Actor Khalil Kain, who is known for edgy character roles on film and for the TV series "Girlfriends," will make his stage directing debut with Sam Shepard's "Buried Child," to be presented by Aaron Davis Hall as an Equity LORT/LOA production from July 11 to August 3. The production uses a multi-racial cast to reinterpret the underlying symbols of Shepard's landmark play, in which the misfortunes of a Midwestern farming family reveal both the demise and endurance of the American Dream.
"Buried Child" rocketed Sam Shepard into the leading cohort of American Playwrights when it was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1979, the first ever for an Off-Broadway production. The play had been commissioned by New York's Theater for the New City. After an exploratory production in San Francisco's Magic Theater, it opened at Theater for the New City with a New York cast in October 1978. The production moved Off-Broadway to the Theatre De Lys (now the Lucille Lortel Theater) and received the Pulitzer Prize. Since the late 1960's, Shepard had been regard as New York's leading counter-culture playwright; this raised him to national fame and attention. A Steppenwolf production of the play was presented on Broadway in 1996.The play is a macabre family drama depicting a once-prosperous Illinois farming family with a dark, terrible secret. Years ago Tilden, the eldest son of Dodge and Halie, committed incest with his mother. She gave birth to a baby boy, which Dodge drowned and buried in the field behind their farmhouse. Now the family is crippled: Dodge is drinking himself to death; Tilden is a psychic cripple; his brother, Bradley, is physically maimed; another brother has died while in military service and the mother, Halie, is sleeping with the local minister. Into this morass appears Vince, the prodigal son of Tilden, with his girlfriend, Shelly. Initially, he is not recognized and she is ignored; ultimately, their presence ignites a sort of exorcism in which the revelation of the family's crimes guarantees its survival and its continuity.WHERE AND WHEN:
July 11 to August 3, 2013
Aaron Davis Hall, 135th Street and Convent Avenue on the campus of City College of New York
Presented by Aaron Davis Hall.
$25 general admission; $10 seniors and students (with ID)
Box office (212) 650-6900, www.adhatccny.org
Previews July 11 & 12 (7:00 PM) 13 (2:00 & 7:00 PM). Opens July 18. Runs through August 3 on the following schedule:
Thursdays and Fridays at 7:00 PM, Saturdays at 2:00 PM and 7:00 PM
Subways: #1 to 137th Street; C train to 135th Street or A, D to 145th Street.
Free parking is available in the South Campus Parking Lot (enter at 133rd Street and Convent Ave.).
Runs 2:15 with intermission. Critics are invited on or after July 13 at 2:00 PM.
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