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Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

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Arden Theatre Company in Old City Philadelphia presents Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet through April 11, 2010.
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February 25 - April 11 Production Sponsor:
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Page 1: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

February 25 - April 11

Production Sponsor:

Page 2: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill
Page 3: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

ARDEN THEATRE COMPANY PRESENTS

ROMEO+JULIETBy WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

Scenic DesignerBRIAN SIDNEY BEMBRIDGE

Lighting DesignerTHOM WEAVER

Fight DirectorDALE ANTHONY GIRARD, SAFD

Assistant DirectorDAN HODGE

Costume DesignerROSEMARIE E. McKELVEY

Sound Designer/ComposerJAMES SUGG

ChoreographerKAREN GETZ

Stage ManagerKATHARINE M. HANLEY*

Directed by MATT PFEIFFER

February 25 - April 11, 2010F. Otto Haas Stage

Production Sponsor:

Applause, please, for our Media Partners:

Special thanks to The Harold and Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust for supporting Arden Theatre Company.

Arden Theatre Company receives state arts funding support through a grant from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, a state agency funded by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.

* Member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the U.S.

Arden Theatre Company • 40 N. 2nd Street • Philadelphia, PA 19106 • 215.922.1122 • ardentheatre.org

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WELCOMEfrom the Producing Artistic Director

Romeo and Juliet is a play that surges with the vitality and vibrancy of youth. It’s only fitting that this production is being created by some of Philadelphia’s most exciting young theatre artists. Director Matt Pfeiffer, recipient of the 2008 F. Otto Haas Award for an Emerging Philadelphia Theatre Artist, has quickly developed a reputation for helming exciting productions marked by strong acting ensembles and extraordinary performances (not surprising, as Matt is also well regarded for his work as an actor). To date, Matt has directed a wide range of plays, from Go, Dog. Go! for Arden Children’s Theatre to David Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross for Theatre Exile, where he is Associate Artistic Director. Matt is also a newlywed. Who better to direct this story of passion and promise? Another young artist on this production is Lighting Designer Thom Weaver. Thom grew up in Cherry Hill. I first met Thom when, as a high school student, he assisted several lighting designers who worked here at the Arden. This bright, eager, precocious kid has become one of Philadelphia’s most sought after designers both locally and beyond (At the Arden he designed both My Name Is Asher Lev and Blue Door). Thom was recently appointed Artistic Director at Philadelphia’s Flashpoint Theatre, making him the first Lighting Designer/Artistic Director I can recall. Thom’s commitment to and passion for theatre and this community is remarkable and truly inspiring. Of course, Romeo and Juliet affords great roles for young actors, and our production features a remarkable cast beginning to make their mark here in Philadelphia and on the national stage. Providing opportunities for them, as well as Matt and Thom – the next generation of theatre artists – is one of our great responsibilities. These artists help ensure that new passions and perspectives are brought to this art form and this community. We are thrilled that so many young artists are making their lives and building their careers in Philadelphia. I recently directed a new play by Rogelio Martinez entitled When Tang Met Laika at the Denver Theatre Center. It was an extraordinary opportunity to work with new collaborators (and a few old favorites like Ian Merrill Peakes, who played animator Tony Wiston in last season’s Something Intangible). I also had the chance to see how a much larger theatre functions and to hear how Philadelphia is perceived by others in our industry. Again and again, people would say things like, “I’ve heard amazing things about Philadelphia” and even “I’m thinking of moving there.” It’s clear our city is viewed as a hotbed of theatrical activity. And the next generation of theatre artists is certainly doing their part to move this community forward. To quote Sunday in the Park with George: “So many possibilities…” Thank you for joining us at Romeo and Juliet. Enjoy.

P.S. We are finalizing plans for next season and will be announcing the full slate of shows soon. Here’s a preview: we will be doing a new play by Michael Hollinger (his first since Opus) and a new production of The Threepenny Opera (and yes, Mary Martello will be in it.) More to come…

Terrence J. Nolen

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CastLady Montague/Balthasar .......................................................................................................... Krista Apple Mercutio/Friar John ................................................................................................................ Shawn Fagan*Lady Capulet ...................................................................................................................... Melanye Finister*Lord Capulet ............................................................................................................................. Scott Greer*Benvolio ..................................................................................................................... James William Ijames*Romeo ..................................................................................................................................... Evan Jonigkeit*Juliet ........................................................................................................................................ Mahira Kakkar*Tybalt/Apothecary .......................................................................................................................... Sean LallyFriar Laurence .................................................................................................................. Anthony Lawton*Paris .............................................................................................................................................. Matt LorenzNurse ............................................................................................................................. Suzanne O’Donnell*Prince ........................................................................................................................ Brian Anthony Wilson*Lord Montague/Peter ...................................................................................................................... Frank X*

UnderstudiesKrista Apple, Carla Emanuele, Sean Lally, Benjamin Lovell, Jesse McIlvaine, Courtney Spiker Martin, Ray Roberts, Ken Sandberg, Wendy Staton, Bradley K. Wrenn

Assistant Fight Director: J. Alex Cordaro

Arden Theatre Company is a professional company employing members of Actors’ Equity Association. *Member of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the U.S.

Please check houseboards for program changes. Taking pictures and/or making visual or sound recordings is expressly forbidden.

The Arden operates under an agreement between the League of Resident Theatres and Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.

Actors’ Equity Association (AEA), founded in 1913, represents more than 45,000 actors and stage managers in the United States. Equity seeks to advance, promote and foster the art of live theatre as an essential component of our society. Equity negotiates wages and working conditions, providing a wide range of benefits, including health and pension plans. AEA is a member of the AFL-CIO, and is affiliated with FIA, an international organization of performing arts unions. www.actorsequity.org

Arden Theatre Company proudly participates in the Barrymore Awards for Excellence in Theatre, a program of the Theatre Alliance of Greater Philadelphia.

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Sun Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat

Feb25 26 27 8p 8p 8p

28 Mar2 3 4 5 62p 7p 7p 10a* 8p 2&8p

7 9 10 11 12 132*&7p 10:30a* 9:30a*&6:30p 10a*&8p* 8p 2&8p

14 16 17 18 19 202p 9:30a*&7p 6:30p* 9:30a*&8p 2&8p

21 23 24 25 26 272p* 9:30a* 2&6:30p 10a 8p 2&8p^

28 30 31 Apr1 2 32^&7p 7p 2&6:30p 8p 8p 2&8p

4 6 7 8 9 102p 10a* 10:30a*&6:30p10a*10a*2&8p

112p

ROMEO AND JULIET runs through April 11. Tell your friends!

[previews] SOLD OUT *post-showdiscussion opening night (SOLD OUT) ^CaptionedandAudioDescribed

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DIRECTOR’S NotesHow do you get to the heart of one of the greatest stories of all time?

Start with the basics; it’s a play about love and hate.

Shakespeare captures beautifully the two most dominant emotions we experience. Hate is easier to access. It’s comforting in a way. The feud between the Capulets and Montagues is referred to as an “ancient grudge”- it has gone on so long no one knows how it started. It has defined entire generations of thought and experience. It’s the kind of hate we’ve seen throughout the entire span of human history.

Love is harder. It requires sacrifice, courage, humility. It always comes at a cost and must be earned in action more than word. But it has the potential to make you more, both in mind and body.

The great dichotomy that Shakespeare captures is that the well-spring for these two great emotions comes from the same place. It’s irrational. We act before we think and we feel before we know. And when we’re young the sensation is even greater. But Shakespeare also shows us that hate leads us to ruin and that love can lift us above a “common bond”. We need love and must abandon hate. Romeo and Juliet’s death, while tragic, is necessary. This society of people can only see their true reflections in the loss of innocence. And in doing so can forgive and love again.

Martin Luther King said, “Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate. Only love can do that.”

These are the pieces that lie at the heart of Shakespeare’s play. In truth, this is a tale that’s existed since the 5th century and when Shakespeare’s company took it on they presented it in the only way they knew how. On their stage and in their costumes with their company. They would’ve made no attempts to make the stage look like Verona and the costumes would’ve been drawn from the fashions of the time. In our pursuit to get to the heart of this story, we’ll employ the same methodology. This is our stage. Our costumes. Our company.

We’d like to invite you on this journey with us. A journey of simple joy, hot blood, great passion, and most of all love. It’s a story that’s been passed down from generation to generation as the great reminder of the power of love and hate. We are eager to take on the task of passing this tale onto a new audience, a new generation, in the hopes that one day we all might hate a little less and love a little more.

Thanks for being here!

Matt Pfeiffer

Matt Pfeiffer

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I remember, as though it were yesterday, the first time I laid eyes on my wife, Kris. She was a teaching assistant in the Mathematics department of the University of Pittsburgh. I was a student in her class. It was day one. I can picture with vivid clarity what she was wearing that day, the way her hair caught the morning sun streaming into the third floor classroom in the Cathedral of Learning.

I had never seen her before, but knew immediately that she was the woman I would marry. What was the source of this certainty? How could it be known? Yet my soul stirred with a desire, a longing, an attraction so powerful that it both frightened and enticed me at the same time.

What was that moment like for you; the moment you first fell in love? Was the mere thought of your lover enough to suspend your senses? Were you hopelessly lovesick? Did you find yourself unable to focus on life’s practical matters while your mind conjured images of your beloved?

How mysterious this thing we call love! So powerful, so compelling, so forceful, no description does it justice. Mere words consistently fail to capture the heart’s deep feelings. And so we are reduced to allusions and allegories. Reduced to stories that attempt, albeit ever so poorly, to describe this wonderfully mysterious thing called love.

So it is only fitting that the Arden would bring to life this great love story by the world’s most recognized storyteller, William Shakespeare. In Romeo and Juliet, love explodes onto the stage with all of its violent, ecstatic, overpowering forcefulness superseding all other values, loyalties and emotions.

Fox Chase Bank Charitable Foundation is delighted to be the production sponsor for Arden Theatre Company’s presentation of Romeo and Juliet. We are privileged to share this time-honored and always timely story with you.

To Love!

Thomas M. PetroChief Executive OfficerFox Chase Bank and Fox Chase Bank Charitable Foundation

A Message From Our Production Sponsor

Thomas M. Petro

Follow the Arden online...

ardentheatre.org/blog ArdenTheatreCo ArdenTheatreCo Arden Theatre Company

The Arden

BLOG

Page 8: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet is one of the most performed plays in the English language. It has upheld the passage of time and is universally recognized as one of the greatest stories ever told. There have been thousands of productions produced, and like the Arden’s version, each production has a concept set in place by the director in which the design elements, cut of the script, and actor intentions are based.

You may have seen this play before, or other plays by Shakespeare. Though some may be presented in the traditional way with men in tights fighting with broad swords, others could have been a bit more creative in their conception. Directors and designers are allowed to present Shakespeare’s plays in any form because they are part of the public domain. The public domain refers to creative content that anyone can use without the permission of the content’s creator. Essentially all work published before 1923 is in the public domain.

A theatre has the right to perform a Shakespeare play however it wants, and many theatres have taken great creative liberties with Romeo and Juliet. I have gathered some examples to share:

• Various incarnations across the globe were presented in which the culture and setting was key to the concept. Two theatre troupes in Jerusalem controversially staged the tragedy in 1994 with a Palestinian Romeo and a Jewish Juliet. In 2000, a version dealt with post-apartheid South Africa, featuring the gang-ravaged youth culture of the Cape Flats in the divided city of Cape Town. Native Voices in Los Angeles produced a Native American version of the play in 2005. It was set in 17th century Santa Fe, seventeen years after the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 and revolved around the conflict between the Pueblo Indians and Spanish colonies.

• A Recent Off-Broadway production presented by the Nature Theater of Oklahoma tells the story of the star-crossed lovers by relying on the cloudy recollections of the common man. The show’s creative team called random people on the phone and asked them what they remembered about the play. The story is told through these remembrances, and the result is a collection of mixed plot-points and misquoted lines:

CONCEPTUALIZING ROMEO AND JULIET By Matthew Decker, Associate Producer

Dan Olmstead and Grace Gonglewski in The Taming of the Shrew (1995)

Kevin Cristaldi and Suzanne O’Donnell in Hamlet (1991)

Scott Greer as Faustus and Shawn Fagan as Hamlet in Wittenberg (2008)

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Shakespeare Around Town

Cymbeline and Two Gentleman of Verona in repertory

February 11-28 University of Delaware

The Wars of the Roses February 26-March 20

Collingswood Shakespeare Company

King LearMarch 3-28

People’s Light and Theatre Company

Love’s Fire: Seven New Plays Inspired by Seven Shakespearean Sonnets

March 18-March 26 West Chester University

MacbethMarch 19 – May 8

The Philadelphia Shakespeare Theatre

Romeo and Juliet March 27

Shakepeare Live! Appel Farm Arts and Music Center

Henry IV, Part 1 April 1 – May 2

Lantern Theater Company

A Midsummer Night’s Dream April 14 – May 9

The Philadelphia Shakespeare Theatre

Shakespearish April 16-19

Renaissance Artist Puppet Company Lansdale Center for the Performing Arts

Romeo and Juliet April 20-24

Annenberg CenterActing Company and the Guthrie Theater

Romeo and Juliet June 4-12

Pennsylvania Ballet

Romeo and Juliet Summer 2010

Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival

The Merry Wives of Windsor Summer 2010

Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival

A Midsummer Night’s Dream July 28-August 1

Shakespeare in Clark Park

Visit the Shakespeare Memorial sculpture by Andrew Calder anytime!

19th and Ben Franklin Parkway

“Romeo, oh Romeo, where art thou Romeo? Something or something and you are the sun! I don’t remember the rest – I don’t have it memorized.”

• Romeo and Juliet has been famously adapted into the musical West Side Story – but one could also argue that it is subtly present in the underlying theme of Grease, Footloose and even High School Musical.

• Romeo/Juliet Remixed (or R0M30/JUL127 R3MIX3D), presented by Spark Productions in Canada, was set to a rave dance floor background with a kickboxing Juliet and an Ecstasy-taking Romeo. Before the play began, the audience had a choice of glow-sticks (pink for Montagues, yellow for Capulets) and was then escorted into “Club Verona” where they could dance and cheer on a crew of break-dancing Verona residents.

• Mahira Kakkar, the Arden’s own Juliet, previously tackled the role at the Virginia Stage Company where Internet technology and audio and video devices were used to bring the play to life. The yuppie setting had the star-crossed lovers as the product of ultra-rich, power-broker families dressed in modern, trendy costumes. The actors photographed each other with handheld cameras that were then projected on large screens flanking the simple, scaffolding set. For a play whose tragedy occurs as a result of failed communication, the technological concept required a modern update - when Romeo is banished to Mantua he is greeted with no cell phone reception. (See page 26 for more on this topic)

No matter what the concept, Romeo and Juliet can only succeed if the emphasis is on Shakespeare’s language. Each theatre has a responsibility to tell the story. A concept is only a concept if it doesn’t connect to its audience.

CONCEPTUALIZING ROMEO AND JULIET By Matthew Decker, Associate Producer

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Who’s Who

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KRISTA APPLE (Lady Montague/Balthasar) first worked at the Arden in 2008’s Our Town, and she’s pleased as punch to be back. Other Philadelphia credits include The Wilma (Life of Galileo), Theatre Exile (Dark Play), and PlayPenn (We Three). Regional: Cape May Stage (Proof). Film/TV: Law & Order: Criminal Intent and the_source. Also a writer, she’s a regular contributor to American Theatre magazine and former Associate Editor of the Teaching Artist Journal. She holds an MFA (Acting) from Temple University and a BA (English, Theatre) from Kenyon College in Gambier, OH. Coming up: Vaclav Havel’s Leaving at The Wilma. Love to the DFH!

SHAWN FAGAN (Mercutio/Friar John) is thrilled to return to the Arden, having played Hamlet in the world premiere of Wittenberg in 2008. Recent credits include Hugh in The Voysey Inheritance (Denver Center Theatre Company), Acaste in The Misanthrope (Dallas Theatre Center), Marchbanks in Candida (Utah Shakespearean Festival), Christy Mahon in The Playboy of the Western World (American Players Theatre), War of the Worlds/Radio Play (SITI Company), Intimations for Saxophone (Arena Stage), and The Complete Works of Wllm Shkspr [abridged] (Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival). Previous work on Shakespeare includes Edgar in King Lear (Utah Shakes); Romeo in Romeo and Juliet, Sebastian in Twelfth Night, and Titinius/Soothsayer in Julius Caesar (APT). New York credits include work with Soho Rep, Clubbed Thumb, and LightBox. For DHF.

MELANYE FINISTER (Lady Capulet) is thrilled to be back on the F. Otto Haas Stage where she played Titania in Arden Theatre Company’s 1998 production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Melanye has been a company member at People’s Light and Theatre since 1991 and has appeared in many plays there including Doubt, The Persians, Six Characters in Search of an Author, The Giver, Something You Did, Fabulation, Member of the Wedding, String of Pearls, and Gospel At Colonus. Melanye has also worked for InterAct Theatre Company, Venture Theatre, The Walnut Street Theatre, and Philadelphia Theatre Company. She directs Youth Summerstage and is a Resident Teaching Artist at People’s Light and she is also a Board Member at Stockton Rush Bartol Foundation. Melanye holds a BFA from Carnegie Mellon University.

SCOTT GREER (Lord Capulet) is always happy to be back at the Arden, where he has appeared in over twenty productions. His favorites include: Death of a Salesman, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Red Herring, Baby Case and Wittenberg. He looks forward to Sunday in the Park with George later this spring. He has won four Barrymores, including the F. Otto Haas Award. Look for Scott in Theatre Exile’s Shining City in April. Scott would like to thank Terry Nolen and Pfeif. Love always to Jen and Lily.

JAMES WILLIAM IJAMES (Benvolio) is thrilled to be back at the Arden after appearing in James and the Giant Peach and An Empty Plate in the Café du Grand Boeuf. James was seen in New Paradise Laboratories’ production of PROM and Emmanuelle Delpeche-Ramey’s Oedipus at FDR in FDR Skate Park. Other credits include: Ken in Ponies (Gloucester Stage Company), Floyd in Seven Guitars (Rowan University), The Artist in Muralista (Philly Fringe) and Mauckingbird Theatre’s The Threshing Floor as James Baldwin.

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EVAN JONIGKEIT (Romeo) Thanks to Terry and Pfeif for the privilege to be back at the Arden, tackling this challenging role, around such a talented group of people. Last seen at the Arden as Dakin in The History Boys, he is a Philadelphia based artist working with many of the town’s companies, including Mauckingbird, Walnut, Montgomery, Pig Iron, PlayPenn, and People’s Light. He also has been seen in films Calendar Girl Killer, The Gift, Fox Television’s Amazing Sport Stories, along with many other independent films and commercials. Evan also serves on New Play Development Literary Committees, as a teacher, as Director of Development for Mauckingbird Theatre, and as a Producer and Director at Cape Repertory Theatre. Evan is a Temple University graduate. Love to my family and Jillian.

MAHIRA KAKKAR (Juliet) is thrilled to be working at the Arden. Recent credits include: Romeo and Juliet (Virginia Stage Company), Seven (London, Boston, Aspen, NY), Sophistry (South Ark Stage), and Inana (Denver Center). Favorite Credits include: Grace in Opus (Primary Stages), Maryamma in Miss Witherspoon (Playwrights Horizons & McCarter), and Emily Webb in Our Town (Oregon Shakespeare Festival). Film & TV: Law & Order: Criminal Intent, A Night in the Hill. Mahira is a native of Kolkata, India, and a graduate of The Julliard School.

SEAN LALLY (Tybalt/Apothecary) is very excited to be taking the stage at the Arden for the first time. He has been working as a company member for EgoPo for about four years where he performed in several productions: Spring Awakening (Ensemble), Something Cloudy, Something Clear (Kip), and Bluebird (Tyltyl). He has also worked Off-Broadway with Temple University’s In Conflict. He would like to thank his friends, family and Sara for all their support.

ANTHONY LAWTON (Friar Laurence) has acted in Philadelphia for 18 years. Favorite roles include George in Of Mice and Men (Walnut Street), Gideon in Playland (Wilma), Coleman in The Lonesome West (Lantern), and Ivan in The Seafarer (Arden). He also produces solo and small cast plays, like The Devil and Billy Markham, The Great Divorce, The Screwtape Letters, and Heresy under the aegis of his own company, The Mirror. For more info: www.anthonylawtonactor.com

MATT LORENZ (Paris) is a Philadelphia-based actor and sound designer. His acting credits include: Haunted Poe (Brat), Never the Sinner and Hedda Gabler (Mauckingbird), The Little Dog Laughed (Flashpoint), The Mystery Plays (PTW), Pushkin at Boldino (Crescent Moon), Sweetie Pie (Azuka), A Brief History of Helen of Troy (Figure/Ground), The Lucia Joyce Cabaret and Pay Up (Pig Iron), A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Much Ado About Nothing, The Merchant of Venice, and Othello (Harrisburg Shakespeare Festival) as well as last year’s Best Narrative Short winner at the Philly Film Festival- “Adam and Evan.” Matt has also written plays and will produce two original works this summer: This is Ridiculous and The Prince of America.

SUZANNE O’DONNELL (Nurse) first appeared with the Arden in Godspell (1989) and then in As You Like It, Saint Joan, Hamlet, Working, The Dragon, Ellen Foster and most recently Agnes in Dancing at Lughnasa. Recent regional credits: Arcadia at the Folger Theatre and Social Security at Cape May Stage. Shakespeare credits include: Kate in Taming of the Shrew, Rosalind in As You Like It, Hermione in Winter’s Tale, Ophelia, Juliet, Viola, Hermia, Emilia and Helena in All’s Well That Ends Well. In 2004, Suzanne performed Time Out! With Didi and Rose with beloved friend and Philly

Who’s Who

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Who’s Who

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BRIAN SIDNEY BEMBRIDGE (Scenic Designer) Off-Broadway: Second Stage, Jean Cocteau Repertory, Kids With Guns Theater Company, Theatre at St Clement’s. Regional: Guthrie Theatre, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Children’s Theatre Company, California Shakespeare, Maltz Jupiter Theater, Two River Theater, Virginia Opera, Opera Omaha, The Second City Toronto, Milwaukee Repertory, Madison Repertory, among others. Honors: 5 Joseph Jefferson Awards, 5 After Dark Awards, 2 LA Drama Critic Circle Awards, 2 Garland Awards and an LA Weekly Award. Mr. Bembridge was just named one of the five most prolific theater artists of the decade, Time Out Magazine and one of the 50 Leading Players in Chicago, New City Chicago. Film: Wallace Shawn’s Marie and Bruce, Holding Out, MANFAST, Stray Dogs, Late for Church, Muppets from Space. Mr. Bembridge holds a BFA from North Carolina School of the Arts, School of Design and Production. briansidneybembridge.com.

ROSEMARIE E. MCKELVEY (Costume Designer) is delighted to be designing Romeo and Juliet for the Arden. Previous Arden designs include Something Intangible (2009 Barrymore Award for Costume Design),Candide, Winesburg, Ohio, Ferdinand the Bull, Caroline, or Change (2007 Barrymore Award for Costume Design), The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales, Twelfth Night, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, and Bunnicula. Other companies Rosemarie is designing for are The Peoples Light and Theatre Company, The Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival, New Paradise Laboratory, and InterAct Theatre Company.

THOM WEAVER (Lighting Designer) Arden: Blue Door, My Name Is Asher Lev. Wilma: Scorched (Barrymore nom), Coming Home, Becky Shaw. People’s Light: Snow White in Follywood. Lantern: The Breath of Life. Delaware Theatre Company: It’s a Wonderful Life, All the Great Books, The Diary of Anne Frank. Theatre Exile: American Buffalo (Barrymore nom.). Two River: 26 Miles (also with Round House), ReENTRY (also at Urban Stages), A Year with Frog and Toad, Macbeth (also with Folger), Bad Dates. Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival: Complete Works of Wllm Shkpr [abridged], A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Other credits include: Cal Shakes, Vital Theater Company, Children’s Theatre Company, Centerstage, Folger Theatre, Syracuse Stage, Berkshire Theatre Festival, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Signature Theatre Company, Berkshire Opera, Urban Stages, Lincoln Center Institute, Lincoln Center Festival,

star Jilline Ringle at City Theatre in Pittsburgh and the Chalfonte in Cape May. She lives in Orlando, FL with husband Jim Helsinger, Rosie and James.

BRIAN ANTHONY WILSON (Prince) feels blessed to return to the Arden for his fifth show. Local theatre credits include shows with: Act II Playhouse, Bushfire, 1812, Freedom, Hedgerow, InterAct, The Lantern, People’s Light, Philly Shakes, Prince Music and PTC. Regional theatre credits include Jitney (Kansas City Rep/Arizona Theatre Co.), Intimate Apparel (Indiana Rep/Syracuse Stage) and Two Trains Running and 12 Angry Men (Cleveland Playhouse). Film: Keeping The Faith, Law Abiding Citizen, The Postman, Rounders, 99 Percent Sure, Booted, The Fields, Shelter, The Good Student, Close Up, and Punch Me. Radio: The Howard Stern Show. TV: As The World Turns, Law & Order: S.V.U., The Sopranos and 5 seasons on The Wire. For my Family.

FRANK X (Lord Montague/Peter) is delighted to return to the Arden after appearing in The History Boys and Peter Pan. Last season he was seen in the world premiere of Little Lamb at InterAct Theatre and in The Winter’s Tale at Folger Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, D.C. Favorite roles have included Malvolio in Twelfth Night (Seattle Rep Theatre), David Gavin in After Ashley (Humana Festival), Sterling North in Permanent Collection (InterAct Theatre), Beringer in Rhinoceros (Theatre Exile), Sam in Master Harold…and the Boys and the title role in King Lear (both at Lantern Theater). Mr. X received a Barrymore Award for his performance in Lonely Planet (InterAct Theatre).

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York Theatre, Summer Play Festival, 37 ARTS, Spoleto Festival USA, City Theatre, Pittsburgh Public Theatre, and Yale Rep. 2007 Audelco Award for King Hedley II (Signature Theatre). 2003 Entertainment Design Magazine Tyro Talent. He is a member of Wingspace Design Group and a staff member of PlayPenn. Education: Carnegie Mellon and Yale.

JAMES SUGG (Sound Designer/Composer) is an actor, sound designer, composer and 10 year member of Pig Iron Theatre Company with whom he has created 10 original works. He has also worked with Seattle Rep, Actors Theater of Louisville, Folger Theatre, The Wilma, Headlong Dance Theater, Rainpan 43 and Lucidity Suitcase Intercontinental amongst many others. His work has been recognized with two Obies (Performance Chekhov Lizardbrain, Special Citation Hell Meets Henry Halfway), four Barrymores for Outstanding Sound Design, and the F. Otto Haas Award for Emerging Theater Artist. He is the composer of the musicals A Murder, A Mystery And A Marriage (an adaptation by Aaron Posner of the short story by Mark Twain), James Joyce is Dead and So Is Paris (Pig Iron Theatre Co.), The Sea (a one man electric chamber opera) and Cherry Bomb (with writer Jen Childs).

DALE ANTHONY GIRARD (Fight Director) is an award winning Fight Director and author of the stage combat manual Actors On Guard. He is a Black Belt in Taekwondo/Hopkido, a member of the North Carolina Stuntmen’s Association and a SAFD recognized Fight Master. Credits include the Metropolitan Opera, New York City Opera, Folger Theatre, Signature Theatre, Florida Grand Opera, Pioneer Theatre, Tulsa Opera, Triad Stage, and the Vancouver Opera. Recent film credits include Eyeborgs, The Trial and Junebug.

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE (Playwright) (1564 - 1616) was an English poet and playwright. His surviving works, including some collaborations, consist of 38 plays, 154 sonnets, two long narrative poems, and several other poems. His plays have been translated into every major living language and are performed more often than those of any other playwright. Between 1585 and 1592, he began a successful career in London as an actor, writer, and part owner of a playing company called the Lord Chamberlain’s Men, later known as the King’s Men. In1599, his company constructed the Globe Theatre. His early plays were mainly comedies and histories, genres he raised to the peak of sophistication and artistry by the end of the sixteenth century. He then wrote mainly tragedies until about 1608, including Hamlet, King Lear, and Macbeth. In his last phase, he wrote tragicomedies, or romances, and collaborated with other playwrights.

MATT PFEIFFER (Director) Matt is thrilled to return to the Arden. Previous Arden credits include directing Go, Dog. Go! and a workshop of Wittenberg. Area directing credits include: Walnut St., Delaware Theatre Co., 1812 Productions, Brat Productions, Lantern Theatre, and 13 seasons with the Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival. Matt also serves as Associate Artistic Director of Theatre Exile where he’s directed Barrymore Nominated productions of Glengarry Glen Ross, Bug, and American Buffalo. Other credits include Two River Theatre and the Orlando Shakespeare Theatre. Later this spring Matt will direct Shining City (Theatre Exile) and The Foocy (Delaware Theatre Co). Matt is a five-time Barrymore Nominee and the recipient of the 2008 F. Otto Haas Award. Thanks to Terry, Amy, and the entire Arden Crew. And special thanks to an amazing group of collaborators. Love to Kim.

DAN HODGE (Assistant Director) Over the last season, he appeared as the title character in Woyzeck for EgoPo, in Bristol Riverside’s Absurd Person Singular, Compleat Wrks of Wllm Shkspr (Abridged) for Theatre Horizon, and in Hamlet at the Lantern. For the Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival; King Lear and The Winter’s Tale. Dan appeared as a Weird Sister in Two River Theatre’s Macbeth directed by Aaron Posner and Teller. With Theatre Exile; Mr. Marmalade and Glengarry Glen Ross which took the 2007 Barrymore Award for Best Ensemble.

Who’s Who

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Who’s WhoKATHARINE M. HANLEY (Stage Manager) has stage managed several shows. Buy her a cocktail after the show and she’ll tell you all about it.

TERRENCE J. NOLEN (Producing Artistic Director) is co-founder of Arden Theatre Company. Favorite Arden productions include all-Philadelphia casts of All My Sons, Death of a Salesman, The Grapes of Wrath and Hedda Gabler and such musicals as Sweeney Todd, Pacific Overtures, Falsettos, Violet and Caroline, or Change. Terry directed the inaugural production of Arden Children’s Theatre, Charlotte’s Web. He has directed six world-premiere plays by Michael Hollinger, three by Dennis Raymond Smeal, Michael Ogborn’s Baby Case, Bruce Graham’s Something Intangible, and recently directed Rogelio Martinez’s When Tang Met Laika at Denver Center Theatre Company. Terry has been nominated for 23 Barrymore Awards for his directing work at the Arden and received awards for The Baker’s Wife, Sweeney Todd, Opus, Winesburg, Ohio, Assassins and Something Intangible. He directed Michael Hollinger’s Opus at Primary Stages in New York and was nominated for a Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Director. His short film The Personal Touch was nominated for an Emmy Award.

AMY L. MURPHY (Managing Director) A Philadelphia native, Amy co-founded the Arden in 1988 with Terry Nolen and Aaron Posner. She is especially proud of the Arden Professional Apprentice program and its contribution to the Philadelphia cultural community. A graduate of Susquehanna University, Amy received the university’s first-ever Young Alumni Achievement Award. She completed the Executive Program for Nonprofit Leaders-Arts which is a joint program of the Stanford Graduate School of Business Center for Social Innovation and National Arts Strategies. Amy has served on panels for the National Endowment for the Arts, the New Jersey State Arts Council and the Executive Committee of the League of Resident Theatres (LORT). Amy was named a Hepburn Fellow 2008-9 by the Katharine Houghton Hepburn Center at Bryn Mawr College.

ARDEN THEATRE COMPANY Founded in 1988, Arden Theatre Company is dedicated to bringing to life the greatest stories by the greatest storytellers of all time. We stage five productions each season as part of our mainstage series and two productions through Arden Children’s Theatre, the city’s first resident professional children’s theatre program. We create and produce new work through our new-work development program, the Independence Foundation New Play Showcase. The Arden Professional Apprenticeship program trains future theatre leaders, and our theatre classes teach children and teens about the craft of making plays. Our access program, Arden For All, makes our work available to the entire community through subsidized tickets and books for economically disadvantaged young people. We also offer sign language-interpreted, captioned and audio described performances and Pay-What-You-Can final dress rehearsals that benefit other nonprofits. The Arden has received six Philadelphia Magazine “Best of Philly” Awards, the Arts & Business Council’s Arts Excellence Award, five City Paper “Reader’s Choice” Awards, four Philadelphia Inquirer “Theatre Company of the Year” citations, 52 awards and 234 nominations from the Theatre Alliance of Greater Philadelphia’s Barrymore Awards for Excellence in Theatre, and was named “Best Theatre Company” by Philadelphia Weekly in 2009. Arden Theatre Company, a professional, nonprofit 501(c)(3) theatre company, is a member of the Theatre Communications Group, the League of Resident Theatres, the Theatre Alliance of Greater Philadelphia, Greater Philadelphia Cultural Alliance, Philadelphia Convention and Visitors Bureau and Old City Arts Association. The Arden operates under an agreement between the League of Resident Theatres and Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States. The Scenic, Costume, Lighting and Sound Designers in LORT theatres are represented by United Scenic Artists Local USA-829, IATSE.

Arden Theatre Company wishes to thank:• East End Salon • Ricky’s Army & Navy • Vulcan’s Forge

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Corporate, Foundation & Government Support$100,000 & aboveHamilton Family Foundation Independence Foundation Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development The Pew Charitable TrustsPhiladelphia Cultural Leadership ProgramThe Philadelphia Theatre Initiative, a program of the Philadelphia Center for Arts and Heritage, funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts and administered by The University of the ArtsThe Wallace Foundation William Penn Foundation

$50,000 to $99,999The Harold and Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust National Endowment for the ArtsPennsylvania Council on the ArtsThe Philadelphia Inquirer, Daily News and philly.com +Shubert Foundation

$15,000 to $49,999Campbell Soup Foundation Comcast Corporation Claneil FoundationEdgerton Foundation New American PlaysEdward M. Story Memorial Fund of the Philadelphia FoundationFox Chase BankHarmelin Media Hirsig Family Foundation of the Philadelphia Foundation Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Kieran Timberlake Associates,LLPLincoln Financial Group Foundation McLean ContributionshipMedical Legal Reproductions+PECOPhiladelphia Cultural FundPhiladelphia FoundationTarget Corporation Virginia Brown Martin Fund of the Philadelphia Foundation

$7,500 to $14,999AnonymousBoeing Corporation Pennsylvania Cultural Management InitiativePNC Charitable TrustTD Bank The Vanguard Group Foundation

$2,500 to $7,499The 1976 FoundationThe Addis GroupAllegiance Bank Arronson FoundationBarra Foundation Brook J. Lenfest Foundation Caroline Alexander Buck FoundationCaroline J. S. Sanders Charitable Trust IICharlotte Cushman FoundationCivic FoundationDolfinger-McMahon Foundation Eagles Youth Partnership+Ethel Sergant Clark Smith Memorial FundAnne M. and Philip H. Glatfelter Family FoundationGreater Philadelphia Tourism and Marketing Corporation The Haley Foundation The Hassel FoundationHatboro Beverages+IBM Corporate Citizenship and Corporate AffairsMerck, Inc. Paul E. Kelly FoundationRosenlund Family Foundation Susquehanna Bank The Victory FoundationThe Wachovia Wells Fargo FoundationWalter J. Miller TrustZipcar Philadelphia+

$750 to $2,499Arronson FoundationConnelly FoundationDrumcliff FoundationJenkintown Building Services+Johnson and JohnsonLouis N. Cassett Foundation Maxwell Strawbridge Charitable TrustMedia Copy+Quaker Chemical FoundationThe Rittenhouse FoundationStephen Starr Events+Union Benevolent Association Walker FoundationBWF Foundation

$749 and underActors’ Equity Association Foundation Pennsylvania Womens ForumWilliam Goldman Foundation+denotes gifts of services or goods

Matching Gift PartnersACE Charitable FoundationArchie D. and Bertha H. Walker FoundationAXA FinancialDCR Environmental Services Inc. Dilworth Paxson LLPEndo Pharmaceuticals ExxonMobil FoundationFederated Department Stores Foundation First Tennessee Foundation

Gannett Foundation GE FoundationGlaxoSmithKlineIBM Corporate Citizenship and Corporate Affairs Independence Foundation Johnson and Johnson Matching Gifts ProgramMerck Partnership for Giving Merrill Lynch National Philanthropic Trust

Penn Virginia CorporationPhiladelphia FoundationPNC FoundationQuaker Chemical Corporation Robert Wood Johnson FoundationSap America, Inc. Subaru of America Foundation United WayThe Vanguard Group FoundationWachovia Foundation Matching Gifts Program

Is your business looking for a tax break in 2010?Receive a tax credit through the Pennsylvania Education Improvement Tax Credit Program by supporting the Arden!EITC funds directly support our educational outreach program, Arden for All.To find out if your business is eligible, visit:www.ardentheatre.org/support/ eitc.html or contact Angela DuRoss, Development Manager at 215-922-8900 x25 or [email protected] thanks to EITC contributors Comcast Corporation, PECO and Susquehanna Bank

Make a donation through your workplace United Way program.Our Donor Choice Number: 14198

Contributions made through the United Way support our

work with children.

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Sassafras Grove ($10,000 & above)Mr. Frederick W. Anton, IIISally and Michael Bailin^Mr. and Mrs. Albert M. Greenfield, IIIPhoebe W. Haas Charitable Trust A, recommended by Carole Haas GravagnoPhoebe W. Haas Charitable Trust A, recommended by John Otto and Dr. Janet Haas Mr. and Mrs. N. Peter HamiltonHirsig Family Fund of The Philadelphia FoundationVirginia and Harvey Kimmel Arts Education Fund of the Philadelphia FoundationAnonymous

Cherry Grove ($5,000-$9,999)John Bitman^Joseph and Marie FieldMatthew and Marie Garfield Ms. Elizabeth GemmillPhoebe W. Haas Charitable Trust B, recommended by Leonard C. HaasBarbara and Leslie KaplanJosephine Klein Suzanne F. Roberts Cultural Development Fund Charles Rose and Mindy Goldberg Rose^Monica Horan and Philip RosenthalTerry and Amanda Foster Spahr, through the Betty and Wes Foster Family FoundationAnonymousLee and Christopher van de VeldeRosalyn and Stephen Weinstein

Filbert Grove ($2,500-$4,999)Mrs. Valla AmsterdamCarol and Tom Beam Lois G. BrodskyAnne M. CongdonDorothy DelbuenoAnn DieboldBob and Nancy ElfantTim and Ellen Foster^Narinder and Patricia GargLinda and David GlicksteinGlenn Gundersen and Susan ManixDavid and MaryJane HackneyRonna and Robert Hall^Drs. Robin and Saifuddin Mama Peggy and Steve Morgan Kurt and Mary-Ann Reiss

Sally Walker and Tom Gilmore^ June and Steve Wolfson Family Foundation

Mulberry Grove ($1,000-$2,499)Brian Abernathy and Elizabeth IrelandJohn AlchinPeggy AndersonBethany AsplundhJim and Janet AverillSheryl and Allen BarGiséle Sambar BathishIvy BayardSandy and Mickey BernsteinReggie Blaszczyk and Lee O’NeillLouis BluverJean G. Bodine Tony Braithwaite+Almut BreazealeBernard Brewstein and Ellen RosenthalDeDe and Tony BrownNancy BurdThomas Burke and Rick FountasLaurada ByersChip Capelli Priscilla and John ClementJohn and Susan ColemanJeffrey Coon+Joy De Jesús and Jamie ReynoldsRobert M. DeverBen Dibble+Tobey and Mark DichterMichael A. Donato and Peter R. SonzogniMarie and Peter DoonerDeb Dorsey and Mike GreenJames R. Fairburn and David A. WickardStephen FalchekJeanne FisherOliver M. FordSandi Foxx-JonesRichard Frey+David and Christina Fryman*Lou and Rhoda Fryman Terry GraboyesBonnie GrahamMarcy Gringlas and Joel GreenbergChara and John C. HaasMr. and Mrs. Jon HarmelinDon and Lynn Martin HaskinJane and Steve HeumannSusan Jacobson and Michael Golden*Mr. and Mrs. D. Scott and Carol Kelley

Caroline KemmererMr. Peter Kenney and Dr. Dorothy NovickHolly KinserKenneth and Eve KlothenJoseph Kluger and Susan LewisBill and Beth LandmanWinnie and Eric LienWilliam A. LoebLarry and Mickey MagidRichard Maimon and Susan SegalLewis R. and Sue Ann MarburgGloria and Dan MarianoJean S. MarkovitzJohn and Amy McCawley*Andrea Mengel and George A. RitterSeymour MillsteinA.C. MissiasEllen and Michael Mulroney Amy L. Murphy and Terrence J. NolenRon and Suzanne NaplesMichael Norris and Matt VarratoDiane PalmerThomas Petro and Kristine MessnerDr. and Mrs. Joel PorterAaron Posner and Erin WeaverAnn and Frank Reed, through the Malfer FoundationPhyllis and Martin RosenthalDolly Beechman Schnall and Dr. Nathan Schnall, in loving memory of Laurie BeechmanHether, Don and Sarah SmithRichard and Amanda SmootKathleen A. StephensonWilliam K. Stewart FoundationKeith and Jim StrawAdelaide Sugarman and Marshall GreenbergHarvey B. SwedloffJustin ThomasMarguerite V. Rodgers and James H. TimberlakeEileen Heisman Tuzman and Martin TuzmanThomas and Patricia VernonSandy and Michael WaxRichard E. Woosnam and Diane Dalto WoosnamMIke Salmanson and Tobi ZemskyEllen Yin+ZAKARAK Productions* denotes gifts made through the United Way +denotes gifts of services or goods ^includes a matching gift

The Sylvan Society recognizes individuals who make annual gifts of $1,000 or more. The exceptional generosity of these donors enables the Arden to tell great stories by having the resources to achieve the highest level of artistic quality. Sylvan Society benefits bring members closer to our work and deepen their appreciation for the role they play in the Arden’s success. To join or for more information, please contact Development Manager, Angela DuRoss, at 215.922.8900, x25 or [email protected].

ARDEN FOR ALL is supported by a generous gift from Virginia and Harvey Kimmel16

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Thank You to our Supporters$500 - $999Iris Melendez & Henry R. Adamczyk, Jr.Stan and Lisa AltmanRon and Joyce BayerPat & Tom BenderBarry & Marilyn BevacquaDaniel R. Blickman*Ruth E. BrownDebbie and Alan CasnoffChristina Clay MDBarbara R. CobbJim and Pat Lockhart CulbertsonMr. and Mrs. Farenback-BratemanShannon and Edward FarmerCarole M. Foley*Hartley Family Charitable FundKaren & Mark HiteEdith KlausnerAlan & Elaine KlawansKenneth D KoppleMarilyn & David KrautMary Ellen KroberMarilyn Sanborne and Richard Labowskie*Mike and Helene LoebMrs. Grace MadeiraDonald J. Martin and Richard RepettoAnn and George MorrisDan PromisloPaul Rabe and Cheryl GunterGraham and Betsy Robb in honor of Lee van de VeldeFranklyn and Cintra RodgersJerry & Bernice RubensteinEva and Marvin Schlanger Family FoundationPhilip and Susan SchlegelDorothy Tomassini

$250-$499Howard AaronsonJanet & Roger AlwangRobert Bauer & Sandy Clay BauerRichard & Joan BehrSheila Bell and Thomas DoddsPeter and Lynne Berman

Mr. & Mrs. J. Robert and Marilyn BirnhakJoanne M. HuggardJoseph & Mary Lou BreidenstineBob CarfagnoMr. Joseph CaseyCaroline CastagnoEdwin G. Close, IIDr. W. Robert and Margaret CookRuth Miller CoxDr. and Mrs. Bruce DennistonShafiq EbrahimAnne EwersCynthia Heininger & James FeeneyDan GannonIn memory of Bob GallagherCharles GearBob & Jan GorenSusan GreeneClara and Jorge LaBrakeBarbara & Robert HauptfuhrerCharles HeadBetsy & Ted HershbergJim & Carolyn HessingerDavid and Beth Medoway KaganBarbara & Jerry KaplanSusan Kellogg and Dick HoffmanSteven B. King*Barbara and Leonard KlinghofferJoel KoppelmanBarbara Patterson LobbWill & Sandy LockJohn & Martha LubellFrank & Sally MalloryRobert ManningGeorge & Judy McCarthyGloria McNuttRobert MullinPaul Nutaitis and Robert ClarkSusan Odessey & Paul CoffLaura Offutt and Steve FukuchiAlice and Albert PackmanBarbara & Don ParmanJohn & Judith PeakesDouglas and Mary PeckJohn & Judy Peeler

John & Pinkie PhilbrickSherri and Abe ReichMary Jo ReillyJoy RickabaughRuth & Marvin SachsIrwin C. and Carole M. SaftHarold and Sharon SchwalmEllen SchwartzWarren and Carole Lee SchwomeyerDr. & Mrs. Eugene ShusterFrank and Catherine SignorelloJames Akerberg and Larry SimmonsJames L. SmithMarilyn and Dean R. StaatsElaine & Sal TagliareniDr. & Mrs. Stephen G. VassoHella & Lew VolgenauMichael Walraven and Mary Lou StarlingFred & Arleen WeinsteinMatthew A. White*Mrs. Thomas A. WilliamsNancy WingoMr. and Mrs. Harry W. WoodcockPaul and Barbara YeagleMr. & Mrs. Howard Yusem*Tom & Jackie ZemaitisMichael Zuckerman

$125-$249Carol and Bennett AaronDr. Ron AbramsDavid ActonCharles and Stephanie AndrewsAlan & Sandy AultCarl and Pat BachSusan Becker & Aaron RubinJoann White and William BeckettDoris and Aaron BitmanMs. Reid BodekLily & Newman BortnickMr. & Mrs. Thomas and Mary Pat BoyleEadie and Allan BrooksBernard & Pamela BrownsteinSheryl RoserMs. Charlotte E. Cady

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Thank You to our Supporters

18

$125-$249 continued Nelly & Scott ChildressSandra & Saul ClairMr. & Mrs. Fred & Karen ClarkJennifer CoffeyJohn CondelloSandra and James CorryCharles J. CoyleBillie CoyneMary Ann DaileyStephanie DevineyDaniel DevlinAndrew & Marla DiamondLarry & Pat DixonMichael DotseyAnonymousPaul and Adele EpsteinSue & Robert EvansWilliam EwingPaul & Judith FarberCharlotte & Mickey FeldmanMalcolm & Martha FickLarry and Maureen Mullin FowlerDr. John & Elaine FrankPaulette and Paul FreemanBrenda FreitagNancy and Richard GabelChaim GalfandMiriam GalsterStan GibellDavid K. GiffordTim and Carol GoldenRobert and Patti GoodmanKelley A. Grady*Roseanne and David GrantMiriam and Saul GrossmanCarl and Helene GumermanDona & Curt HaltiwangerMary & William HangleyBrian HannaMary C. HarbisonDouglas & Harriet HeathBill HendricksonDaniel and Monica HilfertyMr. Frank HollickRossana JaffeAram and Jackie JerrehianValerie M. JonesSarah C. JordanMr. and Mrs. Charles KahnPhyllis KauffmanLucy KaufmanAnonymousMargaret KellerRobert KleinChristal Kozloski*Walter Kraft and Deborah HungJoan Kremer and Jim LutherJoan & Marc S. LapayowkerBob and Mary LawlerRichard LeeLorraine and late Richard LeffJack and Donna LevinNatalie LevkovichMr. & Mrs. Craig & Stephanie LewisRobert & Laurel LipshutzPerry Watts & Samuel Litwin

AnonymousLynn & Joe MankoTed & Ronnie MannMary Louise MartinDr. Rosalie G. MatzkinFaith J. McDowellLorraine and Bruce McMahonAlan & Susan MillerPaul & Lee S MillerEllen MonseesKeith and Liz MosleyKathleen MoyerKenneth & Susan MyersJerome NapsonMary Ann NaultyEtta & Chuck NissmanKathy Nolen EdwardsCarol L. O’BrienWilliam O’ConnorAnonymousGerald O’NeillHugh C. O’NeillAnonymousMr. Richard PariseauBetsy OliphantBob and Leila PeckMary and F. Laurence PethickHelen PhillipsLisa TruckessRhoda PolakoffNancy PostJohn & Margaret PregLinda QuamAnonymousEleanor ReinhardtTeresa Reyes and John HogeneschFred RizzoSusan RockDulcie RommJane A. Rose, CPA/PFS, CFPFaye & Daniel RossAlan RothenbergBernard & Barbara RuekgauerWilliam F. RyanJoan Ryder and Robert LudwigThekla SackstederJoan and Bill SaidelLucille SchlackMr. and Mrs. A. SchmidtMs. Kim SchmuckiMs. Adeline R SchultzElliott and Ellie SeifRobert and Karen SerenbetzLeslie E. SkiltonPhillip and Karen SpikerCeleste and Robert StarankovicRobert Stewart and Barbara Barnett- StewartRuth P. StuessyKen Sugarman & Robin Goldfaden in honor of M.Greenberg & A.SAnonymousBob and Tina TateJoel TempleCathy J. Toner*John UrofskyMalin Van Antwerp*

Richard & Fenching WainsteinSusan WaltherBeth Brooks and Bob WatersonMarvin & Betty WeissAnonymousChristine WinkelvossSally Wojcik and Will LambrakosBertram and Lorle WolfsonAnonymousSam & Kuna Yankell

$75-$124George AhernEmily AikenAnonymousNan AldersonMr. and Mrs. Brian AllebachAnonymousDr. & Mrs. Anthony J. AndrewsLauren and Joshua AverillRita AxelrodKatherine BakerMay & Ethan BallRobert R. Baron*Sylvia BeckLisa BeckerPeninah BerdugoDavid & Nancy BergmanJay and Nancy BerkowitzSteve Zettler and Cordelia BiddlePhilip and Elaine BobroveMs. Rose Marie BockmanFrank BoyerMichael P. BoyleMartha BrandriffCharles BrennanMarlin G. Brown*Michael P. BuckleyCarol BuettgerRobert J ButeraKaren Marston and Greg BuzanRegina ByrneJohn T. CallariBarbara CarmineHoward CellRonald and Christina ChangLeah ChaplinMary ChomitzRita MerkinAnnemarie Clarke and David BuchSharyn F ClausonRhoda and Michael CobenMs. Judy CohenSue CohenJohn R CollettArminta & William B. CollinsDr. Marie A. ConnCarol CoplandRobert and Frances CorliesZoe CoulsonJames Crawford and Judith DeanEmily and Bob CroninKimberly L. Crown*Daniel DagleJennifer DalpiazEllen DeaconRoseann Muziani DealRita and Grace Denbo

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Thank You to our SupportersCarole and Marc DichterIn Honor of Marjorie DickeyGeorge Koch and Santo DiDonatoEllen DipintoEllen & Max DooneiefSonya DoreBeverly DotterRay DoyleAngela DuRossLois S DursoMarcia EisenbergJane EisnerLinda V EllsworthDebbie and Jerry EpsteinBarry J EvansWally and Jane EvansMark & Rene FeitelsonAllan FellnerRuth and Andre FerberJonathan and Catherine Fiebach Fund of the Jewish FederationJohn FischerDeborah and Martin FishbeinMarjorie FitermanHolly and Greg FlanaganCamille Focarino & Joseph DimaioCurt FoxworthDrs. Barbara and Len FrankMr. and Mrs. Kenneth FrankMr. Allan P. FreedmanPaula FreilichPaula FuchsbergWendi FurmanJoel Gardner and Holly PhelpsJohn GeronimoDavid GlanceyCarrie Glasby & Kathleen KarhnakPeggy GloverMs. Joan GmitterJoan and Marvin GoldbergMr. & Mrs. Richard & Rita GoldbergDr. and Mrs. William GoldfarbPriscilla GrosickSusan and Adam GuttentagOna and Stephen HamiltonDonald HargreavesLinda Fowler HartnettGail HauptfuhrerBeverly HaydenRon HermanBill Herman & Laurie NavinSusan W HerronHeidi HertfelderMs. Lynn HewittIsidore & Sharon HoffermanDr. David HoltzPatricia and David HoltzArnold & Esther HornPeter & Barbara HutcheonKathleen JacobsGary & Debbie Johnson-McNuttDonald and Lorraine JonesThomas Lloyd & Jane KampDonald & Mary KaneSandra R KarlsonAlex and Joanne KarrasScott and Margie Kasner

Ira & Linda KatzSheila KesslerToni and Herb KestenbaumCynthia KillionJohn & Cheryl KirbyBrian and Carin KirschnerKen and Eva KleinPatricia and Charles KlingBernadette KollerJames KronzerStephen and Helene KunkelPeter and Peshe KuriloffAnne B. LadensonJohn and Joanne LawsonRobert LazarLisa LeeEdward LichtenbergNorman and Sylvia LiebermanKaren LiskerDaniel and Linda LitwinLeroy & Ruth LoewensternMelissa Lore*Virigina LoweDonald and Nancy MaclayTodd & Susan MaklerNina & John MantioneLolly MarchantRonnie and Larry MargelMilton & Renee MarguliesDr. Arlen Marks and David SmithIrwin Matusow & Barbara RudnickRichard & Gretchen McCannKirsten McCoyDr. Donald Bakove and Margaret G. McLaughlinCeleste McMenaminTom & Helen McNuttCheryl MeyerMartin & Sandra MillerDouglas & Fredaricka MoffittDaniel P. MonbourquetteLisa and Stephen MoranoJeff and Maxine MorganClaire MoyerCarmen MucciBonnie and Eliot NiermanCarol Ann & Thomas O’LearyBrenda J. OliphantLinda OslerClare and Dwayne OsmanStanton and Bernice OswaldSandra PackelCheryl and Paul ParkerSydney S. PasternackRuth PetkofskyDonald PlankKaren and David PresselAlan Reinach and Dana PerlmanClifford Ridley and Betsey HansellGeorge & Zara RobertsLinda Robinson, Ph.D. and Peter KrillClaire RoccoFrancoise and Louis RollmannChad and Jennifer RosenbergKenneth and Shelley RosenbergDr. and Mrs. Randy RosenbergJ. Randall Rosensteel

Dr. Harry RosenthalEdwin and Sally RosentholDavid and Athena RuhlJanet RupertDiane RurodeJanet S. SaltzmanRita and Herbert SalzmanMark SandbergJohn SandsJames and Anne SauveEllen SchlenkerRuth Ann SchlesingerCarl W. and Mary Ellen SchneiderJeanne C. ScottAlex and Stefanie SeldinAntoinette Fauar SeymourMr. & Mrs. J. Thomas ShowlerAnne Shuff and Mike CreechMel and Susanne ShusterAbigail & Richard Simkus Bob and Harriet SingerDavid and Carleene SlowikAnonymousBruce and Penny SmithRichard SmithRichard and Doranne SmithMargaret R. SpencerPaula SpielbergCorinne StahlLeon SteinbergRita StevensPaul StoneBethy & Vinson StouckSharon and Robert StrochakSally SwitzerRichard & Anne TaxMarion and Richard TaxinLinda and Keith ThomsonThe Tobias FamilyLinda and Ken Traver-NeeldPeter TrentacosteKathe VillanovaClifford & Ann WagnerMr. John WaldieThomas WatkinsJenny and Bill WebbHarold WeinerEdward WilkTheresa WilliamsLydia WindermanCarol YetterDiane and Gilbert YoungAskold ZagarsFrancis A. ZampielloJohn and Donna ZappacostaJoan D. Zeidner*Carlos Ziegler & Elizabeth Hasson* Denotes gift made through the United Way+ Denotes gift of goods or services

This list acknowledges donors as of January 19, 2010. If your name has been omitted or misprinted, please accept our apologies. Notify Development Assistant Bobby Bangert at 215.922.8900 x46 or bbangert@ ardentheatre.org. Although space does not allow us to list gifts less than $75, we gratefully acknowledge the contributions.

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Why I Support the Arden

The Hamilton Family Foundation, longtime supporters of our work with kids, has challenged us and you can help! We must raise $50,000 in new or increased gifts by June 30! If we reach our goal, the Hamilton Family Foundation will match our efforts with a gift of $50,000 in support of Arden Children’s Theatre and Arden for All, our education outreach program. Providing access to theatre and in-school programming for kids in our region is an essential part of our mission. Make a gift today and help us to reach our challenge!

To make a gift, contact Angela DuRoss, Development Manager at 215-922-8900 ext. 25 or go online: www.ardentheatre.org/support.

for a challenging year

“Arden Theatre Company is dedicated to bringing to life the greatest stories by the greatest storytellers of all time.”

The lights dim. I make a few last minute adjustments to my coat on the back of my chair, cross my legs, and settle into my seat. As usual, I have little or no idea about the play I am about to see; a direct result of no time for research combined with trust that whatever the Arden is putting on will be worth my while. I close my eyes for a moment, and when I open them I am somewhere else. Completely. The suspension of disbelief comes easily to me, and I have always loved the first few moments of a show, when I am transported into a magic world that amazingly somehow mirrors my own inner world.

Obviously I enjoy live theater, and while there is much great theater in Philadelphia, I have chosen to support the Arden in particular for three main reasons:

•The Arden consistently puts on interesting, thought-provoking, highly entertaining plays, making use of exceptionally professional cast and crew. I am never disappointed, and often astonished.

•The Arden is committed to outreach and education aimed at kids who otherwise may never be exposed to live theater. This is a beautiful and important service to the community.

•The Arden is a fun place to be! Through my membership in the Sylvan Society I have gotten to know other theater-lovers like myself, as well as the dedicated staff of the Arden.

Now is a great time to become a donor at the Arden, or to increase your donation. The Hamilton Family Foundation is providing an outstanding opportunity through a generous challenge: they will match every new or increased donation the Arden raises by June 30, 2010, up to $50,000. That means that each dollar you give more than last year is actually two dollars-worth of support for the Arden’s mission!

Arden Theatre Company, like all non-profit organizations, depends on donor support to continue its existence. I am grateful to be able to contribute to this wonderful, magical place where I can believe the unbelievable and be transported deep inside myself through the story unfolding on the stage.

Bethany Asplundh, Sylvan Society Member

Sylvan Society member Bethany Asplundh (right) and Nancy Wolf (left)

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Board and Committee Members

Board of DirectorsDavid Fryman, PresidentN. Peter Hamilton, Vice PresidentAndrea Mengel, Vice PresidentMichael A. Donato, TreasurerNancy Hirsig, Secretary

Brian AbernathyNancy BurdJoy L. De JesúsEllen P. FosterMatthew GarfieldElizabeth H. GemmillDarrel A. GermanCarole Haas GravagnoAlbert M. Greenfield, IIIRonna F. HallJoanne HarmelinLynn Martin Haskin, Ph.D.Steve HeumannSusan G. Jacobson Barbara KaplanVirginia KimmelHolly KinserRichard L. MaimonJohn J. McCawleyAmy L. MurphyTerrence J. NolenAaron PosnerCharles H. RoseH. Hetherington SmithHarvey B. SwedloffLee van de VeldeDiane Dalto WoosnamEllen Yin

Board Executive CommitteeDavid Fryman, chairBrian AbernathyMichael A. DonatoRonna F. HallPeter HamiltonNancy HirsigVirginia KimmelAndrea MengelCharles RoseHether SmithLee van de Velde

Board Development Committee Michael DonatoPeter HamiltonLynn HaskinLee van de VeldeDiane Dalto Woosnam

Facilities Committee Hether Smith, chairRichard MaimonJohn McCawleyMyles PettengillPaul Thais

Finance Committee Michael Donato, chairNancy BurdEllen FosterElizabeth GemmillSteve HeumannMartin RosenthalHarvey Swedloff

Advocacy CommitteeBrian Abernathy, chair David GlanceyTerry Gillen Julie HawkinsSusan Jacobson Holly Kinser

Institutional Giving CommitteeMichael DonatoDavid FrymanElizabeth GemmillCarole Haas GravagnoJoanne HarmelinJohn McCawleyHether Smith

Personnel CommitteeLee van de Velde, chairDavid Fryman Elizabeth GemmillCharles Rose

Young Friends CommitteeBrian AbernathyGenvieve GoldsteinBetsy OliphantBrian Seaman

Individual Giving CommitteeVirginia Kimmel, chairCharles Rose, chairSheryl BarGiséle BathishJohn BitmanChip CapelliJoy L. De JesúsTerry GraboyesWendy GreenfieldLynn HaskinSteve HeumannNancy HirsigJill KaplanEric and Winnie LienPeggy MorganRichard QuinnSteven SegalHarvey SwedloffRosalyn and Steve WeinsteinDiane Dalto WoosnamEllen Yin

Education Committee Sheryl BarMarla DiamondDr. Dennis W. CreedonDr. Carol DombJohn KingJacqueline MatusowIlene MillerJudy PaulIlene Poses

Granfalloon 2010 CommitteeRonna F. Hall, chairChip Capelli Michael Donato and Peter SonzogniMaureen Ferguson Chuck FinchEllen Foster Mimi Greenly Lynn HaskinSue Jacobson Barbara Kaplan Betsy Oliphant Jan ShaefferBrian Seaman Amy WilliamsNancy WingoDiane Dalto Woosnam

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StaffArtisticProducing Artistic Director ............................................................................................................ Terrence J. NolenAssociate Artistic Director ................................................................................................................... Edward SobelAssociate Producer .......................................................................................................................... Matthew DeckerArtistic Assistant .............................................................................................................................................Erin ReadLiterary Manager .......................................................................................................................................Dennis SmealArtistic Intern ........................................................................................................................................... James Yandoli

Administrative ManagementManaging Director ............................................................................................................................... Amy L. MurphyGeneral Manager ....................................................................................................................................... Jennifer PeckBusiness Manager ...................................................................................................................Courtney Spiker MartinAssociate General Manager .............................................................................................................Mary Beth SimonExecutive Assistant ........................................................................................................................ Christopher HinesArden Professional Apprentices ...................................Kristyn Hegner, Michael Hollinshead, Brittany Howard,

Alan Johnson-McNutt, Mark Kennedy, Meredith SonnenArden Volunteer .................................................................................................................................... Jean Markovitz

MarketingArt Director ...............................................................................................................................................Kristy GiballaMarketing Associate ..........................................................................................................................Leigh GoldenbergMarketing Analyst ..................................................................................................................................... Abigael ReedGroup Sales Associate ................................................................................................................................ Nanci CopeMarketing Intern ..............................................................................................................................Meghan McKeown

DevelopmentDevelopment Manager ......................................................................................................................... Angela DuRossManager of Institutional Giving ................................................................................................................... Matt OcksDevelopment Assistant ........................................................................................................................ Bobby Bangert

EducationEducation Director .................................................................................................................Maureen Mullin FowlerArden Drama School Faculty.....................Bobby Bangert, Kala Moses Baxter, Matt Decker, Carla Emanuele,

Liz Filios, Steve Gravelle, Jefferson Haynes, Millie Hiibel, Michael McElroy, Hillary Rea, Alison Roberts, Alexis Simpson, Scott Sheppard, Vanda Thomas, Anneliese Van Arsdale

Front of HouseBox Office Manager ........................................................................................................................................Lynn KeilyAssistant Box Office Manager ..............................................................................................................Corey MassonHouse Manager.....................................................................................................................................Elisabeth KerseyBox Office Assistants ............................Michael Durkin, Carla Emanuele, Elisabeth Kersey, Michael McElroy,

Fred Ott, Maura Roche, Ryane Studivant

ProductionProduction Manager .......................................................................................................................... Courtney RiggarTechnical Director ................................................................................................................................ Glenn PerlmanAssociate Production Manager ..................................................................................................... Jessica Day WestMaster Carpenter/Shop Foreman .................................................................................................... Will LambrakosMaster Electrician ............................................................................................................................. Martin StutzmanCostume Supervisor ............................................................................................................................ Alison RobertsProperties Master ........................................................................................................................... Meredith McEwenCharge Scenic Artist ..................................................................................................................... Kristina ChadwickProduction Stage Managers ............................................ Stephanie Cook, Alec E. Ferrell, Katharine M. HanleyAssistant to the Stage Manager...................................................................................................... Brittany HowardAssistant Lighting Designer ..................................................................................................................... Justin SmileyAudio Engineer ........................................................................................................................................ Larry FowlerStitchers ......................................................................................... Lorraine Anderson, Bridget Reilly Beauchamp,

Megan Diehl, Rachel Ford, Jenny Jacobs Dresser ................................................................................................................................................. Aurora StantonDeck Crew ................................................................................................................................................... Kate SabatoCostume Interns .................................................................................................... Cari Brezina, Samantha Sedoris

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Passion. A simple enough word that attempts to mine the most complex of human emotions: love and hate. Passion has inspired incredible works of art, created more than a few headlines, and fueled many a battle. In an age where we so often interact in the most impersonal of ways, where an old fashioned letter seems as out of date as a doublet and twittering one hundred and forty characters of information is all the substance we require, can we still access those affections that demand the utmost intimacy?

Many of us use ‘love’ and ‘hate’ so casually–to describe our feelings toward a restaurant, a hairstyle, a movie. But what if we were to imbue those words with the full power of their meaning? Perhaps you have yet to fully experience them. Or maybe you can easily remember the moment you first understood what that skip in your heart was…

Do you remember first feeling love? Hate?“In eighth grade I developed a heart-pounding crush on a violinist in my youth symphony, where I played viola on Saturday mornings. Too shy to acknowledge this openly, I spent long hours every week composing violin-viola duets so I could ask her to stay after rehearsals and play them with me. (I suppose I was inspired by Hector Berlioz, who composed “Symphonie Fantastique” so his beloved might hear it and understand the depth of his passion.) We became good friends over time, though I never had the courage to put my feelings into words, only notes. Ah, young love – tyer of tongues!” -Michael Hollinger, playwright

“I’ve felt hate since I was little, because hate is a natural part of the human mind. [...] I needed to feel hate so I could identify love.”-Daniel Sabato, high school student. Brother of Kate Sabato of the Arden’s Deck Crew

What is love? What does it feel like?“It’s like…it’s like Mommy and Daddy with each other.” -Flynn Nolen, age 6. Son of Terry Nolen, Producing Artistic Director, and Amy Murphy, Managing Director

“When you love someone you just feel it and you want to tell them. Unless you love them secretly and then you can’t tell them because A) they would get surprised and probably tell the teacher and then there’s no telling what will happen to me, and B) then you’ve ruined your secret.” -Lily Greer, age 6. Daughter of Scott Greer, Lord Capulet in Romeo and Juliet

“Passion” comes from the latin word for suffering. Are these emotions always to be endured?“Passion’s a funny thing... Sometimes passion and love are the same thing, and sometimes they’ve just got the same packaging. So many things felt like love when I was young, but... the angst... the turmoil! Love HURT, by god! But then one day you meet somebody, and you’re just in love with them. And they love you back. Period. No questions asked. It’s easy. Like you’ve loved them all your life and you were just waiting for them to show up. And it’s work... but it doesn’t hurt. No angst. No stuff. And it’s very, very easy.” -Krista Apple, Lady Montague/Balthasar in Romeo and Juliet

Erin Read, Arden Artistic Assistant, asks both kids and adults about the emotions inspired by Romeo and Juliet.

Passion Through the Ages

ArdenTheatreCo ArdenTheatreCo

Do you remember your first encounter with love? With hate? Who would you die for?

Fan ArdenTheatreCo on Facebook to answer the Romeo and Juliet question of the week!

R+JR+J

Page 24: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

2009

/10

Din

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Par

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sBISTRO ROMANO 120 Lombard St. • 215.925.8880 • www.bistroromano.comThis Historic Landmark, nestled in an 18th century granary, will stimulate your senses with an ambiance of candlelight and casual elegance while creating an unforgettable dining experience. Wine Spectator Award for our wine list! Voted a “Best of Philly” Restaurant, guests enjoy Bistro Romano’s acclaimed Regional Italian Cuisine and rave of the award-winning Caesar Salad prepared tableside and the romantic underground wine cellar for two. Please call for Wine Cellar and Mystery Theatre reservations. We are now celebrating our 21st year!

CAMPO’S 214 Market St. • 215.923.1000 • www.phillyhoagie.comA legacy of quality, this classic, deli-style restaurant has been churning out delicious sandwiches since 1947. Order any of the special soups, salads, and sandwiches from this Philadelphia kitchen and you’ll see why it’s “where the locals go.” –USA Today

COSI 325 Chestnut Street • 215.399.0214 • www.getcosi.comFrom our hand-tossed Signature Salad to our Tomato, Basil, and Mozzarella Sandwich served on warm flatbread, to the comfortable, urbane and contemporary atmosphere - Così is simply good taste. But we’re not just about sandwiches. Our distinctive menu offerings also include a wide variety of salads tossed to order, pizzas, soups, bagels, unique gourmet beverages and desserts. Something for everyone to enjoy - any time of day. Rated #1 in Fast Casual Restaurants by Parents Magazine.

FORK and FORK:ETC 306 Market St. • 215.625.9425 • www.forkrestaurant.comFork continues to set the standard for New American bistro dining. Chef Terence Feury’s fresh, seasonal cuisine reflects his passion for artisanal and local foods from home made pastas to house smoked pork chops. Part of Fork’s allure is its sophisticated beautiful interior, where the dining experience is anything but stuffy and uncomfortable. Open seven days a week, there is plenty of time before or after the show to enjoy lunch, dinner, or even just dessert. Come in to Fork:etc, our gourmet café for a quick and satisfying breakfast, lunch, or dinner. Our private dining room and catering services are also available for any party. Reservations are recommended.

FRANKLIN FOUNTAIN 116 Market St. • 215.627.1899 • franklinfountainphilly.blogspot.comThe Franklin Fountain is an old-fashioned 1920’s soda fountain and ice cream parlor that brings back magical memories of Americana through service of Sundaes, sodas and splits. Bowtie wearing soda jerks serve customers in an authentically replicated interior with real glassware and charm.

GIGI RESTAURANT & LOUNGE 319 Market St. • 215-574-8880 • www.gigiphilly.comFine dining food in a fun dining atmosphere. A local gem in Old City where everyone feels at home. A new American menu with an international flare.

RISTORANTE PANORAMA 14 N. Front St. • 215.922.7800 • www.pennsviewhotel.comFeaturing contemporary authentic Italian cuisine such as homemade pastas, tender veal and daily seafood specialties, Ristorante Panorama is located in the charming Penn’s View hotel, Front and Market Streets, Philadelphia. The wine program offers over 120 wines by the glass, and has received Sante’ Magazine’s “Wine Hospitality Award for Fine Dining,” Wine Spectator’s “Best of Award of Excellence,” Philadelphia Magazine’s “Best of Philly,” and Decanter Magazine’s “Best Wine by the Glass Program in North America.”

SERRANO 20 S. 2nd St. • 215.928.0770 • www.tinangel.comSerrano has been a fixture in Olde City since 1985 and is everything a neighborhood restaurant should be. With a reputation for serving international fare at neighborhood prices, it is the perfect place to visit, kick back and enjoy; to bring friends and make friends. Comfort. Warmth. Home. After dinner, move the evening upstairs to the Tin Angel, our intimate acoustic café. From opening night, Tin Angel has presented an astonishing array of stars from the world of blues, rock, folk and country and has earned a reputation as the best club of its size in the country.

TRIUMPH BREWING COMPANY 117 Chestnut St. • 215.625.0855 • www.triumphbrewing.comTriumph Brewing Company is a sophisticated restaurant & brewery featuring regional American cuisine and hand-crafted freshly brewed beer. Triumph is located in the heart of Old City.

When dining in Old City, we recommend these restaurants that support the Arden! All offer a special 10% discount to Arden patrons. Please ask your server for details.

Page 25: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

STEPHEN STARR EVENTS

R E - I N V E N T T H E E V E N T

WWW.STARREVENTS.COM

Page 26: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

BY: Jeff, you’re one of the great musical talents in Philadelphia and this production is full of music. What’s it like?

JC: Stephen Sondheim is a genius. This music is so gorgeous – and I don’t know how he does it – but he manages to capture the sound of the beautiful painting the story is based upon.

BY: How do you describe Sondheim’s sound?

JC: Visceral. Intellectual. He’s a talent beyond compare. The only composer who comes close in my opinion is Richard Rogers (Oklahoma) in terms of overall contribution to the musical theatre canon. I do enjoy listening to up-and-coming composers like Rogers’ grandson Adam Guettal (The Light in the Piazza) and Michael John LaChuisa (The Wild Party). But I digress; did I mention that this story is one of my all time favorites too?

BY: Why?

JC: Because it’s a story about beauty and art. And it’s a story about the passion that goes into creating beauty and art. And it’s about contemplating the legacy that we leave. For me, a large part of my legacy is the art and beauty that are my children.

BY: Ah you are a lovely, sentimental sort!

JC: Indeed. I also really look forward to working again with Krissy.

BY: Tell me more about your friendship.

JC: I’ve known Krissy since she was a teenager. I was her husband’s roommate when we were undergrads at Penn. I’ve been around Krissy a long time… I even remember her pet hamster, Peaches.

BY: Oh my…what should our audience look forward to?

JC: Krissy’s got a voice that will blow your mind. The last time we sang together at the Arden was in Baby Case about nine years ago. All I can say is batten down the hatches, girlfriend can SING.

KF: [Laughing] Jeff is great. And talk about someone who can sing! I can’t believe he just told you about my hamster either but oh well.

BY: You two seem to have a real rapport. Krissy, I know that you’ve also had a long history with this production’s director Terry Nolen; tell me about that.

KF: Yes, I’ve known Terry since I was 11 years old and he directed me in Annie at Upper Darby Summer Stage. And I think you have the picture to prove it.

BY: Seriously, you don’t have many secrets left now, eh?

KF: That’s OK; it’s worth it. I’m so excited to be back at the Arden. I have three kids now so there’s a lot I give up to be on the stage. But I also know what it’s like to do something you’re passionate about and this is a project I am passionate about. I love performing; I feel like when I’m on stage I can really breathe. Plus it’s important for me to show my kids that you’ve got to do something that really matters to you.

An Interview with the Stars of Sunday in the Park with George

Jeff Coon and Krissy Fraelich star as George and Dot in the Arden’s upcoming production of Sunday in the Park with George. Beth Yeagle, Arden’s former Director of Marketing and PR, talked with the actors.

Krissy Fraelich and Terry Nolen in 1984.

26

Page 27: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

Music and Lyrics byStephen Sondheim

Book by James LapineDirected by Terrence J. Nolen

MAY 27 - JULY 4

I was delighted to learn that Arden Theatre Company has decided to produce Sunday in the Park with George as part of their 2009/10 season. As you may know, the Arden has been the leading producer of my work in Philadelphia and no one knows better than I their passion and commitment to daring musical theatre. (Coincidentally, I happened to see Terry Nolen’s production of Opus, was knocked out by the play and then discovered that the playwright, Michael Hollinger, has a relationship to the Arden similar to mine: He and I are the most produced playwrights in the Arden’s history, a demonstration of their commitment to new work.)

I was doubly delighted to hear that production will use Michael Starobin’s brilliant original orchestrations. At a time when so many larger organizations are producing reduced forms of shows like mine and the work of other experimental theater composers, it is heartening to know that the Arden exists. I applaud them for their commitment to not scaling back their art, especially in this time of economic uncertainty. I hope the production turns out to be what they want it to be, and I give my blessings and thanks to the Arden and everything they stand for.

- Stephen Sondheim

215.922.1122 • ardentheatre.org

Page 28: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

Arden Theatre Company 2010/2011 season

Join us as a subscriber next season – without knowing all of the titles –

and lock into the lowest prices we’ll offer.

Worldpremiereplays.Largescalemusicals.Literaryadaptations.Celebrationsofcommunity.

Greatstoriesbygreatstorytellers.

Pleasejoinus.

Checkout the insert in your stagebill,stopbythesubscriptiontable,

calltheboxofficeat215.922.1122orvisitusonlineatardentheatre.org

L to R: Caroline, or Change (2007), My Name Is Asher Lev (2009), Wittenberg (2008), Our Town (2008), Assassins (2007), Candide (2008), Opus (2006), The Piano Lesson (2008)

Page 29: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

For a sound designer, how is Shakespeare’s work distinctive? Language. So much of the pleasure in a Shakespeare play lies in the language and the painting of verbal imagery. A sound designer simply has to stay out of the way and leave space. How do you anticipate the music in Romeo and Juliet being different from other Shakespeare plays you’ve worked on?I feel like music can lie at the emotional center of this play in a way that wouldn’t be possible in many of the comedies. Romeo and Juliet encompasses so much of the variety of human experience: first love, violence and anger, simple wisdom, royalty or houses of power, youth and age. This show asks for music that can express the breadth of life. What is influencing your design on this particular production? Most certainly the setting and the work of the other designs is highly influential. Each of the design elements set the play and tell us something of the particulars of this world. In my case, the music needed to have a youthful vibrancy first, pieces that might ignite the fight scenes and also songs that a person might be listening to when they first fall in love. Is there a particular moment in the play you are most excited about?I’m very excited to orchestrate the fight scenes in close harmony with the fight choreographer and the actors. What instruments can we expect to hear during the show?Strings! This could mean a string quartet, an acoustic guitar, an electric guitar. Electric guitars, and their vast varieties of distortions will drive the destructive elements of the show. Spacious strings will hopefully provide the timeless regality and the sweetness for the young lovers. Also organs.

MEET THE COMPOSER Salon Featuring James SuggThursday, March 25th from 6 – 7:30 pm at the Arden

Join us for this revealing evening in which Sound Designer and Composer for Romeo and Juliet

James Sugg, recently featured on the cover of American Theatre Magazine, shares his love of music and the creative process and demonstrates the various instruments he uses to

implement his compositions.Funded in part through Meet the Composer’s MetLife Creative Connections Program.

SUNDAY IN THE PARK WITH GEORGE Salon Featuring Jeff Coon, Krissy Fraelich and Terry Nolen

Thursday, June 17th from 6 – 7:30pm at the Arden

Go behind the scenes of presenting a Sondheim musical as complex as Sunday in the Park with George. Join Jeff Coon (George), Krissy Fraelich (Dot) and director Terry Nolen as

they reveal insight into the life of the artist at work.

The Salons will be moderated by Matthew Decker, Arden’s Associate Producer.

Enjoy a lively discussion and get the inside scoop while sharing a glass of wine and light hors d’oeuvres with the region’s hottest theatre professionals at these Arden salons. Tickets: $25 adults or $10 students with valid ID

215.922.1122 • ardentheatre.org

Salon hors d’oeuvres are kindly provided by Old City Cheese Shop.

MEET THE COMPOSERArden Marketing Associate Leigh Goldenberg interviews Sound Designer and Composer James Sugg

Page 30: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

How would modern technology affect the outcome of events in Shakespeare’s Romeo & Juliet? -Maureen Mullin Fowler, Director of Education

Having taught Romeo and Juliet numerous times over the past decade, I was constantly faced with the same reaction from students. Why didn’t they just call each other? Of course this ignites another discussion about the time period and how the forms of technology we are so familiar with today simply did not exist. In today’s world of Facebook, Twitter, AIM, email, text messaging and Skype, could these events have ever taken place?

I asked a high school class to answer this question in their own words:

Lord Capulet, Juliet’s father, throws a party which Romeo and his cousins attend uninvited. They found out about the party when they intercepted the invitation being delivered personally. Today, Lord Capulet would have emailed invitations to his family members to inform them of the party; without the disturbance of Romeo’s interception. In which case Romeo would not have known about the party and he would not meet Juliet thus canceling the main event of the story; Romeo falling in love with Juliet. – Deondray Ivey

If technology was a factor in the play [Romeo and Juliet], messages would be received instantly. In Verona, if someone wants to contact someone from far away they send letters in order to communicate. There was really no way to be sure that messages were received on time in those days, and in any age, timing is important. The power of technology consumes life today and in some cases technology is people’s lives. If technology had been introduced earlier, there is a definite possibility that many stories would have been told differently. – Onesimus Morrison

When the Friar and Juliet planned Juliet’s death, Romeo had already been banished. Friar Lawrence wrote letters to Romeo to inform him, but the letters took too long to get to him. If cell phones had been invented at this time, Romeo could have easily received a text from Friar Lawrence. Juliet could have emailed Romeo and told him the plan and then he would not have killed himself. – Brianna Stokes

Students quoted above are in 9th grade at Philadelphia High School for Business and Technology, Through the Arden for All education program they have attended Romeo and Juliet,

My Name Is Asher Lev, Something Intangible, Rabbit Hole, Peter Pan, and Blue Door

Page 31: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

SPRING / SUMMER 2010Theatre classes for kids and teens

ardentheatre.org • 215.922.1122

KIDS’ CREW (Grades K-5)One Day Workshops Saturdays, 1 - 4pm: $30 per classACTING (Grades K-2) - March 13STORYTELLING (Grades K-2) - March 27PUPPET MAKING (Grades 3-5) - March 27MUSICAL THEATRE (Grades 3-5) - April 17

Show Time Workshop_ Mon, May 3, 4 - 6:30pm, Grades K-5. $40 IF YOU GIVE A MOUSE A COOKIE: ACTING

Play-in-a-Day Sat, 10 - 3pm. Grades 1-5. $50 per class, 3 for $125. March 13 April 10 May 8 May 15

Eight-Week Classes Mar 20,27, Apr 3,10,17,24, May 1,8: $160 Treasure Trunk: Fairy Tales (Kindergarten) 10 - 11amStorycrafters: Adventures (Grades 1-2) 10 - 11:30amActing: Minds (Grades 3-4) 10 - 12pmPlay Practice: The Stinky Cheeseman (Grade 5) 11:30 - 1:30pm

Spring Break Camp at the Arden Grades K-5. Monday – Friday, 9 - 3pm. $300.March 29 - April 2, 2010

TEEN COMPANY (Grades 6-12)Afterschool Classes Mon, Apr 5,12, 19,26, May 3,10 from 4:30-6:30pm: $120ACTING 1: Script ACTING 2: Shakespeare Scripts

Saturday Classes Apr 3,10,17,24, May 1: $100 per 5-week sessionACTING 1: Scripts - 10 - noon ROMEO & JULIET: Costume Design - 1 - 3pmROMEO & JULIET: Light & Sound Design - 10 - noon

One Day Workshops Saturdays, 1 - 4pm: $30 per classIMPROV - March 20SHAKESPEARE: Hamlet & The Comedy of Errors - April 3MUSICAL THEATRE: Les Miserables - April 24ACTING - May 15

Spring Break One Day Workshop ROMEO AND JULIET Wednesday, March 31 10 - 6pm (2pm performance of Romeo and Juliet)$80 includes theatre ticketAn intensive full day Shakespeare workshop taught by Evan Jonigkeit (Romeo) and Shawn Fagan (Mercutio). Class covers speaking and performing the text and learning stage combat - all on our mainstage. The day culminates with viewing the Arden’s Romeo and Juliet.

CLASS DATE(S) GRADESTIMETUITION

9 - 3pm Mon - Fri, July 19 - Aug 6

Grades 6 - 12

3W

KS

MUSICAL THEATRE CAMP Three weeks!

Teen

Cam

p

$815Includes camp T-shirt

Kid

s’ C

rew

CLASS DATE(S) GRADESTIMETUITION

10 - 4pm ......... $375or Extended Day Services9 - 5pm ........... $425Prices include camp T-shirt

Grades 1 - 5(must havecompleted

Kindergarten)

WK

SE

SS

ION

S

SESSION 1: Under the Sea - June 21 - 25SESSION 2: Around the World - July 19 - 23SESSION 3: Animal Life - Aug 2 - 6SESSION 4: Lands of Make Believe - Aug 9 - 13

Ask about multi-week discounts!

SIBLING DISCOUNT!

Sign up one child for camp and each additional sibling

is $50 off!

SUMMER CAMPS are held at Painted Bride Art Center, 230 Vine Street in Old City

Page 32: Romeo and Juliet Stagebill

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