LONG BEACH, CA - February 16, 2011 - Four-time Emmy award-winning actress Michael Learned and veteran actor Granville Van Dusen find unexpected love in Kathleen Clark's perceptively witty and poignant play, Southern Comforts, directed by Jules Aaron. The four-week run opens March 18 at International City Theatre in the Long Beach Performing Arts Center. Low-priced previews take place on March 15, 16 and 17.
Called a "delightful, even sneakily sexy, romance" by The New York Times, Southern Comforts follows the development of a December-December relationship between a feisty widow and a crusty widower who find love late in life. Recovering from the loss of their respective spouses, the saucy Southern belle who is used to getting her own way and the retired, set-in-his-ways Yankee find in each other what they least expected: a second chance at love.
Playwright Kathleen Clark noted in an interview, "When it comes to love, sometimes the hardest part is not finding someone, but learning how to live with that person once you do."
In that vein, Southern Comforts examines the intimate working of relationships, exploring the challenges that confront every couple, young and old alike. Are they getting together for the right reasons? Do they have enough in common to make a relationship last? And what about sex? The twists and turns of love know no age, but Gus (Van Dusen) and Amanda (Learned) find a way into each other's hearts...and into ours.
Southern Comforts is based on the experiences of Clark's mother and grandmother, both of whom moved from Tennessee to New Jersey where they found the men of their dreams. A finalist for the prestigious Susan Smith Blackburn Prize, it premiered at New York's Primary Stages in 2006 and was produced at the Coconut Grove Playhouse with HAl Holbrook and Dixie Carter.
Four-time Emmy award-winning Michael Learned is best known for her role as Olivia Walton on the CBS family drama series The Waltons. Learned also starred as Nurse Mary Benjamin in the hospital drama Nurse that ran for two seasons on CBS, and in Arthur Miller's television adaptation of All My Sons. Other television appearances include Gunsmoke, Police Story, St. Elsewhere, Murder She Wrote, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, All My Children, One Life to Live, Scrubs, and Cold Case. She recently concluded a guest appearance on the ABC daytime drama General Hospital portraying terminally ill cancer patient Shirley Smith. Feature films include For the Love of Mary, Life During Wartime, Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story, and Power directed by Sidney Lumet. Her long list of stage credits includes Broadway and Off Broadway: All Over, The Best Man, The Sisters Rosensweig, The Time of the Cuckoo, Loves of Anatol and The Three Sisters; National Tours: Three Tall Women by Edward Albee, On Golden Pond (with Tom Bosley), and Love Letters; and Regional Theater: Woman in Mind, Hapgood, The Merchant of Venice, A Delicate Balance and Private Lives, directed by Francis Ford Coppola (A.C.T.); Elizabeth the Queen (Folger Shakespeare Festival); Ride Down Mt. Morgan (Williamstown); Looking for Normal (Geffen Playhouse); Mary Stuart, The Importance of Being Earnest, Picnic (Ahmanson); Antony and Cleopatra, Dancing at Lughansa (San Diego's Old Globe); Steel Magnolias (La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts) among many others. She performed the title role in Driving Miss Daisy in Sarnia, Canada this summer, a part she has played several times in theaters throughout the U.S. including at La Mirada here in Southern California. In addition to her Emmys, she is the recipient of the People's Choice Award and four Golden Globe nominations.
A forty-year veteran of stage, screen, and television, Granville Van Dusen has starred in over 200 TV shows and has narrated close to a thousand TV and radio commercials, as well as voicing the role of Race Bannon in the cartoon classic Jonny Quest. He began his career at the Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis, where he spent five seasons and was honored to work with Sir Tyrone Guthrie himself. More recent theater credits include Managing Maxine at the Asolo Theater in Sarasota; A Delicate Balance with Susan Clark and Bonnie Franklin at the Rubicon Theatre in Ventura; and Darwin in Malibu at the Falcon Theatre in Burbank, for which he received an Ovation nomination. He starred with Len Cariou in the Manitoba Theatre Company's production of The Dresser; in Golf with Alan Shepard with Jack Klugman and Charles Durning; and in Lewis Black's One Slight Hitch with Michael Learned. He played Scar in The Lion King at the Pantages. At the Matrix Theatre, he performed in Waiting for Godot, The Homecoming, Dangerous Corner, Habeas Corpus and in Honour with Susan Sullivan. He appeared in San Diego at The Old Globe Theatre in Private Lives. His critically acclaimed one-man show The Memoirs of Abraham Lincoln continues to tour nationwide, and he has won Drama-Logue Awards for Otherwise Engaged and for Undiscovered Country at the Mark Taper Forum.
Playwright Kathleen Clark has twice been selected to have her plays presented at the Eugene O'Neill Playwrights Conference. In addition to Southern Comforts, her other plays include The Bewitching Hour, Banner, and Secrets of a Soccer Mom.
The set design for Southern Comforts is by Kurt Boetcher; lighting design is by Elizabeth Harper; costume design is by Kim DeShazo; sound design is by Max Kinberg; hair and wigs are by Anthony Gagliardi; and props are by Patty and Gordon Briles.
International City Theatre is Long Beach's Resident Professional Theater at the Long Beach Performing Arts Center and the recipient of the Margaret Harford Award from the Los Angeles Drama Critics' Circle for "Sustained Excellence in Theater." ICT's 2011 Season of Romantic Adventures opened in January with Loving Repeating: A Musical of Gertrude Stein by Frank Galati and Stephen Flaherty. Following Southern Comforts, the season will continue with productions of The Old Settler by John Henry Redwood; Private Lives by Noël Coward; and The Robber Bridegroom by Alfred Uhry and Robert Waldman.
Southern Comforts will run Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays @ 8 pm and Sundays @ 2 pm, March 18 through April 10. Tickets are $37 on Thursdays and $44 on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, except opening night which is $55 and includes a reception with the actors following the performance. Preview performances take place on Tuesday, March 15; Wednesday, March 16; and Thursday, March 17 @ 8 pm. Preview tickets are $29.
International City Theatre is located in the Long Beach Performing Arts Center at 300 E. Ocean Boulevard in Long Beach. For reservations and information, call the ICT Box Office at (562) 436-4610 or go to www.InternationalCityTheatre.org.
Details for Calendar Listings
"SOUTHERN COMFORTS"
WHAT:
Southern Comforts - Four-time Emmy award-winning actress Michael Learned and veteran actor Granville Van Dusen find unexpected love in Kathleen Clark's perceptively witty and poignant play. Called a "delightful, even sneakily sexy, romance" by The New York Times, Southern Comforts follows the development of a December-December relationship between a feisty widow and a crusty widower who find love late in life.
WHO:
Written by Kathleen Clark
Directed by Jules Aaron
Starring Michael Learned and Granville Van Dusen
Presented by International City Theatre, caryn desai, artistic director/producer
WHEN:
Previews: March 15, 16, 17 at 8 pm
Performances: March 18 through April 10
Tuesday at 8 pm: March 15 (preview)
Wednesday at 8 pm: March 16 (preview)
Thursdays at 8 pm: March 17 (preview), 24, 31; April 7
Fridays at 8 pm: March 18 (Opening Night), 25; April 1, 8
Saturdays at 8 pm: March 19, 26; April 2, 9
Sundays at 2 pm: March 20, 27; April 3, 10
WHERE:
INTERNATIONAL CITY THEATRE
Long Beach Performing Arts Center
300 East Ocean Blvd.
Long Beach CA 90802
HOW:
(562) 436-4610 orwww.InternationalCityTheatre.org
TICKETS:
Opening Night: $55 (includes reception following the performance)
Friday, Saturday, Sunday: $44
Thursday: $37
Previews: $29
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