Broadway makes its way to Atlanta this fall with the Southeastern premiere of Time Stands Still at Horizon Theatre. Playwright Donald Margulies' latest work about finding happiness in a world that seems to have gone crazy received a Tony nomination for Best Play in 2010. Time Stands Still is the fourth and final production of Horizon's 2012 season and runs September 14 – October 14.
Time Stands Still will feature an all-Atlanta cast led by some of the city's most acclaimed actors.
Carolyn Cook will tackle the central role of Sarah, a photojournalist just home from Iraq after sustaining an injury by a roadside bomb. Carolyn is well known to Atlanta audiences for her roles in Horizon's The Clean House, The Syringa Tree, and Home/Kabul and as an Associate Artist at Georgia Shakespeare for 18 seasons.
"I am an amateur photographer and am excited to play the role of Sarah, a bright ambitious person caught up in some difficult decisions," says Cook. "The play really grapples with the conflicting passions of home and calling and how we balance or don't balance those things."
Horizon favorite
Robin Bloodworth is paired with Cook as Sarah's longtime partner James who works as a foreign correspondent. Bloodworth has graced the Horizon stage several times over the last few seasons having been seen in True Love Lies, End Days, and 13th of Paris. After a highly praised performance in 2011's Superior Donuts,
Chris Kayser returns to Horizon as Sarah's long-time editor and friend Richard. Kayser also gave stand-out performances in Horizon's productions of The Lonesome West, The Drawer Boy, and Quills and has been an Associate Artist at Georgia Shakespeare for 23 seasons. Rounding out the cast, fresh off a summer with Georgia Shakespeare and in her Horizon debut, is
Ann Marie Gideon who Director Lisa Adler calls "one of Atlanta's young rising stars." Gideon plays Mandy, Richard's optimistic and much younger girlfriend.
At the heart of Time Stands Still is Sarah and James' struggle to adapt their decade-long relationship to conventional domesticity after years of a chaotic life on the front lines.
Pulitzer Prize winning playwright
Donald Margulies "gives us a play filled with honesty, humor, and heart that speaks vibrantly to our life and times," says Adler. "He is a brilliant writer who here looks at a moment in our life when time stands still – that moment after which everything from our relationships to our priorities will change. Margulies' smart writing navigates the personal and political landscape of two couples that are negotiating how to live the rest of their lives. What is more important, saving the world or living the best live we can in our world? Time Stands Still is what Horizon does best-a smart, entertaining, and provocative play about our world today."
The show is directed by Lisa Adler with scenic designs by Moriah and Isabel Curley-Clay, lighting design by
Mary Parker, sound design by Thom Jenkins, costume design by Jonida Beqo, prop design by Kate Bidwell LaFoy and stage manager Jude Futral.
Time Stands Still runs September 14 – October 14, 2012. Performances are Wednesday through Friday at 8:00 PM, Saturday at 3:00 PM and 8:30 PM, and Sunday at 5:00 PM. Tickets start at $20. Tickets and information are available at
horizontheatre.com or 404.584.7450.
During the run of Time Stands Still, Horizon will host post-show discussions after select performances for audience members who want to delve deeper into the play's story and themes. Discussion dates and leaders will be announced in early September. For more details contact Manda Wilhite, Patron Relations Manager at 404.523.1477 x115.
Catch a sneak peek of Time Stands Still Tuesday, August 28 at 7:30 PM. The event will include a performance of a few scenes from the upcoming production and discussion with the director, designers, and actors. The sneak peek is a chance to get a behind-the-scenes look at Horizon's production and learn more about what goes into bringing theatre to life.
PLAYWRIGHT
Donald Margulies received the 2000 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for Dinner With Friends. His other plays included
Brooklyn Boy, Sight Unseen, Collected Stories, The Loman Family Picnic, God of Vengeance, The Model Apartment, What's Wrong with this Picture?, and Found a Peanut. He has won a
Lucille Lortel Award, an American Theatre Critics Award, two Los Angeles Drama Critics Awards, two OBIE Awards, two
Dramatists Guild Hull-Warriner Awards, five Drama Desk Award nominations, and two Pulitzer Prize nominations. His works have been performed on and off Broadway; at major theatres across the United States including
South Coast Repertory, Manhattan Theatre Club,
Primary Stages, Actors Theatre of Louisville,
Long Wharf Theatre,
Williamstown Theatre Festival,
Old Globe Theatre,
La Jolla Playhouse, and
Joseph Papp's New York Shakespeare Festival; and in Paris, London, Rome, Madrid, Tel Aviv, Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Sydney, Berlin, Vienna, and many other cities around the world. Mr. Margulies has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, The New York Foundation for the Arts, and the
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. In 2005 he was honored by the American Academy of Arts and Letters with an Award in Literature and by the National Foundation for Jewish Culture with its Cultural Achievement Award, and was the recipient of the 2000
Sidney Kingsley Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Theatre by a playwright. Mr. Margulies is an alumnus of
New Dramatists and serves on the council of The
Dramatists Guild of America. He is an adjunct professor of English and Theatre Studies at Yale University.
Horizon Theatre Company, 1083 Austin Avenue, connects people to each other, the community and the world through professional, contemporary theater. For more information about tickets, group sales, or to receive a season brochure, call 404.584.7450 or visit
horizontheatre.com.
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