Tracy Letts’ August: Osage County closed out the Arkansas Rep’s 2014-2015 season.
Rep founder Cliff Baker, who starred in the Rep’s first production of The Threepenny Opera returned to the stage as an actor to portray the mysterious patriarch of the Weston clan.
Joining him were Susanne Marley as matriarch Violet and LeeAnne Hutchison, Kathy McCafferty and Brenny Rabine as their three daughters. Marc Carver, Michael McKenzie, and Mary Katelin Ward are family members of the three daughters.
Natalie Canerday, Richard Waddingham and Michael Patrick Kane played another branch of the family. Grant Neale and Cassandra Seidenfeld were two other residents of Osage County who are drawn into the family drama.
The design team includes Mike Nichols (set), Marianne Custer (costumes), Yael Lubetzky (lighting), Allan Branson (sound) and Lynda J. Kwallek (props). Other members of the creative team include fight director D. C. Wright (and there is plenty of physical sparring in addition to the verbal sparring) and dialect coach Stacy Pendergraft.

The Arkansas Rep kicked off 2014 with the Pulitzer and Tony winning CLYBOURNE PARK. Both a prequel and sequel of sorts to A Raisin in the Sun, it looks at the life of a house and a neighborhood.
Thirty years after it opened on Broadway, Arkansas Rep presented The Elephant Man. Due to anticipated renovations at the Rep’s main stage, it was performed at Wildwood Park in the Cabe Festival Theatre.
The Arkansas Repertory Theatre put it all on the line — the chorus line when they presented the 1976 Pulitzer Prize winning A CHORUS LINE in 2006. Directed by Cliff Fannin Baker, this was one of the last productions allowed before a Broadway revival.
Fourteen years after graduating from Little Rock Hall High School, David Auburn received the 2001 Pulitzer Prize in Drama for his play Proof. In September 2002, Arkansas Repertory Theatre produced Proof while the original Broadway run was in its final months.
In June 2003, the Arkansas Rep went back to the dying days of vaudeville when it presented Gypsy. Written by Arthur Laurents, Jule Styne and Stephen Sondheim, this musical fable looks at the end of vaudeville and the rise of Gypsy Rose Lee. It was directed by Rep founder Cliff Fannin Baker.
The Arkansas Rep concluded its 25th season with the Cole Porter musical Anything Goes. Directed by Rep founder Cliff Fannin Baker, it featured an onstage orchestra led by then-Arkansas Symphony maestro David Itkin. (Rep Producing Artistic Director Bob Hupp and Itkin had been trying for a while to find a project for collaboration.)