BECKY SHAW Comes To Huntington Theater

By: Feb. 12, 2010
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The Huntington Theatre Company continues its 28th season - a season of American stories - with artistic director Peter Dubois' hit 2009 Off Broadway production of Becky Shaw, a wickedly funny black comedy about a blind date gone bad. Named to The New York Times', Entertainment Weekly's, and Time Out New York's Best of 2009 lists, this clever, intricate tale of love, sex, and ethics about a group of complicated 30-somethings inaugurates a multi-year look at American comedy that will explore the history and future of the form. The exploration continues next season with Kaufman and Hart's great American comedy You Can't Take it With You.

"Becky Shaw is astonishingly skillful in the way it examines human behavior and personal relationships," says DuBois. "This is exactly what great comedy should do. Gina Gionfriddo has written a sharp, cunning play that shifts our perspective about the tensions between love, money, and happiness. I first read the script on the train and couldn't stop laughing out loud - everyone was staring! It's an incredibly funny piece of writing. Staging Becky Shaw for the Huntington feels like bringing the show home. This is a story that really has to be told in this city."

In Becky Shaw, newly-married Suzanna and Andrew set up Suzanna's lifelong best friend, the sharp-tongued money manager Max, with Andrew's romantically-challenged, seemingly fragile co-worker, Becky. Despite good intentions, the blind date goes so badly that it ends at a police station. As their friends attempt to navigate their way through a complex emotional jungle, Suzanna and Andrew are forced to confront the instability of their marriage, and Suzanna is thrown into further turmoil by her caustic mother Susan's clear-eyed observations about the family. The moral ground shifts time and time again as crisis and comedy ensue, and a series of events are set into motion that forever change everyone's lives. Amid the smart humor, Becky Shaw asks questions about money and class, the ethics of white-lying, and the transactional nature of human relationships as it makes us consider what we owe the people we love most versus the strangers who land on our doorstep.

"Gina has a surprising point of view on human nature, and she's shockingly honest about the way we all behave," says DuBois. "She actually puts the tapes that run silently through our minds into the mouths of her characters. She's got a very sharp, smart point of view on the world and wicked sense of humor."

"Peter and I have been friends and collaborators for over a decade," says Gionfriddo. "He's been with this play since the first draft - asking me all the right questions and pushing me to fully realize these characters and ideas. I'm thrilled he's bringing Becky Shaw to his artistic home, the Huntington."

Playwright Gina Gionfriddo was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for Becky Shaw, which had its world premiere at Actors Theatre of Louisville's Humana Festival of New American Plays and its New York premiere Off Broadway at Second Stage Theatre. Her other plays include After Ashley (Humana Festival, Off Broadway at the Vineyard Theatre, regional theatres, and abroad in Poland); U.S. Drag (Off Broadway by the stageFARM, Clubbed Thumb at HERE, and many regional productions); Guinevere (Eugene O'Neill Theatre Center Playwrights Conference); and the one-acts Squalor and America's Got Tragedy (commissioned and presented by the stageFARM). She has received an OBIE Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship, The Susan Smith Blackburn Prize, an Outer Critics Circle Award, the Helen Merrill Award for Emerging Playwrights, and an American Theatre Critics Association/Steinberg citation. She has written for the television programs "Law & Order," "Law & Order: Criminal Intent," "Cold Case," and the upcoming "The Borgias." Ms. Gionfriddo has contributed essays on rock music to the literary journal, The Believer, and short fiction to Canteen. A graduate of the M.F.A. Playwriting Program at Brown University, she has taught writing at Brown, Providence College, and Rhode Island College. She is currently at work on commissions from Playwrights Horizons and the Center Theatre Group.

Director Peter Dubois is now in his second season as Artistic Director of the Huntington Theatre Company, during which he will also direct Craig Lucas' Prelude to a Kiss. During his inaugural season, he directed the world premiere of David Grimm's The Miracle at Naples. He directed the acclaimed world premiere (Actors Theater of Louisville, Humana Festival of New American Plays) and New York premiere (Second Stage Theatre) productions of Becky Shaw. Other directing credits include Bob Glaudini's Jack Goes Boating with Philip Seymour Hoffman (The New York Times Critics Pick) and A View from 151st Street (The New York Times Critics Pick), Measure for Pleasure (SSDF Callaway Award for Excellence in Direction; Drama League Award nomination), and Richard III with Peter Dinklage (a Newsday top ten New York production of 2004), and Biro (The New York Times Critics' Pick) for The Public Theater where he served as associate producer and resident director; Sam Shepard's Curse of the Starving Class for American Conservatory Theater; and The Seagull, The Winter's Tale, Romeo and Juliet, and more for Perseverance Theatre where he served as artistic director.

The Huntington's season of American stories is the first in the Company's 27-year history comprised entirely of shows by American writers. The plays of the season relate to one another through stories of opportunities lost and found, of intergenerational struggles and successes, and of the most intimate and meaningful relationships. Drawn from some of the best writing the country has to offer, the Huntington is engaging its audience in a season-long conversation about issues of race, class, values, and a shared American experience. "This season at the Huntington, we are taking on a range of compelling American writing," says DuBois. "Each production offers us a singular point of view about the American experience, and I'm very excited by the diverse perspectives these artists bring."

THE CAST
The cast of Becky Shaw includes:
· Maureen Anderman (The Sisters Rosenswieg, Rabbit Hole, and Third for the Huntington; plays by Edward Albee, Michael Frayn, Joan Didion, and others on Broadway) as Susan;
· Seth Fisher (Persephone and Les Liaisons Dangereuses for the Huntington; Tom Stoppard's Rock ‘n' Roll and Julius Caesar on Broadway) as Max;
· Wendy Hoopes (Love, Janis for the Village Theatre, Vienna Lusthaus (Revisited) for New York Theatre Workshop; Walking Off the Roof for Signature Theatre Company) as Becky Shaw;
· Eli James (William and the Tradesmen at Ars Nova and Breedingground's Spring Fever Festival; The Four of Us at Manhattan Theatre Club) as Andrew; and
· Keira Naughton (The Rivals at Lincoln Center Theater; Dance of Death and Three Sisters at Roundabout Theatre Company) as Suzanna.

PRODUCTION ARTISTS
The Creative Team for Becky Shaw includes Scenic Designer Derek McLane (Bad Dates for the Huntington; Ragtime, 33 Variations, I Am My Own Wife on Broadway; Becky Shaw for Second Stage Theatre); Costume Designer Jeff Mahshie (Laughing Wild for the Huntington; The Little Dog Laughed and Next to Normal on Broadway; Becky Shaw for Second Stage Theatre); Lighting Designer David Weiner (Butley for the Huntington; Butley and Reasons to Be Pretty on Broadway; Becky Shaw for Second Stage Theatre); and Sound Designer Walter Trarbach (The Farnsworth Invention and Cymbeline on Broadway; Becky Shaw for Second Stage Theatre). Production Stage Manager is Lori Ann Zepp. Stage Manager is Carola Morrone.

SPONSORS
The Huntington's Grand Patron is Boston University. The 2009-2010 Season Sponsor is J. David Wimberly. Production Sponsor of Becky Shaw is the Judith and Douglas Krupp Family Foundation..

The Huntington Theatre Company is Boston's largest and most popular theatre company, hosting more than 64 Tony Award-winning artists, garnering 36 Elliot Norton Awards, and sending over a dozen shows to Broadway since its founding in 1982. In July 2008, Peter Dubois became the Huntington's third artistic leader and works in partnership with longtime Managing Director Michael Maso. In residence at and in partnership with Boston University, the Huntington is renowned for presenting seven outstanding productions each season, created by world-class artists and the most promising emerging talent, and reaching an annual audience of over 130,000. The company has premiered plays by Pulitzer Prize, Academy Award, and Tony Award-winning luminaries such as August Wilson and Tom Stoppard, as well as rising local literary stars such as Melinda Lopez and Ronan Noone. The Huntington has transferred over a dozen productions to Broadway, more than any other theatre in Boston, including the Broadway hit and Tony Award-winner Alfred Hitchcock's The 39 Steps. In 2004, the Huntington opened the state-of-the-art Stanford Calderwood Pavilion at the Boston Center for the Arts, which includes 370-seat and 200-seat theatres to support the company's new works activities and to complement the company's 890-seat, Broadway-style main stage, the Boston University Theatre. The Huntington is a national leader in the development and support of new plays, producing more than 50 New England, American, or world premieres in its 27-year history. The Huntington's nationally-recognized education programs have served more than 200,000 middle school and high school students in individual and group settings and community programs bring theatre to the Deaf and blind communities, the elderly, and other underserved populations in the Greater Boston area.


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