'Triple Threat' Features Three New Plays, Feb. 5-March 4

By: Dec. 20, 2006
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Emerging Artists Theatre has announced its 2007 Triple Threat, the company's second annual premiere of three full-length plays by emerging playwrights. Triple Threat will play a four-week off-Broadway engagement at Theatre 5 (311 West 43rd St. 5th Floor—btw. Eighth and Ninth Avenues). 

Performances begin Monday, February 5th, and continue through Sunday, March 4th. 
 
Paul Adams, artistic director of EAT, who is directing his first full-length play Real Danger, states "this is a great opportunity and exposure for our entire company of playwrights, directors, actors, designers, and technical team. I'm delighted that Emerging Artists Theatre is moving energetically to the next level of producing Off Broadway." 

The performance schedule follows:

Elephant Girls
Written by Carl Gonzalez
Directed by Derek Jamison
Wednesday at 7 p.m.; Thursday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 5 p.m.; Sunday at
2 p.m.

Elephant Girls "takes place during a Kozy Kitchen party that the perfect housewife Claire decides to host for her sister (Elizabeth), her mother (Francis) and her friends (Suzie and Jasmin). After an unexpected guest (Robina Abdul—Claire's daughter's Afghani math tutor) stops by, Claire struggles to keep the party light and humorous. At first the group greets Robina with a mixture of awkwardness, forced politeness, curiosity and unconscious racism. As the humor, conversation and wine flow, they seem to work their way toward a genuine connection and understanding.
 
It is only after a tragic accident occurs—and a subsequent attempt to cover it up—that the women learn each other's true characters. They find themselves exploring the complexities of human behavior and the consequences of their own life choices. What happens to a little girl in the absence of love? What happens when strangers half a world away take up her cause? Inspired by National Geographic's famous cover photo The Afghan Girl, Elephant Girls culminates in six women spiraling into a maelstrom of white-hot emotion that leaves their relationships forever changed."

misUnderstanding Mammy: The Hattie McDaniel Story
Written by Joan Sorkin
Directed by David Glenn Armstrong
Wednesday at 2p.m.; Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 2 p.m.; and Sunday at
5 pm

misUnderstanding Mammy
: The Hattie McDaniel Story is "a one-woman play with music that reveals a side of Hattie McDaniel that few people knew. Hattie achieved stardom by becoming the first African-American to win an Academy Award, but she paid a high price for fame. By playing a succession of maids and cooks, most notably Mammy in Gone With the Wind, she became the target of an unrelenting campaign against "Mammyism" led by Walter White of the NAACP, who thought her roles were shameful and degrading to their race. Despite her own efforts to bring dignity and humanity to her roles, within seven years of winning her Oscar, her film career was virtually destroyed.

Set in 1952 at the Motion Picture Country Home and Hospital in Woodlands Hills, California, the play begins as Hattie is dying of breast cancer. Hallucinating in her hospital room, Hattie believes Walter White has come to reconcile their differences, and she takes the opportunity to recount her life from her early days in Denver as a singer–dancer–actress in Vaudeville, to nightclub celebrity in Milwaukee, to ground-breaking Hollywood icon and finally to the downfall of her career, trying all the way to prove that she was in fact a credit to her race. As she traces her life from a happy, optimistic girl to a proud but embittered woman, the profound effects of the battle against racism in Hollywood in the 30s and 40s are suddenly clear. Throughout this rollercoaster ride, Hattie sings her songs, dances her dances and recites the lines that made her famous, illuminating a life so long misunderstood."
 
Real Danger
Written by Jeff Hollman
Directed by Paul Adams (EAT Artistic Director)
Monday at 7 p.m.; Tuesday at 7 p.m.; Friday at 9 p.m. and Saturday at
8 p.m.

Real Danger
 "begins with a surprise reunion between two friends nine years after graduation from college. Edward, who is en route from New York to Canada for a back-country excursion in a canoe, initiates the reunion with his friend and soccer teammate Ferdy, who is living with Vickie in Cleveland, Ohio. Edward has made contact because he needs to apologize to Ferdy for an old wrong. As the play progresses, however, Edward learns about Vickie's outstanding career as a professional photographer, a career that has taken her into dangerous places and relationships. He learns about how Ferdy and Vickie met and how they decided to become fugitives for fear that Vickie's former lover would kill them if he could find them. For Edward, the reunion moves quickly away from his original purpose and becomes a series of shocking surprises that he could not have envisioned when he made the decision to seek out his old friend."

Triple Threat plays the following regular schedule through Sunday, March 4th.
 
           Monday 7 p.m. –
Real Danger
           Tuesday 7 p.m. –
Real Danger
           Wednesday 2 p.m. –
Hattie
           Wednesday 7 p.m. –
Elephant Girls
           Thursday 7 p.m. –
Elephant Girls
           Friday 7 p.m. –
Hattie
           Friday 9 p.m. –
Real Danger
           Saturday 2 p.m. –
Hattie
           Saturday 5 p.m. –
Elephant Girls
           Saturday 8 p.m. –
Real Danger
           Sunday 2 p.m. –
Elephant Girls
           Sunday 5 p.m. –
Hattie

Tickets are $40 and are now available online at
www.eatheatre.org or by calling 212-247-2429. Tickets may also be purchased in person on the day of the performance at Theatre 5, 311 West 43rd Street, 5th Floor.

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