"The new Austin Pendleton-directed production of Anton Chekhov's Uncle Vanya, for Off-Broadway's Classic Stage Company in early 2009, will feature Maggie Gyllenhaal as Yelena and Peter Sarsgaard as Astrov, the troupe announced.
The real-life couple join Tony Award winner Denis O'Hare as Vanya, Mamie Gummer as Sonya, Louis Zorich as Waffles, George Morfogen as Srebryakov, Delphi Harrington as Maria and Cyrilla Baer as Marina.
Previews begin Jan. 17, 2009. An official opening date will be announced. The limited run plays to March 1.
Sarsgaard (of the films "Shattered Glass," "Boys Don't Cry," "Kinsey") will jump from his current Chekhov play (he's Trigorin in Broadway's The Seagull) into rehearsals for Vanya, about an old professor (Morfogen) and his young wife (Gyllenhaael) returning to his old estate, arousing old tensions with Vanya and his niece (Gummer).
Gyllenhaal is known for the films "The Dark Knight," "Sherrybaby," "Secretary," "Donnie Darko" and more..."
Tonya Pinkins: Then we had a "Lot's Wife" last June that was my personal favorite. I'm still trying to get them to let me sing it at some performance where we get to sing an excerpt that's gone.
Tony Kushner: You can sing it at my funeral.
Tonya Pinkins: Then we had a "Lot's Wife" last June that was my personal favorite. I'm still trying to get them to let me sing it at some performance where we get to sing an excerpt that's gone.
Tony Kushner: You can sing it at my funeral.
Really excited about this production. And, CSC is one block away from me, so I will have no problem getting to the venue!
...What happened next, was stranger still, a woman breathless and afraid, appeared out of the night, completely dressed in white. She had a secret she would tell, of one who had mistreated her. Her face and frightened gaze, my mind cannot erase...But then she ran from view. She looked so much like you...
That's exciting. I wasn't a fan of Chekov before "The Seagull," so maybe this one will change my mind as well. Now lets talk dollars and cents. Do they do a student rush or anything, or should I spring for real tickets?
I haven't been able to look at Gyllenhaal the same way since Secretary
"I wouldn't let Esparza's Bobby take my kids to the zoo...I'd be afraid he'd steal their ice cream and laugh."- YankeeFan
"People who like Sondheim enjoy cruelty."-LuvtheEmcee
This announcement just made my day. Just snagged my ticket so I have an Ibsen Saturday night (Hedda Gabler) and a Chekhov Sunday afternoon. Color me psyched!
This is exciting, although CSC's lack of student rush means I probably won't be going. I really don't understand what they're thinking. You'd think a theatre company doing classic shows in particular would want to reach out to interested young people whenever possible. Oh well.
Is this play really as boring as it was made out to be on Family Guy?
It's boring if you think Family Guy is high-end comedy.
"[Gore] was widely perceived as arrogant. If you know something, you're not smart. You're a smarty-pants. It's annoying. People get annoyed with your knowledge. It goes back to high school, to not doing your homework ... 'There's something I should know, I don't know why I should know it but someone knows it and I don't. So I'm going to have to make fun of him now.'"
-Sarah Vowell, The Partly-Cloudy Patriot
TS3: now let's think about this: you've got your knickers in a knot because not one but two posters called you out for using a TV cartoon as a source of literary criticism?!?!? no pedestal required, bro -- that was an obvious response from right down here in the gutter. =:o
but, seriously, haven't you noticed that the writers on family guy make fun of EVERYTHING -- stuff they like ... stuff they don't like ... opinions they agree with ... opinions they disagree with ... EVERYTHING. it's what makes the show so great.
Vespertine, CSC had student rush for The Seagull earlier this year; it was $20, two hours prior to curtain. They had rush for New Jerusalem, too. Are you sure that rush has been disbanded?
Volunteer ushering is an option, as well.
"You travel alone because other people are only there to remind you how much that hook hurts that we all bit down on. Wait for that one day we can bite free and get back out there in space where we belong, sail back over water, over skies, into space, the hook finally out of our mouths and we wander back out there in space spawning to other planets never to return hurrah to earth and we'll look back and can't even see these lives here anymore. Only the taste of blood to remind us we ever existed. The earth is small. We're gone. We're dead. We're safe."
-John Guare, Landscape of the Body
I didn't care for Sarsgaard in Seagull either. He wasn't horribly miscast, but he just wasn't that great. His accent seemed all wrong, and just his whole approach.