The Old Globe presents the San Diego Premiere of Pulitzer Prize winner
David Lindsay-Abaire's Good People, the award-winning play about class divisions in modern-day Boston. Directed by
Paul Mullins, Good People runs now through Oct. 28, 2012 in the Sheryl and
Harvey White Theatre, part of the Globe's
Conrad Prebys Theatre Center. Opening night is Thursday, Oct. 4 at 8:00 p.m. Get a first look at the production in the photos below!
Margie Walsh doesn't expect much from her hand-to-mouth existence in South Boston, where a few lucky rounds of bingo can mean the rent is paid on time. After losing her job at the local dollar store, Margie reaches out for help to an old high school flame who made it out of the neighborhood, and she soon discovers that not everyone wants to remember their humble beginnings. A funny and insightful new play, Pulitzer Prize winner
David Lindsay-Abaire's Good People explores whether we can all have the American Dream.
Eva Kaminsky makes her Globe debut as Margaret, a hard-luck single mother trying to scrape together a better life for herself and her daughter. Kaminsky was recently in the Broadway company of The Lyons and has appeared Off Broadway in The Language Archive, Made in Poland, 'Nami and The Safety Net.
R. Ward Duffy plays Mike, a doctor who has escaped South Boston and is confronted with his upbringing when Margaret arrives on his doorstep. Duffy most recently appeared in the world premiere adaptation of
Anna Karenina at Portland Center Stage and performed in New York at
Lincoln Center Theater,
New Dramatists and
Cherry Lane Theatre.
Old Globe Associate Artist
Robin Pearson Rose appears as Dottie, Margaret's foul-mouthed, bingo-playing landlady. Rose has appeared at the Globe in August: Osage County, Vincent in Brixton, Da, All My Sons (San Diego Theatre Critics Circle Award), Voir Dire and Dancing at Lughnasa, Wonderful Tennessee and Remembrance. She has also appeared on Broadway in Holiday and The Visit.
The cast also includes
Carol Halstead as Jean,
Nedra McClyde as Kate and
James McMenamin as Stevie. Halstead recently appeared in the
Broadway production of
Gore Vidal's The Best Man and has been seen Off Broadway in The Duchess of Malfi, Pericles, Walking Down Broadway, Easter Candy, The Mask and The Amazing Adventures of Tense Guy. McClyde is a member of The
Ensemble Studio Theatre and received a 2011 New Dramatist
Charles Bowden Actor Award for Miss Evers' Boys at the Red Fern Theatre Company. McMenamin was most recently seen in The Bad Guys directed by
Hal Brooks at
Second Stage Theatre. His Off Broadway credits include Suicide, Incorporated at Roundabout Theatre Company, Middletown at
Vineyard Theatre and
David Cromer's acclaimed staging of Our Town at
Barrow Street Theatre.
The creative team includes
Michael Schweikardt (Scenic Design),
Denitsa Bliznakova (Costume Design),
Chris Rynne (Lighting Design),
Fitz Patton (Sound Design), Jan Gist (Voice and Dialect Coach),
Caparelliotis Casting (Casting) and
Alison Cote (Stage Manager).
Good People is supported in part through gifts from Production Sponsors Alan Benaroya, Silvija and Brian Devine, Mickey Stern, US Bank, Inn at the Park and Mandell Weiss Charitable Trust.
David Lindsay-Abaire (Playwright) is a playwright, screenwriter, lyricist and librettist whose play Rabbit Hole premiered on Broadway and went on to receive the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, the Spirit of America Award and five Tony Award nominations. He was also nominated for a Grammy Award (Best Musical Show Album) and two Tonys (Best Book of a Musical and Best Original Score) for his work on Shrek the Musical. Prior to that, Lindsay-Abaire was awarded the 2008 Kleban Prize as America's most promising musical theater lyricist. Good People premiered on Broadway in 2011 starring
Frances McDormand and was nominated for the Tony for Best Play. Lindsay-Abaire's other plays include Fuddy Meers, Kimberly Akimbo, Wonder of the World and A Devil Inside, among others. His screen credits include his adaptation of Rabbit Hole starring
Nicole Kidman, Aaron Eckart and
Dianne Wiest and directed by
John Cameron Mitchell as well as the upcoming features Rise of the Guardians (DreamWorks) and Oz: The Great and Powerful directed by
Sam Raimi (Disney).
Paul Mullins (Director) returns to
The Old Globe where he directed the Shakespeare Festival productions of Twelfth Night, Macbeth, Measure for Measure and The Merry Wives of Windsor. Mullins is a company member at The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey and has directed their productions of The Liar, Accidental Death of an Anarchist, Noises Off, Private Lives, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Richard II, Tartuffe and The Threepenny Opera, among others. His regional credits also include Tynan, The Solid Gold Cadillac, The Seafarer, Fat Pig, This is How It Goes and The Russian National Postal Service (The
Studio Theatre), You Can't Take It with You (Chautauqua Theater Company), Heroes, The Center of Gravity, Third, Trying, Lettice and Lovage and True West (Portland Stage), The Whore and
Mr. Moore and Superior Donuts (Dorset Theatre Festival), I'm Connecticut, Urinetown and The Comedy of Errors (Connecticut Repertory Theatre) and The Swan, Reckless and Two Gentlemen of Verona (American Stage Theatre Company).
For tickets, scheduling and more information, visit
www.TheOldGlobe.org.
Photo Credit: Henry DiRocco
Eva Kaminsky as Margaret (center) with (from left) Nedra McClyde as Kate and R. Ward Duffy as Mike
(from left) Robin Pearson Rose as Dottie, Eva Kaminsky as Margaret and Carol Halstead as Jean
(from left) Robin Pearson Rose as Dottie, Carol Halstead as Jean, Eva Kaminsky as Margaret and James McMenamin as Stevie
Eva Kaminsky as Margaret
Eva Kaminsky as Margaret
R. Ward Duffy as Mike and Eva Kaminsky as Margaret
R. Ward Duffy as Mike
R. Ward Duffy as Mike and Nedra McClyde as Kate
Old Globe Associate Artist Robin Pearson Rose as Dottie
Carol Halstead as Jean
James McMenamin as Stevie
(from left) Carol Halstead as Jean, Eva Kaminsky as Margaret and Robin Pearson Rose as Dottie