MTC Announces '11-12 Season, Extends Programming For 45th Anniversary
Marin Theatre Company Artistic Director Jasson Minadakis and Producing Director Ryan Rilette announced five plays for the company's expanded 45th Anniversary Season today. Growing from five to six main stage productions in MTC's intimate 231-seat Boyer Theatre, the 2011-12 season includes a World Premiere by MTC's 2010 Playwright in Residence Steve Yockey, the hysterical Tony Award-winning comedy God of Carnage by Yasmina Reza, two modern American classics by Tennessee Williams and August Wilson and the company's first production of a play by William Shakespeare. The remaining play - a Bay Area premiere by a local playwright - will be announced in April.
"I am very excited to announce our 45th anniversary season," Artistic Director Jasson Minadakis said. "After two seasons of incredible audience growth, we are expanding our season programming in 2011-12 to include six plays in our Boyer Theatre for the first time in 23 years. The five productions we're announcing today include three re-imagined classics and two provocative new plays - one Tony Award winner and one thrilling premiere from an amazing young American writer. In planning each season, we try to offer our patrons the opportunity to explore not only their own lives, but also the lives of others, especially in different times and different places. The journey this season will take us from Shakespeare's opulent Venetian Renaissance courts to the impoverished tenements of Wilson's Pittsburgh and Williams's St. Louis, as well as to Reza's and Yockey's thoughtful dissections of today's polite middle-class havens."MTC opens its 2011-12 Season in August with Seven Guitars, August Wilson's 1940s entry into his remarkable Pittsburgh Cycle, a decade-by-decade exploration of the African-American experience in the 20th century. Awarded Best Play in 1996 by the New York Drama Critics' Circle and nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, Drama Desk Award for Best Play and Tony Award for Best Play, the tragic comedy follows the short-lived comeback of bluesman Floyd "Schoolboy" Barker. Released from a workhouse to find his band has a hit record, he becomes the pivotal figure around which the lives of six others come to briefly revolve in the impoverished Hill District during the summer of 1948. When the play first premiered, The New York Times wrote, "Here's a play whose epic proportions and abundant spirit remind us of what the American theater once was... and still is when the muses can be heard through the din... Seven Guitars is as funny as it is moving and lyrical." This is MTC's first production of the playwright Variety described as having "the rare gift for imbuing everyday people, their conversations and stories with epic resonance."
Celebrating 45 seasons in 2011-12, MTC had modest grassroots beginnings. In 1966, a year that was marked by the escalation of the Vietnam War, domestic racial violence and the Cold War space race, 35 Mill Valley residents came together under the leadership of Sali Lieberman to create the Mill Valley Center for the Performing Arts [MVCPA]. The nonprofit organization brought arts as diverse as film, theater, poetry, dance and concerts of classical, jazz and folk music to Marin County for a decade. After a number of successful community Theater Productions, particularly One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, MVCPA began to exclusively produce and present theater performances in 1977. The small group overcame many challenges to put on critically-acclaimed, award-winning plays in a golf clubhouse, a veterans' auditorium and several schools and parks. To acknowledge the organization's specialization in theater arts and expanded regional focus, MVCPA changed its name to Marin Theatre Company in 1984. This marked the beginning of a period of extraordinary growth. By 1987, MTC had built its own theater complex with onsite administrative offices and joined with other local theaters to negotiate the first regional equity contract in the Bay Area. Since then, MTC established two emerging playwright prizes in 2007 and joined the League of Regional Theatres in 2008. MTC is now the leading professional theater in the North Bay and premier mid-sized theater in the Bay Area.
Videos
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Oakland Comedy Dash (OCD) at The Elbo Room - Fri May 8 2026 Elbo Room Jack London (5/08-5/08) |
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