News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Photo Flash: Hampton Theatre's NOVEMBER

By: Oct. 22, 2016
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

"November," David Mamet's hilarious and scathingly satirical take on American presidential politics, is the first play of the Hampton Theatre Company's 2016-2017 season, opened on October 20, 2016 at the Quogue Community Hall and runs through November 6.

New this season, the HTC is offering $15 discount tickets for audience members 35 and under, and an additional matinee performance on the final weekend of the production, on Saturday, November 5, at 2:30 p.m., prior to the regular 8 p.m. performance that evening.

"November" drops in on first-term U.S. President Charles Smith in the final week before election day. While his party affiliation is neither clear nor relevant, one thing seems certain: this egomaniacal and irredeemably venal politician has no chance of winning reelection. Approval ratings near zero and abandoned by his reelection committee, he has run out of money and his wife is preparing to move out of the White House.

Still, President Smith isn't ready to give up just yet, and he sees a glimmer of hope when the Turkey Representative comes calling at the White House seeking the traditional Presidential pardon of the Thanksgiving turkey. But in order to make the biggest deal of his presidency, Chuck will need all the help he can get from his chief of staff, Archer Brown; his brilliant speechwriter, Clarice Bernstein, and Chief Dwight Grackle of the Micmac Nation.

Premiering on Broadway in 2008, "November" remains eerily relevant in this 2016 election season. With Mamet's trademark no-holds-barred, politically incorrect and profanity laden style, the laugh-out-loud comedy is a caustic characterization of the egomania and moral elasticity that infect too many politicians, and the kind of power-madness that's a danger in any elected official.

In a review of the Broadway production in The Guardian (London), "November" was classified as "a savage farce," with David Mamet "in contention for the title of America's best living playwright." USA Today called the play "punchline packed," while The Times (London) described it as "a raucous comedy."

In a review in The New Yorker, John Lahr wrote: "At once a barbarian, a bully, and an idiot ... Smith brings oxygen to Mamet's rhetorical brilliance-so much so that Mamet seems almost giddy with pleasure as he makes his cretinous creation squirm."

The cast of "November" features four Hampton Theatre Company veterans and one newcomer. Playing Charles Smith is longtime HTC company member Andrew Botsford, last seen as Vanya in the 2016 production of "Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike." Matthew Conlon, last on the HTC stage in "Clybourne Park" and "Hay Fever" in 2015, has the role of chief of staff Archer Brown.

Rebecca Edana, who played, most recently, Bella in the HTC's 2016 production of "Lost in Yonkers," is head speechwriter Clarice Bernstein. Matthew O'Connor, last on the Quogue stage in HTC's "Bus Stop" in 2008, plays the Turkey Representative, and newcomer Rob Byrnes has the role of Dwight Grackle.

Playwright David Mamet is a prolific and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, author, screenwriter and director. As a playwright he is perhaps best known for Glengarry Glen Ross (produced by the Hampton Theatre Company in 2008). The 1982 hit won him the Pulitzer Prize for drama as well as the New York Drama Critics Circle Award, and he later adapted the play for the big screen, garnering an Academy Award nomination.

Other plays include "American Buffalo," "Oleanna," "Sexual Perversity in Chicago," "Duck Variations," "Boston Marriage," "Race" and "The Anarchist," among others. He has also written screenplays for more than 20 films.

His work is characterized by dark themes played out by often desperate characters who veer from the truth to manipulate others for their own selfish ends. Mamet's trademark rapid-fire dialogue is distinguished by its colloquial diction, interruptions and thick swarms of obscenities, and is written with a precise rhythm in mind.

HTC Artistic Director Diana Marbury directs. Set design is by Sean Marbury; lighting design by Sebastian Paczynski; and costumes by Teresa Lebrun.

"November" runs at the Quogue Community Hall from October 20 through November 6, 2016 with shows on Thursdays and Fridays at 7, Saturdays at 8 and Sundays at 2:30. There will also be an additional matinee performance of "November" on Saturday, November 5, at 2:30 p.m.

The Hampton Theatre Company will again be offering special dinner and theater packages in collaboration with the Hampton Bays, and Quogue libraries. Information about the dinner and theater packages is available at www.hamptontheatre.org, or through the libraries.

To reserve tickets, visit www.hamptontheatre.org, or call OvationTix at 1-866-811-4111.

Photo Credit: Tom Kochie



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.






Videos