Darren Lee Cole Theatricals presents the Award Winning Krapp, 39 written and performed my Michael Laurence, directed by George Demas. Krapp, 39 will begin performances on Tuesday January 13, opening on Thursday, January 22 through March 15 at the SoHo Playhouse (15 Vandam Street).
Tickets are $29-$39 (All 39-year-olds are invited to attend Krapp, 29 free of charge - ID required) and can be purchased at 212-691-1555 or visit www.sohoplayhouse.com or www.krapp39.com.
Krapp, 39 is a voyeuristic prefiguring of
Samuel Beckett's "Krapp's Last Tape," and a deeply personal window on one man's last moment of youth. Reeling on his 39th birthday, an actor's obsessive identification with Beckett's famous character compels him to examine his own quixotic life and failures. His hilarious and heart breaking self-scrutiny plays out through intimate audio tapes, archival video, raw journal entries, haunted letters, racy confessions, and recorded conversations with the living and the lost.
Originally produced by Cliplight Theater, this production of Krapp, 39 follows an award winning run at The 2008 New York International Fringe Festival and a celebrated extension in the Fringe Encore Series. Krapp, 39 is written and performed by
Michael Laurence. Michael was recently seen on Broadway as Stu Noonan in
Eric Bogosian's Talk Radio. Some other notable credits:
Michael Hollinger's Opus at
Primary Stages, NYC, the 2008 Off-Broadway revival of
Lee Blessing's Two Rooms, Starbuck in The Rainmaker at
Arena Stage, Tooth of Crime and Book of Days at The Signature Theater, NYC, and
Eric Bogosian's Humpty Dumpty at The McCarter Theater.
George Demas is the founding Artistic Director of The Cliplight Theater (
www.cliplighttheater.com). He has directed numerous plays and one-person shows in New York, Los Angeles and internationally since 1994. His most recent project was Marc Palmieri's critically acclaimed Levittown at Axis Theater in NYC. He will be directing The Funeral Play by
Amanda Quaid at The Flea in June 2009.
Michale Laurence (writer/ performer) is the author of the plays The Escape Artist (Tribeca Lab, 1994), The Escape Artist: Virgil's Cauldron (Phil Bosakowski Theater, 1999), and the co-creator (with playwright-performer
Edgar Oliver) of Chop Off Your Ear (Angel Orensanz Foundation, 2000). He also wrote and directed the independent feature film, Escape Artists(Anthology Film Archives' New Filmmakers Series, 2005). He is a founding member of The Cliplight Theater, for which he has directed Jesse McKinley's Quick Bright Things (HERE Arts Center, 1995),
Edgar Oliver's Master of Monstrosities (La MaMa, 1996), I Am a Coffin (La MaMa, 1997), My Green Hades (Phil Bosakowski Theater, 1999), The Drowning Pages (La MaMa, 2000), and Maverick by George Demas (
Culture Project, 2003). He is a graduate of New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, where he studied at The Experimental Theater Wing with Kevin Kuhlke, Mary Overlie, and Ryscard Cieslak, and The Classical Studio with Louis Scheeder and Deloss Brown. After college, he studied directing with Anne Bogart, and worked with theater legends Judith Malina and Joe Chaiken. As an actor, Michael has performed extensively in New York and regional theater, film and television. His most recent credits include the Broadway revival of
Eric Bogosian's Talk Radio (2007), the New York premiere of
Michael Hollinger's Opus (
Primary Stages, 2007), the Off-Broadway revival of Two Rooms by
Lee Blessing (Platform Group, 2008), and Starbuck in The Rainmaker (
Arena Stage). Krapp, 39 won the award for Outstanding Solo Show at the 2008 New York International Fringe Festival.
George Demas (director) is a director, actor, writer, and producer. As Founding Artistic Director of Cliplight Theater Company, he has produced 33 works in New York City over the past 14 years. Some directing credits: the critically acclaimed Krapp, 39 by
Michael Laurence at the 2008 New York International Fringe Festival, Beirut by Alan Bowne at the 12th annual Festival dell'Ville Vesuviane in Herculaneum, Italy, Macbeth and The Merchant of Venice at Tribeca Lab, NYC, We Are Happy to Serve You by Peter Vouras at The Elephant Theater, Los Angeles, Carl the Second and Levittown by Marc Palmieri–both plays published by Dramatists Play Service, Inc., and The
Dorothy Parker Project adapted by
Amanda Quaid at the Women Centerstage Festival produced by The
Culture Project. As an actor, George has appeared in stage venues of all sizes in NYC, including the Off-Broadway hits Orson's Shadow and Theater for a New Audience's Henry VI, directed by Royal Shakespeare Company fellow Barry Kyle. He played a featured role in Heather Whaley's highly-praised stage adaptation of
Dorothy Parker's stories at the Algonquin Hotel's Oak Room. With Axis Company in NYC he has appeared in: Julius Caesar, Not Yet Diagnosed: Nervous, and A Glance at New York(Edinburgh Fringe Festival.) On television, he has appeared as a guest lead on NBC's Law & Order, and done numerous voiceovers for The History Channel, A & E Network, and the animated hit Daria on MTV. He has had principal roles in feature films starring Frank Whaley,
Ethan Hawke, Peter Dinklege,
Josh Hamilton and Anna Thompson. He can next be seen in the feature film
Henry May Long, directed by Randall Sharp. As a writer, George's play Maverick, co-written with Frank Beacham, is an investigation of
The Life of
Orson Welles, and his legendary battles with the commercial forces in Hollywood. George has a BFA from NYU's Tisch School of the Arts.
Darren Lee Cole (Producer/General Manager) has produced and managed plays for 30 years. Producing: MindGame by
Anthony Horowitz (SoHo Playhouse), Killer Joe by
Tracy Letts (Vaudeville Theatre, West End, London; Soho Playhouse; The Theatre, Chicago), Killing Real Estate Women by Gary Bonasorte, Hiding Behind Comets, Charlaton,O'Keefe, Nostalgia Tropical (all NYC) and Laticia at L'espace Marais (Paris). Management credits: Tango Appassionato, directed by
Graciella Daniele, The Big Love, Parting Gestures, Life in a Marital Institution, The Aunts (all NYC), Miracle on 34th Street, Love Letters, Over the Tavern (all Chicago) and For Colored Girls… national tour. Mr. Cole has been the Executive Director of the SoHo Playhouse for the past 4 years where he has produced: Piaf, Room Service, Jamaica Farewell, Belly of a Drunken Piano, Bukowski From Beyond and Simon Lovell's Strange & Unusual Hobbies.
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