ICT Presents The Old Settler June 3-26

By: May. 05, 2011
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Two women test the bonds of sisterhood in John Henry Redwood's bittersweet comedy,The Old Settler. ICT artistic director caryn desai [sic] directs Ryan Vincent Anderson, Veralyn Jones, Tarina Pouncy and Karen Malina White in a four-week run, June 3 through June 26 at International City Theatre in the Long Beach Performing Arts Center. Low-priced previews take place on Tuesday, May 31; Wednesday, June 1; and Thursday, June 2.

Set in Harlem during World War II, when hot music played and swing dancers ruled the floor of legendary nightclubs like the Savoy Ballroom, The Old Settler is a funny and moving story about hope, love, dreams, disappointment and forgiveness. Middle-aged sisters Elizabeth and Quilly have learned to put past differences behind them. But when a handsome young man named Husband takes a room as a boarder, old hurts and new tensions are brought to the surface.

"It's about the need for love and the pain of loneliness," says desai. "But there's also a lot of humor, and the play's setting is fascinating. In 1943, Harlem was a nerve center of music and culture for blacks and whites alike. Remember, this was during the war, long before the Civil Rights movement."

The Old Settler was first performed at the 1995 Eugene O'Neill Theatre Conference in Waterford, Connecticut. It was seen there by the Russian Theatre Union, and in 1996, the play was produced in Sheleykovo, Russia, followed by a run in Moscow. In 1997, The Old Settler had its first American production at the McCarter Theatre in Princeton, New Jersey, a co-production with New Haven's Long Wharf Theatre. Since then, there have been numerous productions of The Old Settler throughout the U.S. The Old Settler has been recognized with an American Theatre Critics Award, the Virginia Duvall Mann Award, the Beverly Hills/Julie Harris Playwrights Award, and the Bryan Family Foundation Drama Award for Southern Literature. In 2001, The Old Settler was adapted for television and presented by PBS, starring Debbie Allen and Phylicia Rashad.

"When I was in Russia," Mr. Redwood once said in an interview, "we had a question and answer session and someone stood up and said that the play is very Chekhovian. That's why it took so well over there. But the greatest honor came to me when a woman stood up and said that she didn't believe that a man had written this play. That was the greatest compliment in the world to me."

John Henry Redwood was an actor best know for his roles in the plays of August Wilson, and a playwright whose works, The Old Settler and No Niggers, No Jews, No Dogs, have been widely produced in recent years. He died in 2003 in Philadelphia. In his bio for a production of The Old Settler at New York's Primary Stages he wrote, "John Henry, having once studied for the ministry, believes that being a good actor or dentist or golfer is only one's avocation. One's vocation is being the best human being one can be." One of Mr. Redwood's favorite quotations was, "I shall pass this way only once, therefore, whatever good I can do, let me do it now, for I shall not pass this way again."

Veralyn Jones (Elizabeth) is an award-winning actress whose numerous credits include Ben and the Magic Paint Brush and My Wandering Boy (South Coast Rep); Three Sisters After Chekhov (Lost Studio); Medea (Antaeus); Othello (Theatre @ Boston Court); A Selfish Sacrifice (Denver Center Theatre); A Perfect Wedding (Kirk Douglas Theatre); Black White Man (Taper, Too); and Hamlet (Nevada Shakespeare Company). She is a founding member of Lower Depth Theatre Ensemble and is a member of the Los Angeles Women's Shakespeare Company, The Antaeus Company, and the famed Actor's Studio. Some TV credits: SouthLand, The Unit, ER, The Young & Restless, Threat Matrix, City of Angels, Strong Medicine.

Karen Malina White (Quilly) is best known for her television work on The Cosby Show, A Different World, Malcolm & Eddie, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, The Proud Family, and for her work in Lean On Me. Theater credits include the Ovation and Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle award-winning West Coast premiere of The Ballad of Emmett Till (Fountain Theatre); the West Coast premiere of Crumbs From the Table of Joy by Lynn Nottage (South Coast Rep); and Permanent Collection, Distracted, and Salt Fish & Bakes (all at Mixed Blood Theatre in Minneapolis). New York credits include the Off Broadway production of Chain by Pearl Cleage, Brown Silk and Magenta Sunsets, and In Search of Snow.

Ryan Vincent Anderson's (Husband) theater credits include In the Red and Brown Water (Marin Theatre Co.), Holy Ghost (Theatre of NOTE), Standing On My Sister's Shoulders (Ebony Repertory Theatre), When The Tigris Runs Black (directed by John Luis Alfaro at the Ford Amphitheatre), and numerous productions at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival including Death and the King's Horseman; Henry VIII; The Laramie Project; The Dutchman; and Our Town, Clay Cart, and BLACK SWAN, all directed by Bill Rauch.

Tarina Pouncy (Lou Bessie) began her career on stage in Detroit performing in August Wilson's Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, Ozzie Davis' Purlie Victorious, and an original sketch comedy show she co-wrote and performed at Second City called Reparation H. She studied in New York under the late O.L. Duke at the Negro Ensemble Company, performing in their production of Tea, Taxes and Shakespeare. In L.A, she is a member of Theatre Neo and studies improv with the Upright Citizens Brigade (UCB). Film credits include the soon to be released Larry Crowne, directed by Tom Hanks and starring Hanks and Julia Roberts; Winged Creatures with Forest Whitaker; and School for Scoundrels with Billy Bob Thornton.

Director caryn desai [sic] has received numerous awards and nominations including LA Weekly, Drama-Logue, Robby, Ovation and NAACP with credits ranging from classics, to new works, to musicals, to original performance pieces. Recent directing credits at ICT include Loving Repeating: A Musical of Gertrude Stein; The Clean House; Backwards in High Heels; Bright Ideas; The Sweepers; Five Course Love; The Story; Once on This Island; and Dinah Was. Other credits: A Raisin in the Sun; Shakuntala (also adapted by her); Rashomon; The Importance of Being Earnest; A Piece of My Heart; Joe Turner's Come and Gone; Contradictions (her original work); The Musical Comedy Murders of 1940; Graceland; Lysistrata; Agamemnon; Oedipus; Pvt. Wars; and the world premiere of Instead of Nightmares.

The set design for The Old Settler is by Kurt Boetcher; lighting and sound design are by Bill Georges; costume design is by Kim DeShazo; props are by Patty and Gordon Briles; casting is by Michael Donovan.

International City Theatre is Long Beach's Resident Professional Theater at the Long Beach Performing Arts Center and the recipient of the Margaret Harford Award from the Los Angeles Drama Critics' Circle for "Sustained Excellence in Theater."

The Old Settler will run Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays @ 8 pm and Sundays @ 2 pm, June 3 through June 26. Tickets are $37 on Thursdays, and $44 on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, except opening night which is $55 and includes a reception with the actors following the performance. Preview performances take place on Tuesday, May 31; Wednesday, June 1; and Thursday, June 2 @ 8 pm. Preview tickets are $29.

International City Theatre is located in the Long Beach Performing Arts Center at 300 E. Ocean Boulevard in Long Beach. For reservations and information, call the ICT Box Office at (562) 436-4610 or go to www.InternationalCityTheatre.org.



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