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Kirk Douglas Theatre Hosts Two Dale Orlandersmith Plays, STOOP STORIES Closes 7/11

By: Jul. 11, 2010
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With the tough beauty of her writing and the fierce authenticity of her characters, Pulitzer Prize finalist and Obie Award-winning playwright Dael Orlandersmith will bring two of her works to Los Angeles in July and August, the West Coast premiere of her solo performance piece "Stoop Stories" and the world premiere of her new play "Bones." Both plays will be presented as part of DouglasPlus programming at Center Theatre Group's Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City.

"Stoop Stories" is written and performed by Orlandersmith, with Jo Bonney as the consulting director, and will be presented for six performances only, July 7 through 11, 2010.

Orlandersmith's "Bones," which was commissioned by Center Theatre Group, is directed by Gordon Edelstein. It will be presented for nine performances only, July 30 through August 8.

In "Stoop Stories," Orlandersmith transforms herself into characters from the New York neighborhoods of her youth, capturing the diverse voices and rhythms of urban street life. Her characters include, among others, a rocker-turned-junkie, an impressionable young poetess and an elderly Jewish immigrant who recalls the night many years before when he was sitting at a favorite neighbor bar and a down-on-her-luck Billie Holiday sat down next to him.

Peter Marks of the Washington Post said Orlandersmith is a ". . . compelling spinner of city stories.. . ." Tom Avila of Metro Weekly (Washington, D.C.) said, "The tales of her New York are offered in prose, in poetry and in snatches of music and body language that is as expressive as any written word could hope to be."

"Bones," which includes three actors and two onstage jazz musicians, portrays a family - a mother and her grown son and daughter, who are all unable to move forward from a damaged past.

The daughter, who can no longer live with "these ugly things in my head," decides that it is time to confront the family's history and summons the three of them to a meeting. They converge on the neutral ground of a shabby airport hotel. There, Orlandersmith's piercing, evocative story riffs between divergent memories and accusations, and moves with a pulsing drive toward a reckoning, a truth so hard that you can feel it in your bones.

Orlandersmith won an Obie Award for "Beauty's Daughter," which she wrote and starred in at American Place Theatre in 1995. Her play, "Monster," premiered at New York Theatre Workshop in November 1996. "The Gimmick," premiered at the McCarter Theatre and went on to great acclaim at the Long Wharf Theatre and New York Theatre Workshop. "Yellowman" also premiered at the McCarter in a co-production with the Wilma and Long Wharf Theatres. She was a Pulitzer Prize Award finalist in 2002 for "Yellowman," which played at the Fountain Theatre in Los Angeles in 2005. Orlandersmith first performed "Stoop Stories" in 2008 at The Public Theater as part of the Under the Radar Festival, then in 2009 at Studio Theatre in Washington, D.C. and at The Goodman Theatre. Her other plays include "The Blue Album," created in collaboration with David Cale, "Horsedreams" and "Suicide Girlz." Early in her career, she toured extensively with the Nuyorican Poets Café throughout the United States, Europe and Australia.

Tickets for "Stoop Stories" and "Bones" are $20 for each presentation, or $30 when both shows are purchased together. The tickets are available by calling (213) 628-2772, online at www.CenterTheatreGroup.org, in person at the CTG box office at the Ahmanson Theatre or two hours prior to performances at the Kirk Douglas Theatre box office.

For the DouglasPlus presentations, CTG's popular Lounge in the bar area of the theatre's lobby will feature pre-show box dinners, sandwiches and other snacks. For "Stoop Stories," the lobby will be open for an hour after the performances for cocktails and conversation.

DouglasPlus was introduced in the 2008-2009 Kirk Douglas Theatre season with the goal of broadening the spectrum of what CTG can develop, produce and present at the Douglas. It provides an eclectic mix of theatre choices that utilize both traditional and non-traditional performance spaces. Each presentation has a very limited number of performances to be sold at a modest price.

Funding for DouglasPlus is provided by The James Irvine Foundation's Artistic Innovation Fund and the Leading for the Future Initiative, a program of the Nonprofit Finance Fund, funded by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.

The Kirk Douglas Theatre is located at 9820 Washington Blvd., Culver City,

 



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