Home is where the heart—and history—is in Clybourne Park, a "buzz-saw sharp new comedy" (The Washington Post) that cleverly spins the events of A Raisin in the Sun to tell an unforgettable new story about race and real estate in America. Act I opens in 1959, as a white couple sells their home to a black family, causing uproar in their middle-class Chicago neighborhood. Act II transports us to the same house in 2009, when the stakes are different, but the debate is strikingly familiar. Adamant provocateur Bruce Norris launches his characters into lightning-quick repartee as they scramble for control of the situation, revealing how we can—and can't—distance ourselves from the stories that linger in our houses.
Videos
Petite Rouge, A Cajun Red Riding Hood
Imagination Stage (12/11 - 2/8) | ||
Season 18: CONSTELLATIONS and HEAD OVER HEELS
Constellation Theatre Company (2/6 - 6/1) | ||
All the Devils are Here: How Shakespeare Invented the Villain
STC's Klein Theatre (12/6 - 12/29) | ||
Leopoldstadt
Shakespeare Theatre Company (11/30 - 12/29) | ||
Frankenstein
Klein Theatre - Shakespeare Theatre Company (6/3 - 6/29) | ||
The Love Birds: Chaucer’s A Parlement of Foules
Folger Theatre (2/14 - 2/16) | ||
Come From Away
Capital One Hall (1/31 - 2/2) | ||
The Sound of Music
Opera House at The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts (9/9 - 10/5) | ||
& Juliet
Kennedy Center [Opera House] (12/17 - 1/5) | ||
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