Washington Stage Guild Starts 27th Season with Shaw's Original PYGMALION, Now thru 11/18

By: Oct. 25, 2012
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The Washington Stage Guild kicks off its 27th season with one of the most beloved plays of the past century, an indelible hit by the Stage Guild's "playwright in residence" - George Bernard Shaw. PYGMALION was written in 1912, and the story of Cockney flower girl Eliza Doolittle, her speech lessons at the hands of the temperamental Henry Higgins, and the sparks that fly between them, has rarely left the stage since its premiere. Directed by Stage Guild Artistic Director, Bill Largess, Shaw's comedy is sharp and insightful, asking questions as valid today as a century ago. Exactly what "makes" a lady a lady? The way she behaves, or the way she is treated?

"With PYGMALION, Shaw achieved a popular success that surprised even his fans. Less political and polemical than most of his plays, its portrayal of Eliza and Higgins, Doolittle and Pickering delighted audiences as much as its social message intrigued them," says Largess. "Hollywood and Broadway embraced the play, too, with Shaw's Oscar-winning screenplay for the 1938 film, which was the basis for Lerner and Loewe's My Fair Lady. Arena Stage will be presenting the musical during our run, a perfect opportunity to examine Shaw's original intent. It's fascinating how spare, how unsentimental the original is - and that may surprise My Fair Lady devotees. Shaw's famous epilogue makes clear that the characters don't conclude the story when the play ends - perhaps someone should dramatize that into a mini-series to rival Downton Abbey!"

The acting ensemble for PYGMALION features newcomers and old hands from the company. Steven Carpenter, playing Henry Higgins, has appeared in the Stage Guild's Shavian productions of The Philanderer (Helen Hayes nomination), Major Barbara, Man & Superman and You Never Can Tell. Other appearances with the Guild include The Countess, Anna Karenina, and Ill Met By Moonlight. At Ford's Theatre, he appeared in 1776, the world premieres of The Heavens Are Hung In Black and The Road From Appomattox, and five years of A Christmas Carol. Credits at Rep Stage include The Goat and The Lonesome West.

Returning to the Stage Guild after appearing in last season's Shavian one-acts Overruled and Village Wooing is Rana Kay as Eliza Doolittle. Other DC-area credits include: Junie B. in Jingle Bells, Batman Smells (Imagination Stage), Julius Caesar (Taffety Punk Theatre Company's Riot Grrrls), Mauritius (Bay Theatre Company), Lie With Me (Charter Theatre), Twelve Angry Women (Manhattan Theatre Source), Midwives (Round House Theatre), Electra (MetroStage), The Light of Excalibur and Dreams in the Golden Country (Kennedy Center Theater for Young Audiences), Necessary Targets (Olney Theatre Center), Arcadia (Rep Stage), Fifth of July (Helen Hayes nomination), Incident at Vichy, Marat/Sade, and Troilus and Cressida (Washington Shakespeare Company), The Ride Down Mt. Morgan (Theatre J), and The Chalk Garden (Washington Stage Guild).

Vincent Clark will portray Higgins' accomplice Colonel Pickering. His Shavian credits at Stage Guild include The Apple Cart, Augustus Does His Bit, Press Cuttings, Fanny's First Play, On the Rocks, Major Barbara, Too True to Be Good, Heartbreak House, Man & Superman, and John Bull's Other Island. Mr. Clark has also performed in productions at Olney Theatre including: The Underpants, Democracy, 13 Rue de L'Amour and Shaw's St. Joan.

Playing the father who "can't afford" morals will be Conrad Feininger as Alfred Doolittle; another Stage Guild Shaw veteran, having previously appeared in productions of The Apple Cart, Getting Married, You Never Can Tell, as well as Molnar's The Tale of the Wolf, for which he was nominated for a Helen Hayes award for lead actor.

Appearing as Mrs. Higgins is Lynn Steinmetz, who was in last season's Husbands & Lovers. Besides being a company member of the Stage Guild, she has performed at several venues in the Washington-Baltimore area, including Everyman Theatre in Pygmalion, as well as Arena Stage, Woolly Mammoth, Olney Theatre Center, Round House Theatre, Kennedy Center, and the Smithsonian Institution.

Laura Giannarelli portrays Mrs. Pierce and has appeared with the company in more than 40 productions over the past 26 seasons. She has also played Sister Aloysius in Doubt for Baltimore's Everyman Theatre; toured with the Kennedy Center in Dreams in the Golden Country with Rana Kay; and played Amalia in Motti Lerner's Pangs of the Messiah at DC's Theatre J.

Making their Stage Guild debuts are Nora Palka as Clara, Mimsi Janis as Mrs. Eynsford-Hill. Phil Dickerson returns as Freddy. Set Designer Kirk Kristlibas also returns, who co-designed last season's Amelia and costumes by Basmah M. Alomar. Marianne Meadows returns as Lighting Designer along with Arthur Nordlie as Stage Manager.

PYGMALION by George Bernard Shaw
A centennial production of Shaw's most beloved play, in its ORIGINAL version
Directed by Bill Largess
October 25 through November 18, 2012
Press Night: Saturday, October 27, 2012 at 8 pm

During the season, we will again present off-night readings of plays that complement the full productions. These popular pay-what-you-can performances have attracted a loyal audience since we moved to the Undercroft Theatre.

ANDROCLES AND THE LION by George Bernard Shaw
Shaw's clever fable-play about the Christians in Rome, where an act of kindness makes being "thrown to the lions" an unexpectedly good thing.
Monday, November 19, 2012 at 7 pm

Performance times and prices for all productions:
Thursday evenings at 7:30 p.m. $40.00
Friday and Saturday evenings at 8 p.m. $50.00
Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2:30 p.m. $40.00
Discounts are available for senior citizens, students, and groups.
Season passes are available, offering incredible savings for the entire Stage Guild season.

All performances take place at The Undercroft Theatre of Mount Vernon Place United Methodist Church, 900 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Washington, DC. The Undercroft Theatre is located in the heart of downtown Washington, on the corner of Massachusetts Avenue and 9th Street, NW. It's steps from the Convention Center, and blocks from the National Mall, the Smithsonian, the Verizon Center, Chinatown, and restaurants galore.

The Undercroft Theatre is within easy walking distance from the following Metro stations:
Gallery Place/Chinatown-Exit SE corner of 9th and G Sts., NW (Green, Yellow and Red lines)
Mt. Vernon Square-Exit SW corner of 7th and M Sts, NW (Green and Yellow lines)
Metro Center-Exit SE corner of 11th and G Sts., NW (Blue, Red and Orange lines)

Play selection and schedule are subject to change. For information and reservations, call 240 582-0050, email info@stageguild.org or go to www.stageguild.org.


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