News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

A BLACK AND WHITE COOKIE to Begin Previews in March at Theater for the New City

By: Feb. 11, 2020
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

A BLACK AND WHITE COOKIE to Begin Previews in March at Theater for the New City  Image

 

Ego Actus Theatre Company today announced that it will present A BLACK AND WHITE COOKIE, a new play about racial harmony, written by Gary Morgenstein and directed by Joan Kane, March 26th through April 12th at Theater for the New City, 155 First Avenue.

In a provocative and poignant drama about hope trumping polarization, an exorbitant rent increase forces Harold Wilson to close his East Village newsstand after 30 years and reluctantly retire to Florida with his niece Carol. Enter Albie Sands, an eccentric homeless 1960s Jewish radical, who persuades Harold to fight the landlord. Overcoming anti-Semitism, Harold and Albie form an unlikely yet powerful friendship to confront corporate greed and their own mortality.

"I love plays that illustrate how people can overcome bad experiences and thrive," says Director Joan Kane. "What I love about this particular play is the way the characters, who have strongly divergent world views, learn to work together. Black American Harold Wilson, a Republican for decades, has had bad experiences with Jewish people. When aged Jewish communist Albie wants to take up the cause of fighting for Harold's rights Harold is taken aback. This odd couple finds faith in each other's strengths and overcome their differences to fight the "system" together."

Gary Morgenstein (playwright) wrote the off-Broadway sci-fi rock musical The Anthem, inspired by the Ayn Rand novella, among other stage works such as You Can't Grow Tomatoes in the Bronx, about a blue-collar Jewish family in the 1960s, and the political romantic dramedy Right on Target.He is currently developing a musical based on the life of King David. Morgenstein is the author of six novels including the critically acclaimed dystopian A Mound Over Hell, set in 2098 following America's defeat by Islam in World War Three as baseball begins its final season ever, which has been hailed as "1984 Meets Shoeless Joe." A Fastball for Freedom, the second book in The Dark Depths series, will be published in 2021. His other novels include Take Me Out to the Ballgame, The Man Who Wanted to Play Center Field for the New York Yankees, Loving Rabbi Thalia Kleinmanand Jesse's Girl (under film option to Project Blue Book star Ksenia Solo's OnFireFilms).

Joan Kane (director) is the founding Artistic Director of Ego Actus and directed I Know What Boys Want at Theatre Row, Six Characters in Search of an Author in Oslo, Norway and Kafka's Belinda in Prague. She also directed both Safe and what do you mean at 59E59 Theaters and in the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, getting four star reviews for each. Joan was awarded Best Director in the 2016 United Solo Festival was named to the Indie Theatre Hall of Fame by nytheatre.com. She has also directed plays and readings for the Lark, Ensemble Studio Theatre, the NY Fringe Festival, Theater for the New City, Urban Stages, Workshop Theater, Nylon Fusion, Abingdon Theatre, Oberon Theatre, the Samuel French Short Play Festival, the Midtown International Festival and The Actors Studio. Joan has an MFA in Directing from The New School, an MS in Museum Education from Bank Street College. She is a member of The New York Madness Company, the Dramatists Guild and the Society of Stage Directors & Choreographers.

The cast features Jim Fromewick, Roslyn Seale, Chris Collins-Pisano, Julie T. Pham, and Mansoor Najee-Ullah.

The production features set design by Mark Marcante, costumes by Janet Mervin, lighting design by Bruce A. Kraemer, sound design by Richard Gross, props by Lytza Colon, and casting by Jennifer Peralta-Ajemian. The Production Stage Manager is Sabrina Morabito and the Social Media Manager is Laura Varela.

Performances are on Wednesdays to Saturdays at 8:00pm, Saturdays and Sundays at 3:00pm. There is no matinee on Saturday, March 28.

Tickets are $20 and can be purchased online at https://www.artful.ly/store/events/19796 - or at the theater's box office prior to each performance.

 



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.



Videos