News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Theatrical Outfit Insludes THE GUYS, HARABEL & Moe in 2013-2014 Season

By: Jun. 21, 2013
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

Staging real stories. Having real discussions.
Subscribe. Join the conversation.
Let's imagine the possibilities.
Jasmine Guy and Brian Kurlander in

THE GUYS
by Anne Nelson
September 11 - October 6, 2013

Directed by Elisa Carlson

Based on playwright Nelson's own story, we meet Joan, an editor, as she receives an unexpected phone call from Nick, the fire captain. He requests her help on composing the many eulogies he must deliver at memorial services for the men he lost on 9/11. As the afternoon wanes, a friendship grows while the two navigate the emotional landscape of grief, drawing on humor and the bonds of a common humanity.
"A courageous and riveting play that tackles the horror of September 11th with an intimacy that's both unsettling and healing." (Christian Science Monitor).

HARABEL by Jonida Beqo

October 23 - November 10, 2013
Directed by Justin Anderson

This riveting one-woman narrative thrills and inspires. Jonida Beqo--known on the slam poetry scene as Gypsee Yo--boasts international awards and critical praise. Featured on NPR's "Snap Judgment" and at Lincoln Center's Out of Doors Series, Beqo, the 2008 Southern Queen of Slam, intertwines theatre, dance and poetry to tell her dynamic personal journey from Albanian refugee to American resident, illuminating the universal truths that link us one to the other and to the joy of embracing life at all costs.

"We've had standing ovations before but never in the middle of the performance."(Savannah's Creative Loafing).

GIFTS OF THE MAGI*
by Mark St. Germain
November 27 - December 22, 2013
Directed by Heidi Cline McKerley; Music Direction by S. Renee Clark

Back by popular demand, the heartwarming Holiday musical filled with goodness, love and unselfish spirit, The Gifts of the Magi returns next season with all its trimmings in place. Based on two of O. Henry's classic short stories, "The Gift of the Magi" and "The Cop and the Anthem", it's Christmas in New York City, 1904, and Della and Jim, a poor newlywed couple, mutually sacrifice their most precious possessions in order to buy each other a Christmas present while ne'er-do-well Soapy Smith simply hankers to get arrested so he can spend the Holiday in a cozy cell. Wrapped in tuneful songs and neatly tied together by a newsboy narrator this tale will fill your heart with the joy of Christmas. Or in the merry words of Atlanta INTown: "The show is a small gem-see it."

*not included in subscription package

THE BEST OF ENEMIES
by Mark St. Germain
January 29 - February 23, 2014

Directed by Mira Hirsch

Inspired by Osha Gray Davidson's book of the same name and based on a true story, Mark St. Germain's new drama, The Best of Enemies reveals a universal truth: all people, no matter their differences, are capable of change. Amidst their incendiary words of prejudice and fear, Ann, a civil rights activist, and C.P., an Exalted Cyclops of the KKK, forge an alliance based in respect and trust in an honest-to-goodness, modern-day parable of transformation and triumph for civil rights.

"...One of the most important historical plays about America to ever reach the stage." (New York Times)

DIVIDING THE ESTATE
by Horton Foote
April 2 - 27, 2014

Directed by Tom Key

Old resentments and sibling rivalries bubble to the surface as the hilariously dysfunctional Gordon family of Harrison, Texas, spar to claim the biggest piece of the pie in the wildly funny, Tony-nominated Dividing the Estate by Pulitzer Prize and Oscar-winning Horton Foote. Matriarch StElla Gordon keeps her aging and money-strapped children on a short financial leash with no plans to split her 100-year old estate. But the kids have other ideas.

The NY Daily News declares, "Dividing the Estate goes for laughs and succeeds, and at the same time comments on more sweeping notions of avarice, entitlement and carpet-bagging karma." Featuring some of Atlanta's finest and most beloved talent, Dividing the Estate is "good news for theatergoers" (New York Times.)



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.






Videos