News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Walke, Sell et al. Lead LOOK BACK IN ANGER at The Seeing Place Theater, 10/13-10/30

By: Aug. 06, 2010
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

John Osborne's Look Back In Anger is a ground-breaking, classic story of two grief-stricken individuals learning how to love one another. Presented by The Seeing Place Theater October 13 - 30, Wed-Sat @ 8pm, Sat Matinees @ 2pm at ATA's Sargent Theater, 314 West 54th St. 4th floor. $18 General Admission, $15 Students & Seniors. For tickets, please visit www.smarttix.com or call 212-868-4444

Look Back In Anger is set in 1956. Jimmy Porter (Brandon Walker), a well-educated man, ekes out a living running a sweet stall and spends his free time railing against the class system, which he believes has sucked the life out of living. His wife, Alison (Anna Marie Sell) is pregnant, but has not yet broken the news to Jimmy. Their neighbor, Cliff (Adam Reich), has developed a growing interest in Alison and spends most of his time in their attic flat in the English Midlands. Alison invites her childhood friend, Helena (Keenan Caldwell), to stay with them even though Jimmy can't stand her.

Jimmy knows something is wrong and, although Cliff does his best to keep the peace, tensions in the household escalate. As Alison tries to decide what to do about the baby, Helena enlists the help of the Alison's family-and even the church-to pry her loose from Jimmy, who steps further into his role as the original Angry Young Man every minute. Alison's father (Rick Delaney) comes to take his daughter away while Jimmy is out of town, comforting his surrogate mother on her deathbed. Jimmy comes home to find Helena waiting with baited breath, and all hell breaks loose.

The Seeing Place is a base for disciplined artists to develop theater we all want to believe in. We are working to create a pure ensemble, committed to forceful storytelling that discovers and expresses real behavior in this day and age. Beginning in the fall of 2009, The Seeing Place has presented Keith Bunin's The Credeaux Canvas, Hogan Gorman's Hot Cripple, the World Premiere of Brandon Walker's When We Have Gone Astray, and Clifford Odets' Waiting for Lefty.

For more information about this production, please visit http://www.seeingplacetheater.com/

 

 

 

 



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.



Videos