Tonya Pinkins (Caroline, or Change; Jelly's Last Jam) and Tracie Thoms (Drowning Crow, RENT movie and TV's "Cold Case") star in The Fountain Theatre's production of And Her Hair Went With Her, Zina Camblin's play about African-American sisterhood and identity.
Diane Rodriguez directs the six-week Los Angeles run, as part of the
National New Play Network initiative, April 25-June 15 at The Fountain
Theatre. The opening is May 9.
Production notes describe Camblin's And Her Hair Went With Her as a "once hilarious celebration and a serious exploration of
African-American sisterhood and identity. At the heart of the piece is
the friendship between middle-aged Jasmine and single mom Angie, two
women who run a beauty salon. The fun comes in as Pinkins and Thoms don
various roles (and wigs) to also portray all of the salon's customers,
exploring the diversity of black women and comically exposing
stereotypes along the way. Get ready for a wild range of women,
personalities, hairstyles and trends."
And Her Hair Went With Her is supported in part by the National
New Play Network's flagship program, the
"Continued Life of
New Plays Fund,"a cooperative venture designed to insure
that new plays see future productions beyond the initial world premiere.
Partnerships of three theaters receive funds in support of multiple
productions of the same new play.
Playwright Zina Camblin recently completed a year-long residency at The
Juilliard School, under
Marsha Norman and
Christopher Durang, as a part
of the Juilliard Playwriting Fellowship. While at Juilliard, she
has received the Lecomte du Nouy Prize for playwriting. Past
productions and workshops of her other work include:
Memoirs to
Live (Brooklyn Arts Exchange
), Bedroom Stories (Jon Sims
Center for the Performing Arts, San Francisco),
Life's a Drag (UC
San Diego), and
Bunni and Clyde (Know Theater). As a consultant
for NYU's Creative Arts Team, she helped to create several interactive
theater scripts for young audiences. As an assistant writer, she
contributed to
The Jonestown Project, a commission by Berkeley
Repertory Theatre. Zina is a native of Cincinnati and received her
MFA in Acting from U.C. San Diego where she was also a recipient of a San
Diego Playbill Award. As an African American playwright she is
committed to creating unique and strong voices for women of
color.
Tonya Pinkins received a Tony Award for her performance as "Sweet
Anita" in
Jelly's Last Jamand
was twice nominated for her roles in
Caroline, or Change and
Play On. Her additional Broadway credits include
Merrily
We Roll Along, Chronicle of a Death Foretold, The Wild Party and
House of Flowers. She has had a prolific television career,
playing attorney "Livia Frye" on
All My Children in
addition to guest appearances on such shows as
Law & Order,
The Cosby Show, Cold Case, Criminal Mindsand
The Guardian. Tonya's films include
Above the Rim, Romance and Cigarettes and
Enchanted.
Pinkins is an activist for and co-creator of "Operation Z,"
an organization that stands for zero tolerance of violence against women
and children. She is also an educator and has been a guest lecturer
at several universities. She periodically teaches a course she
designed for actors known as "The Actorpreneur Attitude". In
2006, Pinkin's self help book "Get Over Yourself!: How To Drop The
Drama And Claim the Life You Deserve" was released by Hyperion
Publishers.
Tracie Thoms is best known for her role as "Kat Miller" on
TV's
Cold Case. Thoms made her Broadway debut in Regina
Taylor's
Drowning Crow. She has also appeared in
Off-Broadway and regional productions including
Up Against the
Wind (New York Theater Workshop),
The Oedipus Plays (The
Shakespeare Theater),
A Raisin in the Sun (Baltimore CenterStage),
Joe Turner's Come and Gone (Missouri Rep),
The Exonerated
(Off Broadway's The Culture Project) and
The Antigone Project (The
Women's Project). Her films include
The Devil Wears Prada;
the film adaptation of the Broadway musical,
Rent (Critic's Choice
Award nomination); and
Death Proof with
Quentin Tarantino, among
others.
Diane Rodriguez is an Obie-winning actor, writer and director. She is
currently Associate Producer/Director of New Play Production at CTG where
she commissioned and developed new works by
Nilo Cruz, Jose Cruz
Gonzalez, Octavio Solis, Oliver Mayer, Ricardo Bracho, Alina Troyano,
Marga Gomez, Rogelio Martinez, Michael John Garces, Evelina Fernandez and
Cherrie Moraga, among others, and is also co-director of the Mark Taper
Forum's Latino Theatre Initiative. Diane recently directed Nilo
Cruz's
Hortensia and
the Museum of Dreams at Victory
Gardens in
Chicago and Dan Guerrero's
Gaytino at the Kirk Douglas
Theatre. She was nominated for Best Director in Arizona for her
productions of
John Leguizamo's
Spic O Rama and for
Bordertown
by Culture Clash. She most recently directed
Intimate
Apparel by
Lynn Nottage at City Theatre in Pittsburgh and John
Belluso's
Pyretown for Playwrights Arena in Los Angeles. She
has directed productions and workshops for South Coast Repertory, the
Mark Taper Forum, San Jose Repertory, Actors Theatre of Phoenix, Hartford
Stage, the Guadalupe Cultural Center, Cornerstone Theatre, Mixed Blood,
among others. Diane attained widespread recognition as a founding
member of Latins Anonymous and has been recognized by the United States
Congress, State of California, and City of Los Angeles for her
contributions to theater and the Latino Community.
Housed in a charming two-story complex in Hollywood, California, The
Fountain Theatre is one of the most successful intimate theaters in Los
Angeles, providing a nurturing, creative home for multi-ethnic theater
and dance artists. Fountain Theatre productions have won more than
160 awards for all areas of production, performance, and design, and The
Fountain Theatre is the only intimate theater to win the Ovation Award
for Best Production of a Play four times. Fountain projects have
been seen in New York,
Chicago, San Francisco, Seattle, Florida, New
Jersey, Minneapolis and Edinburgh. Recent highlights include the U.S.
Premiere of Athol Fugard's
Victory, the Fountain's Off-Broadway
production of Fugard's
Exits and Entrances in New York, worldwide
readings/productions/tours of
What I Heard About Iraq, the Ovation
Award-winning
Joe Turner's Come and Gone, the three-city tour of
Sonidos Gitanos, and the making of
Sweet Nothing in my Ear
into a television movie, set to air on Sunday, April 20 on CBS-TV's
"Hallmark Hall of Fame."
Set and Costume Design for
And Her Hair Went With Her are by
Sandra Burns;Lighting Design is by
Tony Mulanix;
Sound Design by
Adam Phalen; Assistant Director is
Ben
Bradley; Production Stage Manager is
Elna Kordijan; and
Stephen Sachs produces. Alternates for Tonya Perkins and
Tracie Thoms are
Pam Trotter and
Zina Camblin.
And Her Hair Went With Her opens for press on
May 9, with
performances
Thursdays, Fridays and
Saturdays at 8 pm and
Sundays at 2 pm through June 15. Nine previews are
scheduled on Wednesday, May 7 at 8 pm; Thursdays, May 1 and 8 at 8 pm;
Fridays, April 25 & May 2 at 8 pm; Saturdays, April 26 & May 3 at
8 pm; and Sundays, April 27 & May 4 at 2 pm.Tickets are
$25.00 except opening night (May 9), which is $30.00 and previews
which are $15.00. Students are $18.00 (with ID), and senior tickets
are available for $23.00 on Thursdays and Sundays.
The Fountain
Theatre is located at
5060 Fountain Avenue (at Normandie) in
Los Angeles.Secure, on-site parking is available for
$5.00.The Fountain Theatre is air-conditioned and
wheelchair accessible. For reservations and information, call
(323) 663-1525 or go to
www.FountainTheatre.com.
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