Season

Under the Bed

An HB Ensemble Performance

Playwright: Susan Sandler Under The Bed - HB Studio

Director: Gus Kaikkonen

Cast: Scotty Bloch, Cynthia Harris, Joel Rooks, Marilyn Sokol, Joyce Van Patten

Set: Ray Recht Lighting: William Armstrong Costume: Suzanne Chesney Sound: Robert Auld Choreographer: Liz Curtis Associate Choreographer: Tony Scheppler Production Stage Manner: Shiraz Biggie Technical Director: Christopher Hoyt Casting Consultant: Stephanie Klapper Running Crew: Takumi Mitobe, Jorge Esguiera, Matthew Tischler, Julio Pena, Koichiro Scenic Charge Artist: Adris Krumkalns Scenic Artist: Chelsea Clarke, Amanda Raglevsky Technical Director: Christopher Hoyt Master Carpenter: Michael Merunka, Jr. Electrics Crew: Matthew D. Britt, Andrew Kerr-Thompson, Benjamin C. Tevelow, Krista Kujat Build Crew: Noelle Neglia, Tadhg O’Mordha, David Sih, Matthew Tischler, Luchia Dragosh, Marissa Vila, Ryen Herrman, Mary Willis White, Kathleen Peirce.

Appearing Courtesy of Actor’s Equity Association

Under the Bed was performed April 20th – May 5th, 2005

Vassa Zheleznova

An HB Performance

Playwright: Maxim Gorky

Director:

Vassa Zheleznova was performed during the 2004-2005 season

Synopsis: There are no miracles in this world. Only those we make for ourselves. It’s 8am and a revolt is underway. The father is dying. The son is spying. The wife is cheating. The uncle is stealing. The mother is scheming. The dynasty is crumbling. One house. One fortune. One victor.  A tragic portrait of a woman with an iron will determined to root out the corruption in her family in order to keep control of the family business.

The Habitation of Dragons

HB Studio’s  2004 Founders Memorial

 Playwright: Horton Foote The Habitation of Dragons - HB Studio

Director: William Carden

Cast: David Adams*, Carol Goodheart*, Pearce Green, Tim Hopper*, Kahan James*, John Juback*, Richard Mawe*, Jim McGurn, Rochelle Oliver*, Jess Osuna*, Kathleen Peirce, Amanda Plant, Lorca Simons*, Victor Slezak*, Adam Stern, Mark Thornton*.

Scene: Michael Schweikardt Lighting: Greg MacPherson Costume: Suzanne Chesney Sound: Sten Sevrson Fight: Ian Marshall Production Stage Manager: Shiraz Biggie Production Manager: Matthew D. Britt Technical Director: Paul Bradley

*Appearing Courtesy of Actor’s Equity Association

The Habitation of Dragons was performed December 4th – 5th, 7th – 11th, 14th – 19th, 2004

Synopsis: It’s 1935 in Harrison, Texas. George Tolliver has decided to run for county attorney general, but his older, and more successful, brother Leonard tries to dissuade him because the family’s backing has already gone to another local lawyer, his brother-in-law, Billy. George runs, though, after lashing out at the more successful Leonard for less than moral support in the past. At the same time, their late father’s brother Virgil appears on the Tolliver family’s doorstep, asking for shelter now that he’s old and broke. It’s a hard decision for the widowed Mrs. Tolliver since Virgil once abandoned them years ago when they needed money; still, they take him in. Within days, Leonard’s wife Margaret is found out to be having an affair with Wally Smith, her husband’s handyman. On the very same afternoon, both of Margaret and Leonard’s young boys drown while swimming in the river with Wally. Believing this to be a punishment for her adultery, Margaret has a breakdown and is institutionalized. In his grief, Leonard lets his law practice crumble and in despair reveals to his mother that he’s always known his father committed suicide and did not die accidentally. Things aren’t made any easier when Margaret’s brother, Billy, murders his sister’s lover and now a neighbor wants to blackmail the Tollivers with a packet of love letters sent from Margaret to Wally Smith. Eventually, Margaret returns home to beg her husband’s forgiveness. At first Leonard refuses, but he realizes he does want to start over again and he forgives Margaret before she shoots herself with the gun Leonard was going to use on himself. George, having had to make up for Leonard’s absence, has rediscovered his calling as a lawyerand has finally risen to the responsibilities of his own new marriage, impending fatherhood and leading the sorrowful Tolliver household.

Two Evenings of One-Act Plays

An HB Ensemble Production

Playwrights: Eugene Ionesco, Tennessee Williams, Fernando Arrabal, Don Nigro, Horton Foote, Christopher Durang, Harold Pinter,

Directors: Aleksey Burago, Kate Bushmann+, Rasa Allan Kazlas+, Ian Marshall, Amy Wright.

Cast: Georgina Bates, Stephanie Braxton*, Jim Boerlin*, Emily Cain, Snezhana Chernova, Daniela Dakic, AC Davidson, Toni Ann DeNoble, Nick DeSimone, Pascal Escriout, Koichiro Goto, Elizabeth Grey*, Hanna Hayes, Cordis Heard*, Ryen Herrmann, Gregory Higgins, Genc Jakupi, James LaChere, Philip Kushner, Barry McBrien, David McElfresh*, Rachel Murdy, Etienne Navarre, Noelle Neglia, Dara O’Brien, Marci Occhino, Tadhg O’Mordha, Kathleen Peirce, Marilyn Porayko, Paul Pryce, Anil Ramani, Sophia Remolde, Judy Rosenblatt*, Tony Siniscalchi, David Shih*, Catherine Siracusa, David B. Sochet*, Michael Spence, Ying Yu Tan, Thomas Tinelli, Matthew Tischler, Sharon Wajswol, Derek Wong, Marius Zilberstein.

Stage Manager: Alan Bluestone Production Manager: Shiraz Biggie Assistant Directors: Alan Bluestone & Sharon Wajswol Production Assistant & Set Design: Emily Chain Costume Design: Kanlaya Phoutinane Costumes and Projection Sketches: Catherine Siracusa Props: Elizabeth Grey Sound Editor: Kenneth Feldman Choreography: Georgina Bates Original Music & Lyrics: Nick DeSimone.

*Appearing Courtesy of Actor’s Equity Association, +Member of the Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers

Two Evenings of One-Act Plays were performed in 2006

EVENING A

The Bald Soprano by Eugene Ionesco:

The Long Goodbye by Tennessee Williams:

Picnic on the Battlefield by Fernando Arrabal:

EVENING B

The Daughters of Edward D. Boit by Don Nigro:

The Dancers by Horton Foote:

The Actor’s Nightmare by Christopher Durang:

Mountain Language by Harold Pinter:

 

Damn Everything But the Circus

Playwright: (Book) Stephanie Braxton (Music+Lyrics) Anne Phillips Damn Everything But The Circus - HB Studio

Director: Martin Platt

Pianist: Matt Perri

Cast: Robert Cuccioli*, Merle Louise*, Donna McKechnie*, Stephanie Pope Caffey*, William Solo*, Richard White*.

Managing Director: Marlene Mancini Production Manager: Shiraz Biggie

*Appearing courtesy of Actor’s Equity Association

Damn Everything But the Circus was performed February 9th – 11th, 2007

Valparaiso

An HB Ensemble Production

Playwright: Don DeLillo Valparaiso - HB Studio

Director: Rasa Allan Kazlas

Cast: Chris Chinn*, Jen Danby*, Elizabeth Grey*, Guenevere Donohue, David Khouri, Philip Kushner*, Daniela Mastropietro*, Marci Occhino, David Smilow, Karen Song, L.B Williams*, Julia Wolfermann, Catherine Zubkow.

*Member of the Actor’s Equity Association

Lighting: John Burkland Managing Director: Marlene Mancini Technical Director: Corrie Beth Shotwell Stage Manager: Sarah Nochenson Costumes: Catherine Siracusa Administrative Support: Shaun Bennet Wilson Office Manager: Tara Webb

Valparaiso was performed June 11th – 28th, 2008

Synopsis: In this play, Michael Majeski boards a plane for Valparaiso, Indiana on a routine business trip, but somehow winds up in Valparaiso, Chile! As coverage of this human interest news byte compounds, Michael is catapulted into celebrity status. He is interviewed endlessly by the media but there are problems with his story – what is Michael really hiding? All is finally revealed during the climactic daytime talk show in which Michael, at the mercy of the TV host Delfina, is caught in the light rays of the TV screen.

 

The Writing on the Wall

An HB Studio Performance

Playwright: Ed Napier The Writing on the Wall - HB Studio

Director: Randal Myler

Cast: Victor Villar-Hauser, Stephen Mailer, Robert Sedgwick, Joseph Urla, Robert Walden

Lighting Design: Brian Nason Stage Manager: Jennifer Campos Assistant Director: Zar Kazemi Managing Director: Marlene Mancini Production Manager: Shiraz Biggie

The Writing on the Wall was performed May 18th – 25th, 2007

Synopsis: It’s said that Hollywood is the only place where your friends don’t stab you in the back… they stab you in the face. And that’s just what happens to TV writer Nelson when his latest work gets tangled up in a power struggle between his boss and the star of the show. A dark comedy about trying to hold on to friendship, loyalty, and honor.

The Master and Margarita

An HB Studio Ensemble Production

Playwrights: Mikhail Bulgakov, Adapted by Aleksey Burago

Director: Aleksey Burago

Cast: Georgina Bates, George Bartenieff*, Snezhana Chernova, Pascal Escriout, Jack Gillespie*, Hanna Hayes, David Khouri, Vadim Krol, Andy McCutcheon*, Danusia Roberts*, Tom Shubert, Nick DeSimonne, David Sochet*, Lana Stimmler, Kenneth Thompson, Thomas Tinelli, Marius Zilberstein*.

*Appearing courtesy of Actor’s Equity Association

Assistant Director: Pamela Wilkinson Dance and Choreography: Gus Solomons, Jr Lighting Design: Shiraz Biggie Production Crew: Mindy Luce, Sandra Roque, Rob Freedman

Master and Margarita was performed July 11th – 15th, 2007

Synopsis: This play is a darkly comedic takedown of Soviet society, an audacious revision of the stories of Faust and Pontius Pilate, and a thrilling love story. The novel begins with the Devil’s arrival in 1930’s Moscow disguised as the distinguished Professor Woland. Together with his retinue of odd associates, including a talking, vodka-swilling black cat, Woland wreaks havoc on the societal elite. Meanwhile, the Master (an author of an unpublished novel about Jesus and Pontius Pilate who has been hounded by Soviet censors), languishes in despair in a psychiatric hospital, unable to share his story. His devoted lover, Margarita, agrees to sell her soul to the Devil in an effort to rescue the Master from his fate. The story weaves back and forth between current day Moscow and ancient Jerusalem, studded with sparkling scenes ranging from a dizzying Satanic Ball to the crucifixion of Jesus on Bald Mountain, with the enduring love between the Master and Margarita joining the strands of plot across space and time.