Hartford Stage Artistic Director Darko Tresnjak and Managing Director Michael Stotts announced today the cast and creative team for August Wilson's The Piano Lesson, directed by Jade King Carroll, who helmed our critically-acclaimed production of Having Our Say: The Delaney Sisters' First 100 Years last spring.
The cast features Roscoe Orman, a 42-year veteran of "Sesame Street," and Cleavant Derricks, who won the Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical for the original production of Dreamgirls.
Associate Artistic Director ElizaBeth Williamson said, "We're delighted to have Jade King Carroll return to Hartford Stage to direct this wonderful cast in one of the greatest plays of the 20th Century."
Orman playEd Gordon Robinson, one of the central human characters on "Sesame Street" from 1974-2016. He won the AUDELCO Award for Excellence in African-American Theatre for Woodie King's Do Lord Remember Me, and he has been nominated for that award four other times for such Off-Broadway productions asPower Play; Massinissa and the Tragedy of the House of Thunder;and The Fabulous Miss Marie. Other appearances include Fenceson Broadway and more than 70 guest spots on TV, including recurring roles on "The Wire" and "All My Children." He will play Doaker in The Piano Lesson.
Derricks, one of the stars of the long-running cult favorite "Sliders" on Fox TV, also has appeared on Broadway in Bob Fosse's Big Deal(Tony Award nomination), Your Arm's Too Short to Box with God, Brooklyn and When Hell Freezes Over, I'll Skate. His films includeMoscow on the Hudson and Wes Craven's Carnival of Souls. In addition to more than 30 guest appearances on TV, he has been a regular on five series, including "Thea," "Good Sports" and "Whoops!" He will play Wining Boy in The Piano Lesson.
The cast also includes Toccarra Cash (The Fabulous Miss MarieOff-Broadway) as Grace; Clifton Duncan (The Good Person of Szechwan at The Public Theatre) as Boy Willie; Galen Kane (This Land Was Made at Yale School of Drama) as Lymon; Christina Acosta Robinson (Seven Guitars at Two River Theater) as Berniece; Daniel Morgan Shelley (Hamlet at Classic Stage Company) as Avery; and Elise Taylor, 10, as Maretha. Taylor is a student at Duggan Elementary School in Waterbury. (Tyra Harris, 10, of Bristol will understudy the role of Maretha. Tyra is a three-year veteran of Hartford Stage's A Christmas Carol-A Ghost Story of Christmas.)
In August Wilson's powerful Pulitzer Prize-winning drama, a fractured family comes together to consider the legacy of their father, as his grown son and daughter argue over the heirloom he left behind. A ghost story with traditional African-American songs, The Piano Lesson exposes the family's struggles as they attempt to exorcise the demons of the past and bring forth a new hope for the future.
The Piano Lesson represents the 1930s decade in Wilson's "The Pittsburgh Cycle" of 10 plays, each one representing African-American life over a decade in the twentieth century. Other titles include Fences, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, Two Trains Runningand Seven Guitars.
In addition to the Hartford Stage/Long Wharf Theatre production ofHaving Our Say, Director Carroll's credits include Trouble in Mind at Two River Theater; The Piano Lesson at The McCarter Theatre; andThe Whipping Man and Ma Rainey's Black Bottom at Portland Stage.
In addition to Carroll, the creative team includes set design by Alexis Distler (Having Our Say at Hartford Stage); costume design by Toni-Leslie James (Amazing Grace on Broadway); lighting design byYork Kennedy (Rear Window at Hartford Stage); sound design byKarin Graybash (Having Our Say at Hartford Stage); and dramaturgy by Fiona Kyle (The Shape She Makes at A.R.T.).
Baikida Carroll, who composed original music for Having Our Sayfor the McCarter Theatre, Hartford Stage and Long Wharf Theatre, is the composer for 'Piano' as well.
Lori Ann Zepp (The Body of an American at Hartford Stage) will serve as production stage manager.
Sponsors
The Production Sponsor for August Wilson's The Piano Lesson is The Saunders Foundation. Production support is provided by Federman, Lally & Remis.
The 2016-17 Season also is sponsored by the Greater Hartford Arts Council and the Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development.
Special Dates
Previews begin at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, October 13
Opening Night: 8 p.m. Friday, October 21
Closes: 2 p.m. Sunday, November 13
Tickets & Performances
Tue, Wed, Thu, Sun at 7:30 p.m.-Fri, Sat at 8 p.m.-Sat, Sun at 2 p.m.
Wed matinee at 2 p.m. on November 9 only
Weekly schedules vary. For details, visit www.hartfordstage.org.
Tickets for all shows start at $25. Student tickets: $20. For group discounts (10 or more), contact Theresa MacNaughton at 860-520-7114.
For all other tickets, please call the Hartford Stage box office at 860-527-5151 or visit www.hartfordstage.org.
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