MCC Theater announced today that the New York Premiere of John Pollono's Small Engine Repair will now play through December 21, 2013. Keegan Allen, James Badge Dale, playwright/actor John Pollono, and James Ransone star in the production directed by longtime MCC collaborator Jo Bonney (MCC's The Break of Noon, Fat Pig). Small Engine Repair at the Lucille Lortel Theatre (121 Christopher Street, NYC) had its official opening night on November 20, 2013 and was previously extended through December 15, 2013. The show must close December 21st to make way for the next Lortel tenant. For more info, visit www.mcctheater.org.
In
Small Engine Repair, former high school buddies Frank (Pollono), Swaino (Badge Dale) and Packie (Ransone)-now past their prime-meet off-hours one night in Frank's out-of-the-way repair shop under cloudy circumstances that only Frank seems to have a handle on. Enter Chad (Allen), a plugged-in preppy college jock, whose arrival ignites a long-simmering resentment that sets this taut, twisty, comic thriller on its breathless course.
Playwright
John Pollono will appear in
Small Engine Repair alongside "Pretty Little Liars" star
Keegan Allen; film and television actor
James Badge Dale of the international blockbuster World War Z and HBO's Emmy Award-winning miniseries The Pacific, among many others; and
James Ransone, memorably of HBO's "The Wire" and currently seen on the AMC series "Low Winter Sun." Full biographies appear below.
All performances of
Small Engine Repair will offer $30 Under 30 seating, available two hours prior to each curtain, pending availability, for $30 for audience members 29 years old or younger on the day of the performance. Limited advanced $30 Under 30 seating is also offered online for each performance, with tickets available for pick-up at will call with valid ID including proof of age. One ticket per ID. No exceptions. Additionally, pending availability, $20 Student Rush tickets for full-time high school and college students can be purchased 20 minutes before curtain (cash only) with valid ID. General tickets are $69-$89 and are available by visiting
www.mcctheater.org or calling 212-352-3101.
Content Warning:
Small Engine Repair contains graphic language, strong sexual content, and adult situations. May not be appropriate for those under 17.
Small Engine Repair is part of the previously announced
MCC Theater 2013-14 Season which also includes: the Broadway premiere of the
Mary-Louise Parker-starrer The Snow Geese by MCC alum
Sharr White, which is a co-production with Manhattan Theatre Club (MTC)now playing through December 15, 2013 at the
Samuel J. Friedman Theatre; the Off-Broadway premiere of
Robert Askins' Hand to God, directed by
Moritz von Stuelpnagel and starring
Steven Boyer (Modern Terrorism, The Wolf of Wall Street), at the
Lucille Lortel Theatre, beginning onFebruary 20, 2014 with an official opening on March 11, 2014; and the North American premiere of Penelope Skinner's The Village Bike, directed by
Sam Gold (Circle Mirror Transformation), starring Academy Award nominee
Maggie Gyllenhaal (Crazy Heart, The Dark Knight) at the
Lucille Lortel Theatre beginning May 21, 2014 with an official opening on June 9, 2014.
MCC Theater - founded in 1986 as
Manhattan Class Company - is driven by a mission to provoke conversations that have never happened and otherwise never would. Led by Artistic Directors
Robert LuPone,
Bernard Telsey,
Will Cantler, and Executive Director
Blake West, MCC fulfills its mission by producing new work that challenges artists and rewards audiences, and by nurturing the development of playwrights and students through a variety of literary and education programs that enable more than 1,100 New York City high school students to find - and use - their own unique voice each year through the creation and performance of original theater pieces. MCC currently produces its annual season at the
Lucille Lortel Theatre (121 Christopher Street) and will open its own two-theater complex on West 52nd Street and 10th Avenue in 2016. Notable productions include The Other Place; Really Really; The Submission winner of the inaugural Laurents/Hatcher Foundation Award for new American plays; The Pride; Fifty Words; Nixon's Nixon; The Grey Zone; the Tony Award-winning Frozen; the Pulitzer Prize-winning Wit; the re-imagined production of the musical Carrie; and eight plays by Playwright-in-Residence
Neil LaBute, including Fat Pig, Reasons to Be Pretty and last season's hit Reasons to Be Happy.
Photo Credit: Joan Marcus
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