The New Dixion Place is proud to present The Lost Lounge, a world premiere by Split Britches. The show will take place January 8th, 9th, 15th and 16th at 2pm and 11 pm.
The Lost Lounge is a tribute to the people who hold out and to the places people gather to sift through what is lost and found when delicate memory is confronted with hard progress. It is a dark shadowy lounge populated by some uniquely queer yet recognizably universal characters whose moods swing between pessimism for the future and optimism of the past. All set to the beat of some different drums.
SPLIT BRITCHES was founded by Peggy Shaw and Lois Weaver, together with Deb Margolin
(veterans of Hot Peaches and Spiderwoman Theater), in 1981 at NYC's WOW Cafe. Shaw and
Weaver have become known for "a long line of smart, thrillingly well-executed performance pieces"
(Katherine Dieckmann, The Village Voice) and "tough intellectual and verbal content (John
Hammond, The Native). Peggy Shaw has received Obie Awards for Dress Suits for Hire (1987) and
Menopausal Gentleman (1999). Split Britches won two more Obies for ensemble acting in Belle
Reprieve (1991), a collaboration with Bloolips that was a reversed-gender version of A Streetcar
Named Desire. They created Lesbians Who Kill (1993), a satirical work on violent fantasies; Lust and Comfort (1995), a play set in London in the '50s which addressed sterility and complacency in longterm relationships; and Salad of the Bad Cafe (2000), a collaboration with performance artist Stacy Makishi that was inspired by Carson McCullers' novel and the lives of Tennessee Williams and Yukio Mishima. Shaw and Weaver also create solo shows; You're Just Like My Father, Faith and Dancing: Mapping Femininity And Other Natural Disasters, To My Chagrin and Miss America.
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