Berkeley Playhouse continues their ninth season of professional theater for family audiences with the East Bay premiere of Elton John's Tony Award-winning musical, Billy Elliot the Musical.
The company's first staging of the musical adaptation of the 2000 hit film includes thirty actors under the age of 15 in two separate casts working alongside a company of professional adult actors. Two young actor / dancers - Matthew Dean and Parker James Fullmore - who have donned the ballet slippers as the title character in previous U.S. regional theater performances, will share the role of Billy.
Billy Elliot the Musical begins performances February 16, 2017, with performances running through March 25, 2017 at the historic Julia Morgan Theater in Berkeley. Press night will be held on Saturday, February 18 at 7pm.
When 11-year-old Billy Elliot stumbles into a ballet class, his spirit of creativity and expression is awakened. Set amongst a working-class town facing a miners' strike in 1980s Britain, Elton John's Tony Award-winning musical about following your passion, and challenging expectations-from parents, friends, and community-is for anyone who has dared to dream, if even for a moment, that they could dance. The original 2009 Broadway production won ten Tony Awards, including Best Musical, Best Book of a Musical, and Best Orchestrations.
Tickets (ranging from $22--$40) are available by calling (510) 845-8542 x351 or by visiting online at www.berkeleyplayhouse.org. Ticket prices are subject to change without notice.
"Our 2016-17 season showcases stories of exceptional and diverse characters that are faced with unique personal challenges-and who rise above them to find their inner-voice," says BerkeleyPlayhouse Founding Artistic Director Elizabeth McKoy. "While many of our productions this season are set in a world just outside of reality-Billy Elliot put our audiences in a very real place: a community struggling with major economic downturn, a family barely hanging on through financial and personal loss, and a workforce protesting their governments' policies towards the working-class. While the setting is Margaret Thatcher's England, it could easily take place in any number of American cities today. What's so special about Billy Elliot is that in the midst of those external forces, its core story explores how the awakening of one boy's creativity and inner-passion for dance can have the power to not only lift a family to see beyond that struggle, but how it can help raise the spirit of an entire community."
Helming a cast that includes more than three dozen actors is Berkeley Playhouse Producing Artistic Director, Kimberly Dooley. "What's truly fulfilling about directing Billy Elliot the Musical at Berkeley Playhouse is exploring this extraordinary work that demands its multitude of young performers be in absolute control of the storytelling. Berkeley Playhouse was founded as a home for live productions and a theater conservatory where kids can explore and understand their own potential through creativity. As a director and educator, there is nothing more thrilling than seeing a young actor realize they are holding the core of a big Broadway musical all on their own. Billy Elliot is a beautiful story about the power of realizing potential, but made even more beautiful by how it gives that very opportunity to the young actors involved. The adult professionals in our cast, many of whom audiences have seen on stages throughout the Bay Area, not only inspire the young actors they work with, but are incredibly inspired by them as well." In addition to directing, Dooley is sharing choreography duties with Bay Area dancer, choreographer and teacher Allison Paraiso. The creative team also includes music director Rachel Robinson, scenic designer Kirsten Royston, costume designer Lisa Danz, and lighting designer Nick Kumamoto.
Sharing the role of Billy Elliot will be two young actor / dancers making their debuts at BerkeleyPlayhouse-but as seasoned "Billy's." South Bay resident Parker James Fullmore first performed the role of Billy Elliot at the age of ten (the youngest boy ever to debut in the role) in New Jersey; while fellow South Bay resident Matthew Dean first performed the role at age twelve in San Jose. Both have wowed audiences across the country in multiple productions, and are thrilled to be working together back in their native Bay Area.
Founded in 2007 by professional theatre actor, director, and teacher for over 25 years, Elizabeth McKoy, Berkeley Playhouse's mission is to create theatre and programs that engage, ignite, and celebrate diverse Bay Area audiences through a thriving conservatory, a professional main stage season, educational outreach, and a commitment to the development of new family musicals. In support of our mission, we maintain and enhance the historic Julia Morgan Theater. A commitment to community, diversity, inclusion, and empowerment is at the heart of our work.
Photo by Ben Krantz Studio.
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