For Immediate Release
Media
Contact:
Andrew Paul
Co-Producing Artistic Director
412-225-9145
___________________________________________________________________________________
Pittsburgh Premier of Olivier
Award-winning play Blue/Orange marks the debut production of The Phoenix
David
Whalen, Sam Tsoutsouvas, and Rico Parker star, Andrew Paul directs
Pittsburgh, PA – October 15, 2013. The Phoenix, the
new theatre company founded by long-time PICT artistic director and founder
Andrew Paul and Pittsburgh Playwrights Theatre founder and former director of
theatre initiatives at the August Wilson Center, Mark Clayton Southers, will
debut with a four week run of Joe Penhall’s provocative, caustically funny,
Olivier Award-winning play Blue/Orange. The production will star acclaimed actors
David Whalen, Sam Tsoutsouvas, and newcomer Rico Parker, with direction by
Andrew Paul and scenic design by Mark Clayton Southers. Blue/Orange, sponsored by
founding Phoenix Board Member and noted arts philanthropist Richard E. Rauh,
plays November 1-23, 2013 at the Pittsburgh Playwrights Theatre, 937 Liberty
Avenue in downtown Pittsburgh.
The mission of The Phoenix is to explore the issues facing
our diverse and rapidly changing world through the language of theatre. Blue/Orange takes place in a London
psychiatric hospital where an enigmatic patient claims to be the son of an
African dictator – a story that becomes unnervingly plausible. What begins as a battle of wills between a
young, idealistic doctor and his jaded superior over the appropriate course of
treatment for his patient, possibly exhibiting schizophrenic behavior,
eventually turns into something altogether different. An incendiary tale of
race, madness and a Darwinian power struggle at the heart of Britain’s dying
National Health Service, Blue/Orange offers a perspective on
the mental health system which has been in the headlines recently as a result
of tragedies in Connecticut, Washington, D.C. and Pittsburgh.
Playwright Joe Penhall was born in London and raised in
Adelaide, Australia. His first major
play Some Voices premiered at the
Royal Court in 1994 and was adapted into a film starring Daniel Craig and Kelly
Macdonald. Blue/Orange premiered at the Royal National Theatre in 2000 in a
production directed by Roger Michell and starring Bill Nighy, Andrew Lincoln,
and Chiwetel Ejiofor. It was awarded
Best New Play at the Evening Standard Awards, Laurence Olivier Awards, and at
the Critics Circle. Penhall spent six
years writing the film The Last King of
Scotland and adapted Cormac McCarthy’s book The Road in 2009 for a film starring Viggo Mortensen. His other plays include Landscape With Weapon, Haunted Child, and Birthday.
The three-character play will be performed by well-known
actors David Whalen, Sam Tsoutsouvas, and
newcomer Rico Parker with Andrew Paul
directing. Whalen, one of Pittsburgh’s
most acclaimed actors, was the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette Performer of the Year in 2007. His many collaborations with
director Paul include Mark Antony in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar and his acclaimed portrayal of former President
George W. Bush in the Pittsburgh premiere of David Hare’s Stuff Happens. David
recently played the title role in PICT’s Don
Juan Comes Back From the War and completed work on the feature film The Fault In our Stars, directed by Josh
Boone and adapted from the much loved novel by John Green. Tsoutsouvas has performed leading roles on
Broadway and at many of America’s finest regional theatres. His Pittsburgh appearances include Caryl
Churchill’s A Number at Pittsburgh
Public Theatre, Frank Lloyd Wright in Worksong
at City Theatre, and Max in Stoppard’s Rock’n’Roll,
Antony in Shakespeare’s Antony and
Cleopatra and Hirst in Pinter’s No
Man’s Land at PICT. Rico Parker is a
native of Dayton, Ohio. He has appeared
as Booth in the Jubilee Theatre’s (Fort Worth, Texas) Topdog/Underdog and
was nominated for a Jeff Norton Award for his portrayal of Sylvester in the
American Stage (Florida) production of
August Wilson’s Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,
directed by Mark Clayton Southers. Rico has appeared in Pittsburgh in VALU-MART at Pittsburgh Playwrights
Theatre and as the Joker in Attilio Favorini’s The Gammage Project. The
Phoenix has assembled a formidable design team for its debut production, with scenic
design by Mark Clayton Southers, costumes by Pei-Chi Su, lights by Jim French
and sound design by Elizabeth Atkinson.
Production Stage Manager will be Eric A. Smith.
Director Andrew Paul co-founded the acclaimed Pittsburgh
Irish & Classical Theatre (PICT) and served as the company's producing
artistic director from 1996 to 2013.
Under his leadership, PICT produced more than a hundred plays, festivals
devoted to the plays of Samuel Beckett, John Millington Synge, Harold Pinter,
and Anton Chekhov, and two successful international tours. His many PICT productions as director include
last year's productions of Lee Hall's The Pitmen Painters, Chekhov's
Ivanov, and David Ives' The School for Lies, 2011's productions of
David Mamet's Race and Alan Ayckbourn's House and Garden (co-directed
with Melissa Hill Grande), the 2010 productions of Shakespeare's Othello, Pinter's
No Man's Land, and Harold Brighouse's Hobson's Choice, and the
2009 productions of Alan Bennett's The History Boys and Tom Stoppard's Rock'n'Roll. Andrew's 2002 production of Friel's Faith
Healer starring Bingo O'Malley played to acclaim at thirteen venues in
Ireland and Northern Ireland and he appeared as an actor in the 2003 production
of Shaw's Major Barbara which performed 14 sold-out performances at the
Galway Arts Festival and transferred to Dublin for three weeks of performances
at the Pavilion Theatre. In 2008, he directed and collaborated with David Hare
on the non-English language premier of Stuff Happens at the Slaski
Theatre in Katowice, Poland. In 2010, Andrew was a featured speaker at the
World Theatre Conference in Baku, Azerbaijan
Through their work on The Phoenix, co-founders Paul and
Southers seek to enhance and expand upon the depth and breadth of Pittsburgh’s
already excellent theatrical community.
“With our world changing so quickly,” they state, “it’s no surprise that
the theatre world would be changing as well. Demographic shifts have resulted
in new audience members hungry for exciting cutting edge theatre that reflects
a diverse and global perspective. We’ve
watched these changes for several years as we’ve traveled to see plays together
and discussed how Pittsburgh theatre could respond to them. Now, we want to be ahead of the curve leading
that charge artistically not running behind it.
Through The Phoenix, we propose to explore our shared vision of a new
kind of Pittsburgh theatre that is not a “white” or “black” theatre but rather
one that is diverse, welcoming to all and that invites our patrons to journey
across borders and boundaries with us.”
Tickets for Blue/Orange are available now! Accessibility for all is an important facet
of The Phoenix mission and there will be two Pay-What-You-Can at the door
performances on Tuesday, November 5 and Monday, November 18, both at
8:00pm. In addition, any person under
the age of 30 can purchase tickets for just $15 with valid identification. For tickets, phone Showclix at 1-888-718-4253,
or visit www.phoenixtheatrepgh.org.
FACT SHEET
The Phoenix – A Theatre Company
Mainstage Productions
2013/2014 Season
Blue/Orange by Joe Penhall
Pittsburgh Playwrights Theatre
Directed by Andrew Paul
Starring David Whalen, Rico Parker, and Sam Tsoutsouvas
Scenic Design by Mark Clayton Southers
Costume Design by Pei-Chi Su
Sound Design by Elizabeth Atkinson
Lighting Design by Jim French
Dialect Coach: Natalie Baker-Shirer
Production Stage Manager: Eric A. Smith
Performance Schedule:
Week One: 8:00pm
Preview, Friday, November 1st, 8:00pm Opening Night, Saturday, November 2nd(followed
by reception), 2:00pm matinee, Sunday, November 3rd.
Week Two: 8:00pm
Tuesday, November 5th (Pay What You Can at door), 8:00pm
Wednesday-Saturday, November 6-9, 2:00pm Sunday, November 10th.
Week Three: 8:00pm
Wednesday-Saturday, November 13-16, 2:00pm Sunday, November 17th.
Week Four: 8:00pm
Monday, November 18th (Pay What you Can at the door), 8:00pm Wednesday-Friday,
November 20-22,
2:00pm AND 8:00pm Saturday, November 23 (Close).
Tickets:
Single Tickets: $38
Under 30 (with valid
ID): $15
Artists: $20
Call Showclix at
1-888-718-4253 or visit THE PHOENIX online at www.phoenixtheatrepgh.org
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