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RAISIN Revival, RESIDENT ALIEN Reading Set for Astoria Performing Arts Center's 2016-17 Season

By: Aug. 25, 2016
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Astoria Performing Arts Center (APAC) presents their 16th season featuring two new works and one musical revival, which both tackle social issues including homelessness, immigration and race relations. "We have a thrilling line up as we enter our 16th season at Astoria Performing Arts Center, and all of the work shares the resonant theme of home.

This season will see the world premiere of Christina Quintana's Evensong and a reading of Katya Stanislavskaya's new musical, Resident Alien. In addition, a revival of Raisin, a musical based on Lorraine Hansberry's groundbreaking play with a book by Robert Nemiroff and Charlotte Zaltzberg, music by Judd Woldin, and lyrics by Robert Brittan will be produced. Through the lenses of homelessness, immigration, and racism,each piece explores the question 'where is home?' As we as a society, and as a nation, search for the answer to this question every day, I am energized to have this season join the conversation," explains Dev Bondarin, Artistic Director of APAC.


Astoria Performing Arts Center 2016-17 Season:

EVENSONG - World Premiere

By Christina Quintana

Directed by David Mendizábal

November 3-19, 2016

Thursdays - Saturdays at 8pm; Saturdays at 2pm

Evensong traces the story of Teofilo "Teo" Aguilar, a young Mexican-American gay man and member of New York City's working homeless population. A Texas transplant with big dreams, Teo works as a bank teller, goes on mediocre online dates, and searches for stability and human connection while navigating the tangled shelter system. Using structural elements of choral music and conventions of theatrical magic, Evensong is a tale of survival, growth, and faith in moments of loneliness and solitude.

A short version of Evensong was featured in INTAR's American Nightcap Series in 2014. The full-length play was featured on HowlRound and the Latina/o Theatre Commons' Presente: A Roll Call of New Latina/o Plays last summer. The fall production at Astoria Performing Arts Center marks the play's world premiere.

RESIDENT ALIEN

A New Musical Reading

Book, music, and lyrics by Katya Stanislavskaya

Directed by Artistic Director Dev Bondarin

February 2017

Resident Alien is an original story of a family of three who are part of the third wave of Soviet and post-Soviet immigration to the U.S. in the 1990s. The family -a professor stuck in the past, a musician willing to adapt, and a teenager whose culture shock coincides with her coming-of-age - represents the full spectrum of the successes and failures of the immigrant experience. Resident Alien is about the personal choices every 'alien' faces in a new world - which parts of himself or herself to retain, and which to jettison in order to succeed.

Resident Alien has been developed at the BMI Lehman Engel Musical Theatre Workshop, New York Theatre Barn, and the Dramatist Guild Fellowship. It received the 2015 Weston New Musical Award, with excerpts performed at the Weston Playhouse (VT) and New York City, and recorded by Sh-K-Boom/Ghostlight Records.

RAISIN

Book by Robert Nemiroff and Charlotte Zaltzberg

Music by Judd Woldin

Lyrics by Robert Brittan

Based on Lorainne Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun

Directed by Artistic Director Dev Bondarin

May 4-27, 2017

Thursdays - Saturdays at 8pm; Saturdays at 2pm

Raisin is a musical adaptation of Lorraine Hansberry's revolutionary A Raisin in the Sun, and has a book co-written by her widower Robert Nemiroff. In segregated 1950s Chicago, Walter Lee Younger and his mother Lena fight over the spending of insurance money. He wants to start a business with friends, while she is eager to move the family out of the south side and into Clybourne Park. Pulsing with the musical beat of the city, Raisin depicts a black family's struggle in the face of change.

Raisin won the 1974 Tony Award for Best Musical, a Grammy Award for Best Score, and a national tour followed. APAC's production will be the first time the show has been fully produced in New York City since its initial Broadway run.

Raisin is presented by special arrangement with SAMUEL FRENCH, INC.


Astoria Performing Arts Center (APAC), a not-for-profit organization founded in 2001. APAC's mission is to bring high-quality theater to Astoria, Queens, and to support local youth and senior citizens.

The critically-acclaimed organization provides quality mainstage musicals and plays to the diverse Western Queens community,. To date, APAC has received 41 New York Innovative Theatre Award nominations and 6 wins (including 3 for Outstanding Musical Production for Merrily We Roll Along, Allegro,Children of Eden, and Ragtime), as well as an Off-Off Broadway Theatre Review Award for Outstanding Production of a Musical (Is There Life After High School?). APAC was also the recipient of the 2012 Caffe Cino Fellowship Award.

APAC offers free annual community programs, including a summer performance camp for children ages 8-13, an after school playwriting program for middle school students, and a performance program for the senior citizens of Queens.

Astoria Performing Arts Center performances and programs take place within the Good Shepherd Church, 30-44 Crescent St (at 30th Road), Astoria, NY 11102. APAC's offices are located within the historic Kaufman Astoria Studios.

For more information on APAC, visit www.apacny.org.




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