News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Photo Flash: First Look at REDWOOD CURTAIN at Bridge Street Theatre

By: Nov. 07, 2017
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

Lanford Wilson's rarely performed masterwork Redwood Curtain will play its final performances Thurs, Fri & Sat, Nov 9, 10 & 11 at 7:30 p.m. and Sun Nov 12 at 2 p.m. at the Bridge Street Theatre. BroadwayWorld has a first look at the cast in action below!

America has always been haunted by the legacy of its involvement in Vietnam. Returning to the States, veterans often found themselves facing a populace either actively hostile or somehow ashamed, eager to erase the memory of a war that the U.S. had not 'won'. Feeling misunderstood, unappreciated, and unable to re-assimilate into 'normal' society, an untold number escaped into a ghostly, feral existence in the Redwood Forests of Northern California, an area that reminded them of the jungles they'd left.

Playwright Lanford Wilson was also haunted by a war whose after-effects he'd dealt with so brilliantly in his 1978 play "5thof July". At the dawn of the 1990s, while teaching a five-week workshop at Humboldt State University in Arcata, California, he encountered these homeless vets almost daily when they'd emerge from the woods to panhandle, scrounge through dumpsters for food, and perform odd jobs. From this seed, Wilson conceived a play called "Redwood Curtain" about a 17-year-old Vietnamese-American piano prodigy, adopted in infancy by a wealthy California family, but obsessed with discovering the identity of her biological father, an American GI who abandoned her and her birth mother in Saigon. She tracks one of the homeless vets into to the forest where he has retreated, convinced that he can provide a crucial link to her past. And in true fairy-tale tradition, the woods in Wilson's "Redwood Curtain" turn out to be full of magic and, ultimately, healing.

"America's long Vietnam Era hangover is just one of the themes Wilson deals with in this powerful and touching piece," says John Sowle, director of the upcoming production of 'Redwood Curtain' at Catskill's Bridge Street Theatre. "All the characters in the play feel lost and helpless in some way. Lyman Fellers just wants to be left alone, to forget the war and everything else but his own immediate needs. Geri, the adoptee, feels a desperate need to know for certain where, and who, she comes from. And Geri's Aunt Geneva, a timber heiress whose family has responsibly and sustainably logged the trees in the forest for generations, is suddenly faced with losing them in a hostile takeover by corporate interests. Surrounded by these massive, ancient redwoods, deeply and immovably rooted in the earth for centuries and now threatened themselves, all three of these characters feel rootless and adrift. And none of them will be able to find their way 'out of the woods' until they can come to grips with, and face, the legacy of the past. This is a deeply warm and human play and we're particularly honored to be presenting it in the two weeks surrounding Veteran's Day."

Appearing in the Bridge Street Theatre production are NYC actors Julie Pham as Geri and Joseph Tisa as Lyman, with local favorite Molly Parker Myers as Geneva. The production is directed by John Sowle and designed by Sowle in collaboration with Catskill artist Harry Matthews. Costumes are by Michelle Rogers and sound is by Carmen Borgia. The Production Stage Manager is Caedmon Holland.

Get advance discount tickets HERE or by calling 800-838-3006. Tickets are also available at the door starting a half hour before the show.

high res photos

Photo Flash: First Look at REDWOOD CURTAIN at Bridge Street Theatre  Image
Joseph Tisa as Lyman and Julie Pham as Geri in Redwood Curtain at Bridge Street Theatre through November 12.

Photo Flash: First Look at REDWOOD CURTAIN at Bridge Street Theatre  Image
Molly Parker Myers as Geneva and Julie Pham as Geri in Redwood Curtain at Bridge Street Theatre through November 12.

Photo Flash: First Look at REDWOOD CURTAIN at Bridge Street Theatre  Image
Joseph Tisa as Lyman and Julie Pham as Geri in Redwood Curtain at Bridge Street Theatre through November 12.

Photo Flash: First Look at REDWOOD CURTAIN at Bridge Street Theatre  Image
Molly Parker Myers as Geneva and Julie Pham as Geri in Redwood Curtain at Bridge Street Theatre through November 12.



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.






Videos