CANDIDA
January 22, 2007


Cast:

Candida—Blair Brown

The Reverend James Mavor Morell—Daniel Jenkins

Miss Proserpine Garnett—Annie Golden

Reverend Alexander Mill—Mark Saturno

Mr. Burgess—Ed Dixon

Eugene Marchbanks—Matt Cavanaugh

Narrator—Charlotte Moore

candida

Candida is a comedy by playwright G. Bernard Shaw. It was first published in 1898, as part of his Plays Pleasant. The play questions Victorian notions of love and marriage, asking what a woman really wants her husband to provide her with. Additionally, because the clergyman is a Fabian Socialist, as was Shaw, various political issues of the time are also part of the plot.

The play begins in October of 1894 in the drawing room of St. Dominic's parsonage in the East End of London. Reverend James Morell, a Christian Socialist minister, discusses his busy schedule with his efficient typist, Miss Proserpine Garnett ("Prossy").

Burgess, Morell's father-in-law, a successful but unscrupulous businessman from a working class background, visits the Morell home for the first time in three years. While Burgess cannot convince Morell that he has changed his nature, he impresses Morell with the news that he has raised the wages of his underpaid workers. Morell's wife Candida returns home accompanied by the 18 year-old poet Eugene Marchbanks, whom Morell has recently rescued from the streets. Once alone with Morell, Marchbanks reveals that he is in love with Candida. His nervousness fades as he speaks of Candida's beauty and how Morell does not deserve her. As Act One ends, the Reverend Morell, shaken by Marchbanks' accusation, nonetheless insists that the young man stay for lunch.

At the start of Act Two, Marchbanks is left alone with the typist Prossy. While she tries to work, he speaks of the plight of the poet and attempts to get her to confess her ardor for Morell. Flustered by Eugene's insinuations, she strikes out instead at Burgess, who has wandered in, accusing him of being a "silly old fathead."

Meanwhile, Candida senses her husband's growing discomfort on the subject of Marchbanks and pulls him aside to talk. She tries to tease him but ends up reinforcing his insecurities about their marriage and his vocation. Candida suggests that his popularity as a speaker has more to do with his personal charm than his message. Frustrated, Morell considers canceling his evening's speaking appointment. He reconsiders, though, and decides to leave Candida alone with Marchbanks as a kind of test.

At the top of Act Three, Marchbanks and Candida near the end of their evening together - an evening spent in poetry reading. Seeing that Candida is bored with the verse, Marchbanks is on the verge of declaring his love when Morell arrives home. Morell and Marchbanks size each other up, and Morell insists that Candida choose between the two of them. Candida takes up the challenge, asking each man to make his case. They do, and Candida, in a surprising turn of events, demonstrates that Morell is the weaker of the two, and therefore more deserving of her love. Marchbanks, realizing his future lies elsewhere, leaves Morell and Candida behind.


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THE MUSIC CURE,
INTERLUDE at the PLAYHOUSE &
THE KING, THE CONSTITUTION AND THE LADY

February 19, 2007

MusicCure

The cast for these three one-acts:
Marian Seldes, Paxton Whitehead, George S. Irving and Barrett Foa.
Host—Howard Kissel

 

THE MUSIC CURE
A neurotic young aristocrat (Foa) is on the verge of a nervous breakdown. There’s no relief even after his family doctor (Whitehead) administers opium. His tempestuous nature is challenged by the appearance of a world-famous pianist (Seldes) who opens his horizons in ways he’d never dreamed possible.

INTERLUDE AT THE PLAYHOUSE
It’s opening night at a grand new playhouse in London. The theatre manager/star of the evening (Irving) is scheduled to make a speech but he’s simply not up to it. Luckily, his put-upon wife (Seldes) is there to put the audience in the right mood and save the day.

THE KING, THE CONSTITUTION AND THE LADY
This unpublished play was originally seen in London’s EVENING STANDARD in 1936. The then king, Edward VIII, was threatening abdication should he not be allowed to marry ‘the woman he loves,’ Wallis Simpson. The play imagines a secret meeting between the King (Foa), the Prime Minister (Whitehead) and the Archbishop (Irving)

 


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The Doctor's Dilemma

March 19, 2007


Doctorsdilemma

Hosted by—Jeremy McCarter
of NEW YORK MAGAZINE

Redpenny—Michael Tisdale
Emmy—Patricia Conolly
Sir Colenso Ridgeon—Brian Murray
Leo Schutzmacher—Howard Kissel
Sir Patrick Cullen—Malachy McCourt
Cutler Wolpole—Timothy Jerome
Sir Ralph Bloomfield Bonington—Simon Jones
Dr. Blenkinsop—Lenny Wolpe
Jennifer Dubedat—Kate Baldwin   
Louis Dubedat—Mark Saturno
Minnie Tinwell—Sarah Moon
The Newspaper Man—Michael Schulman
Mr. Danby, Secretary—Brent Harris

 

A Tragedy in Four Acts and an Epilogue
Written in 1906

Synopsis
Shaw's incendiary story follows one Mrs. Jennifer Dubedat who  loves and idolizes her brilliant artist husband, Louis, who is dying of tuberculosis. She goes to a doctor and convinces him to save her husband. The doctor can keep only so many patients, and must choose who is worth saving, but is convinced that Louis' artistic talents make him worthy. But when he and several colleagues meet Louis, they discover that he is in fact a smooth-talking money-grabbing scoundrel. They also learn that he has another wife, whom he has abandoned. So, the doctor has a problem: he can let Louis die, leaving Mrs. Dubedat with her idealized image, or save him and his artistic talents, but force her to face his many flaws. It's Shaw taking on the entire medical profession; along with art, sex and finance.


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Androcles and the Lion
Gladiators! Lions! Laughs!

April 23, 2007

Shaw reminds us how ridiculous we all are when faced with our own mortality, and how frivolous our most fanatical beliefs can be.

AndroclesCast


Cast

Host — Brendan Lemon
Narrator — Roma Torre
Lion — Bruce Vilanch
Megaera — Raven Snook
Androcles — Seth Rudetsky
Centurion — Jeremy Mccarter
Lavinia — Alexis Soloski
Captain — Charles Isherwood
Lentulus — Michael Musto
Metellus — Adam Feldman

Spintho — Michael Riedel
Ferrovius — Howard Kissel
The Royal Ox Driver — David Finkle
Retiarius- Gladiator — Eric Grode
Secutor- Gladiator — Frank Scheck
The Call-boy — Patrick Pacheco
The Editor — David Cote
The Menagerie Keeper — Michael Schulman
Caesar — Rex Reed

Synopsis
Christians are being led to the Coliseum for torture. There's an eager crowd waiting, along with Caesar and his cohorts. Androcles, a Greek tailor who happens to be one of the Christians, has always felt kindly toward animals. He'd even helped out a passing lion on the road to Rome. His wife has rejected him, the Romans make fun of him, and even the other Christians aren't quite sure what to make of him. But the eager crowd, the Gladiators and the hungry lions aren't interested in his domestic difficulties.

 


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The Admirable Bashville
Or Constancy Unrewarded

March 21, 2007

bashville cast

Cast
Lydia—Lacey Kohl
Cashel Byron—Marc Kudisch
Mellish—Louis Zorich
Lucian—James Ludwig
Bashville—Daniel Jenkins
Cetewayo—Kevin Joseph
Paradise—Graham Rowat
Lord Worthington—Robert Ian Mackenzie
A Policeman—George S. Irving
Adelaide Gisborne—Charlotte Moore
Narrator- Patricia Conolly
Host—Michael Riedel


(Being the Novel of ‘Cashel Byron’s Profession’ done into a stage play in Blank Verse.)
Written in 1901 and first performed the following year.

First Tableau:
Scene 1: A Glade In Wilstoken Park
Scene 2: London. A room in Lydia’s House
Scene 3. The Agricultural Hall, Islington.

Second Tableau:
Scene 1: Wilstoken. A room in the Warren Lodge.

The period of the play is the spring and summer of 1881.

Synopsis
This play is, in fact, based upon Shaw's own highly successful novel, Cashel Byron's Profession. The novel was written in 1882 and after rejection by several publishers it was published in serialized form in a magazine. Shaw wrote five novels early in his career and then moved on to pursue drama criticism and eventually playwriting.

The novel follows Cashel Byron, a world champion prizefighter, as he tries to woo wealthy aristocrat Lydia Carew without revealing his illegal profession. Meanwhile, she also has a secret admirer in her formidable footman, Bashville. Brains vs brawn. The play follows much the same path. The novelty of this particular play is that Shaw wrote it as a parody of Shakespeare. The entire play is, in fact, written in blank verse. As the characters are all ‘contemporary’ this makes for a unique comic lunacy in Shaw’s canon.
As Admirable Bashville is a very short play, the evening will include readings from some of Shaw’s letter and excerpts from prefaces


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Two wildly entertaining one-act comedies by Shaw:
Village Wooing &
How He Lied To Her Husband

With
Karen Ziemba, Brian Murray and Matt Cavanaugh

Host: Michael Feingold
of the Village Voice

Narrator: Clover Lalehzar
of NY1

June 18, 2007

wooing Cast

Village Wooing
A: Brian Murray
Z: Karen Ziemba

Village Wooing, "A comediettina for two voices" in three "conversations," lasts less than an hour, has two characters:
A and Z. A is a misanthropic author who meets Z, a country telephone operator and general store salesgirl, on a world cruise. Against his will, by reason of her common sense and persistence, she marries him when they are later thrown together in her village store.

Excerpt:
Z: My father used to say that men and women are always driving one another mad.
A: That sounds literary. Was your father a man of letters?
Z: Yes: I should think he was. A postman.

How He Lied To Her Husband
She: Karen Ziemba
He: Matt Cavanaugh
Her Husband: Brian Murray

Shaw sends up his own CANDIDA in high comedic style. In the manner of a Lonsdale drawing-room comedy, we meet the glamorous wife who has determinately allowed a beautiful young man to fall in love with her. Romantic letters complete with very specific poetry has been written by the young man, given to the wife, and misplaced. Her husband is now believed to be in possession of the letters…but her husband seems to have a profoundly potent trick up his sleeve.

Excerpt:
SHE: What did you get tickets for? Lohengrin?
HE: I tried; but Lohengrin was sold out for to-night.
SHE: Then what did you get?
HE: Can you ask me? What is there besides Lohengrin that we two could endure, except Candida?
SHE: Candida! No! No, I won't go to it again, Henry. It is that play that has done all the mischief. I'm very sorry I ever saw it: it ought to be stopped. Something should be done to that wretched man who wrote it.


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THE Millionairess

By George Bernard Shaw

July 23, 2007

Millionairess Tyne  Daly as Epifania Fitzfassenden, the richest woman in the world who is determined to live life on her own terms. It's just that people keep getting in the way. THE MILLIONAIRESS has been a successful vehicle for many stars, including Maggie Smith, Katharine Hepburn, Edith Evans and even Sophia Loren in the film version. A 1935 screwball comedy that Shaw wrote with Hepburn in mind, its cast of characters take us on a wild ride. Joining Ms. Daly will be John McMartin (GREY GARDENS), Jonathan Hadary (SPAMALOT), Rebecca Luker and Daniel Jenkins (MARY POPPINS), Simon Jones, Charlotte Moore, John Martello and Adam Feldman of TIME OUT NY. Narrating will be Roma Torre of NY1. The evening will be hosted by Howard Kissel of the DAILY NEWS.

A Comedy in Four Acts
Written in 1935

Act I: Mr. Julius Sagamore's Office in Lincoln's Inn Fields.
Act II: The Coffee-room of the Pig and Whistle, a Riverside Inn.
Act III: A Basement Sweat-shop in the Commercial Road.
Act IV: The Pig and Whistle (now the Cardinal's Hat).

 

CAST of CHARACTERS as they appear
Julius Sagamore - JONATHAN HADARY
Epifania Fitzfassenden - TYNE DALY
Alastair Fitzfassenden - DANIEL JENKINS
Patricia Smith - REBECCA LUKER
Adrian Blenderbland - SIMON JONES
The Doctor - JOHN MCMARTIN
The Man - JOHN MARTELLO
The Woman - CHARLOTTE MOORE
The Manager - ADAM FELDMAN

The Narrator - ROMA TORRE
The Host -  Howard Kissel


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Man and Superman
A Comedy and a Philosophy

September 17, 2007

SupermanCast

Written during 1901 and 1903
First presented in 1905
First presented in its entirety 1915

Host: Jeremy McCarter
Produced and directed by David Staller.

Act I: Portland Place. Roebuck Ramsden’s Study.
Act II: Richmond. The Avenue to Mrs. Whitefield’s House.
Act III: Scene 1: Evening in the Sierra Nevada.

THERE WILL BE ONE BRIEF (ten minute) INTERVAL

ACT III: Scene 2: Hell.
Scene 3: Early Morning in the Sierra Nevada.
Act IV: Granada. The Villa Garden.

TIME: The Present. (1905

Cast

Roebuck Ramsden (& The Statue)
George S. Irving

Octavius Robinson
Euan Morton

John Tanner (& Don Juan)
Michael Cerveris

Ann Whitefield (& Dona Ana de Ulloa)
Kerry Butler

Mrs. Whitefield
Jackie Hoffman

Miss Ramsden
KT Sullivan


Violet Robinson
Elena Shaddow

Henry Straker
Matthew Arkin

Hector Malone
Noah Racey

Mendoza (& The Devil)
Marc Kudisch

Mr. Malone
Nick Wyman

Narrator
Michael Riedel

A lifetime of happiness! No man alive could bear it: it would be hell on earth’

Man and Superman is one of Shaw's most celebrated and devilishly witty plays. Mr. Staller has trimmed the play from five to three hours to allow for inclusion of the famous interior act known as ‘Don Juan in Hell.’

In Man and Superman Shaw explores the philosophy that humanity is the latest stage in a purposeful evolutionary movement of the “life force” toward ever-higher life forms.

The play's hero, the roguish Jack Tanner, is bent on pursuing his own spiritual development in accordance with this philosophy. Believing marriage would prevent him from achieving his higher intellectual and political ambitions, Tanner is horrified to discover that his newly appointed ward, Ann Whitefield, intends to marry him. He flees to Spain with Ann in hot pursuit. The chase even leads them to the underworld, where the characters’ alter egos discuss questions of human nature and philosophy in a lively debate in a scene often performed separately as ‘Don Juan in Hell’. In Man and Superman, Shaw combined seriousness with comedy to create a satirical and buoyant exposé of the eternal struggle between the sexes.


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Two utterly ridiculous one-acts
by George Bernard Shaw

PRESS CUTTINGS
with

PASSION, POISON AND PETRIFACTION

October 22, 2007

Host: Howard Kissell


castpic

PASSION, POISON AND PETRIFACTION
(or The Fatal Gazogene): A Brief Tragedy for Barns and Booths.

Written in 1905, this is one of Shaw's most light-hearted larks: involving murder, sex, betrayal, finance and seltzer.

Scene: A Bed-sitting room in a fashionable quarter of London.

Cast of Characters:
Lady Magnesia Fitztollemache
Jayne Houdyshell

Phyllis (Her Maid)
Annie Golden

George Fitzteollebache (Her Husband)
Brian Murray

Adolphus Bastable (A Leader Of Fashion)
Euan Morton

Landlady
Charlotte Moore

Police Constable
Matthew Arkin

Doctor
A Mysterious Person

 

PRESS CUTTINGS
(A Topical Sketch Compiled From The Editorial and Correspondence Columns of the Daily Papers During the Woman's War in 1909)

Written in 1909, this is Shaw's 'suffragette comedy', involving a Prime Minister in drag, a conservative General out of control and some very determined women.

Scene: General Mitchener's Office in the War Office
Time: The forenoon of the First of April, 1909

Cast of Characters:
General Mitchener of the Army Council
Brian Murray

Balsquith, Prime Minister
Matthew Arkin

Mrs. Farrell, War Office Charwoman
Annie Golden

An Orderly
Euan Morton

Mrs. Banger, Secretary of the United Anti-Suffragettes
Charlotte Moore

Lady Corinthia Fanshawe, President of the Same
Jayne Houdyshell

 


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WIDOWERS' HOUSES
An Original didactic Realistic Play
By George Bernard Shaw

November 19, 2007

widowers houses cast

Cast of Characters:
Dr. Harry Trench — Jeremy Webb
Cockane — Barrett Foa
Sartorius — Fritz Weaver
Blanche — Kathy Brier
Annie  — Sarah Moon
Lickcheese — Lenny Wolpe
Narrator — Adam Feldman
Host — Jeremy McCarter

Finished in 1892 after various attempts.

Act I: In the Grounds of  a Hotel-Restaurant at Remagen on the Rhine.
Act II: Library in Sartorius' house at Surbiton.
Act III: The Drawing-Room; Evening.

 

Written and set in 1892, Widowers' Houses is a hilarious yet scathing look at the ethics of making money. When a young doctor (Jeremy Webb) learns that his future father-in-law (Fritz Weaver) has earned his wealth by renting slum housing to the poor, the doctor refuses the dirty dowry that awaits him. But he must reconsider his righteous stance when he discovers alarming news about the source of his own income. Don't miss this rare opportunity to see George Bernard Shaw's first play - the one that launched his career as one of the wittiest and most widely produced writers of his generation.


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Pygmalion
By George Bernard Shaw

December 17, 2007

pygmalionCastt

Cast of Characters:
Jennifer Smith—Mrs. Eynsford-Hill
Liz Morton—Clara Eynsford-Hill
Allen McCullough—Bystander, Footman
Matt Cavenaugh—Freddy Eynsford-Hill
Hannah Cabell—Eliza Doolittle
Daniel Jenkins—Colonel Pickering
David Staller—Henry Higgins
Beth Fowler—Mrs. Pearce
Brian Murray—Alfred Doolittle
Marian Seldes—Mrs. Higgins
Michael Riedel—Narrator

Host: David Cote

This robust comedy has become Shaw's most famous and iconographic play. In it, he takes on almost every major social and political issue. This reading is the 22nd of the four-year series, devoted to presenting every play ever written by Shaw. It is also the first of the plays in which producer/director David Staller will appear. Eliza Doolittle will be played by Hannah Cabell, who is preparing to open in the title role of MTC's PUMPGIRL. Marian Seldes will be playing Mrs. Higgins, Brian Murray is taking the role of Alfred Doolittle and Daniel Jenkins will be stepping into Pickering's shoes. Also cast are Broadway favorites Beth Fowler, Matt Cavenaugh and Jennifer Smith. Narrating will be Michael Riedel of the NY POST. The evening's host will be TIME OUT NY's David Cote.