Get all the top news & discounts for Chicago & beyond.
"We are all civilized people, which means that we are all savages at heart but observing a few amenities of civilized behavior," writes Tennessee Williams in his introduction to Sweet Bird of Youth. Goodman Theatre opens its 2012/2013 Season with a major revival of Williams' 1959 play directed by Chicago native David Cromer. As previously announced, Academy Award nominee Diane Lane portrays Alexandra del Lago, an aging Hollywood screen siren on a journey with an unlikely soul mate, Chance Wayne (Broadway's Finn Wittrock)-an ineffectual drifter whose youth and promise have begun to fade.
Cromer's 17-member cast includes John Byrnes as Dan Hatcher; Sean Cooper as the Heckler; Maggie Corbett as Edna; Jennifer Engstrom as Miss Lucy; Peter Fitzsimmons as Scotty; KrisTina Johnson as Heavenly Finley; John Judd as Boss Finley; Colm O'Reilly as George Scudder; Tyler Ravelson as Stuff; Penny Slusher as Aunt Nonnie; D'Wayne Taylor as Charles; Vincent Teninty as Tom Jr.; Dan Waller as Bud; R. Charles Wilkerson as Fly; and Kara Zediker as Violet.
Sweet Bird of Youth runs tonight, September 14 – October 25, 2012 (Opening Night is September 24) in the Goodman's Albert Theatre. Tickets ($27 - 88; subject to change) are now on sale and can be purchased at GoodmanTheatre.org, by phone at 312.443.3800 or at the box office (170 North Dearborn)."Sweet Bird of Youth is one of Tennessee Williams' most subversive, complex and uncompromising examinations of the world of the formerly beautiful. Bringing this play to the stage is a formidable task, and there is no one more qualified to meet this challenge than David Cromer," said Artistic Director Robert Falls, who worked with Cromer as an actor in Falls' 2002 production of Long Day's Journey into Night at the Goodman."Every one of us has a complicated relationship with time passing. It's something we don't talk about," said Cromer, a multiple Jeff Award winner and 2010 MacArthur Fellow who makes his Goodman directorial debut with this production. "Sweet Bird of Youth is this wild, vibrant, undulating play-just wind and palm trees swaying, and seagulls flapping past, and you can hear the sound of the ocean throughout it-and then there's this sort of horror. I've always loved Tennessee Williams for that juxtaposition, and I can't imagine doing this play anywhere but at the Goodman with this incredible company of actors."