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Maya Brattkus

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Maya Brattkus is a Los Angeles based actor who recently received her BFA in Acting from the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts). She has studied at the British American Drama Acadamy's Midsummer in Oxford program and has been in several productions at the Theatricum Botanicum. She was recently seen in the independent feature, WILD PRAIRIE ROSE, which won the Jimmy Stewart Legacy Award at the HEARTLAND FILM FESTIVAL, as well as several other film festival awards including BEST FEATURE at the SEATTLE DEAF FILM FESTIVAL. Recently Maya was seen on ID Discovery Channel's new show, MAN WITH A VAN.

Maya Brattkus News


THE NIGHT BUSTER KEATON DREAMED ME to Have West Coast Premiere at 24th Street Theatre


24th Street Theatre finds color in the lives of two orphan girls living in a silent film world of black, white and varying shades of gray. Debbie Devine directs the West Coast premiere of Kerry Muir's magical, surreal, dream-like movie-within-a play, The Night Buster Keaton Dreamed Me, for an April 11 opening. Performances will continue through May 31, with low-priced previews taking place March 28 through April 5.

Arthur Miller's THE CRUCIBLE Hits Close to Home at Theatricum Botanicum


A parable of mass hysteria that draws a chilling parallel between the Salem witch hunts of 1692 and McCarthyism, which gripped America in the 1950s, The Crucible by Arthur Miller remains eerily timely in today's climate of fake news. Will Geer's Theatricum Botanicum, its own history firmly rooted in the McCarthy-era Hollywood blacklist - when actor Will Geer and his wife, Herta Ware, created the theater as a haven for blacklisted actors - opens a new production of Miller's modern classic onJune 30. Theatricum artistic director Ellen Geer, Will's daughter, is at the helm, with family members Thad Geer,Willow Geer and Melora Marshall featured in the cast.

BWW Review: George Orwell's ANIMAL FARM Speaks Directly to the World's Current Political Turmoil


ANIMAL FARM, Orwell's brilliant political satire about the corrupting influence of power, charts the fall of idealism and the rise of tyranny after the animals of Manor Farm rise up against their oppressive human owner in a struggle for rights, equality, gaining the right to make their own choices on how to live their lives. Onstage, the story is read by two children, the girl (Sierra Rose Friday) and boy (Shane McDermott), keeping the audience informed as to the action taking place or what has gone on off stage leading to that particular scene. It all begins as the animals, led by Snowball, an idealistic pig (Christopher Yarrow), take over the farm from Mr. Jones (Steve Fisher). Their plan goes well at first; all the animals are equal and content. But eventually, several of the other pigs, led by Napoleon (Mark Lewis) and Squealer (Melora Marshall), yield to the lure of power and start to make decisions that serve their own interests best, eventually leading them to proclaim that some animals are more equal than others. The quote, 'absolute power corrupts absolutely,' certainly applies to Orwell's masterful work.

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