearsal process, and it often places the director in the unfamiliar roles of brother, warden, referee, parole officer, and animal trainer. The rehearsals of these dramas are, or should be, unsettlingly similar to the experience portrayed in the plays. The inspiration for Donald Bevan and Edmund Trzcinski to write Stalag 17 was almost certainly another, epically successful men-in-a-box play, Mister Roberts. Like Stalag 17, it was a loosely autobiographical play about the World War II experiences of an American serviceman, for Mister Roberts playwright Thomas Heggen had served on a Pacific cargo ship, just as both Bevan and Trzcinski had been imprisoned in the real Stalag 17. Bevan, who was already a playwright, had to notice the success of the 1948 comic drama on Broadway as well as its main theme of being “trapped” on a ship while fighting “the enemy” among them (their soul-crushing captain) while trying to fight the real enemy, the Japanese. He recruited his nonplaywright prison camp alumnus (Heggen also had a collaborator, director Joshua Logan) Trzcinski, to work with him, and, three years after Mister Roberts conquered New York, Stalag 17 premiered to whispers that it was Son of Mister Roberts. It was not, however. This men-in-a-box play was far more serious in tone and intent, and there were not a lot of laughs from audiences and critics who may have been expecting them. Stalag 17 still found its audience and had a successful run, but when Hollywood pro Billy Wilder agreed to direct the film version, Bevan and Trzcinski must have seen the writing on their box’s wall. Wilder’s specialty was comedy with an edge, and his M.O. was rewriting any property he got his hands on to play to his strengths (which were considerable: among his classic films are The Seven Year Itch, Some Like It Hot, and Sunset Boulevard). Sure enough, the movie version of Stalag 17 was a comedy in the Mister Roberts mold. It was a bigger success than the play, and the playwrights didn’t seem to mind. They should have. Their Stalag 17 is different but excellent—and one of the very best men-in-a-box plays ever written. —Jack Marshall, Artistic Director Stalag 17 . . . When most people hear that phrase, they either have no idea what it means or they think of the famous 1953 Billy Wilder movie. But for people of an earlier generation, it is immediately recognized as the name of a German POW camp, and, for a select few, the words bring back horrendous memories of the very specific time and place when they were at the mercy of their fellow human beings . . . but were given none. Both Wilder’s film and the play by Donald Bevan and Edmund Trzcinski use humor to offset violence, anger, and treachery. That Bevan and Trzcinski were able to write about their experience and still find a way, not only to laugh about it but to make others laugh, is a testament to the power that this play must have had when it first premiered. Since then, it has been overshadowed by the famous movie. Put aside the celluloid memory and see this story as it was originally meant to be seen—on the stage. —William Aitken, Director Download the podcast Listen in as Artistic Director Jack Marshall discusses the TACT production of Stalag 17 with director Bill Aitken and actors Tony Bullock (Sefton), Jon Townson (Price), and Hans Dettmar (Shultz). Podcast available at http://americancenturytheater.blogspot.com The American Century Theater dedicates this production of Stalag 17 to all American veterans, with special gratitude to family members and friends who have served . . . From the extended Manger family In loving memory of our father, father-in-law and grandfather John Thomas Manger, Jr. b.1923 d.2010 T/Sgt.—flying radio operator and gunner in WWII Army Air Forces 5th Airforce, 90th Bomber Group Jolly Rogers, 320th Squadron (Moby Dick) In honor of (L to R) Joe Rous, Bob Kenney, and Oliver Johnson, pictured here shortly after their liberation from Stalag VII-A in May of 1945. Rous, Kenney, and Johnson were all members of the First Battalion of the 117th Regiment of the 30th Infantry Division, which won a Presidential Unit Citation for its heroic resistance to the German counter-attack at St. Barthelemy at the Battle of Mortain in August 1944. Rous was from the Chicago area, Kenney was from outside Boston, and Johnson was from southern Ohio, near the hills of Appalachia. Their backgrounds were very different, but in POW camp they bonded into a close-knit group and kept each other alive. Capt. Joseph S. Mahaley United States Navy Reserve (Ret.) 1969–2002 Vietnam, 1970 and 1973–1975 In honor of his service, with love and great respect from his wife, Peri Mahaley Cpl. John F. Nash, III 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines—Kilo Company April 2005–April 2009 In honor of my son, my hero, and all those who served with him in Operation Iraqi Freedom From his proud mother, Peri Mahaley In loving memory of Lt. Col. Alexander M. Teets (second from left, bottom row) US Army Air Corps 1942–1946 B-24 Pilot, 13th Air Force, 5th Bombardment Group (H) US Air Force 1953–1973 WWII—Korea—Vietnam In loving memory Lt. Hazel Adele Flickinger US Army Nurse Corps South Pacific 1942–1946 The Marshall family honors husband, father, grandfather, hero Major Jack Anderson Marshall Sr. b.1920 d.2010 317th Infantry Regiment, 80th Division Recipient of the Silver Star, Bronze Star, and Purple Heart Inducted into OCS Hall of Fame at Ft.Bragg (2000) In loving memory of Sgt. Richard Walker Ewing, Jessica and Kayla honor loving husband, father, their father, Staff Sgt. and grandfather. Jeffrey B. D’Arcy (Ret.) Richard served 6 years Served in the Army for in the Marine Embassy 20 years Guard and was a veteran Veteran of the Gulf War, of the Korean War. 1st Armored Division Afterwards, he served our We are very proud of all country as a police officer. you’ve done for our country Your family loves and grateful for all you are and misses you. doing for us. 1st Lt. Paul H. Kenney, a P-51 fighter pilot, was shot down while on a strafing mission over Germany on 15 April 1944. He was captured and held as a POW in Dulag Luft Dulag 12 in Grosstychow, Poland. Thank you for your service: Robert Killion, Sgt., USMC Gene Townson, SSgt., USAF Jeff Townson, SSgt., USMC In honor of my father Col. Harris R. Hill (Ret.) who served our country in the U.S. Army for 30 years. A veteran of both Korea and Viet Nam I’ve always been so proud of you. —Rhonda Dedicated to those currently serving— I’m proud of you two. —Bob SALUTING Second Lieutenant Robert W. Fuller (1921–2006) (front row, 6th from left) United States Army Ordnance Department 444th Heavy Automotive Maintenance Company, 78th Battalion August 1942–December 1945 Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes, and Central Europe Bronze Star 1945 AND ALL WHO SERVED WITH HIM Commander Alan Sherman (Ret. 1982) 21 year US Naval career USNA Class of 1963 Executive Officer on the USS Cayuga LST 1186 3 tours in Vietnam We are so proud of you Lt. Jerry Champion United States Army 82nd Airborne Division Haiti Relief Effort B Co. 1-325 AIR 2BCT 82nd ABN Sgt. Jess Decker United States Army Dialya Province, Iraq 209th Military Intelligence Company, 1st Regiment 14th Calvary Squadron, 3/2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team Karl Bittner (S.S. Captain) is pleased to be working with TACT again, having been seen last season as Clarence, Jr., in Life With Father. Most recently, he appeared as Lean in The F Word (The Inkwell). Other local credits include Late Bloomers and Glory Days (Capital Fringe Festival 2009), Princess Peanut’s Rainy Day (Charter Theatre), and Man of La Mancha (Keegan Theatre). On film, he portrayed David Koresh in the MSNBC documentary, Witness to Waco. Karl is a graduate of the National Conservatory of Dramatic Arts. Tony Bullock (Sefton) has worked professionally as an actor in Florida, Mississippi, and South Carolina. His introduction to the DC area theatre scene was as Lord of Essex in Kit Marlowe (Rorschach Theatre), where he also played Hamlet (the zombie king) in Living Dead in Denmark. Tony received his BFA in Theatre from William Carey College in Mississippi, attended the journeyman program at the Warehouse Theatre in Greenville, South Carolina, and earned his MFA from Florida State University Asolo Conservatory for Actor Training in Sarasota, Florida. Hans Dettmar (Shultz) is happy to be debuting with The American Century Theater. He was most recently seen playing Ludie in The Trip to Bountiful (Reston Community Players) and has also appeared as Irwin in The History Boys, John Merrick in The Elephant Man (earning a 2008 WATCH Award nomination for outstanding lead actor in a play), Cradeau in No Exit, Cohen in The Underpants, Chris in All My Sons, Demetrius in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and Banquo in Macbeth. Musical theatre roles include John Dickinson in 1776, Barber/Quixote understudy in Man of La Mancha, Emile DeBeque in South Pacific, and Harold Hill in The Music Man. Thanks to his best friend, Marianne. Tom Eisman (Herb) is pleased to be playing in Stalag 17, his first show with The American Century Theater and his first since returning to the DC area after a year in Chicago acting and studying improv. A 2007 graduate of Ball State University with a degree in Acting, he thanks his parents, sister, and friends for their wonderful love and support. James Finley (Dunbar) made his American Century Theater debut as Bronk Brannigan in Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? Other recent area credits include Schwarz/Jack in Lulu, Armand Duval in Camille, and Bill in Small Craft Warnings (Washington Shakespeare Company), Sam/Jim in MAY 39th/40th (11:11 Productions/Capital Fringe Festival), and Pedro in Man of La Mancha and Thomas Jefferson in 1776 (Keegan Theatre). Bill Gordon (Hoffy) was last heard on The American Century Theater stage as “Jingle Bill” Gordon in An American Century Christmas, for which he also designed and ran sound. Previous TACT roles include Von Konigswald in Happy Birthday, Wanda June and The Cabbie and Lt. Buchevski in Cops. TACT sound design credits include The Titans and Life With Father. Other local stage credits include Boo in The Marriage of Bette and Boo (Spooky Action Theater). A former radio professional, Bill also produces TACT’s “Before the Curtain Is Raised” podcasts, as well as a number of podcast programs for the American Shakespeare Center in Staunton, Virginia. Jay Hardee (Marko) is an acting company member at Washington Shakespeare Company, where he received rave reviews as the titular courtesan in Camille: A Tearjerker earlier this season. At WSC, he also played Alan Strang in Equus and roles in Lulu, Caligula, The House of Yes, Macbeth, The Children’s Hour, Richard II, Hapgood, The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Anymore, and Titus Andronicus. He directed the WSC hit production Small Craft Warnings and co-directed Red Noses. He has worked with Baltimore Shakespeare Festival, Journeymen Theater Ensemble, Scena Theatre, Forum Theatre, Ganymede Arts, Solas Nua, and DC Dollies and the Rocket Bitch Revue. Next, he will direct the Englishlanguage world premiere of Chilean playwright Marco Antonio de la Parra’s Every Young Woman’s Desire at WSC, co-direct de la Parra’s Secret Obscenities at Capital Fringe, and co-direct Richard III to open WSC’s new home at the new Arlington Cultural Center in Rosslyn. He will also appear in Cat’s Cradle this summer at Longacre Lea Productions. Steve Lebens (Reed) has performed with The American Century Theater in Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?, An American Century Christmas, Hellzapoppin’, Drama Under the Influence, and Call Me Mister. Steve has also appeared at regional theaters such as the Guthrie Theater and in DC at Studio Theatre Secondstage, Folger Theatre, Signature Theatre, and Horizons Theatre. Overseas, he has worked with the Theater of the Americas in Bogota, Colombia, and the Karachi Drama Circle in Karachi, Pakistan. Film credits include Browncoats/Redemption, and television credits include Law and Order:Criminal Intent, C-47 (pilot). Matthew Meixler (McCarthy, S.S. Guard) spent the past seven years studying and acting in NYC. He is pleased to be making his area debut with The American Century Theater—and returning to contemporary text. An original member of the New York Neo-Classical Ensemble (newyorkneo. org), he played Francis Flute/Thisby in A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Arviragus in Cymbeline. He graduated with a BFA from New York University Tisch School of the Arts, completing his primary training in the Meisner Extension Studio and advanced training with Associate Dean Louis Scheeder in The Classical Studio. Much love and thanks to family and friends for their continued support. David Olmsted (Horney) is very happy to make his first onstage appearance for The American Century Theater, where he has recently joined the staff. He has worked backstage with TACT for two years, most recently as Assistant Stage Manager for Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? Other TACT credits include Native Son (ASM), Life With Father (Stage Manager), and The Titans (Costume Master). Upcoming: Stage Manager for TACT’s world premiere, The Amazing Sophie. Secondstage); and Cape in White Biting Dog (Project Y/Source Theatre). He has appeared on film, TV, and commercials. Jon earned a BFA in Acting from Auburn University and an MFA in Acting from the University of Florida. He holds Actor/Combatant status with the Society of American Fight Directors. Donald L. Osborne (Shapiro) recently made his debut in the Washington area as George MacCauley in The American Century Theater production of Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? Donald earned his BFA in Acting from Utah State University and MFA in Shakespeare and Renaissance Theatre Performance from Mary Baldwin College. Past performances include Edgar in King Lear (MFA project at Blackfriars Playhouse), Vince in Tape (B Street Theatre, Sacramento), and Bill in Western Big Sky (The Met Theatre, Los Angeles). He has also performed in films and commercials. John Stange (Stosh) is pleased to make his debut at The American Century Theater and to (finally) be certified lice free. John is a recent graduate of The Theatre Lab School of the Dramatic Arts Honors Conservatory, where a year of honing his metaphorical kung fu in the proverbial mountains culminated in a turn as Jerry in Edward Albee’s The Zoo Story. He also recently took a road trip to the Universal Theatre Festival in Provincetown MA to play Ant in Reina Hardy’s Andalusia. James Svatko (Geneva Man) is grateful for the opportunity to contribute to the ensemble performance of Stalag 17. His theatre credits include Larry in Immoral Combat (McLean Drama Company: Alden Theatre and the 2009 Capital Fringe Festival) and ensemble with The Shakespeare Theatre Company production of Julius Caesar. Film credits include principal roles as Harold Wagner in Til Deaths Do Us Part (Merge Films) and Frank Catalano in Disorganized Crime (Big Moustache Productions). Gabriel J. Swee (Duke) was born and raised in the heartland of Illinois, where he earned his BA in Theatre Performance from Illinois State University and performed as King Polixenes in The Winter’s Tale, as Kyle Kalke in Toni Press-Coffman’s Touch, and as Yousef in the world premiere of Relatively Close by Jim Sherman. Gabriel pulled up roots and traveled to the DC area to perform with TACT in his professional debut. He thanks you for your support of the theatre. Jon Townson (Price) is pleased to return to TACT, where he appeared as John F. Kennedy in The Titans (world premiere). Recent work as a company member with Keegan Theatre includes Jonathan Edmund in Elizabeth Rex, Owen in Translations, King Henry VIII in A Man for All Seasons, Paddy Brabazon in An Island of No Land at All (world premiere), Tybalt/Father Lawrence in Romeo and Juliet, and Gentleman Caller in The Glass Menagerie (Ireland Tour and U.S.). Area credits include: Jamie in Long Day’s Journey into Night and Bazarov in Nothing Sacred (Firebelly Productions); Jackson/Garin in The Death of Meyerhold (Studio Theatre Sherri L. Perper (Producing Director) produced The American Century Theater’s last-season hits, Native Son and Life With Father. Of the many shows she has produced in the DC theatre community, her favorites are The Wiz, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, The Last Night of Ballyhoo, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Sherri is also TACT Director of Outreach and Marketing. William Aitken (Director) returns to directing at The American Century Theater after last appearing there as General Curtis Lemay, Adlai Stevenson, Anatoly Dobrynin, and Rodion Malinovsky in The Titans. He directed the TACT production of Eugene O’Neill’s Desire Under the Elms and has appeared at TACT as Harold Ryan (Happy Birthday, Wanda June), Ned Crossman (The Autumn Garden), Ishmael/Actor (Orson Welles’ Moby Dick Rehearsed), Herb Lee (Tea and Sympathy), McCarthy/Society Gentleman (The Time of Your Life), and Phil Foley (Paradise Lost). He has also performed for: Washington Shakespeare Company as Diego (The Royal Hunt of the Sun), Old Jew (Incident at Vichy), and Dr. Joe Cardin (The Children’s Hour); Arena Stage as Robert (u/s) in Proof; Keegan Theatre as Baylen (Glengarry Glen Ross), Juror Ten (Twelve Angry Men), Pedro (Man of La Mancha), Capulet (Romeo and Juliet), IRA Officer (The Hostage), The Bear (Elizabeth Rex), and Scanlon (One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest); and Rorschach Theatre as Sir Walter Raleigh (Kit Marlowe). Ceci Albert (Properties Design) is pleased to be working on her third production with The American Century Theater, having designed costumes and properties for Life With Father and A Piece of My Heart. She has designed costumes for Joseph (The Arlington Players), props for Saturday, Sunday, Monday and Scapino (Little Theatre of Alexandria), and has provided costume and/or prop support to seven seasons of productions with the St. Mark’s Players, most recently designing costumes for Lion in Winter. Ceci offers special thanks to her family and friends who have been so generous in offering their personal treasures to be used in these shows. Ian Armstrong (Sound Design) is pleased to be working with Bill Aitken again at The American Century Theater, having designed his production of Desire Under the Elms. Other TACT designs include Steven Scott Mazzola’s Drama Under the Influence. Ian’s other recent designs include The Children’s Hour (Washington Shakespeare Company), Bad Hamlet (winner, best experimental play, 2009 Fringe Festival), the world premiere of Photograph 51 (Active Cultures Theatre), Low Level Panic (Story Theatre), and Songs for a New World (Open Circle Theatre). He designed I French Kissed a Zombie, and I Ain’t Scared of Your Brother Neither in Los Angeles and Enter the Poet for CollarborAction Theatre in Chicago. Ian is a graduate of the Corcoran School of Art and The Catholic University of America. Jessica Branch (Wardrobe Mistress) is a longtime admirer of the theatre, enjoying her journey from patron to participant. Her first backstage venture was with Amadeus (The Arlington Players). Jessica recently completed a sewing workshop with the Arlington Adult Education program and is grateful for the opportunity to integrate her sewing skills into the performing arts. Jim Callery (Sound Board Operator) is excited to be working on his first production with The American Century Theater. His most recent backstage credits include: Lion in Winter (St. Mark’s Players); Dog Sees God (Little Theatre of Alexandria); Glorious!, Jeffrey, and Musical of Musicals: The Musical (Dominion Stage); and the WATCH-nominated Follies (The Arlington Players). Jim would like to thank Bob and Sherri for this opportunity, his aunt and uncle for their support, and his wonderful friends. Rip Claassen (Costume Design) has been a fixture on the Washington theatre scene for many years, perhaps best known as dramaturge at Backstage, Inc., Washington’s theatre supply store. Rip has taught theatre and acting at the Institute for the Arts for Fairfax County Public Schools, Duke Ellington School of the Arts, and other local theatre programs. For The American Century Theater, he has directed (Life With Father), produced (Native Son), and costumed innumerable shows. He has directed for Natural Theatricals as well as other local venues. Rip founded the Northern Virginia Theatre Festival for high schools and provides coaching to theatre students seeking admission to competitive college theatre programs, the Virginia Governor’s School for Humanities and Visual and Performing Arts, roles in community and professional theatres, and other competitive programs. He is Artistic Director of Teens and Theatre (TnT), a nonprofit theatre education company. Anndi Daleske (Set Design) designed the set for The American Century Theater’s recent production of Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? She has designed costumes, sets, or props for the Shakespeare Festival at Tulane, The Jefferson Performing Arts Society, The Summer Lyric Theatre, St. Mark’s Players, Olney Theatre Center, and the DC Fringe Festival, among others. Some favorite shows include Fiddler on the Roof (props, puppets, and masks), A Comedy of Errors (costumes), Cymbeline (set), Rabbit Hole (props), Bad Dates (props), The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe (costumes), and Seneca’s Medea (shadow puppets and props). She earned her MFA in Theatrical Design from Tulane University and was Properties Master at Olney Theatre Center from 2007–2009. Cheryl Ann Gnerlich (Lighting Design) has lighting design credits for Pirates of Penzance (Sinfonicron Light Opera Company), What the Butler Saw (Virginia Shakespeare Festival), Cover Me in Humanness (Capital Fringe Festival), and On the Verge (William and Mary Second Stage). Her assistant lighting design credits include Romeo and Juliet and Love’s Labour’s Lost (Virginia Shakespeare Festival) and Stop Kiss (William and Mary Mainstage). Thanks to Mom, Dad, and friends for their love and support. Casey Kaleba (Fight Director) has arranged violence for Olney Theatre Center, Folger Theatre, Round House Theatre, Signature Theatre, and Studio Theatre Secondstage. He is a company member with Rorschach Theatre and a member of the Society of American Fight Directors, Fight Directors Canada, and the Nordic Stagefight Society. Rachel M. Loose (Assistant Stage Manager), originally from Lancaster County, PA, earned her BA with Honors in Drama from Washington College. She is happy to be working with The American Century Theater for the first time. Since moving to the DC area, she has been stage manager for By the Bog of Cats and Prisoner of Zenda (1st Stage) and stage manager and assistant director at Silver Spring Stage. Rachel is pursuing her MA in Arts Management at George Mason University. Bob Pierce (Stage Manager) is delighted to return to The American Century Theater to work on Stalag 17. Previous credits include: Medea (Theatre Lab); A Piece of My Heart (DC run, TACT); The Left Hand Singing, Hearts, and Falsettos (The New Jewish Theatre, St. Louis); Ain’t Got Time To Die and Capacity (First Run Theatre, St. Louis); Invention of Love (Elden Street Players); Richard III (Tapestry); On Golden Pond and The Underpants (Prince William Little Theatre); and Jeffrey (Dominion Stage). Jameson Shroyer (Technical Director/Master Carpenter) is Master Carpenter at the Olney Theatre Center. He worked as Technical Director/ Master Carpenter on The American Century Theater’s production of Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? and also works in that capacity for various theatre companies in DC and Virginia. Jim Vincent (Assistant Stage Manager) is excited to be working on his first production with The American Century Theater. He just finished working as light board operator for Reefer Madness, The Musical (Dominion Stage). On stage, Jim played Henry Potter in It’s a Wonderful Life! (Elden Street Players). He recently worked as the co-lighting designer/light board operator for Glorious! and as stage crew for Jeffrey (Dominion Stage). Other recent productions include stage crew for On Golden Pond (Prince William Little Theatre) and the role of Sir Robert Brakenbury in Richard III (Tapestry Theatre Company). Thank you to the many generous donors who provided support from April 1, 2009 through March 10, 2010. Group Theater Goers ($5,000+) Arlington Commission for the Arts Virginia Commission for the Arts Bob and Wendy Kenney Provincetown Players ($2,500–$4,999) David T. Austern Theater Guilders ($1,000–$2,499) Rebecca and Gene Christy Steve Cohen and Mary McGowan John Dawson Mercury Theater Backers ($500–$999) The Arlington Community Foundation Robert DuBois Alison Fields Constance McAdam Mrs. Robert M. McElwaine Vivian and Arthur Kallen Peri Mahaley Eleanor Marshall Patricia Payne Suzy Platt The Plubell Firm Sheldon and Marilyn Wallerstein Living Theater Lovers ($250–$499) John Acton Jean and Richard Barton Marvin and Ellen Cantor W. Seth Carus Joya Cox Dennis Deloria and Suzanne Thouvenelle Ellen Dempsey and Lou George Gloria Dugan Tracy Fisher Tom and Kathryn Fuller Bill Gordon Marjie Mayer Robert Half International Bill and Connie Scruggs David and Willa Siegel (in memory of Jack Marshall, Sr. and Robert M. McElwaine) Marcia Neuhaus Speck Frontis Wiggins The Players ($100–$249) Pete and Cherry Baumbusch Tom and Loretta Beaumont Sally Beth Berger Janet and David Bond Elizabeth Borgen R.G. Bowie Ron Brandt Alan and Susan Branigan David Briggs Boris Cherney Wendy Cohen Janet and Marty Fadden Dr. Coralie Farlee Timothy Farris Sharon Galm Jean F. Getlein Ed Gofreed Gabe Goldberg Alan Herman Rhonda Hill (in memory of Jack Marshall, Sr.) Robert Honeygosky Roger and Katharine Hood Elaine Howell Thomas Hoya Angela Hughes Richard Kamenitzer Ellen and Stu Kennedy Robert L. Kimmins Alan King Paul Klingenberg Nathan and MaryLynn Kotz The Players ($100–$249) continued David Lamdin Mary Ann Lawler and Neil Sigmon Gudrun Luchsinger Winnie Macfarlan Angus MacInnes Carol MacLean Donald Adams and Ellen Maland Lory Manning Judith and David McGarvey Margaret Mulcahy Susan and M. B. Oglesby Daniel Ross Charline Rugen Robert F. Schiff John Seal Henry Shields Jean V. Smith Pat Spencer Smith Jennifer Sosin and Adam Posen The Hon. and Mrs. John M. Steadman Robin Suppe-Blaney David Tannous Virginia Tarris Professor Heathcote W. Wales Doug and Evelyn Watson Bonnie Williams and Bob Skelly The Federal Theater Funders ($10–$99) Cheryl Bailey Wendy Cohen Sally Hill Cooper Dorothea de Zafra Atwell Michael deBlois Robyn Dennis Patricia Dowd Susan Duka Charles Feingersh Donna Feirtag The Hon. Jay Fisette Rosann Garber Cathy Garman James and Maria Gentle Margaret Gough Robert and Patsy Graves Madi Green William Hamilton Jean Handsberry Bill and Donna Hannay Rachel Hecht Linda Hill and Paul Steinmetz Steve Hornstein Howard and Myrna Kaplan R.M. Kraft Helen Kress Steven Laterra Sharon Leiser Wilbur A. Leventer Mark Linton Margaret Lorenz James Mangi and Kathleen Schmidt Martin Marks Phebe K. Masson Evelyn and Milan Matey Barbara and Kenneth McLean Undine and Carl Nash Richard and Rebecca Pariseau John Perlman Susan Prytherch Rhoda Ritzenberg Michael and Loretta Rowe Dennis Ryan Sharon Schoumacher Carole Shifrin Bertha Shostak Linda and William Smith James and Patricia Snyder Robert L. Spatz Barbara Stearns Kathryn Tatko Marjorie Townsend Wilma Ucker Jo Ursini and Ken Krantz George and Kay Wagner Adrienne White Carol and Henry Wolinsky Annette Zimin Donors-in-kind Jason Beagle, The Burdette Smith Group, P.C., Brian Crane, Karen Currie, Dennis Deloria, Ellen Dempsey, Kate Dorrell, Kimberly Ginn, Bill Gordon, Rhonda Hill, Jack Marshall, Steven Scott Mazzola, Sherri L. Perper, Loren Platzman, Ann Marie Plubell The American Century Theater 2009–2010 Season World Premiere: Allyson Currin’s The Amazing Sophie [Treadwell] May 27–June 19, 2010 Rescue Series: Rodgers and Hart’s Babes in Arms (1937) July 8–11, 2010 (New dates!) Lanford Wilson’s Serenading Louie (1976) July 23–August 21, 2010 Apply tonight’s ticket value to the price of a subscription for the remainder of TACT’s 2009–2010 season. See the box office manager tonight or call 703.998.4555 for more information. Stalag 17 is funded in part by Arlington County through the Cultural Affairs Division of the Department of Parks, Recreation, and Cultural Resources, and the Arlington Commission for the Arts. This arts event is made possible in part by the Virginia Commission for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts.