Clinton School presents discussion on Rep’s HENRY V

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Tomorrow, Thursday, September 6, the Clinton School of Public Service will present a panel discussion on the Arkansas Repertory Theatre production of Henry V.

In a panel moderated by The Rep’s producing artistic director Bob Hupp, members of the cast of Henry V will discuss the process of bringing Shakespeare’s characters to life for a modern audience.

This is the latest in a continuing series of panels at the Clinton School which look at Arkansas Rep productions.

The program will take place at 12 noon at Sturgis Hall.

Arkansas Rep receives grant for HENRY V

Last week, it was announced that the Arkansas Repertory Theatre received a grant for its upcoming production of Henry V.  It was one of 42 nonprofit, professional theatre companies to receive grants from Arts Midwest to perform Shakespeare for students through Shakespeare for a New Generation.

Shakespeare for a New Generation introduces middle and high school students to the power of live theater and the masterpieces of William Shakespeare. Since the program’s inception in 2003, Shakespeare for a New Generation has benefitted more than 2.25 million individuals, including 1.9 million students, with live performances and educational activities. These awards mark the tenth consecutive year of Shakespeare in American Communities, a national program managed by Arts Midwest in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA).

Arkansas Repertory Theatre is the only performing arts organization in Arkansas to receive this year’s Shakespeare for a New Generation grant. The Rep will stage Henry V in September, offering the production to more than 20 schools through student matinee performances over a three-week run, reaching more than 1,500 students across Arkansas. The Rep reached more than 5,000 students last season through its Student Matinee Program.

This is the third Shakespeare in American Communities grant for Arkansas Repertory Theatre. The Rep was one of only seven theatres selected for the NEA’s inaugural program, staging Romeo and Juliet in 2004. The Rep then mounted an educational tour of The Comedy of Errors across the Mississippi Delta region in 2006.

“This Shakespeare in American communities grant allows us to expand the educational outreach component of our new season’s first Mainstage production,” says Bob Hupp, Producing Artistic Director for The Rep. “Shakespeare’s Henry V is both thrilling and poignant; the themes of the play: the quest for power, the cost of war, the price we are willing to pay for what we believe is right are as relevant to us today as they were 400 years ago.”

Henry V is politics, it is history, it is the human condition in extraordinary circumstances,” says Hupp. “To be able to explore these ideas with students across central Arkansas is a central objective of our work this fall. We look forward to bringing The Rep’s first foray into Shakespeare’s history plays to vivid life for audiences of all ages, and especially, with the help of this important grant, to enriching the experience for young audiences through a greater understanding of the creative, historical and cultural context of the play.”

Actor Tom Hanks, who is featured in the program’s educational film “Why Shakespeare?” says, “When I was introduced to Shakespeare in American Communities more than 10 years ago, I recognized its potential, given how important Shakespeare’s work was to me when I first began acting. However, I couldn’t have anticipated the incredible, widespread impact it’s had on students across the country. I commend the NEA and the participating theaters for their commitment to sharing Shakespeare’s legacy with future generations.”

Each of the 42 participating theater companies will present productions of Shakespeare plays to at least 10 schools. Accompanying educational activities include in-school residencies, workshops, or post-performance discussions.

“Arts Midwest is thrilled to celebrate the tenth year of this remarkable program,” said David Fraher, executive director of Arts Midwest. “Shakespeare in American Communities has been incredibly successful at reaching young and diverse audiences across the nation and we are pleased that we can engage so many talented theater companies this year.”

Ninety-four theater companies across the United States have taken part in the NEA’s Shakespeare program since its inception ten years ago. These companies have presented 30 of Shakespeare’s works  through 7,000 performances and 17,000 educational activities at more than 5,500 schools in 2,800 communities in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

About Arts Midwest
Arts Midwest promotes creativity, nurtures cultural leadership, and engages people in meaningful arts experiences, bringing vitality to Midwest communities and enriching people’s lives. Based in Minneapolis, Arts Midwest connects the arts to audiences throughout the nine-state region of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. One of six
nonprofit regional arts organizations in the United States, Arts Midwest’s history spans more than 25 years. For more information, visit http://www.artsmidwest.org.

About the NEA
The National Endowment for the Arts was established by Congress in 1965 as an independent agency of the federal government. To date, the NEA has awarded more than $4 billion to support artistic excellence, creativity, and innovation for the benefit of individuals and communities. The NEA extends its work through partnerships with state arts agencies, local leaders, other federal agencies, and the philanthropic sector. For more information, visit arts.gov.

About The Rep

Founded in 1976, Arkansas Repertory Theatre is the state’s largest nonprofit professional theatre company. A member of the League of Resident Theatres (LORT D), The Rep has produced more than 280 productions, including 40 world premieres, in its historic building in downtown Little Rock. Producing Artistic Director Robert Hupp leads a resident staff of designers, technicians and administrators in the creation of seven or more productions for an annual audience in excess of 70,000. The Rep produces works that range from contemporary comedies and dramas to world premieres and the classics of dramatic literature. For more information, visit http://www.therep.org.

2012–2013 Shakespeare in American Communities Selected Theater Companies 

– A Noise Within (Pasadena, CA)
– The Acting Company (New York, NY)
– Actors’ Shakespeare Project (Somerville, MA)
– Actors Theatre of Louisville (Louisville, KY)R
– African-American Shakespeare Company (San Francisco, CA)
– American Players Theatre (Spring Green, WI)
– The American Shakespeare Center (Staunton, VA)
– Arkansas Repertory Theatre (Little Rock, AR)
– California Shakespeare Theater (Berkeley, CA)
– Classic Stage Company (New York, NY)
– Dallas Theater Center (Dallas, TX)
– Denver Center Theatre Company (Denver, CO)
– East LA Classic Theatre (Los Angeles, CA)
– Epic Theatre Ensemble (New York, NY)
– Fairbanks Shakespeare Theatre (Fairbanks, AK)
– Folger Theatre (Washington, DC)
– Georgia Shakespeare Festival (Atlanta, GA)
– Geva Theatre Center (Rochester, NY)
– Hartford Stage Company (Hartford, CT)
– Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival (Cold Spring, NY)
– Idaho Shakespeare Festival (Boise, ID)
– Indiana Repertory Theatre (Indianapolis, IN)
– Montana Shakespeare in the Parks (Bozeman, MT)
– Nebraska Shakespeare Festival (Omaha, NE)
– The Old Globe Theater (San Diego, CA)
– Oregon Shakespeare Festival (Ashland, OR)
– Park Square Theatre Company (Saint Paul, MN)
– The People’s Light & Theatre Company (Malvern, PA)
– Portland Center Stage (Portland, OR)
– Saint Louis Black Repertory Company (Saint Louis, MO)
– San Francisco Shakespeare Festival (San Francisco, CA)
– Seattle Shakespeare Company (Seattle, WA)
– Shakespeare & Company (Lenox, MA)
– Shakespeare Dallas (Dallas, TX)
– The Shakespeare Festival at Tulane (New Orleans, LA)
– Shakespeare Theatre Company (Washington, DC)
– The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey (Madison, NJ)
– Theater for a New Audience (New York, NY)
– Touchstone Theatre (Bethlehem, PA)
– Utah Shakespeare Festival (Cedar City, UT)
– The Will Geer Theatricum Botanicum (Topanga, CA)
– Yale Repertory Theatre (New Haven, CT)

Start Celebrating with CABARET

Argenta Community Theater's CabaretThe Argenta Community Theatre is inaugurating producing its own productions with the Tony winning Cabaret.  Unfortunately, if you don’t already have a ticket, you won’t be able to “come to the Cabaret” because this production has been sold out for over a week.

Cabaret, which won the Tony Award for Best Musical in 1967, is a musical adaptation of Christopher Isherwood’s “Berlin Stories” and John van Druten’s I Am a Camera.  It features a book by Joe Masteroff and score by John Kander and Fred Ebb.

Producer Vince Insalaco and director Robert Hupp have assembled a cast and creative team to transform the Argenta Community Theatre into the Kit Kat Klub.  The choreographers are Marisa Kirby and Christen Burke Pitts with Kurt Kennedy serving as musical director.

Kirby leads the cast as tragic heroine Sally Bowles. Cipher-like scribe Cliff Bradshaw is played by Michael Klucher.  Brandon Higdem is the leering MC of the Kit Kat Klub.  Also starring are Tricia Spione and Alan Rackley as a mismatched pair of older Germans struggling with their relationship in the midst of the onset of the Third Reich.

Others in the cast are David Weatherly, Jessica Smith, Carl Carter, Matt Morley, Kris Waltermire, Dylan Dugger, Sydney Ippolito, Emily Karnes, Bailey Lamb, RaeLeigh Narisi, Rachel Powell and Brittany “Sparkles” Rorie.

Insalaco hopes to produce a musical and a play at the Argenta Community Theatre each year.

Final Weekend for A LOSS OF ROSES at Arkansas Rep

Theatregoers hoping to not lose out on on Pulitzer Prize winner William Inge’s A Loss of Roses have a few remaining performances to catch it at the Arkansas Repertory Theatre.

The production, directed by Tony nominee and Obie winner Austin Pendleton, stars Tony nominee Jane  Summerhays, Bret Lada and Jean Lichty as a mother, son and a visitor from their past who resurfaces.

Pendleton directed a staged reading of A Loss of Roses featured in TONGUES at New York’s Cherry Lane Theatre in 2010. Pendleton has served as artistic director of the Circle Repertory Theatre Company in New York and is an ensemble member of Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre Company.

“Bringing a rarely-produced work by William Inge to the stage is cause for celebration; doubly so when the creative team is led by Austin Pendleton,” says Arkansas Rep Producing Artistic Director Robert Hupp. “He’s assembled a dynamic cast for this fascinating play. Arkansas Rep is honored to introduce A Loss of Roses to a new generation of theatregoers and to re-examine Inge in the context of what he spoke of as his favorite among his many works.”

The cast also features Todd Gearhart, Max Jenkins and Sara Croft as members of a traveling troupe of actors and Keegan McDonald, Katye Dunn and Sydni Whitfield as neighbors of the central family.

A Loss of Roses plays tonight at 7pm, Friday and Saturday at 8pm and Sunday, July 1 at 7pm.

Next up at Arkansas Rep: William Inge’s A LOSS OF ROSES

The original version of William Inge’s A Loss of Roses will open this Friday on June 15, 2012, at Arkansas Repertory Theatre. The revival will be directed by Tony nominee and Obie winner Austin Pendleton.

“I discovered A Loss of Roses a few years ago. I thought: this is a forgotten beautiful American play, full of colorful people and rich, juicy humor, and full of tragedy,” says Pendleton. “Since I read it, I’ve wanted to do it. I’m thrilled a theatre as good as Arkansas Rep is letting me do it.”

Pendleton directed a staged reading of A Loss of Roses featured in TONGUES at New York’s Cherry Lane Theatre in 2010. Pendleton has served as artistic director of the Circle Repertory Theatre Company in New York and is an ensemble member of Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre Company.

Pendleton says several of Inge’s plays have been revived by theatre artists wanting to tackle the playwright’s well-made plays. However, A Loss of Roses has remained mostly on the shelf since it closed on Broadway in 1959.

Arkansas Rep’s production will feature Jean Lichty as Lila Green, Tony nominee Jane Summerhays as Helen Baird and Bret Lada as Kenny.

“Bringing a rarely-produced work by William Inge to the stage is cause for celebration; doubly so when the creative team is led by Austin Pendleton,” says Arkansas Rep Producing Artistic Director Robert Hupp. “He’s assembled a dynamic cast for this fascinating play. Arkansas Rep is honored to introduce A Loss of Roses to a new generation of theatregoers and to re-examine Inge in the context of what he spoke of as his favorite among his many works.”

A Loss of Roses was Inge’s first big setback after a string of critical and commercial successes with Bus Stop and the Pulitzer Prize-winning Picnic. The production was plagued by cast and script changes, earned poor reviews and closed after only three weeks on stage. Inge felt the play was one of his best, and was said to be stung by the criticisms.

“This play is not the play that was produced in New York last November,” Inge writes in his foreword in 1960. “It was greatly changed by the time the play opened at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre. Now I can’t remember why all the changes were thought necessary at the time, but working under the pressure that exists in theatre today, people become excited and mistrust their best instincts.”

A Loss of Roses will run June 15 – July 1, 2012, at Arkansas Repertory Theatre at 601 Main Street, Little Rock?

Clinton School presents panel on Ark Rep’s A LOSS OF ROSES

The University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service will host a panel discussion with Tony Award-nominated director Austin Pendleton and cast members of the Arkansas Repertory Theatre’s production of A Loss of Roses.  The panel will take place tomorrow, Wednesday, June 13 at 12 noon at Sturgis Hall in Clinton Presidential Park. The program is free and open to the public.

A Loss of Roses is a little-known William Inge masterpiece that tells the story of two women struggling to make their lives bearable in a small Kansas town. Penned in the intimate style of Tennessee Williams, who was Inge’s mentor, A Loss of Roses is a bittersweet romance about the loss of innocence which garnered a young Warren Beatty a Tony Award nomination in the 1959 Broadway production. The play will run on The Rep’s stage from June 13 to July 1.

Director Austin Pendleton starred in the original cast of Fiddler on the Roof (and can be heard on the original cast recording). Since the 1960s he has had successful careers as an actor, playwright, director, lyricist, teacher and administrator.  In addition to his Tony nomination for directing Elizabeth Taylor and Maureen Stapleton in The Little Foxes, he has received the Clarence Derwent Award (for Hail Strawdyke) and Obie Award (The Last Sweet Days of Isaac).  Among his many films are What’s Up Doc? and the Academy Award winning My Cousin Vinny.

Reel Classics with The Rep: PICNIC

Tonight at Laman Library, the Arkansas Repertory Theatre continues “Reel Classics with the Rep.”

Join The Rep for a discussion with The Rep’s Producing Artistic Director, Bob Hupp as he discusses The Rep’s upcoming production of A Loss of Roses by American playwright William Inge.  Following the discussion, Laman Library will screen the 1955 the Academy Award-winning romantic drama “Picnic” starring William Holden and Kim Novak based on the Pulitzer Prize winning play by William Inge.

Reel Classics With The Rep runs the second Monday of every month at Laman Library, 2801 Orange in North Little Rock and is free and open to the public.

Call Laman Library for more details (501) 758-1720.