Stage Left Theatre's World Premiere of Here Where It's Safe written by ensemble playwright M.E.H. Lewis and directed by ensemble member Scott Bishop, will play its final show on April 3rd.
THE PLAY
Zach and Abbie are an American couple desperate to have a child. Beena is a 19 year old Indian woman struggling to escape an abusive marriage and provide for her son. When financial concerns convince Abbie to hire a surrogate in India, the two women's lives become tangled with surprising and dangerous consequences. Here Where it's Safe is a new play by award-winning playwright and Stage Left ensemble member M.E.H. Lewis (Burying the Bones, Fellow Travellers) that asks what comes of the choices we make, and what happens when we run out of choices.
THE DEBATE
In keeping with Stage Left's mission of raising social and political debate, Here Where It's Safe will spark discussion about a number of topics, including questions of exploitation and outsourcing, as well as the Catholic Church's position on surrogacy and other reproductive issues. Immediately following each Sunday performance we will host a panel discussion on these issues with a variety of community representatives to be announced. We have also begun using online social networking and our website to extend the debate beyond the confines of the theatre and the performance.
TICKETS, DATES & INFORMATION
Tickets may be purchased by calling the box office at 773.883.8830 or online at www.stagelefttheatre.com. Stage Left Theatre is located at 3408 N. Sheffield Ave. in Chicago. Street, metered and paid lot parking is available. The theatre is handicapped and CTA accessible via the Belmont El (Red & Brown) & Addison El (Red) stops.
THE PEOPLE
M.E.H. Lewis (Playwright) is the internationally produced author of the award-winning plays Burying the Bones (Stage Left, 2004, Jeff Nominee), Fellow Travellers (Stage Left, 2006, Jeff Award winner for Best New Work) and Creole (InFu-sion Theatre, 2007). Ms. Lewis is a two-time Illinois Arts Council Fellow, and winner of the Julie Harris Competition, the Dayton Playhouse Competition, the Tremain Fellowship, and the PEN Trans-Atlantic Award. In addition to Here Where It's Safe, her most recent work includes Musica Mundana, workshopped with InFusion Theatre, Small World, commissioned by Solano Theatre, and A House in Haifa, commissioned by Next Theatre. She is a resident playwright at Chicago Dramatists, a founding member of the Stone Soup Collective, and a member of the Dramatists Guild.
Scott Bishop (director) is a Chicago-based theatre teacher and director. His recent directing credits include Safe in LeapFest 6, The Deer And The Antelope Play at Riverfront Theatre in Rockford, IL, Arsenic And Old Lace at SummerPlace Theatre, How Gertrude Stormed The Philosophers Club at Bailiwick Theatre, Everything In 150 Pages for the n.u.f.a.n. Ensemble, and a staged reading of Why'd You Make Me Wear That Joe? for the International Festival of Women Playwrights. He has served as Theatre Director at three high schools, where he has directed productions of One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, A Raisin In The Sun, and The Odd Couple among many others. With the aid of a Target Community Giving Grant, in 2004 Scott established an outreach program through which under-served youth were able to participate in creative drama workshops. He has also worked as assistant director on productions at the Griffin Theatre Company and Victory Gardens Theatre in Chicago, as well as South Coast Repertory Theatre, in Costa Mesa, CA. Scott holds an M.A. in Theatre from Northwestern University.
The cast includes SLT ensemble members Cat Dean (Abbie), Cory Krebsbach (Zach), and Kate Black (Jem), as well as Mouzam Makkar (Beena), and Anita Chandwaney (Uma).
The staff includes SLT ensemble members Adam Kohn (sound design), Mark Pracht (assistant direction) and Zev Valancy (dramaturgy), with guest artists Jazzma Pryor (stage management), Elizabeth Flauto (costume design), William Anderson (scenic design), Jessica Harpenau (lighting design), Heather Ho (properties design), and Alex Braatz (technical direction). Artistic Director Vance Smith will produce.
ABOUT STAGE LEFT
Founded in 1982, Stage Left Theatre is committed to nurturing voices for the American theatre by developing and producing plays that raise debate and challenge perspectives on political and social issues. Through a full subscription season and Downstage Left, one of Chicago's most prolific new play development programs, Stage Left strives to bring high-quality new work and world premieres to the Chicago stage. Over the last seven years, the Joseph Jefferson Committee has honored Stage Left world premieres with six nominations and three awards for Best New Work.
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