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Friday, January 11, 2013

ACT OUT OPENING: Disconnect at Victory Gardens




Victory Gardens presents the American Premiere of
Disconnect
by Anupama Chandrasekhar
directed by Ann Filmer

Featuring Minita Gandhi, Behzad Dabu,
Kamal J. Hans, Arya Daire, and Debargo Sanyal


Victory Gardens continues its 2012-13 season with the American Premiere of Disconnect, written by Anupama Chandrasekhar and directed by Ann Filmer. The production runs January 25 – February 24, 2013 at the Victory Gardens Biograph Theater, 2433 N. Lincoln Avenue in Lincoln Park. The Press Opening is Monday, February 4, 2013 at 7:30 p.m.

Forty-something Avinash is hopelessly out of step in a company that demands success, energy, and youth. To bring his game up, he is transferred to work with the bright young graduates in Illinois—down on the fourth floor. In the windowless, nighttime offices of a call center in Chennai, India, is a bustling world of energetic Indian workers dreaming the American Dream and faking U.S. accents to target their American “marks” maxed out on credit cards. Anupama Chandrasekhar’s Disconnect is a powerful and witty drama about the consequences of consumer culture and the intricacies of our interconnected global economy.

Artistic Director Chay Yew comments, “While I was at Sundance last year, I made a good friend of British director Indhu Rubasingham, recently the Artistic Director of the Tricycle Theatre in London. When I told her of my appointment at Victory Gardens, she immediately sent me Anupama Chandrashekhar’s Disconnect. I knew this smart, funny, bittersweet and very observant play needs to be experienced in Chicago. In this poignant study of credit and debt culture in America, Anu has vividly portrayed the complex lives of non-descript voices we often hear when we call customer service, and our interconnected relationship with a country and its people continents away. I’m also very pleased to welcome one of off-loop Chicago’s most exciting directors, Ann Filmer, to lead an all South Asian cast in this American Premiere.”

Disconnect had its world premiere at The Royal Court Theatre in 2010.  The Victory Gardens production marks its American Premiere.  The Independent called it, "A marvel...Disconnect is the Glengarry Glen Ross of our day.”

Previews:              January 25 – February 3, 2013
Regular run:         February 5 – February 27, 2013

Schedule:         Wednesdays:     7:30 pm
                            Thursdays:         7:30 pm
                            Fridays:                7:30 pm
                            Saturdays:         4:00 pm
                            Sundays:            3:00 pm

Location:              Victory Gardens Biograph Theater is located at 
                          2433 N. Lincoln Avenue,
                          in the heart of Chicago’s Lincoln Park neighborhood

Tickets:                 Previews:            $20 - $40
                             Regular run:      $20 - $50

Box Office:            The Box Office is located at 2433 N. Lincoln Avenue, Chicago
                             773.871.3000; victorygardens.org



The cast of Disconnect includes Minita Gandhi (Vidya), Behzad Dabu (Giri), Kamal J. Hans (Avinash), Arya Daire (Jyothi), Teresa Kuruvila (US), Owais Ahmed (US), and Debargo Sanyal (Ross).

The designers are Grant Sabin (Set Designer), Mac Vaughey (Lighting Designer), Christine Pascual (Costume Designer), Barry Bennett (Sound Designer) and Dennis Conners (Stage Manager).

Full performance schedule
Previews of Disconnect are January 25 – February 3, 2013: Tuesday through Saturday at 7:30 pm and Sunday at 3 pm.  Previews are $35-$40.   Regular performances run through February 27, 2013: Thursday through Saturday at 7:30 pm; Saturday at 4 pm; Sunday at 3 pm.  Regular performances are $35-$50.

Performances are at the Victory Gardens Biograph Theater, 2433 N. Lincoln Avenue, in the heart of Chicago’s Lincoln Park neighborhood.  For tickets and information, call the Victory Gardens Box Office, 773.871.3000 (TTY: 773.871.0682), email tickets@victorygardens.org, or visit www.victorygardens.org.  Ask the Box Office about student tickets ($15), senior, Access, 20 for $20, and rush discounts.  For group discounts, call 773.328.2136.


Dig Deeper Events:

PLAYING RACE
A Town Hall Discussion
Thursday, January 31, 2013 (Post-show)
Alarms went off in a recent La Jolla Playhouse production of Nightingale when white actors played Asian characters. In Chicago, the issue was raised with Oak Park’s Circle Theatre’s Bollywood treatment of Pippin. Where do we stand on nontraditional casting? Is this a form of minstrelsy or is this harmless cultural appropriation? Join Victory Gardens for an important town hall conversation on playing race in American theatre.

Reading of Indio written and performed by Alladin Ullah
accompanied on tablas by Avirodh Ramsamooj; directed by Chay Yew
Sunday, February 10, 2013 - Free for Disconnect ticketholders
Auditioning to play a terrorist in a major Hollywood movie may be stand-up comedian Aladdin’s big break. As he prepares for his audition, he finds himself thinking back on his deceased father, who left Bangladesh for a better life in New York, and his parents’ futile attempts to raise him Muslim in Spanish Harlem. Accompanied by the tabla, Aladdin takes us a hilarious and moving journey about art, immigration, family, the Yankees and the nature of the American dream. Presented in association with Silk Road Rising.

IDENTITY: REAL AND IMAGINED
A Presentation and Conversation 
Monday, February 11, 2013 at 7:30 pm 
Who is really on the other end of the phone? Responding to the themes of identity and race in Disconnect, the Third Coast International Audio Festival conducts an evening of audio stories specially curated for a conversation about identity: real and imagined.

PLAYS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
A Play Reading Festival 
March 7 - 17, 2013
Victory Gardens Theatre hosts the International Voices Project 2013, a two weekend festival of contemporary plays from across the globe.



About the Artists

Anupama Chandrasekhar (Playwright) is a journalist-turned-playwright based in Chennai.  She has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.  Anupama will makes her American debut at the Victory Gardens Theater with Disconnect. The play originally opened at the Royal Court Theatre, London, in 2010 to sell out shows and critical acclaim. It has been staged in Austria and the Czech Republic and will have its West Coast premiere at the San Jose Rep in March 2013.  Her breakout play Free Outgoin premiered at the Royal Court Theatre in London in 2007. It was revived at the Royal Court’s main theatre the next year and travelled to the Traverse Theatre for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.  Anupama was a finalist in 2009 for the prestigious Susan Smith Blackburn Prize (U.S.), given annually to outstanding works by women in the English speaking theatre, for her Free Outgoing. She was also a runner-up in 2008 for the London Evening Standard’s Most Promising Playwright award and shortlisted for the Whiting Award, UK for the play. Her screenplay adaptation of Free Outgoing was a finalist for the Sundance Screenwriter’s Lab, Utah. Her most recent work was her adaptation, The Snow Queen, commissioned by the Unicorn Theatre in London as part of the British Council’s Connection Through Culture project. It opened for Christmas in 2011 and was a tremendous box office success. Remounted by Trestle Theatre, the play toured India in 2012 and will further tour the UK in 2013.  Anupama is currently working on Bay-Sea-Ocean, a new commission from the Royal Court Theatre. Other plays include Kabaddi-Kabaddi (Royal Court Theatre – 2005, International Human Rights Watch Film Festival); Whiteout (Royal Court Theatre, BBC Radio World Drama – 2006); Anytime, Anywhere (Kimaayaa, 2004); and Closer Apart (Theatre Nisha, 2003) and ACID (QTP, 2004). Additional awards include Charles Wallace India Trust fellowship to attend the Royal Court Theatre International Residency for Young Playwrights 2000; Regional Winner (Asia) of the Commonwealth Short Story Competition 2006; and Runner up Jane Chambers International Award for Women Playwrights 2005 for her play, Acid.

Ann Filmer (Director) has directed over 40 productions in Chicago, half of those being world premieres, at such theatres as Red Orchid (Brett Neveu's Eric LaRue), Shattered Globe (House of Blue Leaves), Live Bait, Stage Left (David Alan Moore's In Times of War and Mia McCullough's Spare Change), Porchlight, Prop Thtr, The Aardvark, and Emerald City. She also has directed for Northwestern, NIU, DePaul, UIC, Circle Theatre in Forest Park (Susan Hahn's Golf), William Inge Theatre Festival in Kansas, and 29th Street Rep in New York.  She was the 2004-05 recipient of the Michael Maggio Directing Fellowship at the Goodman Theatre where she directed David Mamet's Almost Done, Reunion, and Dark Pony. In 2001 she received an After Dark Award for her direction of John Green's The Liquid Moon at Chicago Dramatists.  Ann was the Associate Artistic Director of Writers' Theatre in Glencoe for three years and served on the board of the League of Chicago Theatres. While Producing Director of Chicago Dramatists from 2000-2004, Ann co-produced the National Showcase of New Plays 2004. She is the editor of "New Plays from Chicago" Chicago's first-ever anthology of new plays and the creator and Artistic Director of Chicago's Estrogen Fest. Ann founded 16th Street Theater in September 2007 and has developed and directed the world premieres of Rohina Malik's Unveiled, Susan Hahn's The Scarlet Ibis, Will Dunne's The Ascension of Carlotta, Robert Koon's Menorca and Tony Fitzpatrick's This Train which enjoyed a sold-out, critically-acclaimed remount at Steppenwolf's Garage Theatre. She also directed the Jeff-Nominated Kita y Fernanda by Tanya Saracho, Anna Deavere Smith's Fires in the Mirror and Brett Neveu's The Last Barbecue. Ann has shared the stage with Tom Wopat and Jennifer Garner.

Owais Ahmed (Understudy) is making his Victory Gardens debut. He is a senior, graduating with a B.A. in Acting at Illinois State University, where he was most recently seen as Anon in Anon(ymous).  He was also seen in The Merchant of Venice (Shylock), The Passion Play (Visiting Friar/Englishman), and in Bhopal (Jaganlal). Owais is also a national Irene Ryan Award finalist through the Kennedy Center's American College Theatre Festival.

Behzad Dabu (Giri) is making his Victory Gardens debut.  He grew up in Syracuse, NY, made Chicago his home in 2005 and has since been performing on various stages all over town; most recently, in Disgraced at American Theater Company. Other credits include: TheatreSeven's We Live Here, First Folio's Twelfth Night, The Goodman's Christmas Carol, Holes at AdventureStage, and the original cast of The History Boys at TimeLine Theatre, where he will return this summer performing in Blood and Gifts.  In addition to stage work, he can be seen and heard in various commercial and voice-over spots. Behzad attended Columbia College Chicago, where he now works full-time in addition to acting.    

Arya Daire (Jyothi) is making her Victory Gardens debut in Disconnect. A "reformed" lawyer, this is her second appearance on the Chicago theatre scene, after her turn as Marcy Park in The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee.

Minita Gandhi (Vidya) made her Victory Gardens debut earlier this season with the role of Judith in  Equivocation. Regional credits include Mary Zimmerman’s The Arabian Nights at Lookingglass Theatre, Berkeley Repertory Theater, and The Arena Stage; Half-Life, A Christmas Carol, and The Voysey Inheritance at Milwaukee Repertory Theatre; Around the World in 80 Days, A Christmas Carol at Indiana Repertory Theater; Twelfth Night at First Folio Theater; Distracted at ATC, and Gilgamesh at the MCA with Silk Road Rising. Film/TV credits include Fox's “The Chicago Code” and Parvati's “Golden Skin.” Minita was born in Mumbai, India and specializes in East-Indian dance and movement. She travels and performs with the corporate comedy troupe Wavelength, teaches anti-bullying techniques and sexual abuse prevention for K-12 with Imagination Theater, is a graduate of the Pacific Conservatory of the Performing Arts, and is represented by The Gray Talent Group.

Kamal J. Hans (Avinash) makes his Victory Gardens mainstage debut with Disconnect.  Most recently Kamal appeared as Mourad in the world premiere of Mia McCullough’s Impenetrable at Stage Left Theatre.  This year, Kamal’s projects include Shakespeares’ Much Ado About Nothing – “A Bollywood Spectacular” which he is producing as the Managing Director for Rasaka Theater (the Midwest’s first South Asian Theater company) and in the Regional Premiere of Jonas Hassen Khemiri'sInvasion! at Silk Road Rising.  Favorite roles include Mayor in Fuckin’ A (Urban Theater), Marius in Fanny, Caliban in Shakespeare’s Tempest, Devendra in Silk Road’sMerchant On Venice, Salieri in Amadeus and Anatoly in Chess.  Kamal’s studies include the Theatre School at DePaul University, Julliard School, The University of Chicago GSB and Illinois Wesleyan University. 

Teresa Kuruvilla (Understudy) recently graduated from Loyola University Chicago with a B.F.A. in Music Performance. She was most recently seen playing Bloom in the Literary Guild Complex's original production of Unnatural Spaces, directed by Coya Paz. In addition to acting, she frequently performs as a vocalist throughout Chicago. She is a teaching artist for After School Matters, as well as the International Performing Arts Academy.

Debargo Sanyal (Ross) is making his Chicago stage debut in Disconnect at Victory Gardens. He was recently seen opposite Morgan Freeman in the Magnolia Pictures feature film The Magic of Belle Isle (directed by Rob Reiner), and opposite Robert De Niro & Kate Beckinsale in the Miramax feature film Everybody's Fine. Other feature film credits include The Normals, Today's Special, Bert and Arnie's Guide to Friendship, Made for Each Other, Drawing with Chalk, Red Hook, West 32nd, Sita Sings the Blues, Karma Calling, Quarter Life Crisis, Sad Sack Sally, Ashes, and My Sassy Girl. NYC stage credits include: the Obie Award-winning U.S. premiere production of Jonas Hassen Khemiri's Invasion! (The Play Company at Walkerspace), the world premieres of Chuck Mee's Queens Boulevard (the musical) (Signature Theatre Company), Jorge Ignacio Cortiñas' Bird in the Hand (Fulcrum Theater), Chad Beckim's After. (Partial Comfort Productions), Larry Kunofsky's Your Boyfriend May Be Imaginary (The Management), Mike Batistick's Port Authority Throw Down (The Working Theater), Andrea Lepcio's Looking for the Pony (Vital Theatre Co), Kate E Ryan's Women of Trachis (Target Margin), Sonya Sobieski's Commedia Dell Smartass (New Georges), Kristin Newbom's Telethon (Clubbed Thumb), and the NY premiere of Tom Stoppard'sIndian Ink (Alter Ego Productions). TV credits include guest appearances on Blue Bloods, Damages, Law & Order, The Sopranos, NYC 22, Law & Order-Special Victims Unit, The Unusuals, Running Wilde, Law & Order-Criminal Intent, All My Children, and national commercials.


Access Performances
Audio description and touch tours for patrons who are blind or have low vision
Friday, February 15       Performance 7:30pm
Sunday, February 24     Performance 3:00pm/7:30pm     Touch Tour        1:30pm/6:00 pm                                                                             
Call 773.871.3000 for reservations.

Word for word captioning for patrons who are hearing impaired
Wednesday, February 13 at 2:00pm                             
Friday, February 22 at 7:30pm
Saturday, February 23 at 4:00pm
Sign language interpretation for patrons who are deaf or hearing impaired
Friday, February 22 at 7:30pm

Victory Gardens is the winner, Best Accessible Theater, Deaf Illinois Awards 2009.  See www.victorygardens.org and click on “Enhance Your Visit” for information on other Access services including large print and Braille programs, assisted listening devices, and artist development workshops as well as a full schedule of special events, post-show discussions and presentations.

Logistics and Amenities
Parking
$11 valet parking is available for all performances except weekday matinees. Metered and street parking is available, but mind the neighborhood parking restrictions.

Public transit
By CTA train, take the Red, Purple or Brown lines to the Fullerton stop.  Walk east on Fullerton to Lincoln, then north 1/2 block to the theater.   The #8 Halsted, #11 Lincoln,  #37 Sedgwick/Ogden, and #74 Fullerton CTA buses all stop at the corner of Fullerton and Halsted, 1/2 block south of the theater.  See transitchicago.com for times and routes.

Pre- and post-show dining
See www.victorygardens.org for a list of Victory Gardens’ neighborhood dining partners.  Each is within walking distance of the Biograph, and all offer a special discount to patrons who present a Victory Gardens ticket stub.

About Victory Gardens Theater
Under the leadership of Artistic Director Chay Yew and Managing Director Chris Mannelli, Victory Gardens is dedicated to artistic excellence while creating a vital, contemporary American Theater that is accessible and relevant to all people through productions of challenging new plays and musicals. Victory Gardens Theater is a leader in developing and producing new theatre work and cultivating an inclusive theater community. Victory Gardens’ core strengths are nurturing and producing dynamic and inspiring new plays, reflecting the diversity of our city’s and nation’s culture through engaging diverse communities, and in partnership with Chicago Public Schools,  bringing art and culture to our city’s active student population.  

Since its founding in 1974, the company has produced more world premieres than any other Chicago theater, a commitment recognized nationally when Victory Gardens received the 2001 Tony Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre. Our commitment to developing, supporting and producing new theatre work makes Victory Gardens an American Center for New Plays.

In 2006, Victory Gardens successfully completed an $11.8 million renovation of Chicago’s famed Biograph Theater, and moved two blocks north from its longtime venue at 2257 N. Lincoln Avenue, to its beautiful new home in one of Chicago’s most celebrated historic landmarks.  Renamed Victory Gardens Biograph Theater, the new venue is a state-of-the-art 299-seat mainstage which has greatly expanded the company’s artistic flexibility.

In 2009, Victory Gardens completed the second phase of renovation at the Biograph, building an intimate, new, 109-seat studio theater on the second floor.  On March 1, 2010, at a special launch event for Victory Gardens $1 million Campaign for Growth, the theater’s new studio was officially named the Richard Christiansen Theater, in honor of the Chicago Tribune chief critic emeritus and longtime champion of Chicago’s live theater scene.  Visit www.victorygardens.org for more details.

Victory Gardens Theater receives major funding from Alphawood Foundation, The Joyce Foundation, The Shubert Foundation, The Chicago Community Trust, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Allstate Insurance, The Boeing Company, Crown Family Philanthropies, Leo S. Guthman Fund, National Endowment for the Arts, Polk Bros. Foundation, and REAM Foundation. Additional funding is provided by: Illinois Arts Council (a state agency), The Edgerton Foundation, The James S. Kemper Foundation, Charles & M.R. Shapiro Foundation, Sara Lee Foundation, Venturous Theater Fund, McVay Foundation, The Seabury Foundation, Wrightwood Neighbors Conservation Association, The Charles H. and Bertha L. Boothroyd Foundation, John R. Halligan Charitable Fund, Illinois Tool Works, Motorola Mobility Foundation, Elizabeth F. Cheney Foundation, a City Arts Grant from the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, The Irving Harris Foundation, PNC Foundation, and The Saints.

WHAT WE'RE WATCHING: Filmmaker Jim Hemphill at Facets this Weekend




THE TROUBLE WITH
THE TRUTH

Facets Film Dialogue
with filmmaker Jim Hemphill 


Filmmaker Jim Hemphill will be here in person for a Q&A at both screenings on Friday, January 11th, as well as the 3 pm screenings on Saturday & Sunday, January 12 & 13. 



THE TROUBLE WITH
THE TRUTH

"Convincing, moving and provocative"
  -Variety

"An alive and involving film... an equitable, tender, sometimes surprising game of hard truth-telling"
  -Los Angeles Times

"There isn't a false note in either the dialogue or the performances"
  -Village Voice

 "Director Jim Hemphill's naturalistic dialogue and direction is so unfussy — and, at times, humanly awkward—as to feel a bit like a documentary. Call it mumblecore for grown-ups (i.e., minus the mumbling)"
  -New York Post

"Part of the greatness of this film is that it not only avoids any simple answers, but it also takes us into the awkward contradictions and internal dishonesties that help us look at the mirror each day."
  -RogerEbert.com

"Engagingly written and well played by both leads... the movie lets one night tell the lifetime story of two people who know each other too well to hide anything"
  -TimeOut Chicago



Robert (John Shea) is a middle-aged jazz musician who ekes out a living playing piano in a hotel bar. He is a perpetual "starving artist", but he likes it that way, being able to flirt while living a life of leisure with minimal commitments. When his daughter Jenny (Danielle Harris) tells him that she is engaged, he advises her against getting married, as his own relationship to Jenny's mom Emily (Lea Thompson, Back to the Future, Some Kind of Wonderful) did not last. He does not understand why anyone would want to give up their independence. Yet when Robert and Emily reunite for dinner, it quickly becomes clear that things are more complicated than he believed. They still have feelings for each other, and as the night progresses, begin to wonder if they made a mistake by splitting up, as memories and confessions bring things to the surface. Robert and Emily eventually find that they have a lot of unresolved issues to talk about, which leads to unexpected results. They eventually learn that marriage is like a phone call in the night: first the ring, and then you wake up. 

Directed by Jim Hemphill, U.S.A., 2011, 96 mins.




New York Post     Film Threat     RogerEbert.com         



ACT OUT REVIEW: The Motherf**ker With the Hat Highly Recommended at Steppenwolf #review


Veronica (Sandra Delgado) leaps into Jackie’s (John Ortiz) arms when he tells her that he found a job.   (All Production Photos by Michael Brosilow)



THE MOTHERF**KER WITH THE HAT
STEPPENWOLF THEATRE COMPANY 

ENSEMBLE MEMBER ANNA D. SHAPIRO RETURNS TO DIRECT, FOLLOWING HER HIT BROADWAY PRODUCTION,
DECEMBER 28, 2012 – MARCH 3, 2013 IN THE DOWNSTAIRS THEATRE

Amid the tumultuous turning of the set pieces, two couples' lives twist and become enmeshed.   Lies and lust, addictions and contradictions abound in this hilarious love story.   The Motherf**ker With The Hat plays out on an impressive stage where three living spaces revolve in and out of view and sofas and a bed rotate and flip out of the floor to the urban cacophony of sirens.   In a similar fashion, Jackie and Veronica flip between infidelity, jealousy, and undying love.   And the gay, passive pansy of an uncle who just wants to feed and nurture everyone, turns out to have a vindictive Van Damme streak.


(right to left) Couson Julio (Gary Perez) cooks breakfast for Jackie (John Ortiz)

We're completely enamored with Todd Rosenthal's set!    We dug the play of light and shadows as the fire escapes and balconies add the illusion of urban height, and the three entwined living spaces are pure genius as the perfect playground for Motherf**ker's passions to play out.

Critics focus on the addiction versus AA help and hypocrisy in the script.   Yet The Motherf**ker With The Hat is all about what we let into our bodies, including food, drugs and people, and whether they're good for us or harmful.   It's this all too human conundrum of desiring the pancake and sausage dinner while making healthy vegan fare, or seeking out the forbidden lover or revenge screw.   It's about green protein eggs and energy drinks that taste terrible but bring strength and health, and living a sober AA farce while binge drinking on the sly.   It's about doing lines and feeding people lines.

Sandra Delgado as Veronica


Unwitting neighbors become enemies.  Friends are not what they seem.   The characters all wear many metaphorical hats and everyone's got something to hide.   Anna D. Shapiro is back with a retooled version of her Tony Award nominated Broadway hit that's stronger for it's simmering intensity.   The original was criticized for being louder and more over the top.   In the more than capable hands of Steppenwolf's expert cast, this rendition glows with a vengeance.   The Motherf**ker With The Hat makes our ChiILpicks highly recommended list.   Jeff recommended.

Steppenwolf Theatre Company’s highly anticipated production of The Motherf**ker with the Hat by Stephen Adly Guirgis is here!   Ensemble member Anna D. Shapiro directs following the Tony Award-nominated Broadway premiere, with an all-star ensemble cast featuring Sandra Delgado, Sandra MarquezGary PerezJohn Ortiz and Jimmy Smits and members of the original design team: scenic designer Todd Rosenthal, lighting designer Donald Holder and composer Terence BlanchardThe Motherf**ker with the Hat runs through March 3, 2013 in Steppenwolf’s Downstairs Theatre (1650 N Halsted St). Tickets ($20 – $86) are on sale now. This play contains adult language.

Things are looking up for recovering alcoholic Jackie and his girlfriend Veronica—until Jackie spots another man's hat in their apartment and embarks on a sublimely incompetent quest for vengeance. Fast-paced and uproarious, Mother is a gleefully foul-mouthed look at modern love and other addictions.

“I think what Stephen is up to in the play is that he is creating people who may seem different from the ones sitting next to us in the theater but who become, over the course of the play, deeply human, deeply familiar and deeply sympathetic. And the play is funny! And surprising,” comments Artistic Director Martha Lavey. “The language is musical and poetic and deeply passionate. Stephen has created characters whose mode of expression is both energized and bound by a profusion of profanity.”

 (right to left) Jackie (John Ortiz) takes his sponsor, Ralph D. (Jimmy Smits) to visit his Cousin Julio


The cast of The Motherf**ker with the Hat features Sandra Delgado as Veronica, Sandra Marquez as Victoria,Gary Perez as Cousin Julio, John Ortiz as Jackie and Jimmy Smits as Ralph D. The production team includes: Todd Rosenthal (scenic design), Linda Roethke (costume design), Donald Holder (lighting design), Rob Milburn andMichael Bodeen (sound design) and Terence Blanchard (original music). Additional credits include: Erica Daniels(casting), Matt Hawkins (fight choreographer), Cecilie O’Reilly (voice coach) Kim Osgood (stage manager) andChristine D. Freeburg (assistant stage manager). Photos and bio information for all artists are available upon request.

Tickets to The Motherf**ker with the Hat ($20 – $86) are currently on sale through Audience Services (1650 N Halsted St), 312-335-1650 and steppenwolf.org20 for $20: twenty $20 tickets are available through Audience Services beginning at 11am on the day of each performance (1pm for Sunday performances). 

Rush Tickets: half-price rush tickets are available one hour before each show. 

Student Discounts: a limited number of $15 student tickets are available online using promo code “HAT15”. Limit 2 tickets per student; must present a valid student ID for each ticket. For additional student discounts, visitsteppenwolf.org/studentsGroup Tickets: all groups of 10 or more receive a discounted rate for any performance throughout the season. For additional information, visit steppenwolf.org/groups.

Free post-show discussions are offered after every performance in the Subscription Season. Steppenwolf is located near all forms of public transportation and is wheelchair accessible. Street and lot parking are available. Assistive listening devices and large-print programs are available for every performance.

John Ortiz as Jackie in Steppenwolf Theatre Company’s production of The Motherf**ker with the Hat by Stephen Adly Guirgis, directed by ensemble member Anna D. Shapiro. The Motherf**ker with the Hat runs December 28, 2012 – March 3, 2013 in Steppenwolf’s Downstairs Theatre (1650 N Halsted St).

Director Anna D. Shapiro joined the Steppenwolf Theatre Company ensemble in 2005 and was awarded the 2008 Tony Award for Best Direction of a Play for August: Osage County (Steppenwolf Theatre Company, Broadway, London). She was nominated in 2011 in the same category for The Motherf**ker with the Hat (The Public Theater, LAByrinth Theater Company). Other directing credits at Steppenwolf Theatre Company include Three SistersA ParallelogramUpThe CrucibleThe Unmentionables (also at Yale Repertory Theatre), The Pain and the Itch (also in New York), I Never Sang for My FatherMan from NebraskaPurple Heart (also in Galway, Ireland), The Drawer BoySide Man (also in Ireland, Australia and Vail, Colorado), Three Days of Rain and The Infidel. Other credits include A Number (American Conservatory Theater); The Drawer Boy (Paper Mill Playhouse); Iron (Manhattan Theatre Club); and The Infidel (Philadelphia Theatre Company). She is a graduate of the Yale School of Drama and Columbia College Chicago and is the recipient of the 1996 Princess Grace Award. She is a full professor in Northwestern University’s Department of Theatre and has served as the director of the MFA in Directing program since 2002.


Playwright Stephen Adly Guirgis is co-artistic director of New York City's LAByrinth Theater Company. His plays have been produced on five continents and throughout the United States. They include Our Lady of 121st Street(Drama Desk, Lucille Lortel, Outer Critics Circle Best Play nominations, 10 best plays of 2003), Jesus Hopped the 'A' Train (Edinburgh Festival Fringe First Award, Barrymore Award, Olivier Nomination for London's Best New Play), In Arabia, We'd All Be Kings (2007 LA Drama Critics Best Play, Best Writing Award), The Last Days of Judas Iscariot(10 Best, Time magazine and Entertainment Weekly) and The Little Flower of East Orange (starring Elen Burstyn and Michael Shannon) at The Public Theater. All five plays were originally produced by LAByrinth Theater Company and directed by Philip Seymour Hoffman. The Motherf**ker with the Hat marks his third consecutive world premiere co-production with The Public Theater. In London, his plays have premiered at The Donmar Warehouse, The Almeida (directed by Rupert Goold), The Hampstead (directed by Robert Delamere) and at The Arts in the West End. Other plays include Den of Thieves(HERE, HAI Theater Festival) and Dominica the Fat Ugly Ho (directed Adam Rapp) for the 2006 E.S.T. Marathon. He has received a 2006 PEN/Laura Pels Award, a 2006 Whiting Award and a 2004 TCG fellowship, new play commissions from Manhattan Theatre Club, Center Theater Group and South Coast Repertory, and is a member of LAByrinth Theater Company, New Dramatists, MCC's Playwright's Coalition, Ojai Playwrights Festival and New River Dramatists. Television writing credits include NYPD BlueThe Sopranos, David Milch's CBS drama Big Apple and Shane Salerno's NBC series UC: Undercover. As an actor, Stephen has had leading film roles in Todd Solondz's Palindromes, Brett C. Leonard's Jailbait (opposite Michael Pitt) and in Kenneth Lonergan's upcoming Margaret. Other film credits include Philip Seymour Hoffman's Jack Goes Boating, Charlie Kaufman’sSynecdoche New York, Adam Rapp's Blackbird, Noah Buschel's Neal Cassady as well as Meet Joe Black (directed by Martin Brest), Noise (directed by Henry Bean), Trainwreck: My Life as an Idiot (directed by Todd Harrsion Williams) and television’s Law and Order. He directed Liza Colon-Zayas' Sistah Supreme for Danny Hoch's Hip Hop Theater Festival, Marco Greco's award-winning Behind the Counter with Mussolini in New York and Los Angeles and Melanie Maras's Kiss Me on the Mouth (InViolet Rep/CSNY). A former HIV Educator and Violence Prevention Specialist, he lives in New York City.




Steppenwolf Theatre Company is America’s longest standing, most distinguished ensemble theater, producing nearly 700 performances and events annually in its three Chicago theater spaces—the 515-seat Downstairs Theatre, the 299-seat Upstairs Theatre and the 80-seat Garage Theatre. Formed in 1976 by a collective of actors, Steppenwolf has grown into an ensemble of 43 actors, writers and directors. Artistic programming at Steppenwolf includes a five-play Subscription Season, a two-play Steppenwolf for Young Adults season and three repertory series: First Look Repertory of New Work, Garage Rep and Next Up. While firmly grounded in the Chicago community, nearly 40 original Steppenwolf productions have enjoyed success both nationally and internationally, including Off-Broadway, Broadway, London, Sydney and Dublin. Steppenwolf has the distinction of being the only theater to receive the National Medal of Arts, in addition to numerous other prestigious honors including an Illinois Arts Legend Award and nine Tony Awards. Martha Lavey is the Artistic Director and David Hawkanson is the Executive Director. Nora Daley is Chair of Steppenwolf’s Board of Trustees. For additional information, visit steppenwolf.orgfacebook.com/steppenwolftheatre and twitter.com/steppenwolfthtr.

The 2012/13 Subscription Season also includes The Birthday Party by Harold Pinter, directed by ensemble member Austin Pendleton (January 24 – April 28, 2013) in the Upstairs Theatre; Head of Passes by ensemble member Tarell Alvin McCraney, directed by ensemble member Tina Landau (April 4 – June 9, 2013) in the Downstairs Theatre; and Belleville by Amy Herzog, directed by Anne Kauffman (June 27 – August 25, 2013) in the Downstairs Theatre.



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