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Seacoast Rep Presents A CHORUS LINE

By: Feb. 18, 2020
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The Seacoast Repertory Theatre's production of A Chorus Line represents a full circle in the career of its director, Bryan Knowlton. He has gone from unsuccessfully auditioning for a role in the musical as a youth to performing in its Broadway revival. Now he returns to Portsmouth two decades later to direct a production of the story which often mirrors his life.

"I am so thrilled to be able to come back to the place where it all started. This show changed my life," Knowlton said.

A Chorus Line, which opens March 6 at the Seacoast Rep, is a defining show of American musical theater. With its story of hopeful dancers baring their souls as they audition for a dream role, A Chorus Line opened at the Shubert Theater in 1975. It won nine Tony awards and a Pulitzer Prize, and held the record for the longest running show in Broadway history when it closed in 1990.

"A Chorus Line was shaped and formed around the heartbeat of a dancer, and 45 years later the show is a powerful as it's ever been," Knowlton said. "At its heart it's a story about people's manifestations of a dream and the dream becoming a reality."

A Chorus Line has unique roots in theater. It emerged from the taped sessions of a group of 19 dancers in New York, candidly discussing their personal and professional lives. The many hours of recordings from multiple sessions were woven into a musical by choreographer Michael Bennett and writers James Kirkwood Jr. and Nicholas Dante.

Marvin Hamlish and Edward Kleban wrote the memorable songs, including "One," "I Hope I Get It," and "What I Did for Love."

Knowlton sees his chance to direct the Seacoast Rep's production as way to connect Bennett's original to a new generation of performers and audiences.

Although he never met Bennett, who died in 1987, Knowlton has worked with several performers from the original Broadway run. In addition to performing in the revival, he toured with the national company of A Chorus Line, played in regional theater shows, and directed an earlier production at the Seacoast Rep before hanging up his dancing shoes in 2014 to become a director and choreographer.

"I'm like one generation away from working with Michael Bennett," Knowlton said. "I feel as though with all of the knowledge and all the experience that I've had with A Chorus Line, I'm allotted the opportunity to pass the torch on to a new generation of people who will also be setting the show some day."

Knowlton's introduction to A Chorus Line came with the Seacoast Rep's production in 1997, directed by Laurie Gamache, a veteran of the original Broadway run. In his early teens, Knowlton tried out for the central role of Paul San Marco, who has an emotionally charged monologue discussing coming out as gay to his parents, and his conflicts over manhood and sexuality.

Knowlton didn't get the part, but he received valuable encouragement from Gamache. "She took me out to lunch one day and said, 'Listen, you can't play Paul right now because you're too young. But one day you will. You could make a living off A Chorus Line.' And I did. My opening night when I went on Broadway, she sent me a bouquet of flowers."

A Chorus Line is the Rep's second mainstage production reflecting a year-long theme of "Hindsight 2020," -- in which theater classics were selected to highlight American historical and cultural trends that led up to now.

The Rep's production will feature some staging elements, such as costuming and the introduction to the opening scene, to give A Chorus Line a fresh look within the boundaries of the original script and Bennett's choreography. But the original story holds up well, reflecting still-current themes and personal challenges with universal relevance.

For example, Knowlton said, "we're not fully evolved yet in 'the gay thing.' There are people who can't tell their parents."

"All these stories are heart-wrenching. That's what's so cool about this show. By the end of the show, because they've all told these personal, adolescent stories, everyone in the audience feels something for at least one person up on that line, or has identified with a person on that line. By the end they're rooting for someone."

Amid a cast drawn from the region and across the country, Seacoast Rep resident artist Jason Faria will play the role of Paul. "I wanted to cast someone that I trusted," Knowlton said. "I'm excited to have the Seacoast see a new side of him that people haven't seen before. It's a very soft Jason."

When not in Portsmouth, Knowlton divides his home between New York and London, where his husband works. He is still pursuing theater dreams - now aiming to direct and choreograph an award-winning Broadway production. But he can take satisfaction in the journey that began at the Seacoast Rep many years ago.

"I am from Portsmouth originally and I grew up doing theater at Seacoast Repertory Theater. For 10 years I cultivated my craft at SRT through extraordinary teachers and mentors and all while manifesting the idea that one day this Portsmouth kid would make it to New York City and make it on Broadway. "

"This show helped me achieve my fullest potential as a dancer," he said. "The part I played, it challenged me, it made me let go of my past and be proud of where I come from and who I am now - a gay man, a husband, a son a brother, an uncle, I'm forever grateful for the opportunities the show provided for me."

A Chorus Line runs March 6-April 4. Show times are generally Thursdays at 7:30, Fridays at 8 pm, Saturdays at 2 pm and 8 pm, and Sundays at 2 pm. Tickets are available through the Seacoast Rep box office at 603-433-4472, or online at Seacoastrep.org/tickets. For student discounts, call the box office. The Seacoast Repertory Theatre's 2020 season is sponsored in part by: Bondgarden Farms, Martingale Wharf, MacEdge, Shilo Farm, and alphagraphics.



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