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PTP Season Includes Plays by Barker and Minghella

By: May. 23, 2007
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The Potomac Theatre Project (PTP) will present its 21st repertory season (and its first in New York) that includes three of Anthony Minghella's early works in an evening entitled Politics of Passion: The Plays of Anthony Minghella, and Howard Barker's provocative No End of Blame -- the story of a political cartoonist whose pen is dipped in poison.

Performances for the repertory season will run from June 20 to July 14, 2007 at The Atlantic Stage 2 (330 W. 16 St.) in NYC. Politics of Passion, directed by PTP's Co-Artistic Director Cheryl Faraone, will begin previews June 20 for a June 26 opening. No End of Blame, directed by PTP's Co-Artistic Director Richard Romagnoli, will begin previews June 23 for a June 27 opening

"In a harsh, relentless ride through history, Playwright Howard Barker's No End of Blame: Scenes of Overcoming explores the role of the artist in society and the struggle for freedom of expression. Starting with a harrowing depiction of war with an attempted rape and a near execution in the Carpathian Mountains during WWI, the protagonist is the brilliant Hungarian political cartoonist Bela Veracek (loosely based on German cartoonist Victor Weisz). Running from Hungary at the end of the First World War to the newly emergent Soviet Union and then to a pre-WWII Britain, he's constantly at odds with the governments he lampoons and the newspapers that admire his talent but expect conformity and absolute submission. No End of Blame is a scathing commentary about the censorship of art," state press notes.

Politics of Passion: The Plays of Anthony Minghella will feature three of the playwright's early works: Cigarettes and Chocolate - "When Gemma suddenly stops talking, her circle of friends is confounded by her silence. What could possibly be her motivation for this radical act of social isolation? Gemma's deliberate silence compels them to funny, painful confessions of love, longing and shame;" Hang Up - "Two phones, one conversation. A couple negotiates the complexities, longings and mistrust in a relationship at a distance.  Sometimes love is a disconnect…;"  Truly, Madly, Deeply (selected scene from the film) -"In the time it takes to hop down a city block, could you reveal who you truly are to the person walking next to you?"

The cast for Politics of Passion includes David Barlow (Horizon/NY Theatre Workshop), Jesse Hooker (Some Men/Second Stage), Cassidy Freeman, James Matthew Ryan, MacLeod Andrews, Colby DiSarro, Michael Doyle, Tara Giordano, Laura Harris, Willie Orbison, Julia Proctor and Lauren Turner Kiel.

The cast for No End of Blame includes Alex Draper (Terrorism/New Group, Get What You Need/Atlantic Theater) as Bela Veracek, Christopher Duva (Voysey Inheritance/Atlantic Theater) as Grigor Gabor, MacLeod Andrews, Bill Army, Megan Byrne, Alex Cranmer, Caitlin Dennis, Lucas Kavner, Jeanne LaSala, Julia Proctor, Peter Schmitz, Alec Strum and Sally Swallow.

The Potomac Theatre Project (aka PTP/NYC), nominated for seven Helen Hayes Awards, continues to redefine political theatre for the 21st century with an annual month long repertory season, which will now be in NYC. The company's mandate is the presentation of highly theatrical and thought-provoking work of contemporary social and cultural relevance. In its 20 seasons the voices of PTP's writers have addressed art, pornography, AIDS, homelessness, censorship, totalitarianism, apartheid and gender wars.

The production team consists of Aaron Gensler (Set Design), Matt Nielsen & Lucas Kavner (Sound Design), Hallie Zieselman (Lighting & Projection Design) and Andrew Dickey (Production Manager). Costume Design for Politics by Frances Bohar and Blame by Catherine Vigne. Production Stage Manager for Politics is Elizabeth Kegley and Blame is Kristen Deane.

Tickets are $18 and can be purchased by calling 1-800-838-3006 or visiting www.brownpapertickets.com. For more information on the company, visit www.potomactheatreproject.org.

Photo by Stan Barouh- Alex Draper as Bela Veracek in No End of Blame




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