News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Karin Conrood Slated to Direct NY Premiere of I KILLED MY MOTHER, 2/10

By: Jan. 10, 2012
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.

Following its acclaimed U.S. premiere in Chicago, I KILLED MY MOTHER, a new play by celebrated Romanian playwright András Visky, will make its New York premiere at La Mama E.T.C. this winter in a production staged by director Karin Coonrod. From February 10 - March 4, Chicago's Theatre Y will bring the lyrical tale of an orphaned Romanian teenager’s personal odyssey to LaMaMa as a highlight of the downtown institution's 50th anniversary season.

Set in Romania, the two-person play tells the story of Bernadette, a girl who grows up in a series of Romanian orphanages after being abandoned by her mother. With the help of her friend Clip, she learns to transcend the incessant brutality of her surroundings and turn her back on parasitic relationships, even the maternal bond, in order to realize her own extraordinary identity.

Coonrod has won praise for her innovative re-imaginings of classic plays for The Public Theatre, New York Shakespeare Festival, and Theatre for a New Audience. She most recently directed the acclaimed production of William Shakespeare’s "Love's Labor's Lost" at The Public Theater.

I KILLED MY MOTHER is a fiction based on the true story of one of the many Romanian orphans born under the reign of Nicolae Ceau?escu, the Communist dictator who outlawed both contraception and abortion. Thousands of desperate women were forced to abandon their newborn babies, and many of the orphanages and juvenile homes created to deal with them suffered from appalling conditions and abusive staff. The issue continues to have ramifications for Romania even 20 years after Ceau?escu’s execution.

One of Eastern Europe's most celebrated living playwrights, András Visky has had his plays staged throughout Europe and in the United States. He is the associate artistic director of the Hungarian National Theater in Cluj, Romania, where he has frequently collaborated with such prominent U.S. artists as RoBert Woodruff, the former artistic director of the American Repertory Theater, and Obie Award-winning director Andrei Serban. Both men will be on hand for a post-production discussion of Visky's work on a date to be announced shortly.

“My mentor was the brilliant Romanian director Liviu Ciulei, and meeting a playwright from his birthplace who shares his passion, boldness, and engagement with political issues was like discovering a long-lost brother,” said Coonrod. “But what's most striking about Visky's play is its universality – it's about the spiritual leap required to transcend difficult relationships of all kinds, whether they be with a birth mother, a mother country, or any other unhealthy bond.”

Coonrod and Theatre Y debuted their spare, poetic production of I KILLED MY MOTHER in Chicago in 2010 to critical acclaim and sold-out houses. The company, which has deep ties to Eastern Europe, enjoyed a triumphant launch in 2006 with the first U.S. production of Visky's play JULIET, starring actor and current artistic director Melissa Hawkins, who also plays Bernadette in I KILLED MY MOTHER. The production continues LaMaMa's decades-long tradition of introducing American audiences to some of Eastern Europe's most influential theater artists, including Serban, who emigrated to the U.S. from Romania in 1969 with the help of La MaMa founder Ellen Stewart.

The cast of I KILLED MY MOTHER is Theatre Y’s Melissa Hawkins (Bernadette) and Andrew Livingston (Clip). Other members of the artistic team include Peter Ksander (lighting and scenic design), Eduardo Paulo (graphic design) and Christopher McLinden (Producing Artistic Associate).

Tickets are $20 and can be purchased online (www.lamama.org) or by phone 212-475-7710. Each 90-minute performance starts at 7:30pm.

András Visky is a poet, playwright and essayist and the resident dramaturg at the Hungarian Theatre of Cluj, Romania, where he also holds the position of associate artistic director. He is the author of more than a dozen plays, including “Juliet,” which opened at Budapest’s Thalia Theatre and ran there for several seasons. His play “Long Friday,” a stage adaptation of Imre Kertész's “Kaddish for an Unborn Child” (winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize for Literature), received awards for Best play and Dramaturgy at the Hungarian National Theater Festival in Pécs. His most recent play, “Born For Never”, opened at the Festival d'Avignon in 2009 and earned the critics’ vote for best performance of the Festival. In 2009, Visky was awarded the prestigious József Attila Award by the Hungarian Minister of Culture.

Karin Coonrod is an internationally renowned director who has received numerous awards for her innovative reimaginings of classic plays. The founder of Arden Party Theatre Company in New York and Compagnia de’ Colombari in Orvieto, Italy, Coonrod first gained widespread acclaim for her production of Shakespeare’s “Henry VI” at The Public Theater, where she recently staged William Shakespeare’s "Love's Labor's Lost." Her work, which has been hailed by the New York Times as "prodigiously inventive," has been seen at Theatre for a New Audience, American Repertory Theatre, Hartford Stage, Moscow Art Theater, Yale University, and Columbia University.

Theatre Y was founded in 2006 by actor Melissa Hawkins and director Christopher Markle. The company is steeped in the theatrical traditions of Eastern Europe, which Chris Markle advanced until his death in 2008. Chris had a long artistic partnership with the Romanian director Liviu Culei and worked with other primal masters of the Eastern European theatre, including Luciane Pintilie and Taduesz Kantor. These collaborations - in addition to the traditions and work of Romanian-Hungarian playwright András Visky - influenced the company?s founding, with Visky?s play Juliet as its first production. Written for his mother, the play centers on the true story of András? first memories in a communist gulag, the play is a dialogue about love. Theatre Y has toured the English version of Juliet internationally for the past three years, including performances in Romania, Slovakia, Hungary, Israel, Palestine and over a hundred performances in the United States. In the winter of 2010, Theatre Y?s production of Visky's I Killed My Mother was a world premiere which played to sold-out houses at Chicago?s Greenhouse Theater and garnered critical acclaim. Recently in Chicago Theatre Y presented a trilogy of plays including Camus’ The Misunderstanding, James Joyce’s Exiles and Philip Ridley’s Vincent River. www.theatre-Y.com/theatre_Y/home.html



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.






Videos