YSD Alumni Magazine, Fall 2008
YSD Alumni Magazine, Fall 2008
Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage Paid New Haven, CT Permit No. 167
Life is a Cabaret, Old Chum: Forty Years in Yales Most Inspiring Basement After the Annex: The Living Legacy of YSD Designers From Playwriting to Book Reviewing: An Unlikely Journey An Interview with Richard Foreman
Dear Alumni,
But reading this magazine in proofs has given me A year spent doing something that you love can go by hope. I have been inspired by the range of work that quickly. When you have spent ten years in a place, as I engages our alumniby the diversity of ideas and have now done as a student and then faculty member at the School of Drama, the tenth year seems to go by expression for which you stand, and by the enduring somewhat more quickly than the ninth, and a lot more imagination of this vast artistic community as evidenced quickly than the first. Aging has a way of speeding up by your individual and collective achievements. the relative passage of time. So no year in my experience Throughout the generations of stories in these pages, has gone by faster than this one, with its heady political there is an imaginative pulse and a sense of surprising excitement and unsettling financial turmoil sounding in outcomes, usually delightful. How happy I am to vivid counterpoint to the strains of new and classic plays remember that none of us here knows the paths our in rehearsal and performance here at Yale. current students will take, and that it is our job to In spite of the pace and the hullabaloo, I have had prepare them for a lifetime of invention. many chances this year to catch up with alumni around Such creativity will be a powerful source of renewal the country and here in New Haven. for the American theatre. While many of our current Many of you have passed through to students are excited by the prospects of working in the work at the Rep or Long Wharf, to see commercial theatre or resident theatre movement, many a show at the Rep or the Cabaret, to others are impassioned critics of those sectors, who see teach or to visit a class; many more of the most exciting opportunities in ensemble generated youalmost 1000have attended a work, or international collaborations. Still others will ysd reception in the past year. When you involve yourselves I have been inspired by in the life of the School in these the range of work that engages our alumni ways, I feel a buoyant sense of our past supporting our future: by the diversity of ideas and expression the qualities of your experience for which you stand, and by the enduring and wisdom inform our work at imagination of this vast artistic the School with both your direct input and the indirect example community as evidenced by your individual of your creative pursuits. and collective achievements. Even amid the excitement and great promise of our historic national election, the economic uncertainty that discover, as many of you have done, paths that you did marks the fall of 2008 threatens us with increasingly not foresee when you imagined a life in the theatre. The severe temporal and financial challenges we marginal role for art in our nation. The professional faceof real estate management, deleveraging, and a theatre is undermined by a mix of undercapitalization and political temerity that has led our country to crisis in consumer confidence, to name just a fewwill disinvest in education, health care, and the individual be all of ours to work on in the months and years to artist. It is daunting to imagine how, in an economic come. This magazine reminds me that the artistry and downturn, large institutional theatres can maintain a professionalism to which our alumni and students healthy balance between those resources required to are so committed will be the enduringly powerful sustain facilities and administrative staffs and those tools we have to offer our nation and the world in the required to support the artists who are the creative advancement of our art form and our culture, and it drivers of our theatre. That smaller ensembles have makes me excited about the future of both! less to lose in economic shocks is meager consolation. Thank you for sharing your lives and work with us. Diminishing wealth and work threatens the security of Sincerely yours, artists to support themselves in day jobs, too.
Dedication
Pierre-Andr Salim 09
September 17, 1981November 18, 2007
On Tuesday, November 20th, 2007, the Yale School of Drama/ Yale Repertory Theatre community gathered in the University Theatre to mourn the loss and celebrate the life of Pierre-Andr Salim 09, who was killed in a tragic accident on the morning of November 18th during the load-in of Tartuffe. The opening of Tartuffe was delayed for a week to allow for the memorial service. Salim was born and raised in Jakarta, Indonesia. Before coming to Yale, he earned a degree in computer science from the National University of Singapore, where he first discovered the theatre. He remained in Singapore after graduation and worked as a production and stage manager for several theatre companies, including Checkpoint Theatre, Wild Rice, Theatre Practice, and Toy Factory. Salims death devastated communities across two continents, as his colleagues in the United States and in Singapore felt the loss of not only a friend but an artist of great potential. He had planned to return to Singapore after graduating, so that his training could benefit the artists and colleagues to whom he was so committed. Pierre is survived by his parents, his brother and sister, and his maternal grandmother. The following are excerpts from eulogies delivered that day, collected to honor the memory of a beloved artist and friend.
He was smarter than us, and more passionate, harder working yet hugely humble. He had a quiet determination to learn, to improve himself, not for the simple sake of his own career, but for the sake of improving the artistic community as a whole. There was a moment in our recollections when a fellow student recalled Pierre saying resolutely that a technical manager must be feared. We shared a moment of absolute silence, and then the room erupted into laughter. Who would fear Pierre? How, indeed, would anyone fear someone whose very demeanor invited trust?
Huzir Sulaiman Yale World Fellow; Joint Artistic Director, Checkpoint Theatre
James Bundy
To honor Pierres life and work, Yale School of Drama has established the Pierre-Andr Salim Memorial Scholarship, covering full tuition and living expenses for one entering student each year for the duration of his/her program. The award gives first priority to students from Southeast Asia and second priority to students from elsewhere in Asia, with an overall preference for students in technical theatre and design. In addition, to pay further tribute to Pierres legacy, the Pierre-Andr Salim Memorial Prize will be awarded each year to a graduating student who shows distinct promise of raising the standard of practice in the field.
Contents
annual MAGAZINE YALE SCHOOL OF DRAMA
Fall 2008, Vol. LIII
Fall 2008
Deborah S. Berman Editor Mark Blankenship 05 Contributing Editor Debbie A. Ellinghaus Managing Editor Jason Fitzgerald 08 dfa Candidate Associate Editor Scott Dougan 09 Art Editor Jennifer Nelson Copy Editor
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Departments
8 9 9 9
Editorial Staff
Luis Abril 10 Susan Clark Susan Kim 11 Ann M.K. McLaughlin 03 Christopher Mirto 10 Laura Torino Larsson Youngberg
On York Street
7 Not Just Break and Schedule:
The Art of Stage Management A Design Department Legacy The Drama School Library Takes a Final Bow Dwight/Edgewood Project 2008 Summer Cabaret Becomes Part of the Family Theater Magazine Takes on Censorship Long Term Service Awards
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Features
Life is a Cabaret, Old Chum: Forty Years in Yales Most Inspiring Basement
By Mark Blankenship 05
Contributors
Michael Barker 09 Sarah Bishop-Stone 10 Maya Cantu 10 Joseph Cermatori 08 dfa Candidate Matt Cornish 09 Miriam Felton-Dansky 09 Jacob Gallagher-Ross 09 Christopher Lehmann-Haupt 59 Quincy Long 86 Elizabeth Norment 79 Rebecca Phillips 09 Jorge Rodriguz 10 Jennifer L. Shaw 09 Devon Smith 09 Krista Corcoran Williams 09
10 18 22 24 26 28 29
4 4 5 6
Faculty News
Paula Vogel: Keeping Her Day Job Matthew Suttor: Opera Composer Catherine Sheehy in Netherfield Park Faculty News
After the Annex: The Living Legacy of YSD Designers From Playwriting to Book Reviewing: An Unlikely Journey Radicalizing Effects: An Interview with Richard Foreman Elements of Style: Joan Kron 48 Mr. Wilsons Profession: Edwin Wilson 57 Alumni Weekend 2008
In Review
30 NY Holiday Party 2007 31 LA Spring Party 2008 32 Yale Repertory Theatre 200708 Season 34 Yale School of Drama 200708 Season 36 Yale Cabaret 200708 Season
Design
Jack Design, [Link]
By Christopher Lehmann-Haupt 59
On the Cover
Richard Gallagher 06 in Electronic City at Yale Cabaret, 2006. Photo by Paul Gelinas 09.
By Joseph P. Cermatori 08
39 41 43 46 00 48 70
Alumni News
Graduation Prizes, Fellowships and Scholarships Alumni Faculty and Honors In Memoriam Bookshelf The Art of Giving Class Notes Contributors
By Rebecca Phillips 09
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By Rebecca Phillips 09
YSD 2008
On York Street
Not Just Break and Schedule: The Art of YSD Stage Management
As the Production Stage Manager for the 2008 Carlotta Festival, Jo McInerney 08 knows that taking blocking notes or taping the floor with the shape of the set is only part of her job. Shes also working to build community, ensure safety, and keep everybody on track as opening day looms. Her dedication and clear understanding of her role, on the eve of her graduation, are evidence of a training program that fosters not just expert rule-keepers but full-blooded theatre artists. Of course, a stage managers education focuses on the nuts and bolts of the professionthe documentation and managerial skills that are needed on a daily basis. For McInerney, this means attending budget meetings, adjusting complex schedules involving up to a third of YSD students, and coordinating the stage managers for each of the festivals three productions. But according to Yale Repertory Theatre Production Stage Manager James Mountcastle 90 (Faculty), the facultys primary goal is to train their students to become independent artists and thoughtful custodians of the artistic process, a refrain I heard repeatedly during interviews. A Yale stage managerthe only collaborator to live inside a production from early meetings to closing nightlearns to listen to the entire work of art. Its not just break and schedule, says Karen Hashley 10, who decided to become a stage manager because she loves the jobs clout and its heavy responsibility. This artistic involvement is most apparent during technical rehearsals. In a highly charged atmosphere, the stage manager begins to take control, striving to create a space in which every artist feels [Link] to Amanda Spooner 09, the stage manager must maintain a positive attitude in the room even as stress levels increase. This involves guiding the production and personnel through the choppy waters of tech, constantly balancing the needs of, say, the carpenters
artistic and spiritual quest that must be authentic to the individual who undertakes it. So at Yale School of Drama, these students are arguably learning more than a trade. Theyre preparing to be stewards of a creative process, blending technical skill and aesthetic sensitivity to help the theatre thrive. And if it sometimes feels like climbing a mountain, for students like McInerney, Hashley, Spooner, and Barker, theres a world of fulfillment in the ascent. Matt Cornish 09
Scott Dougan 09 and Suzanne Dougan 76 standing outside the University Theatre. Photo by Jason Fitzgerald 08.
reflects, but he brings a lot of the qualities of a great family, including his mothers love of ideas. Suzanne Dougan, who has sent many of her own students to the Drama School over the years, is pleased to see how things have changed since she graduated. Its much more organized Now theres more support for the way the designers work through the process in production. For Scott, being part of a legacy has meant an embarrassing story or two from Lee about his mothers student days, but he also has another reason to be grateful to Yaleits where his mother met his father, Clark Dougan 76 grd, a history professor. As she did during Scotts visit with Lee, Suzanne has tried hard to be a mother first and a teacher second. She says that, if anything, its her job to teach him discipline, to make sure hes done his research and that he corrects his drawing. And yet, aesthetics and genetics are not far apart. Scott remembers his faculty interview, when Michael Yeargan (Faculty) held up one of his sketches and said, You draw like your mother! Most of my stuff is big, Suzanne says of her work. I tend to assault spaces. Scott, whose recent multi-story set for The Ghost Sonata was one of the more overwhelming designs to fill the University Theatre in a few years, meekly responds, I guess thats genetic. Jason Fitzgerald 08
YSD 2008
YSD 2008
On York Street
Checked Out: The Drama School Library Takes a Final Bow
On a Friday afternoon last May, the Yale School of Drama Library smelled of catering. Linen tablecloths and purple lilacs spruced up an elaborate buffet, and revelers chatted happily while they ate. Yet there was palpable sadness in the air. After all, this was a goodbye partyat summers end, the Library was scheduled to move its entire collection to the newly expanded Robert B. Haas Family Arts Library. All Lydia Garcia 08 could think was, I hope they put everything back the way Pam likes it. She was referring, of course, to Pamela Jordan, who served as the rooms purple-clad librarian and den mother for 32 years. In his speech, Dean James Bundy 95 called the gathering a subterfuge to celebrate Jordans three decades of service, winning her extended applause. Her face, always a stony hieroglyph, betrayed not so much closure as stoic acceptance. more optimistic take on the future: a beautiful multi-storied addition to the Architecture building that includes a spacious caf and reading areas, a new Special Resources collection, a renovated Digital Media Center, and an integrated Arts Library incorporating Art, Architecture, Drama, Visual Arts, and Arts of the Book resources. At the Drama Library goodbye party, Townsend reminded the crowd that the decision to relocate long preceded his tenure, which began in 2007. Jordan will miss the freedom and virtual sovereignty of heading the Drama Librarys circulation desk, but she will nonetheless have a prominent place in the new library, a saving grace for students and alumni unwilling to say goodbye. As Dean Bundy reminded her, Your spirit, your generosity, your dedication to the students and the school will make the new space as important to us as the one we leave behind. After the applause finally died down, Jordan turned to the crowd and, reliably, responded: Well, I dont have anything to say. I told people I would lock myself in the cage, so you couldnt find me! Jason Fitzgerald 08
President Rick Levin grd 74 with Jake Thompson. ing, he paid tribute to each employee with a special gift commemorating their years of service. Acknowledged for their dedication to Yale were: Deborah Berman (5 years); Elizabeth Bolster (5 years); Marguerite Elliot (5 years); Nancy Genga(5 years); Brian MacQueen 06 (5 years); London Moses (5 years); Katherine Burgueo 90 (10 years); Janet Cunningham (10 years); Susan Clark (15 years); Mary Zihal (15 years); Brian Cookson (20 years); William Reynolds 77 (25 years); Claire Shindler (30 years); and Jake Thompson (35 years). Jason Fitzgerald 08
Ruth Feldman, Dean James Bundy 95, and Librarian Pamela Jordan in the Drama Library. Photo by Maggie Elliot. It was the rest of the crowdwho needed a mourningritual. For them the Drama Library was not just a place to find books. It was a sanctuary, offering comfort with its cracked wooden tables and ancient yellow couches. After more than a decade of negotiations, the relocation had come to seem a threat that, waited out, would disappear. Among the crowd was Allen Townsend, Arts Library Director and representative of a
Mike Donahue 08 and Michael Barker 09 outside of 217 Park Street. Photo by Scott Dougan 09.
The Dwight/Edgewood Project mentor Barret OBrien 09 looks on as Angel Estrada works on his play. Photo by Ruth Feldman.
YSD 2008
YSD 2008
Faculty News
Paula Vogel Keeping Her Day Job
Paula Vogel (Faculty) is probably best known as the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of plays like How I Learned to Drive, Baltimore Waltz, and The Long Christmas Ride Home. But for the past twenty-four years, she has pursued a parallel career teaching playwriting at Brown University, where she has had peerless success cultivating young writers. Her former students include literary lights Bridget Carpenter, Jordan Harrison, Adam Bock, Lynn Nottage 89 (Faculty), plus Pulitzer winner Nilo Cruz and MacArthur Fellow Sarah Ruhl (Yale Rep Associate Artist). And now her pedigree has a new line: New Haven. In July 2008, Vogel began a five-year appointment as Eugene ONeill Professor (Adjunct) and Chair of the Playwriting Department at Yale School of Drama, bringing along a trove of pedagogical experience and a fierce commitment to encouraging singular voices. Vogels appointment represents a triumphal return: Turned down from admission to YSDs playwriting department when she was just 21, Vogel has devoted her teaching life to providing beginning playwrights with the kind of institutional support she never had. The hallmark of her instruction is her devotion to a writers individuality. Adam Bock, who has become a regular presence in the biggest Off-Broadway theatres, says, Paulas a brilliant teacher. What she does is make her students realize that there are many different ways to tell a story. She exposes them to all types of theatre and devices. She made me realize that I dont need to put a play in a kitchen. Im always looking for a different place to put a play. Suddenly it looks new to people and they can hear again because theyre not used to it. When you think of the Brown playwrightsSarah Ruhl, Nilo Cruz and Jordan Harrisonwe all take those risksShe believes in the personal voice. She always asks what would happen if you pushed yourself a little. For Vogel, teaching also has political importanceperhaps now more than ever, as grants for writers dry up and glacier-paced development programs stymie new plays. She has said, I feel that more than when I started [the Brown playwriting program], this country has not embraced its obligations to artists, and that is a very politically and spiritually dangerous avoidance of our social responsibility. Art is a necessity, not a luxury. How healthy we are as a society is related to how expressive we are. Thanks to a new grant from the Robina Foundation underwriting the expansion of Yale Repertory Theatres new-play commissioning program, the Yale Center for New Theatre, Vogel has also been named Playwright-in-Residence at Yale Rep. But while shell always be a playwright first, Vogel says teaching has been one of the best day jobs in the world. In the years to come, the Drama Schools playwriting students will undoubtedly be glad shes kept it. Jacob Gallagher-Ross 09 New Zealand International Arts Festival, was hard for some audiences to swallow, but for others it was a revelatory new take on New Zealands colonial past. After a career as a composer of various performance and theatre pieces, Suttor has finally succumbed to the opera bug, fascinated by an art form that brings together theatre artists in a way nothing else does, a gesamt sensibility for which he credits his time at the School of Drama. Suttor has also used the writing process of Cannibal Dog as a teaching tool in his Department of Sound Design courses, a decision that may have influenced Sarah Pickett 08 and Jana Hoglund 08 to write operas for their thesis projects. In the meantime, Suttor has begun to collaborate with Anna Jones 06 on his latest opera project, Virgins in Venice. The rewards are great, he says of his newest passion. This is what I want to do. Jason Fitzgerald 08
Holiday Party
Yale Club of New York December 15, 2008
Composer Matthew Suttor (Faculty) works on his new opera The Trial of the Cannibal Dog with conductor Peter Scholes. Photo by Robert Catto.
Spring Party
A production shot from Matthew Suttors (Faculty) new opera The Trial of the Cannibal Dog. Photo by Robert Catto. At the home of Jane Kaczmarek Los Angeles, CA March 8, 2009
Kathleen McElfresh 06 and David Matranga 06 in Dallas Theater Centers recent production of Pride and Prejudice.
Sheehy created a theatricalist dramaturgy in which letter exchanges become ballroom dances, and Elizabeth Bennett becomes narrator as well as heroine.
novel its true due, not reducing it to a simple boy-disaffects-girl-until-her-eyes-are-opened-forher love story. Wanting to preserve Pride and Prejudice as the incisive study of a social system held together by veils, vows, gossip, and reputation, Sheehy created a theatricalist dramaturgy in which letter exchanges become ballroom dances, and Elizabeth Bennett becomes narrator as well as heroine. The experience of her two productions was also, in Sheehys words, a Yale Family extravaganza. The Asolo production was directed by her YSD classmate Mark Rucker 92, with costumes by her partner Katherine Roth 93 and sets by Ola Maslik 06. The Dallas Theater Center mounting also featured costumes by Roth, sets by John Coyne 97, lights by Paul Whitaker 02, and sound design by Brian Fitz Patton 01. It was stage managed by Adam Ganderson 06, and starred Kathleen McElfresh 06 as Elizabeth and David Matranga 06 as Darcy. For the young woman on the Metro-North train, the plays climactic final kiss brings more than one love affair to a tender, satisfying conclusion. Jason Fitzgerald 08
Paula Vogel (Faculty) teaching playwriting students at Yale School of Drama. Photo by Joan Marcus.
YSD 2008
YSD 2008
Faculty News
Welcome Back Neil Mulligan 01
To paraphrase George Moore, a man travels the world over in search of what he needs, and returns to Yale to find it. Immediately after graduating from Yale School of Drama, Neil Mulligan 01 became Assistant Professor (Adjunct) of Technical Design and Production and Technical Director of Yale Repertory Theatre. Yale was the only world I knew, he remembers. In fear of missing other opportunities, Mulligan left New Haven in 2004 to become Project Engineer at Hudson Scenic Studio. It took only two seasons, though, before he realized the regional theatre was where I wanted to beI missed being part of the whole process. After briefly working as Technical Director of the Goodspeed Opera House, Neil found his old positions were reopened at Yale Rep. He returned in summer 2007 and has now officially taken on his newoldappointment. As he rushed into his next budget meeting, he told me, smiling, Its great to be back. Jason Fitzgerald 08
Ben Sammler 74 (Faculty) exchanges a laugh with YRT shop carpenter Matthew Gaffney. Photo by Deborah Berman.
Yales Designer Gets Her Own Spotlight: Tipton Receives MacArthur Award
Jennifer Tipton (Faculty) has earned many prizestwo Tony Awards, an Olivier Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize, to name a few. And she has become accustomed to finding adulatory epigraphs attached to her name in print, such as the recent article in The New York Times that said the great lighting designer Jennifer Tipton. But when a representative from the MacArthur Fellows Program called in midSeptember to pronounce her a MacArthur Genius Fellow, she was stunned. Thank God [the program representative had] told me to sit down. I couldnt respond! she says of the phone call. Considering her nearly five decades as a professional lighting designer, the MacArthur Foundation has called the 71-year-old Tipton one of the most versatile designers working today, noting that her distinctive designs have redefined the relationship between lighting and performance. The honor is accompanied by a $500,000 prize, with no strings attached. Tipton is not the first member of the YSD family to earn the fellowship. Lynn Nottage 89 (Faculty) and Sarah Ruhl (Yale Rep Associate Artist) are recent winners, and
Neil Mulligan 01 (Faculty) instructs students in his Stage Rigging class last fall. Photo by Joan Marcus.
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Phillip Owen 09 and Aubyn Philabaum 08 in Bone Songs directed by Paul Carey 08.
Life is a Cabaret, Old Chum: Forty Years in Yales Most Inspiring Basement
By Mark Blankenship 05
I was a dramaturg and a critic. At Yale Cabaret, I was a playwright, a director, a rapper, and a talking piece of hair. And though I did spontaneously rap in a few of my classes, my time in New Haven would have been much less interesting without the hours I logged in that amazing basement theatre. Having just celebrated its fortieth anniversary, the Cabaret commands similar respect from countless YSD alumni. A student-run theatre that produces a different show on almost every week-
end of the academic yearand serves dinner and drinks before performancesits the ultimate evocation of the Schools energy. (And then theres the Summer Cabaret, which has kept the offseason lively since 1974.) Most School of Drama graduates have outrageous Cabaret stories, so on a mission to hear them, I spoke to a broad spectrum of alumni. The fruits of my quest are below, and while every tale is different, they share a common thread: They evoke the spirit of a beloved artistic home.
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Wild Times
For instance, everyone agrees that in the Cabaret, rules go out the window. Steve Lawson 76 (Artistic Director 73 74) says, It wasthe cutting-edge place, a haven where you could blow off steam. It was invaluable for this DFA, whose days were spent on critical theory and theatre history, but whosenights offered the opportunity for his imagination to cut loose. Henry Winkler 70 adds, There was really something wonderful about being in Macbeth [at Yale Repertory Theatre], and then running across the street and around the corner, and doing a short Tennessee Williams play. For Trip Cullman 02, 97 yc (ad 00 01), the Cabaret offered a unique artistic freedom. Whereas school productions emphasized creating work that would fit into an institutional or regional theatres season, he says, the Cabaret functioned as a petri dish for the students most outlandish and risky impulses. The most artistically successful shows at the Cabaret were those that no larger institutional theatre in its right mind would ever produce.
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Of course, the Cabaret has been known to bewitch the institution. Every so often, a show finds its way to a major production. Take The 1940s Radio Hour, which began at the Summer Cabaret and ended up on Broadway in 1979. The original musical by Tim Acito 02, Zanna Dont!, traveled from the basement to a commercial Off-Broadway run in 2003, and many plays by Christopher Durang 74including an early version of The Marriage of Bette and Boobegan as Cabaret babies. The wild imagination in these shows is often the product of necessity. With a new piece to produce every week, unusual choices are almost demanded. Everyone was hungry to produce, eager to explore and challenge themselvesas well as each otherwith what now seems like reckless abandon, says Michael Kinghorn 91 (ad 89 90). Artistic constraints were few, save the hour-length limit. Consequently, what audiences witnessed tended to be rough, raw, energetic and exciting.
1 David Prittie 81, Thomas Derrah 80, David Alan Grier 81, and William Mesnick 82 during the 7980 season. 2 Jane Ann Crum 85 and Christopher Noth 85 in the Cabarets production of When You Comin Back Red Ryder? 3 Tony Shalhoub 80, Joan Berliner 75 yc, Steve Lawson 76, Polly Draper 80, 77 yc, and Geoffrey Pierson 80 in Weve Got to Stop Meeting Like This, Yale Cabaret, 7879 season. 4 Daniel J. Rubin 93 and Paul Giamatti 94, 89 yc in The Spectacular Laugh Riot at Yale Cabaret, 9192 season. 5 Malcolm Gets 92 and Douglas Dickson 88 mus in Full Circle, 9192 season. 4
Mark Linn Baker 79 and Anneke Gough 79 in Adaptation, Yale Cabaret, 1997.
Early 1968
November 6, 1968
First official performance Yale Cabaret: An evening of songs by Kurt Weill, starring Martha Schlamme and Alvin Epstein.
Winter 1968
Committee of 21, a group of YSD students, demands student control over Cabaret productions. By February 1969, the Cabaret is completely student-run.
January 1970
The Cabaret has an early hit with Cocaloony Tennessee, which stars Henry Winkler 70 and Jill Eikenberry 70.
After Phi Gamma Alpha closes its doors at 217 Park Street due to lack of membership, the building is converted to a coffee house, with plans for artistic presentations by YSD, YRT company members, and the non-Yale community.
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Cabaret means to me. We were always trying to say something that needed to be said. That has stuck with me. The Cabaret was really trying to serve as a voice. My Cabaret experience involved unabashed political agitation. In 2002 I was co-author, co-director, and co-star of The Pins and Needles Project, an adaptation of Harold Romes 1937 pro-union musical revue Pins and Needles. When we did the show, the entire campus was buzzing about an impending strike by several groups of University employees, and we used our show to support their demands. In the midst of all the tension, we performed to a room crammed with Yale employees, who booed our agit-prop caricature of university president Richard Levin. Barely into my twenties, I felt like I was making truly important theatre for the first time in my life.
were leaving in their costumes. Tan was usually so good-natured. Who knew she had it in her? One production stands out in my mind, says Beau Coleman 89. The Mikado. The cast was huge, and it was 90% non-actors. There was such delight in everyones eyes when they were performing. It seemed to epitomize what the Yale Cabaret stands fora home for all YSD students to come together to create, collaborate and celebrate their discoveries with the audience.
Political Action
But if the Cabaret were just a weekly love-in, it wouldnt be nearly as important to the culture of the school. You didnt feel like you had to define yourself there, [but] thats not to say people werent judging, says Connie Grappo 95 (ad 9394). It is, after all, the Drama School, where everyone has an opinion about everything and doesnt hesitate to share. The shows opened every Thursday, and every Friday, word was out.
Word is not always good, though Cullman feels thats valuable. I remember [that] even when the selections caused intense controversy, the Cabaret sparked important dialogue in the community, he says. For example, when there was a feminist outcry over a planned production of Miss Juliethe actress cast as Miss Julie decided the part was too misogynist and refused to go onseveral dramaturgy students held a series of talkbacks before and after performances to generate a debate about the alleged woman-bashing in Strindbergs text. Also, several students, from dramaturgs to directors to stage managers, went on as Miss Julie in the lead actress stead. For Marshall Williams 95 (ad 93 94), helpful conflict arose over the nature of the Cabaret itself. In my years, it was not really a political forum, which it definitely had been when it started, he says. In our year, there was an anniversary celebration for the Cabaret and a few founders came back for it, and gave us a taste of how the Cabaret was started. I remember one of them saying, Well, if its just going to be a song-and-dance evening of fun, thats not what the
Im sure we all thought that we were advancing some kind of profound agenda, says Kinghorn. The biggest, the best, the most innovative projects with the greatest artistic integrity, or something like that. The real accomplishment, however, was more practical: managing to produce a new show each week while attending classes and conducting the regular work of YSD productions. In her first weeks as artistic director in 2004, May Adrales 06 (ad 04 05) survived the practical challenges that Kinghorn describes. She had decided to produce Wallace Shawns eighty-character comedy The Hotel Play, and she needed eighty cast members. We spent hours chasing after people in bars, after classes, on the street, in the bookstore, trying to get them to act in the play, she says. At the eleventh hour, we lost our leadhe was cast in a school play, and wasnt allowed to be in our showand we threw in the towel. We stood in the Cabaret, [surrounded by] the newly painted set, and after a few whiskeys, we decided that the only thing to do was re-envision it all. We decided to do a 24-hour play festival called The Hotel Plays, and it was, by some miracle, a success. Plenty of Cabaret memories involve barely averted disaster. I do remember being in a show called The Dragon in my second year, says Jim Noonan 06 (ad 05 06). A two-person scene, complete with witty and fast dialogue, was reduced to a simple and searching monologue by just one actor, because the other actor had completely
The Family chor us in Die Sieben Todsnden, Yale Cabaret, 2007. From Left to Right: Brian Mummert 09 yc, Ethan Heard 06 yc, Jesse Obbink 09 yc, Casey Breves 09 yc
March 1971
Robert Brusteins 51 New York Times article Can We Give Up the Theater? mentions Yale Cabaret for the first time in the national press.
19711972
The Cabaret establishes its current schedule of performances Thursdays through Saturdays, with a new production each week.
Summer 1974
The Summer Cabaret is officially created by a group of students including Christopher Durang 74, Meryl Streep 75, Walton Jones 75, Mitchell Kurtz 75, and James Ingalls 76.
1974 1975
Christopher Durang 74 premieres dentity Crisis. Yale Cabaret earns its first liquor license.
19811982
Membership to Yale Cabaret costs $510, with a minimum $2.50 food charge per performance.
1984 1985
York Streets, satirical pre-shows for the late Thursday night incrowds, begin around this time. Pambo by Bill Corbett 89, 82 yc, a violent vignette of life in the Drama Library, may be the only extant script.
19901991
The 4th production of the season, Straight to the Helms!, responds to the recent NEA scandal, in which the NEA demanded an obscenity pledge from its grant recipients after being sued for funding controversial art exhibits. The show featured a large cast with writers as disparate as Samuel Beckett, Karen Finley, and Liev Schrieber 92.
YSD 2008
April 1995
Dean James Bundy 95 directs Mystery Date, by Melissa James Gibson 95 and Rachel Sheinkin 95. Bundy is the first dean of the School of Drama to have formerly directed in the Cabaret.
(Right) Ernie Hudson 76 and Ron Recasner 74 in the Cabarets 1973 production of Being Hit (Middle right) Wendy Wasserstein 76, Albert Innaurato 74, and Christopher Durang 74
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forgotten every single one of his lines. Im not even sure the audience noticed. But I do believe that the lost lines were a result of a visit to the GPSCY [the on-campus bar, just down the path from the Cabaret] during the break between shows. Meanwhile, an entire subgenre of Cabaret lore could be dedicated to the New Haven fire marshal, who must verify the safety of every set before the show can go on. I remember the first cabaret I directed [was] Noonday Demons by Peter Barnes, says Grappo. The whole show was almost canceled hours before the first performance because there was a four-foot-high pile of [fake] feces in the middle of the cave that was the set. The fire marshal could have probably gotten it to light if hed tried, but luckily he was too grossed out by what it represented to hold his lighter there very long. It prepared me for the constant trouble-shooting that you do when producing professional theatre.
1 Michael Braun 07 in The Love of Don Perlimplin for Belise in the Garden in 0405 season. 2 Bryan Henry 08 in In the Cypher: A Poetry Slam, Yale Cabaret, 2007. 3 Enrico Colantoni 93 in Unveiling, Yale Cabaret, 1992. 4 William Francis McGuire 91 and Liev Schreiber 92 in Go On, Yale Cabaret, 9091 season.
The Cabaret teaches many lessons like those Grappo describes. Sometimes, the shows produced there go on to professional runs, and the creative team learns to transport the Cabarets energy to a more traditional space. Sometimes, the skills developed at a 1 a.m. rehearsal just come in handy. Margaret Glover 88, 81 yc is Senior Lecturer in Screenwriting at the London Film School. She says, I try to engender the spirit of the Cabaret in my students. Its more complicated in film[there are] more rules and regulations, higher risksbut when your ambitions exceed your budgetwhich was always the case in Cabaret shows youve got to beg, borrow and steal. In the end, the Cabaret taught me that youve always got to balance the budget. I used to do all the shopping for Tommy the chef, says Peskin, whos now the Executive Director of the Montclair Arts Council in New Jersey. In a funny way, working for the kitchen taught me how to prepare for large events and how to do strategic planning. Lawson adds, AfterNew Haven, I did a lot of cabaret. Thosehours spent in the basement also had a major bearing on the writing Ive done for Manhattan Theatre Club, Williamstown Theatre Festival, and elsewhere. Even for a recent graduate like Adrales, the Cabaret has had a professional impact. The Cabaret holds so much life and creativity, she says. I thought then that I would try to create that kind of space with
my own theatre company one day. Hopefully, Im on my way. I began working at The Public Theatre as an Artistic Associate soon after graduation with that goal in mind. But of all the respondents, Brendan Hughes 04 (ad 0203) defines the Cabarets legacy in the boldest terms. He declares, The Cabaret, and particularly Thursday late night performances for the Drama School, have ruined me for proscenium theatre forever. It was like a tent meeting. Walking into the Cabaret and putting your finger into the socket of that energyeveryone gossiping and laughing, glaring at rivals across the room, holding forth on that afternoons verse project, or baseballwas like getting the same feeling you get as a kid, being the only one who will actually ingest pop rocks and CocaCola. The feeling of daring and menace and community in there is so delicious and sinister, that everything afterwardsall the regional theatre in the worldends up feeling like a command performance for the politbureau. Its worth mentioning that Hughes is the one who cast me as a talking piece of hair in Gip Hoppes satire A New War. It was my first month at the YSD, and I had just finished performing an original rap song at the schools variety show when he asked me if Id like to be in his production. I barely knew what the Cabaret was, but I signed up anyway. Im grateful I did.
19992000
After decades of avoiding the inevitable, Cabaret is staged at the Cabaret.
Spring 2001
Zanna, Dont!, an original musical by Tim Acito 01 that will find commercial success, premieres at the Cabaret.
December 2006
Yale Cabaret featured in The New Yorker Critics Notebook, when Hilton Als recommends Run, Mourner, Run by Tarell Alvin McCraney 07.
September 2007
For the Cabarets 40th anniversary season, Alvin Epstein reprises Mack the Knife from the Weill revue that launched the Cabaret.
Summer 2008
The Summer Cabaret officially falls under the auspices of Yale School of Drama (see On York Street).
20082009
The Yale Cabaret tradition continues with its 41st season, under artistic director Patricia McGregor 09 and managing director Aurelia Fisher 09.
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At the age of ten, some kids have mastered Guitar Hero. Others rule on the Little League field. Set designer John Conklin 66, 59 yc was conquering Puccini.
I have a picture of myself as a ten-year-old holding a little model of Madame Butterfly, he says. It must be [Butterfly], because theres Mount Fuji in the background. Conklin, who recently returned to Yale Repertory Theatre to design Daniel Fishs production of Tartuffe, isnt unusual. Many of the Drama Schools most successful set design graduatesthose who frequently work on Broadway, off-Broadway, and in other prominent venuessay their work grabbed them early. I wanted to be a set designer when I was seven years old, says Tony Award-winner John Lee Beatty 73, and Heidi Ettinger 76 remembers experimenting with every theatrical discipline as a kid. Riccardo Hernandez 92whose design for Yale Reps production of The Evildoers garnered a 2008 Connecticut Critics Circle Awarddreamed of his career while growing up in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where his father was a professional opera singer. Similarly, Michael Yeargan 73 (Faculty) remembers being in fourth grade and seeing his first opera, La Bohme, when the Met visited his hometown of Dallas, Texas. The curtain went up on that garret, he remembers, and I thought it was the most beautiful thing in the world. I was fascinated to know how everything was made and I knew I wanted to do that for the rest of my life. Given the aspirations of department chair Ming Cho Lee (Faculty) for the program, that pattern of lifelong devotion makes sense. At Yale School of Drama, Lee says, We are training people who are real theatre artists individual artists, rather than just people who do well in the industry.
Derek McLane 84 sits on his set for Rafta, Rafta. Photo courtesy of Derek McLane.
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I was fascinated to know how everything was made and I knew I wanted to do that for the rest of my life.
Michael Yeargan 73
True by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa 03 at New Yorks Second Stage, then he sped to Virginias Signature Theatre for a production of Kander and Ebbs musical The Visit. Each project takes you into a different world, historically and visually and archaeologically, says Ettinger, who just designed Romeo and Juliet at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival. With each project youre forced to really educate yourself about brand-new universes. Of course such mercurial rosters are not all variety for varietys sake. Many designers are quick, like Lobel, to admit of their choices, Some of this has to do with money. Beatty sighed during our conversation: Designers what a low-paying profession! He pointed out that most non-profit theatres, and even many commercial theatres, expect designers to have other sources of income. Creativity is often required of those committed to making a living from design. Sometimes one show will make it financially possible to do two or three more. Other times a radical move will pay off, such as Beattys latest resume itemrestaurant design. (Visit Bond 45 in Times Square to sample the work of a Tony winner and a plate of shrimp scampi.) You have to be a bit of a business man, says Beatty, to be a designer. And you have to be able to communicate clearly, regardless of the territory. McLane says his Yale training taught him to draw in a conversation, to be able to doodle an idea almost instantly, which has proven essential with the variety of directors he has worked with. Many of these designers have chosen, in turn, to inspire new generations of young designers through teaching: Conklin, for instance, lectures at NYUs Tisch School of the Arts, while Michael Yeargan has taught alongside Ming Cho Lee since the late 1970s. Todd Rosenthal 93, who designed the set for Tony and Pulitzer Prize-winner August: Osage County, helms classes at Northwestern and finds teaching as invigorating as any other part of his career. The most important thing Ive learned from teaching is that every idea is valuable, he says. Even really bad ideas are valuable. Knowing what something isnt is as crucial as knowing what it is. Despite such wide-ranging opportunities, type-casting plays a role in many career paths,
(From top) Michael Yeargan 73 (Faculty) at his home in Milford, CT. Photo by Andrew Boyce 09. Todd Rosenthal 93 at his studio in Chicago, Ill. Photo courtesy of Todd Rosenthal. Riccardo Hernandez 92 on the set of Bring in Da Noise Bring in Da Funk in 1995. Photo by Michal Daniel.
Of course, few children, imagining their lives as designers, considered the grown-up challenges of the professional theatre world. Since the tension between being an individual and remaining professionally active shapes every designers path, the Design departments greatest long-term achievement may be the generations of designers who have adapted to the changing demands of a life in the theatre, while maintaining real ownership over their work and careers. Adrianne Lobel 79 believes a designer should not be limited by his or her capabilities. If you think, this needs to be a set that is super super real, then you need to know your architecture. If the approach that develops is abstract, then you need to be able to create your own vocabulary in a non-literal world. Not surprisingly, Lobels design credits range from her well-known work with Peter Sellars (Marriage of Figaro, The Mikado) to the Broadway credits Passion and A Year With Frog and Toad (for which she also holds a producer credit). Yeargan, similarly, cites the variety of his work, which has spanned regional theatre to European avant-garde to Broadway, as his proudest accomplishment. His disarming career mantra: I hope it doesnt all look alike. And consider Hernandezs current slate. Asked about his upcoming projects, he thinks for a moment, then rattles off a remarkable hodgepodge: a Broadway revival of August Wilsons Fences directed by Suzan-Lori Parks, Thornton Wilders The Matchmaker at Baltimores Center Stage, an opera based on the film Il Postino (starring Placido Domingo as Pablo Neruda), and, for American Repertory Theatre, an adaptation of The Seagull with Hungarian director Jnos Szsz. Then theres Derek McLane 84, who recently flew to California to open Moises Kaufmans 33 Variations, then back to New York for the tech of the New Groups dramedy Rafta, Rafta. Next, he designed the drama Good Boys and
and it brings a mixed blessingeasier access to work that matches ones type, and a need for greater vigilance to keep other doors from closing. Santo Loquasto 72 remembers the day his high-profile productions of The Cherry Orchard and American Buffalo opened simultaneously, and yet, after Orchard, it seemed like every director and producer wanted twelve tons of that. He found respite in the regional theatre. In New York, youre hired based on what youre good at. Its in the regionals where you get to do Joe Orton and Peer Gynt in the same season. Loquastos relationship with the regionals, though, may also be a product of his generation. Conklin, Loquasto, Beatty, Yeargan, and, a little bit later, Lobel graduated when the non-profit theatre was bursting with potential and eager for young blood. Upon graduating, Conklin immediately left to work with Hartford Stage, founded by former classmate Jacques Cartier 61, whom Conklin met while at Yale College. The theatre became a professional home for Conklin for many years thereafter. The way designers get work is the directors they know, he explains, and so many of those directors I knew were involved in this regional theatre idea. Ming Cho Lee reflects how, when he took over the department, the goal was not to go to Broadway or to get a Tony, but to follow artists and theatres one was excited about. Today, he continues, Broadway is a career focus we talk about industrybut what does industry have to do with the individual artist? Conklin often feels that he is doing work young designers should be doing, but the risk-averse production climate makes taking a chance on a young artist extraordinarily difficult. I feel often guilty, actually, because there are, I guess, literally fewer opportunities and literally more designers.
Still, despite the tougher odds, young designers continue to thrive. Hernandez credits Yale for an unexpected passion that has proven career gold. When he arrived in New Haven, he intended to focus on opera, but he was assigned the premiere of Suzan-Lori Parkss abstract, poetic play The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World, and the production got him permanently excited about new work. It also fostered a lasting relationship with Parks, who asked him to be a part of her directorial debut of Fences. Considering the number and range of successful careers by Yale designers provides a daunting picture of Yales legacy of success and vocation. Its an aerial view not unlike the one Michael Yeargan had while accepting his first Tony Award, in 2005, for The Light in the Piazza. Despite the shock of his first win, after thirty years in the fieldI feel like I made it just under the wirewhat he remembers most vividly is recognizing, from his perch on the stage, that the vast majority of design nominees were Yale School of Drama alumni. They spanned five decades, from Pat Collins 58 (design lighting nominee for Doubt) to Scott Pask 97 (scenic design winner for The Pillowman), and included many of his own former students (Loquasto and Beatty were also nominated that year, for Glengarry Glen Ross and Doubt, respectively). Having seen so many fellow and former students become colleagues and close friends, he knew better than anyone that Broadway was just a small, if significant, corner of the vast field of work that Yale designers have accumulated under their collective belt. For Yeargan, seeing them all together was the greatest thrill.
(From top) Santo Loquasto 72 at home in New York. Photo provided by David LeShay of the Theatre Development Fund. Adrianne Lobel 79. Photo by Ken Howard.
Its in the regionals where you get to do Joe Orton and Peer Gynt in the same season. Santo Loquasto 72
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Stunned by my classmates reaction to my play, I was forced to ask myself a question that had never before occurred to me:
What
exactly is a play?
How do you go from being a playwriting major at Yale School of Drama to spending three decades-plus writing daily book reviews for The New York Times?
This is the sort of question you find yourself asking as the years advance, even if the advance of those years isnt so enfeebling as to confine you to doing nothing but asking such questions. (I recently got a birthday card announcing that 150 is the new 100.) I arrived at Yale in the fall of 1956 in part because the chief playwriting teacher then, John Gassner (Former Faculty), had apparently taken it into his head that a possible fresh source of talent might be English majors from top-flight colleges. I had just graduated from Swarthmore. The person who told me about Gassners theory was the first friend I made at the Drama School, Ralph Allen 60, who had starred academically at Amherst and then dropped out of the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship program at Princeton
when, he said, his first assignment there was to write an essay based on a reading of the complete works of James Fenimore Cooper. Ralph preferred to return to a Philadelphia detective agency he had worked for the previous summer and to write tragic plays on the side. One of his first, Winters End, Ralph told me, had actually been produced and directed by Jose Quintero, who in that autumn of 1956 when we arrived at Yale was staging the first production of Eugene ONeills Long Days Journey Into Night. That reminded Ralph of a review of Winters End he would often gloomily quote, as I recall it: Lust, lunacy, incest and fratricide but light years away from Eugene ONeill. Ralph had enlisted in the Drama School to sharpen up his skills. Boy, was Gassner wrong about our talents for bringing new life to the stage! Fresh from Swarthmores Honors Program in English Literature myselfwhere I had learned to track the play of lightness and darkness metaphors in Othello, or to expatiate on the ambiguity of the word nature in King LearI undertook as my first assignment at Yale to write a one-act adaptation of Tolstoys mordant short story, The Death of Ivan Illitch. I began to sense that my ideas of stagecraft werent working when, after an hour-long reading of my opening scene (in which I had tried to bring to dramatic life the sort of intricate symbolic meanings of cancer that decades later Susan Sontag would dismiss as blaming the victim in her book Illness as Metaphor), I looked up and found my fellow students staring at me slack-jawed and glassyeyed. Wasnt Tolstoy writing about people? one of them had the nerve to ask. (Ralph Allen, who was marginally closer to a sense of reality than was I, chose as the subject of his opening assignment the Biblical story of King Saul. The title of his three-hour one-act play was, as I recall, Sauls Death or maybe The Death of Saul. Being young and stuffed to the gullets with literature, we were both much taken with death.) Stunned by my classmates reaction to my play, I was forced to ask myself a question that had never before occurred to me: What exactly is a play? In more time than I care to admit it took me, I arrived at an answer: A story told through dialogue. This in turn raised a far more vexing question that even after years of reading books and studying literature had eluded me: What exactly is a story? Although countless people seem to know the answers to those questions without ever having to ask them, I have been puzzling over them ever since. At Yale, I found some relief by reading what has survived of Aristotles Poetics, even though it is more about Greek tragedy than the
art of storytelling, and even though I felt secretly ashamed at finding such an ancient work so useful, when surely many volumes had been written on the subject in the meantime. (They hadnt been, as it turns out; theoreticians of the art of dramatic narrative, from Nietzsche to Joyce to the critic Walter Kerr, have had surprisingly little to add to Aristotle.) I also discovered at Yale how diabolically difficult it is to write a decently good play. Make a tiny miscalculation in the first act and it will sink the entire enterprise by the end of act three. For very good reasons had great writers who dreamed of success in the theatre like Henry James, Thomas Mann and Robert Frost, among others, failed utterly at the challenge. Unlikely to earn a living by writing plays, after graduating from Yale I considered the offer of a job of running a college theatre department. But that would have meant directing students in plays, so I succumbed to my fascination with storytelling by taking a job as an editor in a publishing house. One position quickly led to another in the game of musical chairs that the book business was in those days, and, after two more jobs in publishing, I found myself first an editor on The Sunday Times Book Review and then the senior daily book reviewer for the paper. Forty years quickly went by. Meanwhile, my classmate Ralph Allen, more daring than was I, pursued the theatre and caught it by teaching and lecturing. Cursed with total recall along with his Eeyore sense of gloom, Ralph drew on a memory fund built up in his youth when his father used to take him regularly to burlesque shows. He wrote the riotous and wildly successful Broadway review Sugar Babies, starring Mickey Rooney and Ann Miller. He had come a long way from Sauls Death. Did I ever get the itch to improve on The Death of Ivan Illitch or any of the other plays I wrote at Yale that brought new meaning to the expression closet drama, or plays not meant for staging but instead (and only just maybe) reading aloud? From time to time ideas for stories have occurred to me, and I have played with them, trying to keep in mind such hard-to-realize Aristotelian precepts as a tragedy being an imitation of an action that is serious and also, as having magnitude, complete in itself. One of my ideas was: What would happen to a legislator if he tried to have illicit drugs legalized? Another concerned a childrens summer-camp Indian program run by a man who took the history of Native Americans at the hands of the white man a little too seriously. But instead of plays, two published novels resulted, A Crooked Man (Simon & Schuster; 1995) and The Mad Cook of Pymatuning (Simon & Schuster; 2005). Writing mere novels is really much much easier.
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But then I thought, well if thats my tendency why dont I radicalize that instead, and really make that so-called weakness the center of my art, which is what I did and what Ive been doing for the last forty years.
problem. You get an effect that you like, and then you dont want to let go of it. And I thought about that, and I said, Well I better work on that. But then I thought, well if thats my tendency why dont I radicalize that instead, and really make that so-called weakness the center of my art, which is what I did and what Ive been doing for the last forty years. Alsoof course Yale was a very different school in those daysI remember being in the first-year directing class that all the playwrights had to partake of and volunteering for the first exercise, which was creating a stage picture. I got five of my playwright associates to sit in chairs in very stolid poses, and just maybe hold up a hand awkwardly. The people that preceded me did all kinds of big, swooping stage pictures, and Nikos Psacharopoulos (Former Faculty), who directed the class, praised them all. The curtain went up on my tableau, and there was dead silence. And Nikos said, Oh my God. That should be an aspirin commercial. It gives me a headache. And the class roared. And for the rest of the year, I was too embarrassed ever to volunteer for a directing project. Needless to say, Im the one member of that class of sixty or so who ever became a successful director in the theatre.
What are your thoughts about the future of your work, and what will your next steps be? Using film in my work has changed things completely. This year, Im doing my third play with video projections, and Im now so interested in it, that I think Im going to use some of the material Im generating now just to make film, and see if I can do it. Ive been working so differently than I did back in the seventies, when I made my last film. Also, its had a big effect on how Im working in the theatre. Im taking more risks in terms of doing things that have less spectacular attractions, that are less frantic, that are more meditative. What do you think about the theatre today? My whole life Ive had an ambivalent relation to the theatre. I started going to the theatre when I was thirteen. I would see a couple of things every year that I liked, but they were not the big hits. I saw everything up through the time when I was in my later thirties, and then I just couldnt take it anymore. I started seeing less and less, and now I just dont go to the theatre. I dont deny that maybe if I went to see fifty things there would be one that would knock me out, but I cannot endure sitting through the other forty-nine anymore. Ive had it.
What role does the theatre play in downtown culture nowadays, if downtown can even be said to exist anymore? Well, yes it can. I mean obviously I work with a lot of young people. We have a lot of interns and the people who play the parts in my theatre and do everything in my theatre are all young enough to be my kids and often my grandkids. So Im aware of what theyre talking about, whats going on, and there seems to be a fairly active community of people trying to make somewhat experimental art, but as for the role that theatre plays in that culture, I havent got a clue. How do you continue to remain contemporary over forty years? How do you feel about your career right now? Im sure there are some people who dont think Im contemporary. I think I am because I think Im still trying to do something more personal and more radical in terms of an idiosyncratic personal vision than anybody else in the theatre is trying to do. I do not believe in art as a collaborative ventureoh my God, I should be banished from the theatre, thats heresy!but I always wanted to make theatre like a painter paints a painting. I wanted to control all the elements and make it extremely personal. Thats what I do, and there arent many people, for various reasons, who do that, either by choice or necessity. And I think the world needs it. Were obviously living in a world where the bottom line, more and more, is all that counts, where pleasing your fellow human beings more and more, therefore, is all that counts, and, to me, that produces entertainment, not art.
Last question: Theres a whole crop of artists who have recently graduated from Yale School of Drama and entered into this real world environment. Do you have thoughts or advice for them? Yeah. Just one piece of advice: courage. Nine-tenths courage. Courage to really stay with your vision, to really understand that if you dont have a response right away, if you believe in it, if you keep at it, eventually people will come around. I really think thats more important. But, its not going to work if you make these little compromises that start diluting your vision Assuming you have a vision.
Joel Israel, Stefanie Neukirch, Christopher Mirto 10, and Stephanie Silver in Wake Up Mr. Sleepy! Your Unconscious Mind is Dead! directed by Richard Foreman 62. Photo by Paula Court. (Opposite) Foreman in his New York apartment. Photo by Joseph P. Cermatori 08.
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By Rebecca Phillips 09
(Below) Joan Kron 48 outside the University Theatre circa 1947; (right) Production of First in Heart at Yale School of Drama, with costumes by Joan Kron.I bought all those fabrics on a shoestring in New Havenand made everything from scratch. (Opposite) Photo by Erika Larsen.
Joan Kron 48 announced. You know that. I did, but sitting across from this impeccably groomed, razor-sharp contributing editor at Allure magazine, I had a hard time believing it. Although Kron, who has made a career as a writer, claims that she hasnt really done anything with the training she received at Yale School of Drama 60 years ago (she graduated with a Certificate in Design in 1948), it is clear that her unexpected and unconventional professional path has been a perpetual investigation of stylea style all her own. At Yale, Kron (known then as Joan Feldman) was famous among her classmates for one of her design projects, a circus parade in bold, explosive pinks, greens, blues and golds on 75 or so black boards. The faculty prominently displayed these sketches of performers, acrobats and animals in motion throughout the halls of the Drama department buildings. So it came as no surprise to her friends when, after graduating from Yale, Kron was offered her dream job as a circus designer with the Ringling Brothers Barnum & Bailey Circus. And then I made the worst decision of my life, maybe, she says with a laugh. Engaged to a doctor from Philadelphia, Kron was about to leave the wardrobe department at NBC to prepare for her wedding, and so she did not take the job. Instead of joining the circus, Kron got married, and created several costume designs for small theatres in Philadelphia where, against the wishes of some of her employers at the outrageous Mummers Parade, but true to her Yale training, she never put glitter on the sketches. After the birth of her first child, Kron became one of the founding members of the Arts Council at the YM/YWHA Philadelphia, where she was the chairman from 1959 to 1968. Her relationships with artists Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein allowed her to manufacture limited edition art objects from 1965 to 1973she still has a few Pop Art
pillows from one of the collections, all of which were hand-embroidered by her mother in black and white. But it was through another unexpectedand tragictwist of fate that Kron first discovered her talent for writing. While she and her family were abroad in southeast Asia, Krons daughter fell ill and died. Returning to her previous life in Philadelphia became all but impossible. At the suggestion of a friend, Kron began researching the (then) new field of grief therapy, and writing about what she found. She began to publish at Philadelphia, discovering very quickly that she had a knack for the creative process of writing, which she doesnt consider so different from designshe chooses her words as carefully as she once chose articles of clothing, for their clarity and originality. After divorcing her first husband and moving back to New York, Kron became a style contributor and eventually a senior editor and lifestyle feature writer at New York Magazine, then Chief Reporter for The New York Times Home Section in its premiere year. Kron continued to publish work there and in The Washington Post, The Washington Star, and The Wall Street Journal, writing on design, the home, fashion and beauty. Always inspired by the sociology of style as it relates to psychology and identityshe is particularly drawn to the work of Erving GoffmanKron found her beat as a journalist, investigating the presentation of self through design. Her 1983 book Home-Psych: The Social Psychology of Home and Decoration merged these interests. HighTech: The Industrial Style and Source Book for Home followed in 1987; it created a sensation by coining the term high-tech and exploring modernist design in home decorating, which remains a personal fascination. While living in Philadelphia, Kron was always in the
papers, both for her work with the Arts Council and for her home, where she had hung theatrical track lighting in her living room. Even now, her apartment is an eclectic blend of Baroque, Rococo, and sleek modern pieces that create a surprisingly unified dcor in a strict black, white, and chrome palette. (The tour de force is an enormous black and white striped rolled armchair that is Krons favorite perch in the rooma truly theatrical chair, she says with pride.) After taking a job as a beauty feature writer at Allure in 1991, Joan was approached by the newly created cosmetic surgery section to write Shopping for a Face Lift, an investigative piece that turned into Lift: Wanting, Fearing, and Having a Face Lift, published in 2000. In Lift, Kron gives an account of her own face lifts (she has had two), as well as the scientific and psychological factors for women to consider before they have the procedure. Today, as Allures Scalpel News columnist, Kron fuses her passion for design and beauty with her relentless search for the truth to inform her readers about an inconstant, and sometimes dangerous, industry. Now, she says, I wonder what Im going to do with the rest of my life. She talks about the image police, how a potential employer will (consciously or unconsciously) hire someone based on physical appearance. Perhaps this is one reason for Krons continued interest in plastic surgery and in what she calls the psychology of beauty, the inmost layer of personal style. From costumes to home design to beauty to the skin, Joan Kron has, for over sixty years, investigated in ever-deepening degrees the ways in which people self-identify through aesthetic choices. Style, she instructs, is the heart of everything. Spoken like a true designer.
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In a sun-drenched
ONeill, I might have been a playwright. But Im not. He was, however, getting married, and he wanted the security of a teaching career, which he found at the CUNY Graduate Center. Because of his training at the Drama School, where he also taught playwriting (among his students were John Guare 63 and A.R. Pete Gurney 58), Wilson found a wide variety of work in the theatre as a teacher, scholar, director, producer, and critic for The Wall Street Journal. Of course, he says with a sigh of nostalgia, the theatre has changed a lot since I started in the fifties and sixties. Early in Wilsons career at CUNY, the newly instituted open enrollment policy brought with it new kinds of students from much more diverse backgrounds, students who werent connecting to the standard theatre history textbooks. Wilson began crafting lectures around photocopies of articles and developing his own approach to reaching these students. When he brought his new ideas to McGraw Hill, they agreed in 1975 to publish The Theater Experience, now in its eleventh edition, the book that would become one of the most widely used theatre textbooks in the United States. The Theater Experience is unlike anything that came before it. Whereas most books present the theatre as an art form that was there to be looked at or listened to, says Wilson, his approach emphasized the audiences point of view, embracing a more approachable writing style that was never stiff, academic, or overly formal, even including tools like sports metaphors, making use of things that [the students] would relate to. The book contains nearly 300 photographs, many of which are original production shots, and it was the first college theatre text to use Broadway and regional productions as part of its curriculum. Wilson is also the author of Living Theatre: A History, and Theater: The Lively Art, all of which boast the same commitment to merging rigorous scholarship with accessible writing. In the early 1990s, Wilson hosted a televised interview program on PBS called Spotlight where he interviewed playwrights, actors, directors, and artists including Neil Simon, Jules Feiffer, Andr Bishop, Al Hirschfeld, George C. Wolfe, Lynn Redgrave, Eric Bentley, and others. Now that he has slowed down a little, Wilson has returned to writing plays, a career he admits kind of passed me by. But, he says, he has been lucky to have such a long double career in the theatre, a career that has allowed him to live in New York City as a teacher and critic, in the same apartment, for forty years. Yale School of Drama prepared him for that kind of life in a profession that, Wilson admits, has a way of redirecting people who start out as playwrights or designers and end up doing something else. But for Ed Wilson, that something elsehis enormous body of published workhas allowed him to reach millions of readers, teaching them to think differently about the lively art Wilson loves so much.
alumni weekend
Stephen Godchaux 93
2008
by jorge j. rodrguez 10 Photos by Harold SHapiro
Aaron Copp 98
With the presidential election only a few weeks away, the relationship between politics and theatre was at the center of the Yale School of Drama Alumni Weekend, held on October 10 12, 2008.
Susan Hilferty 80
Anne Cattaneo 74
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Paula Vogel, Eugene ONeill Professor (Adjunct) of Playwriting and Chair delivered the keynote address, stressing the importance of the dramatic arts amidst the political spectacles lately visible across America. Joking that the free market has proven a terrible model for both theatres and banks, she explained how her career as a playwright was helping her confront the current economic crisis. Vogel then encouraged the Schools alumni to pressure the candidates running for office to support the arts and to contribute to the future of American theatre. The second day began with an address from Dean James Bundy 95. Bill Conner 68 said afterwards that his speech was the highlight and reason for attending Alumni Weekend. James presented the state of the School, showing it to be healthy and vibrant and thriving in spite of even greater challenges. Alumni had the opportunity to converse between sessions with Dean Bundy and Deputy Dean Victoria Nolan (Faculty), to ask questions about the future of the School and of Yale Repertory Theatre. Theatres capacity to effect social change was examined in three panel discussions: Green Theatre, The Drama of Politics and the Politics of Art, and What Makes a Play Have an Impact on the World?, moderated by Jim Simpson 81, Michael Sheehan 76 and Anne Cattaneo 74 respectively. The panelists, including artists from every theatrical discipline, debated whether their craft could truly
alter the course of a nation. Despite their disagreements over methodology, they conceded that in times of political unrest, theatre becomes a socially relevant occasion to articulate the change desired for the world. A number of alumni also participated in a workshop, Laughing Voice, led by Pamela Prather (Faculty). Magaly ColimonChristopher 98, who was thrilled to get a refresher course on Prathers vocal techniques, left the workshop beaming about its effectiveness: Everyone should try it: on your way to an audition, start laughing. Youll be working out your diaphragm, releasing endorphins, and you might even inspire people around you to smile. Other highlights of the weekend included the opportunity to attend Yale Repertory Theatres production of Passion Play by Sarah Ruhl (Yale Rep Associate Artist), directed by Mark WingDavey, as well as Chekhovs Three Sisters, the second-year acting project, directed by Ron Van Lieu (Faculty). Throughout the weekend, current and former students connected, sometimes exploring the possibility of future collaborations. Cliff Warner 87 was grateful for the exposure to new students, adding I always return from Yale [Drama School] events with a new sense of pride, proud to be a part of such an important community.
alumni weekend
2008
John Coyne 97
Greg Copeland 04
I always return from Yale [Drama School] events with a new sense of pride, proud to be a part of such an important community.
Cliff Warner 87
James Bundy 95 (Dean) Jim Simpson 81, Jeff Burroughs, Matthew Welander 09
Victoria Peterson 89
Michael Diamond 90
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Alumni Events
Holiday Party
In December 2007, alumni gathered at the annual Holiday Party at the Yale Club in New York City.
Photos by Anita and Steve Shevett
L.A. Party
1 2 7 8
In March 2008, Jane Kaczmarek 82 and Bradley Whitford once again welcomed alumni into their home for the annual West Coast gathering.
Photos by Ryan Miller, Capture Imaging
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1 Phyllis Warfel 55, Joe Grifasi 75, and
Dean James Bundy 95.
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7 Rachel Myers 07, Malcolm Darrell 07, Bridget Jones 06, and Stephen Moore 05. 8 Jane Kaczmarek 82 with husband Bradley Whitford.
2 Merope Lolis and Yannis Simonides 72, 69 YC. 3 Members of Class of 2008. 4 David Conte 72 and Carmen Delavala
(Former Faculty).
10 Robert Cohen 64, Asaad Kelada 64, and Daniel Travanti 64.
5 Vicki Shagoian (Faculty) and David Nugent 05. 6 Robert Russell 89, Walter Bilderback 87,
Mark Wade 88, Patrick Kerr 87, and Sharon Washington 88.
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The Phyllis Warfel Award for Outstanding Alumni Service
The award is named for Phyllis Warfel 55, editor of the Drama Alumni Newsletter for fifteen years. Its purpose is to honor individuals who have contributed to the well-being of the entire Yale Drama Alumni community. Joe Grifasi 75 was this past years winner. Previous recipients are:
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11 Greg Copeland 04, Jami OBrien 04, Heather Mazur 03, and Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa 03. 12 Alexis Chiu, Matthew Humphreys 03, Michael Gross 73 with his wife Elsa Gross. 13 Dean James Bundy 95 and Jane Kaczmarek 82. 14 John Amicarella, Stephanie Nash 88, Louis Plante 69, and Abba Elfman 86.
Phyllis Warfel 55 Sally Bullock 48 Neil Mazzella 78 John Badham 63, 61 yc Talia Shire Schwartzman 69 Arthur Pepine, former Financial Aid Officer at YSD Fran Kumin 77 Asaad Kelada 64
Dick 42 and Mickey 44 Fleischer Richard Maltby 62, YC 59 Philip Isaacs 53 Henry Winkler 70 Bronislaw Ben Sammler 74 Marc Flanagan 70 Edward Trach 58 Jane Kaczmarek 82 Joe Grifasi 75
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Geordie Johnson and Bryce Pinkham 08 in A Woman of No Importance. Photo by Carol Rosegg. Gary Perez and Adriana Sevan in Boleros for
the Disenchanted. Photo by Joan Marcus.
Stephen Barker Turner, Matt McGrath, and Johanna Day in The Evildoers. Photo by Joan Marcus. Kevin ORourke, E. Faye Butler, Starla Benford, and Garrett Neergaard in Trouble in Mind. Photo by Joan Marcus.
Zach Grenier and Christopher Donahue (onscreen) in Tartuffe. Photo by T. Charles Erickson.
20072008
Season
Tensions ran high on the stage of Yale Repertory Theatre this season. Re-imagined classics and world premieres navigated everything from political hierarchies to drawingroom social mores, from affairs of state to affairs of the heart. With a fervent political dialogue surrounding the approaching presidential elections, Yale Rep kicked off its season with Shakespeares politically tumultuous Richard II. Under the direction of Evan Yionoulis 85, 82 YC (Faculty) and with Jeffrey Carlson in the role of the impulsive young king, we witnessed Richard IIs spectacular fall from power and the subsequent rise of his adversary Henry Bolingbroke (King Henry IV), played by Billy Eugene Jones 03. With the specters of past kings hanging literally overhead as bronze statues, we followed Richards devolu-
tion from a bombastic monarch to a petulant youth curled on the floor. Fraught with its own rivalries, Alice Childress Trouble in Mind took a peek backstage at a 1950s Broadway rehearsal process, where an African-American actress questions her perpetually stereotypical casting in roles of maids and mammies. Ironically, Trouble in Mind was slated to make Childress the first African-American woman to have her work produced on Broadway but since she refused the producers demand to sweeten her plays ending, the moment never came. Director Irene Lewis 66 staged the play as Childress originally wrote it: a searing inquiry into questions of identity, ambition, prejudice, and integrity. With Tartuffe, in association with McCarter Theatre Center, director Daniel Fish created a
visually disarming staging of Molires classic comedy, updated for an age that is increasingly under surveillance. From corsets and histrionics to sweatpants and sarcasm, actors literally crossed between the two worlds Fish created: an opulent, baroque 1664 and a stark, wired 2007. Throughout the performance, an on-stage videographer magnified intimate moments into vast live projections, emphasizing how a family is nearly undone by the machinations of a watchful, manipulative imposter. In the world premiere of The Evildoers, playwright David Adjmi and director Rebecca Bayla Taichman 00 fiercely probed the tortured lives of four well-off New Yorkers. Seated around the dinner tables of upscale restaurants and immaculate leather-and-glass Manhattan apartments, two couples experi-
enced personal crises that erupted into devastating public catastrophes. Idle chatter about sexuality, diamond rings, and literature gave way to a quest for survival as apocalyptic floods and death invaded their pristine worlds. A Woman of No Importance introduced us to the obligations and scrupulous manners of the nineteenth-century British social season. In the stoic drawing-rooms and curated gardens populated by ladies with parasols and men with walking sticks, director Dean James Bundy 95 and his cast winkingly exposed the absurdities, both superficial and devastating, of such elaborate social hierarchies. Boleros for the Disenchanted, the newest play by Academy Award-nominee Jos Rivera, explored the nature of love as it evolves over a forty-year marriage. We follow a couple from their passionate courtship in 1950s Puerto
Rico to a series of bedridden confessions in 1990s Alabama. The nature of enchantment and disenchantment was explored on both national and personal levels, as questions of emigration and assimilation fused with the desire for love and forgiveness. The plays messages of care and commitment answered a season of socio-political challenges, a kind of reminder that to evaluate the contemporary momentfrom its leaders to its prejudices to its hypocrisiesis to treat the nation as a home, and to be the best family member one can be.
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Caitlin Clouthier 08 in The Ghost Sonata. Photo by Jesse Belsky 09. Erika Sullivan 09 and Barret OBrien 09
in Peer Gynt. Photo by T. Charles Erickson.
Austin Durant 10 holding Laura Esposito 09 behind a plexiglass wall with Nikki Berger 08 in front in I Am a Superhero by Jennifer Tuckett 08. Photo by Carol Rosegg. John Patrick Doherty 10 and Liz Wisan 10 in The Good Egg by Dorothy Fortenberry 08. Photo by T. Charles Erickson. (left to right) Joby Earle 10, Christina Maria Acosta 10, Zach Appelman 10, Teresa Avia Lim 09, and Rachel Spencer 10 in Grace, or the Art of Climbing by Lauren Feldman 08. Photo by T. Charles Erickson.
20072008
Season
By Jennifer L. Shaw 09
This year, you could hardly take a step in downtown New Haven without passing a poster for the latest Yale School of Drama production. The advertising blitzkrieg was necessary because, for the first time in recent history, all YSD productions were open to the public. The posters worked, filling seats with a diverse audience for YSDs season of directors theses, verse projects, and new play festivals. The season opened with a five-day party: Baal, the thesis production of director Snehal Desai 08. Brechts first play, Baal tells the tragic tale of its title character, who spreads depravity and destruction as he seeks fulfillment in earthly delights. The set design by Timothy Mackabee 09 transformed the University Theatre into a German nightclub, seating patrons at bars and old cabaret tables. Free wine flowed, creating a celebratory
atmosphere that was excellently corrupted by Bryce Pinkham 08 as Baal, who became a violent, over-indulgent antihero. Director Shana Cooper 08 struck a more mystical chord with her production of Strindbergs The Ghost Sonata. The set, by Scott Dougan 09, re-imagined the UTs stage as a cemetery-like mansion, full of discarded souls, while costumes by Katherine ONeill 09 left an otherworldly impression. Fueled by Coopers physical direction, the show tapped the eerie beauty of a play about gaining access to an imagined heaven, only to find a nightmarish hell. In Peer Gynt, Mike Donahue 08 brought an entirely different type of life onstagetwo goats. Ibsens epic sprawled across multiple countries and four hours, fueled by a thirteenmember ensemble that handily navigated the livestock. Donahue made great use of the
New Theaters flexibility (and the Technical Design and Pro duc tion departments rigging abilities), launching almost every actor into the air. The famous drowning scene was especially beautiful, with both men bobbing in the waves of the lighting design by Chaun Chi Chan 10. Verse projects Pericles, Romeo and Juliet, and Troilus vs. Cressida tested the Bards elasticity with imaginative reinventions from secondyear directors Erik Pearson 09, Patricia McGregor 09, and Rebecca Wolff 09, respectively. Pearsons grotesquely comedic Pericles brought deserved attention to the littleknown gem, playfully setting the story on a wunderkammern set by Sarah Pearline 09. McGregors adaptation of Romeo and Juliet, set in New Orleans, reinforced the universality of Shakespeares star-crossed lovers by reimagining the warring families as the Creoles and
Uptown Black communities. Wolff, meanwhile, took to the field and staged Troilus vs. Cressida as a high school football rivalry in an all-male adaptation. The Thornton Wilder Festival of One Acts presented first-year playwrights work: Lone Pilots of Roosevelt Field by Kim Rosenstock 10, The Art of Preservation by Susan Soon He Stanton 10, and Learning Russian by Michael Mitnick 10. Lone Pilots mingled humor and compassion as we followed a young woman who tries to reconnect with her father before she heads to boot camp. Stanton brought a piece of Hawaii into New Haven in The Art of Preservation, suggesting that saving library books from a flood is akin to saving culture from modernity. In Learning Russian, Mitnick played with the idea of time, introducing a self from yesterday to a self from tomorrow. All three sparkled with wit and creativity, promising two more years of intelligent work
from YSDs newest scribes. Second-year playwrights Mattie Brickman 09, Gonzalo Rodriguez-Risco 09, and Matt Moses 09 premiered their new work at the Langston Hughes Festival. Brickmans If Found, Please Return to Charles Darwin crossed time boundaries and explored cultural taboos by staging parallel and romanticrelationships between two sets of cousins, one of whom was the famous Darwin. Rodriguezs play Dramatis Personae staged a collision between historical and personal events, as three friends weathered the 1996 Japanese Embassy hostage situation in Peru. The Covering Skyline is Nothing ended the Festival on a note of revolution, as Moses play posited a world of perfect, factory-made babies available to the highest bidder, until one worker calls for rebellion. The YSD season ended with the Carlotta Festival of New Plays, showcasing third-year
playwrights Jennifer Tuckett 08, Lauren Feldman 08, and Dorothy Fortenberry 08. Tucketts I Am A Superhero considered the power needed for one child to put her world back together after her fathers sudden death. In The Good Egg, Fortenberry wondered how far one woman should go to create the perfect family, as she debates testing her embryos for the same debilitating manic-depression that afflicts her brother. Finally, Feldmans heroine in Grace, or the Art of Climbing learned what it takes to climb a mountain and, at the same time, to conquer her personal demons. After producing a season of work both difficult and uplifting, with loud ovations and sold-out shows, graduating and continuing students alike were filled with anticipation for the next season, whether at Yale or in their professional careers.
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Alex Knox 09 and Brian Hastert 09 in The Apocryphal Project directed by Michael Walkup 06 dfa Candidate, written by Lauren Feldman 08. Erica Sullivan 10 in Perk, Pussy, Pathos, directed by Laura Esposito 09, written by Kevin Artigue.
Hollywood written and directed by Barret OBrien 09. All photos by Erik Pearson 09.
20072008
By Maya Cantu 10
For its 40th anniversary, the Yale Cabaret engaged the intersection of the political and personal, as artists explored how larger societal forces can mold even the most intimate details of our lives. Remarkably, nearly all the eighteen productions and four special events programmed by co-artistic directors Erik Pearson 09 and Rebecca Wolff 09 and Managing Director Jacob Padrn 08were new works. Early in the season, the American suffragette movement provided the backdrop of the play Bicycling for Ladies, in which a housewife attempts to pedal to personal liberation in 1895 New Haven. The musical, by Dorothy Fortenberry 08 and Colin Wambsgans, helped mark this years Cabaret as a destination for thought-provoking, socially conscious musical theatre. Continuing the trend, Ken Robinson 09 debuted Dancing in the Dark. Robinson not only adapted the piece from the novel by Caryl Phillips, but he also starred as the legendary Antiguan-born, African-American vaudevillian Bert Williams, whose relationship with his partner George Walker was strained by the pressure of entertaining white audiences in blackface. The show was garnishedoften to
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ironic effectwith popular songs of the day. Another unconventional musical, Sidewalk Opera, explored the tightly bound issues of race, class, and social injustice. The illuminating docu-musical was written by sound designer Jana Hoglund 08, who interviewed homeless individuals at St. Thomas More Centers soup kitchen and, over the next twelve months, wove their words into songs that reflected natural vocal patterns. While some productions this year opened into distant worlds, Sidewalk Opera focused our gaze onto our own neighborhood. And, like Dancing in the Dark, it was directed by 2008-09 Cabaret artistic director Patricia McGregor 09. In Amerigo in Wonderland, an ancient explorer clashed with both modern America and the Lewis Carroll classic. Created by Sarah Bishop-Stone 10 and Suzanne Appel 10 and performed almost entirely by Theater Management studentsthe show imagined how 15th century Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci might fare today in the diverse and chaotic land he claimed to have discovered. Charise Smith 10 lyrically interpreted the Hades and Persephone myth through a CubanAmerican lens in Estrella Cruz [The Junkyard Queen], in which Demeter was transformed
YSD 2008
into an migr inventor, and Persephone became a young girl in the process of defining herself. The Apocryphal Projectwritten by playwright Lauren Feldman 08 and actor Brian Hastert 09, and dynamically staged by Michael Walkup 06took an imaginative look at the Bible. Or rather, it pondered unofficial scripture that failed to make the final cut, suggesting a hilarious alternate dimension to Christian dogma. (In the process, it also raised parallels to modern censorship.) Presented as a spring Special Event, The Home coming Project explored topics that some mainstream news outlets ignore. Conceived and directed by Jason Fitzgerald 08, and featuring short pieces by Yale School of Drama students, the show powerfully charted the difficult transition from soldier to civilian, while mourning the lives lost in Iraq. With such a stellar line-up of shows, Yale Cabarets 40th anniversary season reminded me why the Cabaret was founded: It is a theatrical laboratory, and each production is a beautifully ephemeral experiment. May the next forty years be just as rich in invention and adventure.
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In the Wings
The Gordon Knight Scholarship Sarah Pickett 08 The Lotte Lenya Scholarship Ken Robinson 09 Chris McFarland 09 The Lord Memorial Scholarship Stephanie Ybarra 08 The Virginia Brown Martin Scholarship Caitlin Clouthier 08 Alex Knox 09 The Stanley R. McCandless Scholarship Jesse Belsky 09 Ji-youn Chang 08 Melissa Mizell 08 The Alfred L. McDougal and Nancy Lauter McDougal Scholarship Ashley Bryant 08 Bryce A. Pinkham 08 The Benjamin Mordecai Memorial Scholarship Hannah Granneman-Isaac 08
The Kenneth D. Moxley Memorial Scholarship Christopher Peterson 08 Brian Swanson 08 The Donald M. Oenslager Scholarship in Stage Design Brenda Davis 08 Michael Locher 08 The Donald and Zorka Oenslager Scholarship in Stage Design Yuri Cataldo 08 Anya Klepikov 08 Sarah Pearline 09 Lauren Rockman 08 The Eugene ONeill Memorial Scholarship Mattie Brickman 09 The Mary Jean Parson Scholarship Rebecca Wolff 09 The Scholarship in Playwriting Matt Moses 09
The Richard Harrison Senie Scholarship Luke Brown 09 Paul Carey 08 Melissa Trn 08 The Michael Sheehan Scholarship David Roberts 08 The Howard Stein Scholarship Jennifer Tuckett 08 The Leon Brooks Walker Scholarship Joseph Parks 08 The Richard Ward Scholarship Jacob Padrn 08 The Constance Welch Memorial Scholarship Brian Burns 08 Carter Gill 09 Teresa Avia Lim 09 Jamel Rodriguez 08 The Rebecca West Scholarship Alex Major 08 Luke Robertson 09
The John Badham Scholarship Snehal Desai 08 Erik Pearson 09 The George Pierce Baker Memorial Scholarship Gonzalo Rodriguz-Risco 09 Drew Lichtenberg 08 Miriam Felton-Dansky 09 The Herbert H. and Patricia M. Brodkin Scholarship Eric Bryant 09 Aubyn Philabaum 08 Alex Teicheira 09 The Patricia M. Brodkin Scholarship Joanne McInerney 08 Danielle Federico 08 Kristofer Longley-Postema 09 The Paul Carter Scholarship Justin McDaniel 08 The Cheryl Crawford Scholarship Lauren Feldman 08 The Holmes Easley Scholarship Andrew Boyce 09 Scott Dougan 09 Paul Gelinas 09 Tim Mackabee 09 The Eldon Elder Fellowship Kyong Jun Eo 09 Jacob Gallagher-Ross 09 Miu Chi Lai 08 Roberta Pereira Da Silva 08 Nondumiso Tembe 09 Jennifer Tuckett 08 The Annie G.K. Garland Memorial Scholarship Donald Claxon 09 The Randolph Goodman Scholarship Heidi Hanson 09 F. Lane Heard III Scholarship Barret OBrien 09 The Jay and Rhonda Keene Scholarship Moria Clinton 09 The Ray Klausen Design Scholarship Amanda Seymour 09
Dramaturgy Joseph Paul Cermatori Jason Thomas Fitzgerald Lydia Genoveva Garcia Drew Lichtenberg Playwriting Lauren Michele Feldman Dorothy Fortenberry Justin Sherin Jennifer Ann Tuckett Stage Management Danielle Louise Grace Federico Joanne Elizabeth McInerney Sarah Hodges Olivieri Lisa-Marie Shuster Technical Design & Production Christopher Parker Brown Jason Grant John Fremont Hilley Justin Lee McDaniel Steven Wells Neuenschwander Christopher Michael Peterson Brian Michael Swanson Aaron H. Verdery Jonathan Larimer Willis Theater Management Paola Allais Hannah Grannemann-Isaac Heide Lisa Janssen Jacob G. Padrn Roberta Maia Pereira Da Silva David Jordan Roberts Rachel Louise Smith Stephanie Andrea Ybarra Technical Internship Certificate Sarah Beata DeLong Bona Lee Nicholas John Pope Melissa A. Sibley Kathryn Jane Sirco Patricia Rose Sorbi
GRADUATION PRIZES
Prizes are given each year to members of the graduating class as designated by the faculty.
The Donald and Zorka Oenslager Travel Fellowship Miu Chi Lai 08 Ji-youn Chang 08 The Pierre-Andr Salim Prize John Fremont Hilley 08 Frieda Shaw, Dr. Diana Mason OBE and Denise Suttor Prize Sarah J. Pickett 08 The Oliver Thorndike Acting Award Bryce A. Pinkham 08 The Herschel Williams Prize Brooke Annette Parks 08
The ASCAP Cole Porter Prize Dorothy Fortenberry 08 The Edward C. Cole Memorial Award Justin Lee McDaniel 08 Brian Michael Swanson 08 The John W. Gassner Memorial Prize Miriam Felton-Dansky 09 The Bert Gruver Memorial Prize Joanne Elizabeth McInerney 08 The Allen M. and Hildred L. Harvey Prize Justin Lee McDaniel 08 The Morris J. Kaplan Award Hannah Aileen Grannemann-Isaac 08 The Dexter Wood Luke Memorial Prize James Qing-Ren Chen 08 The Julian Milton Kaufman Memorial Prize Shoshana Ela Cooper 08 The Jay and Rhonda Keene Prize Melissa Trn 08 The Leo Lerman Graduate Fellowship in Design Anya Klepikov 08
The Acting Class of 2008 performs in the Commedia Project. Photo by Erik Pearson 09.
*Certificate recipient
YSD 2008
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Spotlight On
Scott Pask 97 Winner, Les Liaisons Dangereuses
Awards
35th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards June 2008 Outstanding Achievement in Costume Design for a Drama Series Katherine Roth 93 Nominee, All My Children Outstanding Drama Series Directing Team William Ludel 73 Nominee, General Hospital Princess Grace Awards 2008 Statue Recipient Alec Hammond 96 The cast of South Pacific at Lincoln Center Theater. Set design by Michael Yeargan 73, costume design by Catherine Zuber 84, and lighting design by Donald Holder 86. Photo by Joan Marcus. Michael Merritt Award for Excellence in Design and Collaboration David Budries (Faculty)
Derek McLane 84 Nominee, 10 Million Miles Takeshi Kata 01 Nominee, Adding Machine Michael Yeargan 73 Winner, South Pacific Outstanding Costume Design William Ivey Long 75 Nominee, Young Frankenstein Outstanding Lighting Design Donald Holder 86 Nominee, South Pacific 62nd Tony Awards June 2008 Best Direction of a Play Anna D. Shapiro 93 Winner, August: Osage County Best Scenic Design of a Play Scott Pask 97 Nominee, Les Liaisons Dangereuses Todd Rosenthal 93 Winner, August: Osage County Best Scenic Design of a Musical Michael Yeargan 73 Winner, South Pacific Best Costume Design of a Musical Catherine Zuber 84 Winner, South Pacific Best Lighting Design of a Play Donald Holder 86 Nominee, Les Liaisons Dangereuses
14th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards January 2008 Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries John Turturro 83 Nominee, The Bronx is Burning Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series Christian Clemenson 84 Nominee as a member of the cast,
Boston Legal
Judges Award: Politics Stefan Rudnicki 69 Narrator Winner, Hubris 39th Annual Joseph Jefferson Awards November 2007 Directing Anna D. Shapiro 93 Steppenwolf Theatre Company Winner, August: Osage County Scenic Design Todd Rosenthal 93 Steppenwolf Theatre Company Winner, August: Osage County James Schuette 89 Goodman Theatre Nominee, Oedipus Complex Walt Spangler 97 Goodman Theatre Nominee, King Lear Costume Design Linda Cho 98 Chicago Shakespeare Theater Nominee, The Two Noble Kinsmen Lighting Design Robert Wierzel 84 Chicago Shakespeare Theater Nominee, Troilus and Cressida
Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series Maulik Pancholy 03 Nominee as a member of the cast, 30 Rock Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Comedy Series Tony Shalhoub 80 Nominee, Monk 2007 Barrymore Awards October 2007 Clear Sound Award for Outstanding Sound Design Brian Fitz Patton 01 Philadelphia Theatre Company Nominee, Nerds://A Musical Software Satire 10th Annual LMDA Prize in Dramaturgy: Elliot Hayes Award June 2008 Ilana Brownstein 02
Connecticut Critics Circle Awards June 2008 Outstanding Set Design Riccardo Hernandez 92 Yale Repertory Theatre Winner, The Evildoers Outstanding Costume Design Anya Klepikov 08 Yale Repertory Theatre Winner, A Woman of No Importance Outstanding Ensemble Lucia Brawley 02 Yale Repertory Theatre Winner as a member of the cast, Boleros for
the Disenchanted
39th Annual Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Awards March 2008 Costume Design Maggie Morgan 92 Center Theatre Group Nominee, Sleeping Beauty Wakes 59th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards August 2007 Oustanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series Tony Shalhoub 80 Nominee, Monk Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series Christian Clemenson 84 Winner, Boston Legal Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series Kate Burton 82 Nominee, Greys Anatomy Outstanding Variety, Music, or Comedy Special Lewis Black 77 Nominee, Lewis Black: Red, White, and
The cast of August: Osage County directed by Anna Shapiro 93 and set design by Todd Rosenthal 93. Photo by Joan Marcus.
2008 Lucille Lortel Awards May 2008 Outstanding Play Tarell Alvin McCraney 07 Nominee, The Brothers Size David Ives 84 Nominee, New Jerusalem: The Interrogation
Outstanding Costume Design Jenny Mannis 02, 96 YC Nominee, The Drunken City Outstanding Sound Design Daniel Baker 04 Nominee, The Four of Us 2008 Drama Desk Awards May 2008 Outstanding Actress in a Play Frances McDormand 82 Nominee, The Country Girl Outstanding Director Anna D. Shapiro 93 Winner, August: Osage County Outstanding Set Design Scott Bradley 86 Nominee, Eurydice Santo Loquasto 72 Nominee, Trumpery
Outstanding Director Annie Dorsen 00, 96 YC Nominee, Passing Strange Outstanding Scenic Design Scott Bradley 86 Nominee, Eurydice Derek McLane 84 Nominee, 10 Million Miles Scott Pask 97 Nominee, Blackbird
2007 Ovation Awards November 2007 Costume Design Linda Fisher 72 La Mirada Theater for the Performing Arts Nominee, Greater Tuna Sound Design David Budries (Faculty) Center Theatre Group Nominee, Souvenir
Screwed
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In Memoriam
Butch Cassidy, Humanitarian: Paul Newman 54
Paul Newman 54 once imagined his epitaph: Here lies Paul Newman, who died a failure because his eyes turned brown. These were the words of a man who wanted to leave a legacy deeper than his handsome face and baby blue eyes. The swirl of obituaries and memoriams in the wake of Newmans passing, on September 26, 2008, age 83, of cancer, shows how thoroughly he succeeded. David Letterman said of him, If you wanna talk about legacyhe knew what he had to do as a human being on this planet was take care of his fellow humans, and he never faltered from that commitment, and Roger Ebert devoted so much of the Chicago Sun-Times obituary to Newmans character that his wife asked him, Why didnt you write more about his acting? Indeed, Newmans impressive film resumeCool Hand Luke, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, The Verdict, The Color of Money, Road to Perditionis matched by his philanthropic achievements: Newmans Own (a charity foundation disguised as a food company), The Hole in the Wall Gang Camp (for children with lifethreatening illnesses), the Scott Newman Center (to prevent youth substance abuse), the Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy, the Safe Water Network, and countless donations and outpourings of support to causes around the world. Though he spent only a year at Yale School of Drama, as a directing student, before an understudy role in a New Haven try-out turned into a lead role in a Broadway smash (the play was Picnic)he always kept Yale close to his heart, a generous contributor and frequent visitor, and he was given an honorary degree in 1968, the same year he became a Calhoun College Fellow. Two of his films, Butch Cassidy (1969) and Slap Shot (1977) premiered in New Haven. Robert Brustein 51 dra, 66 hon (Former Dean), who in the early days of Yale Repertory Theatre received from Mr. Newman the largest donation in the Schools history at that time, called Newman a vanishing Americana man who knew what he owed to his profession, and even more, what he owed to the world. Bob Barr 52, a classmate of Newmans who remembers how they sold Encyclopedia Britannica editions door-to-door together to earn spending money, shares, All the stories about Paul are and were true: he was straight-forward, hardworking, honest and talented.
Richard Beebe 85
Dick Beebe 85 died Friday, June 20, 2008 in Benedictine Hospital in Kingston, New York, from complications associated with brain cancer. He was 54. Beyond Dicks gifts as a writer, he had a real talent for friendship and will be missed by friends and colleagues, not only from his time at Yale but also from his youth and college years in Boston, his working life in New York and Los Angeles, and his time in Saugerties, a small town in upstate New York where he spent the last years of his life. Dick set the bar as a playwright while at Yale. His plays were wildly ambitious, wickedly funny and always human. Actors and directors adored working on Dicks plays. After Yale, Dick went to Los Angeles, where he quickly made a name for himself writing for film and television. He was particularly proud of The Lazarus Man, a successful television series he created starring Robert Urich. Dick also began drinking again during this time after having been sober for many years. His battles with alcoholism continued in and out of rehab until he settled in Saugerties, where he was finally able to return to sobriety. Dick had just begun to write again when he was diagnosed with cancer. The irony of recovering from alcoholism only to be stricken with cancer did not escape him, nor did it seem to disillusion him. Indeed, Dick went on to live as long and as happily as he was able, aided by his always sardonic wit and by his friends from Alcoholics Anonymous, who looked after him around the clock during his last days. Dick is survived by his wife, Barbara, and by a sister, also named Barbara, who was at his bedside, along with his friends from AA, when he died. Quincy Long 86
Delbert Mann with Richard Thomas on the set of All Quiet on the Western Front, 1979.
Delbert Mann 48
The huge number of Yale School of Drama graduates who have had successful film and television careers is no new phenomenonas the career of Delbert Mann 48, who made his mark during The Golden Age of Televi sion, proves. When Mann, who died in Los Angeles on November 11, 2007, graduated from Yale and followed his friend and mentor Fred Coe to NBC in the spring of 1949, the words live television were a novelty, and the budding industry was turning to theatre artists to shape the look and feel of the medium. Mann directed dramas for such now-forgotten series as Philco Playhouse, Goodyear Television Playhouse, and Producers Showcase, earning an Emmy nomination in 1954 for his musical adaptation of Our Town. But it was the following year that would permanently place him in the national spotlight. He became the first director to win an Oscar for Best Direction for his debut film, Marty, Paddy Chayefskys tender celebration of an awkward romance between a plain-looking schoolteacher and an unassuming butcher. The film, created on a dime budget as a tax write-off for United Artists, was the surprise critical and commercial hit of the season. Mann spent the rest of his career balancing television and film projects, serving as a great mentor and friend for the new generations of talent that followed him and, as President of the Directors Guild of America from 1967 to 1971, protector of their future in the industry. He cared deeply for his wife, Ann, whom he nursed through a long illness, and he is survived by three sons and seven grandchildren.
Alvin Colt 37
New York City lost one of its premier costume designers when Alvin Colt 37 died on May 4, 2008. He was 91. Remembered by his Emmywinning protg Bob Mackie as always a gentleman and . . . certainly . . . a hero of mine, Colt was known for his ability to make comedy out of clothing. When my lyrics or scenes werent that funny, his costumes would get the laughs, said Gerald Alessandrini, creator of Forbidden Broadway, the satirical Broadway revue for which Alvin had been designing since 1992(one of his last costumes was a send-up of Patti LuPones matronly garb in Gypsy). Though Colts most famous design was for the original Broadway production of Guys and Dolls, others include On the Town (his 1944 Broadway debut), Finians Rainbow, Pipe Dream (Tony award), Lil Abner, and Jerome Robbins Broadwayhighlights from a Broadway resume that grew steadily and uninterrupted through 2001, a nearly 60-year span. But Colt made New York theatre history as a charter member of the Phoenix Theatre, one of the earliest off-Broadway companies. An exhibition of Colts work, Costumes and Characters: The Designs of Alvin Colt, was presented at the Museum of the City of New York in 2007.
He knew what he had to do as a human being on this planet was take care of his fellow humans, and he never faltered from that commitment.
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In Memoriam
Katherine De Hetre 71
On December 29, 2007, Katherine De Hetre 71, was killed in a car accident while driving along Route 101 in Northern California on her way to her familys new home in Southern Oregon. She was 61. As a student at YSD, she played Bunny Barnham in Terrence McNallys Where Has Tommy Flowers Gone? After Yale, Katherine performed on Broadway in The Love Suicides at Schofield Barracks, by Romulus Linney 58, and understudied the role of Letta in a revival of Arthur Millers Death of a Salesman. Her work in television included roles in Murder, She Wrote and Quincy, M.E. Katherines husband, actor Charles Levin 74 71 yc , writes that she was a brilliant actor, a wild and crazy mom, and the gypsy in my soul.
Alumni News
Rosemary Ingham 67
Costume designer Rosemary Ingham 67, who died on July 13, 2008, will be missed for many qualitiesher talent, her devotion to her craftbut not least among them is the vivacity and bravery she brought to her long career. She loved staking out new ground in which theatre could bloom, whether it be the Long Wharf Theatre in New Haven, Connecticut, or the Great River Shakespeare Festival in Winona, Minnesota, along with the fabric store and workshop Clothworks in Charlottesville, Virginia. Ingham designed costumes all over the country, though she was most well known for her period designs, particularly for Shakespeare productions. She has also nurtured generations of young designers from her years as a professor at Southern Methodist University and, later, University of Mary Washington. Even more impressive are the students she has influenced from afar, thanks to her four books on designthree of them written with colleague Liz Coveywhich have been among the most influential tomes on the subject. In 2006 she received the U.S. Institute for Theatre Technology Distinguished Lifetime Achievement Award. Greater than all these achievements, though, was Inghams familyher four sons (all with her late husband, playwright and actor Robert Ingham) and four grandchildrenwho will miss her most of all.
Jeffrey Dennstaedt 87
Jeffrey Viet Dennstaedt 87 passed away suddenly at his home in Minneapolis, Minn., on February 5, 2008. He was 47. Friends and colleagues remember Jeffs professional talents and his personal warmth. Longtime friend Tim Fricker 89, who followed Jeff from his undergraduate years at Towson University, to their time together at YSD, to Jeffs first post-Yale position as Technical Director at the University of Virginia Theatre Arts Program, remembers, While Jeff was always a consummate and dedicated professional, he also understood and helped others understand the importance of having a life outside of work. On reconnecting with Jeff in Virginia, Tim shares, I learned things [from Jeff] about technical direction that I carried with me for the rest of my career. Simple things, but Jeff set a good example in many aspects of [our] work, and I will always be grateful for the time I spent working with him there and elsewhere, and most of all, grateful for his friendship. From 19932001, Jeff was Technical Director at McCarter Theatre Center in Princeton, N.J. Tom Muza, General Manager, said, To his friends Jeff had a gentle manner, an easy smile and warm heart. No one could plan a better bike route or encourage us to make it that last mile. Jeff challenged us with conversation and, believe it or not, he asked many of us to bring him back dirt and sand samples from our travels. Did he have a scale model of the world in his basement? Ride on, my friend. In January of 2001, Jeff became Technical Director for the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minn. Joe Dowling, the Guthries Artistic Director, reflected on Jeffs role in the design and construction of the Guthries new space (opened in summer 2006), when he spoke at Jeffs memorial service: Jeff had an extraordinary capacity to solve problems. He relished in the complex designs that were presented before him. I know that in the creation of this building, Jeffs input was invaluable. He knew instinctively and from experience how important it was that however iconic the architecture, the long-term health and success of this theater depended on the decisions that were taken at the planning stage. And if mistakes were madeand indeed there wereit was largely because, whether through budgetary reasons or because we simply didnt listen, we didnt actually pay attention to his advice. He is one of the true heroes of this new building, of the Guthrie, and we will remember him for a very long time.
complex layers of the club sandwich she called her life in the arts. Our adventures together continued over the yearsin New York, in Ashland, in Ireland, many times at her farm in Vermontand there was never an opinion she expressed that didnt clarify or debunk or unlock something Id been grappling with, and always in her terse, droll, suffer-no-fools style. I came to depend on her wisdom as I steered through my own club sandwich, and she kept teaching me, til the end. As she passed in age all milestones known to me, we navigated uncharted territory together. I felt my way through pockets of her fading memory, helping where I could and annoying her as little as possible when I couldnt. The rhythms of our conversations changed; I learned to wait more patiently for the ends of her paragraphs, which, miraculously, always arrived, with the same force as ever. She was indefatigable. She touched countless lives. She was determined to live to be a hundred, and damn near made it. Elizabeth Norment 79
Farewell
Dick Beebe 85 6.20.2008 Ralf Bode 66 2.27.2001 Norman E. Cohen 59 7.19.2008 Alvin Colt 37 5.4.2008 Katherine DeHetre 71 12.29.2007 Jeffrey V. Dennstaedt 87 2.5.2008 Gene Diskey 61 3.29.2008 Andrew H. Drummond 66 7.31.2005 Dorcas D. Durkee 46 10.23.2007 Eva E. Feldman 62 6.7.2007 Brita Brown Grover 59 2.20.2008 Rebecca Hargis-Turner 45 05.23.2004 George Hersey 54 art 64 10.23.2007 Mildred W. Hoadley 45 12.15.2007 John D. Hough 57 7.14.2008 Rosemary Ingham 67 7.13.2008 Irma S. Johnson 35 12.3.2007 Joan Pollak Kan 48 7.3.2007 Jane Kimbrough 61 7.15.2007 Stanley Kloth 55 8.28.2007 Fritz Andre Kracht 53 10.18.2005 Juda L. Levie 53 1.28.2008 Barbara Mackenzie 56 2.16.2006 George Mallonee 59 12.4.2007 Delbert Mann 48 11.11.2007 Chris Markle 79 7.28.2008 Charles McCallum 50 8.31.2007 James R. Miller 65 8.06.2008 Tad Mosel 50 8.24.2008 Albert John A.J. Moulfair 65 12.14.2007 Gary Munn 59 12.11.2007 Paul Newman 54 hon 88 9.26.2008 Roxanne Kadishov Nicholson 71 9.24.2007 Francine Parker 59 11.8.2007 Felice Anthony Polito 68 10.19.1991 Boyce Price 39 11.1.2007 Mark J. Richard 57 3.3.2008 Pierre-Andr Salim 09 11.18.2007 Louise Saurel 38 2.23.2008 William Snyder, Jr. 55 3.12.2008 Bros Giles Turbee 65 9.15.2000 Mary Van Dyke, Former Faculty 12.29.2007 Edwin L. Vergason 42 3.27.2007 Zack L. York 42 3.17.2008
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Bookshelf
Theatre Craft
Non Fiction
Cult Films: Taboo and Transgression By Allan Havis 80 University Press of America, 2008 Writers in Paris: Literary Lives in the City of Light By David Burke 61, 58 YC Counterpoint Press, 2008 No city has attracted so much literary talent, launched so many illustrious careers, or produced such a wealth of enduring literature as Paris. From the 15th century through the 20th, poets, novelists, and playwrights, famed for both their work and their lives, were shaped by this enchanting locale. From natives such as Molire, Genet, and Anas Nin, to expats like Henry Miller, Samuel Beckett, and Gertrude Stein, author David Burke follows hundreds of writers through Pariss labyrinthine streets, inviting readers on his grand tour. Unique in scope and approach, Writers in Paris crosses from Right Bank to Left and on to the Ile de la Cit as it explores the alleyways and haunts frequented by the worlds most storied writers. Memory, Testimony, and Allegory in South American Theatre: Upstaging Dictatorship By Ana Elena Puga 98, 02 DFA Routledge, 2008
Crazy Mary By A.R. Gurney 58 Broadway Play Publishing, 2008 Coyote Tales By Daniel Elihu Kramer 91 Bakers Plays, 2008 Finished from the Start and Other Plays By Juan Radrig By Ana Elena Puga 98, 02 DFA (translator) and Mnica-Nez Parra (translator) Northwestern University Press, 2007 Annushkas Voyage By Edith Tarbescu 76 PlayScripts, 2008
Mechanical Design for the Stage By Alan Hendrickson 83 (Faculty) & Colin Buckhurst 04 Elsevier Science & Technology Books, 2007 Shakespeares Language: A Glossary of Unfamiliar Words in His Plays and Poems, 2nd Edition By Eugene F. Shewmaker 49 Checkmark Books, 2008 Theyre Playing Our Song: Conversations with Americas Classic Composers, Revised and Expanded Edition By Max Wilk 41, 41 YC
Blood on the Stage Sherlock Holmes on the Stage By Amnon Kabatchnik 57 Scarecrow Press, 2008 Beyond the Golden Door: Jewish American Drama and Jewish American Experience By Julius Novick 66 Palgrave Macmillan, 2008
Fiction
Spiderman: Peter Parker: Back in Black By Robert Aguirre-Sacasa 03, Matt Fraction, and Sean McKeever Marvel Enterprises, 2008
Capote in Kansas: A Ghost Story By Kim Powers 84 Westview Press, 2007 Truman Capote and Harper Lee were children when they met. Twenty-five years later, Capote had taken New Yorks literary world by storm, while Lee struggled to put pen to paper and sweat out the story of her childhood in the same city. They would reunite in the desolate plains of Kansas to create In Cold Blood. And they would start talk of an even greater mystery: What happened between themand who really wrote To Kill a Mockingbird? How did two innocents from a backwoods Southern town achieve such fame, and why did they stop speaking to one another? Capote in Kansas is an unforgettable what might have beena fantasia of ghosts seeking resolve and revenge, and memories and regret for a past that was, that will never be again.
Miss Witherspoon & Mrs. Bob Cratchits Wild Christmas Binge: Two Plays By Christopher Durang 74 Grove Press, 2006 Christopher Durang, the criminally funny author of Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You, returns to the scene of his prime with two raucous new plays about death, religion, and a creamy Christmas pudding. In Miss Witherspoon named one of the Ten Best Plays of 2005 by both Time and NewsdayVeronica, a recent suicide whose cantankerous attitude has not improved in the afterlife, discovers that the one thing worse than the world she left behind is having to go back for seconds. Ordered to cleanse her brown tweedy aura, Veronica resists being reincarnated (as a trailer-trash teen or an overexcited Golden Retriever), only to find that she may be mankinds last, best hope for survival. In Mrs. Bob Cratchits Wild Christmas Binge, a sassy ghost once again attempts to shake Scrooge from his holiday humbug, but the whole family-friendly affair is deliciously derailed by Mrs. Cratchits drunken insistence on stepping out of her miserable, treacly role. Morals are subverted, starving yet plucky children sing carols, and somebodys goose is cooked as Durang lovingly skewers A Christmas Carol, Its a Wonderful Life, and many more to create a brand-new, cracked Christmas classic.
Telling Stories: A Grand Unifying Theory of Acting Techniques By Mark Rafael 86 Smith & Kraus, 2008 Telling Stories: A Grand Unifying Theory of Acting Techniques is an essential resource for professional actors, acting students and teachers, or anyone who wants to better understand the evolution of modern acting theory. This guidebook provides a history of acting theories and training and describes techniques that enable an actor to inhabit a character. In the book are numerous acting exercises that illustrate each method, as well as advice on performing Shakespeare and on developing scripts. Messiahs of 1933: How American Yiddish Theatre Survived Adversity through Satire By Joel Schechter 72 Temple University Press, 2008
Making an Exit: A Mother-Daughter Drama with Alzheimers, Machine Tools, and Laughter By Elinor Fuchs (Faculty) Henry Holt & Co, 2006 Collections of Nothing By William Davies King 81, 83 DFA, 77 YC University of Chicago Press, 2008 The Bishops Daughter: A Memoir By Honor Moore 70 W.W. Norton, 2008
Toehold By Stephen Foreman 67 Simon & Schuster, 2007 Erotomania: A Romance By Francis Levy 73 Two Dollar Radio, 2008
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department to further develop its curriculum in writing for the musical theatre, with additional funds allocated to playwrights residencies and lectures at Yale School of Drama. This generous giftis a direct investment in the future of American theatre, and ensures that the Yale Rep will continue to have a significant and lasting impact on the
development of new work for the stage, said Yale University President Richard C. Levin 74 yc. Reflecting Bingers love of both theatre and higher education, Robina Foundation president Gordon M. Aamoth shared that he is pleased to participate in Yale School of Drama and Yale Repertory Theatres commitment to providing playwrights with the means
to actively pursue careers in the theatre at a time when more lucrative forms of media may lure them away Supporting them in a university environment, in particular, offers a unique and especially creative venue for developing plays and for nurturing their talents and imagination.
Dawn Greene
James Binger
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Snyder describes as a renaissance woman, is modest about her own accomplishments. A graduate of Yale College and the Parsons School of Design, she is alternately an interior designer, a mother, and a philanthropist. From her grandfather and mother she has inherited a philanthropic legacy, which she continues as a board member of the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum and the Lincoln Center Institute, and as a manager of her familys foundation, which focuses on arts education and Jewish causes. When she and her husband realized their young son was a special-needs student, and that local school systems were not well equipped to serve him, they created a school for their son and similarly challenged children Role Model: the schools current enrollment is 60 Esme Usdan students, and they hope to have as many Leaving the Saturday night performance as 108 by fall 2009. Usdans gift to Yale of the 2008 Dwight/Edgewood Project School of Drama/Yale Repertory Theatre presentations, Esme Usdan 77 yc combines her interests both in the arts marvels at the talent displayed by and in mentoring young people by the evenings middle-school aged supporting the annual Dwight/Edgewood playwrights. I really believe in mentors, Project and the Will Power! education Usdan muses. I always program. The School think if Id had a mentor in of Drama fits into our life I wouldve gone further. mission, she says, and I They provide children an love drama. It feels great opportunity to be able to to enable children to have see, to open their eyes to more opportunities. And something they might be besides, this renaissance good at, something to give woman continues, I them confidence. Usdan, always wanted to be a whom her husband James writer. Esme Usdan not seem to aspire to make a difference. He hopes the Center for New Theatre will provide a focus to develop writers with a voice, who have something important to say and want to inspire change. An avid art collector and Co-Chairman of the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) in Los Angeles, Johnson appears to be living the dream, blurring the lines that separate philanthropy and art, work and personal fulfillment. His reasoning couldnt be more clear: Art is a visual expression of our values that stirs each of us intellectually and emotionally. It helps us to understand our place in the world, to think critically and to make us more fully human. In other words, its us.
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Alumni Notes
Documentary (L.A.) and another for Best Director (N.Y.). The play alone went on to win the Northeast Public Access TV awards for Best Comedy and Best Drama, 2007. On the Beach is also appearing in the 8th Annual National Play Reading Festival in Boca Raton, Fla., and in New York City at Polaris North. My husband Sheldon is well and is still working at Mt. Sinai Hospital, N.Y. To date we have eight grandchildren ranging in age from 18 to 1. Our eldest is at MIT and our youngest lives in Montreal with his three older siblings. In between are two boys in Princeton who keep us all busy and hopping and a teenager in Illinois who wants to be an actor. My e-mail is llichtblau@[Link] and Id be delighted to hear from classmates near and far. Ed Loessin 54 continues to review the arts scene in Hampton Roads, Va., exclusively for WHRO-FM, where he has been since 1993. Addi tionally, hes selling his watercolors through a local gallery and currently hangs in more than 20 states. He and his wife recently moved into a retirement center in an apartment a few doors down from the bar really makes life free of care! Michael Onofrio 53 is in retirement, but he continues to work as an interpreter at Kylduit Rockefeller Family Estate in Pocantico Hills, N.Y. Sue Ann (Young) Park 52 continues her work as Director of Teacher Training for The Arthur Lessac Institute (Kinesensic Voice and Body Training). She celebrated her 90th Birthday in 2007 at White Horse Village Retirement Com munity near Philadelphia, where she lives with a black toy poodle named Pogo and is mentoring and writing a teachers manual for Lessac Kinesensic Training. Zelma Weisfeld 56 established the Zelma Weisfeld Scholarship in Costume Design at Yale School of Drama, which was awarded for the first time this year to Heidi Leigh Hanson 09. This past summer we presented Olympia Dukakis in her own adaptation of The Tempest, Staying In Touch and called Another Side of the Island, in which she Reconnecting with Classmates starred as Prospera alongside her husband Louis Zorich, brother Apollo, and me. In addiHow can we reach you if we dont know where tion, Henry Winkler 70 joined us for the you are? Please be sure to keep us updated third in our series of An Evening With . . . proon all contact changes, especially mailing grams. Last season we were privileged to have addresses, email addresses, phone numbers John Lithgow debut his one-man show, John and work information. Write to us at ysd. Lithgow: Stories by Heart, which recently alumni@[Link]. Or update your info played at the Mitzi Newhouse Theatre at Lincoln Center. We also have added two more directly through the Association of Yale Alumni members to our Hon orary Board, playwright at [Link]. Arthur Kopit and actress Rebecca Luker. Our Not a member of AYA? Join nowits free! annual Yuletide Affair fundraiser featured As a member, you can register for the School Greg Naughton, son of James Naughton 70, of Drama Listserv where you can post and and Gregs lovely wife Kelli OHara, who is receive notices intended for YSD alumni. Many radiant in the current revival of South Pacific at Lincoln Center. We plan to take another huge other services, including the online Alumni step in 2009, and that is to expand our season Directory and the Yale Career Network, are to include winter and spring productions. available at [Link]. Were hoping that some of these will be origiAttention all Facebook users (and those nal work. I feel so fortunate to be doing what I yet to join): Please be sure to join the official love in one of the loveliest spots on Earth. Please, come and see me. Yale School of Drama Facebook Group. This Stephen Arnold 60 retired in 2001 and setis another great way to network and keep in tled in Malvern, Pa. He writes that he has travtouch with your classmates and stay in touch eled extensively in Europe, Africa, Asia, and with the School. Latin Americaenabling him to practice his Coming soonThe Yale School of Drama fluency in German, Spanish, and French! Alumni Webpage will soon be available on Dr. Anthony S. Beukas 65 has retired after 43 years as Chairman and Artistic Director of our website, [Link]. Well keep you the Communications and Theatre posted! Department at Yeshiva University in New York City. During his tenure, he directed and designed sets, costumes, and lights for 84 productions. He lives in Dumont, N.J., and has two sons and three grandchildren. Rod Bladel 61 played a dean at John Wilkes Booth College in Ishmael Reeds Body Parts at ager, and directing an occasional reading. The Nuyorican Poets Caf in November 2007, group changed its name to Electric Theatre directed by Rome Neal. Company in July 2008 but continues to presBeverly Brumm 65 has been teaching an ent at The Performance Space at the Hotel acting class at The Actors Institute in New Jermyn in downtown Scranton. York City. She directed Caryl Churchills A Gian Pietro Calasso 65 writes, Right now Number for Clockwork Theatre, which perIm teaching Digital Directing at Rome formed at Theatre Row, this past September. University La Sapienza. Im also finishing a ............................ David Burke 61, 58 yc celebrated the book, entitled Los Angeles, Nowhere, Now Here. release of his new book in May (see Its a new approach to drama and photography, David Ackroyd 68 shares, Alpine Theatre Bookshelf). which I call Film in Stills. It is partially Project (ATP) continues to grow at an astoundJohn Beck 63 writes, My adaptation of financed and sponsored by Rome University ing rate, so you must forgive me if Im a bit Boucicaults The Poor of New York, morphed as artistic research. breathless as we race headlong toward our into The Poor of Scranton, was the George Dicenzo 65 is teaching in New York fourth summer season. If you happen to be Christmastime production of The Northeast City and Philadelphia and is working on the including Glacier Park or anywhere else in the Theatre in 2006. In June 2007, I retired as pres- occasional picture when a kind and humane beautiful Northwest in your vacation plans, ident of the Theatres Board of Directors. I director calls my agent. His most recent film please stop by for a performance at ATP (www. continue to contribute as I can by designing was A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints (2006), [Link]) in Whitefish, Mont. programs and posters, acting as literary manwith Chaz Palminteri and Robert Downey, Jr.
Alumni Notes
Marvin Kaye, and an exceptionally good cast. Joy Carlin 54 shares that her production of Terry Johnsons Hysteria at the Aurora Theatre turned out to be a family affair, with her daughter Nancy Carlin playing the disturbed Jessica and Nancys husband Howard Swain playing Salvador Dali. Joy went on to direct Kathleen Clarks Southern Comforts at Theatre works in Palo Alto, where she was also in a staged reading of a new play by Joe DiPietro called Creating Claire, as part of Theatreworks new play development series. Fay Moore Donoghue 51 is working towards a lifetime retrospective of her work as a painter and muralist. The exhibit will be presented in March 2009 at the International Museum of the Horse, Lexington, Kentucky. Geoffrey Johnson 55, currently a Trustee of the Nol Coward Foundation, has been to England twice recently to attend Foundation meetings. The Coward Foundation has been set up to advance the name of Nol Coward for future generations as well as to grant funds to organizations with a connection to the theatre. On his first trip abroad, Geoffrey participated in a reading of The Letters of Nol Coward (published by Knopf and Methuen) at the West Yorkshire Playhouse in Leeds with the cast of the new Kneehigh Theatre stage version of Brief Encounter, which was trying out there. He also saw a performance of the recently uncovered 1921 Coward play, The Better Half, in London and a revival of Present Laughter with Alex Jennings at the National Theatre. On his second trip, he was a guest at the Nationals Star Quality: Aspects of Nol Coward, to which he had contributed material. He also lectured at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama where the students were in rehearsal for the seldom-done 1926 SemiMonde. Other highlights of the year included participating in readings of The Letters at the Kravits Center in Palm Beach, the Players Club in New York, and the Port Washington Library Literary Series. Geoffrey also enjoyed an evening with a fellow classmate, Carol Thompson Hemingway 55, which included a pre-performance dinner with some of the Ernest Hemingway family before the opening of The Fifth Column at the Mint Theatre. Marillyn Barker Johnson 50 shares, I continue writing and winning poetry awards in state and national contests. I teach a weekly class called How to Write Your Personal History so Someone Will Want to Read It. My twin sister, who also attended Yale in 1948 to 1950 in the Music School, is a composer who has had her works performed by many different symphonies in this country and abroad. Currently she is working on a new work and has asked me to write a poem for inspiration for another symphony. We have collaborated on four others. I also teach a monthly study group for a group of women studying different ancient world civilizations. This year we have studied the Mayas, the Aztecs in Central America, and the Incas of Peru. My husband Dale Johnson has been busy golfing and has made 10 holes-in-one here in Utah since 1995. Both of us keep busy in our retired years. In June 2008, Amnon Katatchnik 57 had two reference books published simultaneously by Scarecrow Press (see Bookshelf). The first covers 80 milestone plays of crime, mystery and detective drama produced between 1900 and 1925, the first volume in a set. Playwrights covered include Maxim Gorky, John Millington Synge, John Masefield, Lord Dunsany, Jacinto Benavente, Georg Bchner, Karel apek, Ernst Toller, Elmer Rice, and Eugene ONeill. The second cites the many theatrical appearances of the Great Detective since his debut in a one-act musical satire in 1893, with plays written by Arthur Conan Doyle and by other hands. Both collections recount plot summaries, production details, and more. Amnon writes, Directing is my profession and I have been a fanatic collector of suspense literature since a tender age. So these books are truly a labor of love. Lucile Makowsky Lichtblau 56 writes, My short play On the Beach opened Proctors 440 Theater in Schenectady, N.Y. this past fall. My play Seems Like Old Times was the subject of a documentary made by Public Access TV (Great Neck, N.Y.) and was shown in the N.Y./ L.A. Indepen dent International Film Festival last year where it was awarded two prizes, The Film Achievement Award for Best
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Millie Kuner 47 writes, At present I am hoping to finish my book on three writers (the publisher is getting a bit impatient) by the end of the year, and I am also serving as dramaturg for our small theatre group in Ithaca. If all plans work out, a visit to China will be in the offing. Meanwhile Ive been seeing plays in New York and have been particularly impressed by Tracy Letts August: Osage County and by the marvelous, inspired revival of Sunday in the Park with George because it has been so enhanced by the new theatre tech nology. It owes a lot to the pioneering efforts of the late George Izenour (Former Faculty), whose work at the Drama School I remember when I was a student there. Max Wilk 41 is proud to have his ASCAP Deems Taylor Award-winning Best Book on American Popular Music reissued for his Theyre Playing Our Song: Conversations with Americas Classic Composers, originally published in 1973 and recently re-released (see Bookshelf).
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Bob Barr 52 has officially become a member of Actors Equity, and he is still acting. He is currently rehearsing Third, by Wendy Wasserstein 76, at Deep Dish Theatre in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. After that, he will head to Phoenix, Arizona, where The Phoenix Theatre has scheduled his play, Matchmakers, for two readings in early 09, with hiatus for rewrites. Another play of his, Inconstancy, recently had a reading at Man Bites Dog Theatre in Durham, and The Tigers Skin is circulating to a number of theatres for development. Ronald Bazarini 55 writes, My play Mrs. Gaskells Lover won the 9th National Readers Theatre competition of 2007. From April 17 to May 3, The Open Book presented it as an Equity Showcase at the 78th Street Theatre Lab in Manhattan with a first-rate director,
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Alumni Notes
70s
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In March, Princeton colleagues Michael Cadden 76, 79 dfa, 71 yc (Former Faculty) and Tim Vasen 93, 87 yc took a group of Prince ton undergraduates to Greece as part of an acting course called Re: Staging the Greeks. He writes, Having read all of Greek tragedy and comedy before their departure, students and teachers visited a number of ancient sites in Athens and environs and worked with a number of Greek theatre professionals, including directors Theodoros Terzopolous and the truly inspiring Martha Frintzila. They look forward to producing Agamemnon and Iphigenia at Aulis on the McCarters Berlind stage in November (with Tim directing). In the true spirit of Athenian democracy, Tim, Michael and the students voted on which plays to perform after a lengthy discussion in their hotels rooftop garden, which looks up at the Acropolis. When the vote proved too close to call, they put the ballots in a pillowcase and drewletting the gods make the choice. Joseph Capone 70 writes, For the last several years, I have been busy developing a theatre company. Classics @ the Point Theatre Ensemble is located upstate in the village of Catskill, N.Y. We present two productions annually depending on grant funding received each year. Productions have been presented in a historic warehouse (built in 1893) as well as outdoors on the scenic banks of the beautiful Hudson River. Lani London Click 73, owner and designer of Palm Beach Purses ([Link]) and Ecochic Purses ([Link]), had an opening in March 08 of her new collection at Susan Handsens Pluto in Leo Fine Art Gallery in Hobe Sound, Fla. David M. Conte 72 led a panel titled Good to Go! that dealt with design issues and scenic construction methods and hardware for touring at the 2008 USITT (United States Institute for Theatre Technology) Conference in Houston in March. David was joined by John Lee Beatty 73, Tom Sullivan 88, and David Boevers 96. Christopher Durang 74 recently enjoyed the first major New York revival of The Marriage of Bette and Boo at the Roundabout Theatre (costumes by Susan Hilferty 80 and lights by Donald Holder 86). Beyond Therapy was given a summer co-production by
(From left to right) David Boevers 96, David M. Conte 72, John Lee Beatty 73, Tom Sullivan 88 at the USITT Conference in Houston. All four alums participated in a panel titled Good To Go! that dealt with design issues and scenic construction methods and hardware for touring.
Williamstown Theatre Festival and Bay Street duction of Don Juan in Prague, directed by Theatre (starring Darrell Hammond, Kate David Chambers 71 (Faculty), between its Burton 82, Matt McGrath, and Bryce Prague opening and performances at BAMs Pinkham 08; with sets by Walt Spangler 97, Next Wave Festival in December 2006. I spent costumes by Emily Rebholz 06, and sound by nearly six months at Dallas Theater Center in Brian Fitz Patton 01). Finally, the cast 2007, working both with David Kennedy 00 recording of his new musical Adrift in Macao, and Richard Hamburger 72, and this year I written with composer Peter Melnick, was stage managed Othello at the Alley in Houston recently released by LML Music. (I feel like an honorary Texan!), which was Denise Gordon 78 writes, I continue to designed by Walt Spangler 97. jump between directing television and feaAfter a number of years away from South tures, web-isodes and commercials, comedy Coast Repertory (SCR), I returned there at the and drama, as Hollywood continues its inevibeginning of this year to stage manage A table paradigm shift. The more I am asked to Feminine Ending by Sarah Treem 05, 02 YC, directed by Timothy Douglas 86, with his do better work with fewer resources, the more Yale classmate Amy Aquino 86 and recent the YSD training pays off, and we rediscover grad Jedadiah Schultz 05, with lighting by less can be more. I just did an enormous project in five 10-hour days at the Warners Ranch, Peter Maradudin 84. I am working at SCR again on Ayckbourns Taking Steps, being lit and the crew was thrilled to be back at work by Geoff Korf 91. I was so sorry to miss the after five months of unemployment. On a happier note, my adaptation of the U.K. bestseller, spring party at the home of Jane Kaczmarek 82an event that I so enjoybut Im seeing A Special Relationship, is finally getting some classmates and other Yalies all over the countraction, and we hope to shoot in 2009. try! Ive managed to run into classmate Lewis Julie Haber 77 shares, Its been a busy couBlack 77 on both coasts in the past year or so, ple of years for me, freelance stage managing always a fun surprise. around the country. A couple of months in William Hauptman 73 writes that in New Haven in 2006, doing The Front Page at March 2008, there was a showcase of my play the Long Wharf (with Chris Henry Coffey Domino Courts at the WorkShop Theater 99 as Hildy). I was able to talk to the YSD Company in New York, by a new company stage management class while I was there, that calls itself Hot Grease Productions. On and again in the fall when I rehearsed a pro-
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John Rothman 75 is playing a recurring character in the new NBC series Kings, starring Ian McShane and Dylan Baker 85, and which is shot in New York. He also played a part in the remake of The Day the Earth Stood Still with Keanu Reeves, worked on Damages with Glenn Close, made a few indie movies, and did a play called Tender on Off-OffBroadway. At New York Stage and Film, he played the Chairman of HUAC in Finks, a new play by Joe Gilford, about his parents Jack and Madeline Gilford and the blacklist. He served on the Screen Actors Guild negotiating committee, where he worked hand and hand with his old classmate Alan Rosenberg 74, trying to come to terms with the AMPTP. In addition, he is currently working with Joe Grifasi 75 on the Yale School of Drama actor mentoring project. In May, he visited New Haven to attend the graduation of his daughter Lily Rothman 08 yc, a history major and head of costumes for the Yale Dramat. David Rotenberg 76 celebrated the publication of his latest novel in Canada and Australia in May; it will soon be available in the U.S. (see Bookshelf). He also recently directed a new adaptation of The Great Gatsby. Bob Sandberg 77 writes, Its been a happy theatre year in our family. My daughter Megan Sandberg-Zakian directed a critically acclaimed production of The Etymology of Bird by Zakiyyah Alexander 02 at the Providence Black Rep, where Megan is Associate Director. Im writing IRL (in real life) for George Street Playhouse, and What Cant Be Seen was developed at the Province town Playhouse. The Judgment of Bett, commissioned by A.R.T. and Discovering Justice, was part of New Visions/ New Voices at the Kennedy Center. Joel Schechter 72 continues to teach theatre history at San Francisco State University. He has recently published a new book about American Yiddish theatre (see Bookshelf). Roy B. Steinberg 78 directed Jo Beth Williams in Life In General/Greenville General, which can be seen on the web at [Link]. Roy also played a Hollywood producer in an independent feature called Jack Rio and in a parody of the Swift Boat commercials. He can be seen on [Link]. David Stifel 74 writes, I recently completed a run as Marat in Marat/Sade at the Knightsbridge Theatre in L.A. Last year, I got installed as part of a new attraction at Disneyland in Anaheimthe voice and face of a new audio animatronic Pirate on Tom Sawyers Island. (The shoot was an interesting technical acting problemfull-out facial and
Jon Huberth 70 Williamstown Theatre Festival and moderated an American Express Insider discussion with Gotta Dance director Dori Berinstein 96 for the Tribeca Film Festival. In September his adaptations of Tennessee Williams letters into a one-man show will be going on the road, first to Williams birthplace Columbus, Mississippi, with A Distant Country Called Youth (drawn from the early correspondence) in rep with Blanche and Beyond (the letters of his maturity), and three weeks later to the Kennedy Center with Blanche. The actor in both plays is Richard Thomas. Between them these shows have played in ten states, Canada, and Ireland. Francis Levy 73 has published a new novel (see Bookshelf). He writes, I am the Director of the Philoctetes Center for the Multidisciplin ary Study of Imagination at the New York Psycho analytic Institute, where we run roundtables on diverse subjects. This past autumn we sponsored a roundtable entitled The Critic as Thinker, which included Robert Brustein 51 dra, 66 hon (Former Dean) and Stanley Kauffmann (For mer Faculty). I have embarked on a number of spiritual disciplines, one of which is traditional Japanese karate. I recently became a Sandan, or third-degree black belt. The online edition of the Wall Street Journal did a profile of my workout routines in June 2007. Im married and have two grown sons. Robert Long 76, Ted Ohl 77, and John Coyne 97 were among 60+ panelists to participate in the debut North American Theatre Engineering and Architecture Conference (NATEAC) at New York Citys Pace University this past July 20th and 21st. The conference
The Yale Cabaret Hollywoods cast and company before reading a play adapted from Mark Twain in the Perry Mansion at the Heritage Square Museum. (front row)Devon Michaels 95 yc, Elissa Marie Kerhulas, Talya Mirkin, Julie Estrada Evans. (middle row) Nicholas Hormann 73, Ava Dupree, Sam Wise. (back row) Oscar Basulto, Walt Klappert 79, Dyanne Asimow 67, Darius [Link] by Bob Hankins.
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series are going extremely well. Weve also recently launched a major new festival, Fall for Dance, featuring the best contemporary dance from around the world. An off-center series of contemporary performance was also recently initiated featuring a free movie series, contemporary performance art (Old Trout Puppet Workshop, Mike Daisey, 500 Clown, Groovaloos, etc). We also started a very cool new series showcasing the best independent bands whose performances have been consistently selling out. Other highlights include a residency by the Merce Cunningham Dance Company and the upcoming premiere of a piece we co-commissioned with American Ballet Theatre featuring choreography by Twyla Tharp and music by Danny Elfman. Id be pleased to welcome any colleagues and classmates to the Center if they ever find themselves in Southern California . . . they can expect the red-carpet treatment. Wendy Rolfe Evered 89 and Charles Evered 91 report from Princeton, N.J., that their two children, Margaret, 8, and John, 7, are growing up way faster than they would like. Charles just directed his first feature film, Adopt a Sailor, which stars Bebe
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Joseph Barna 81 writes, I have not contributed to the alumni news previously, but most of my post-YSD years were spent writing theatre software (from Artsoft through Tickets. com) and not particularly newsworthy. Lately, however, I have been back in real theatre and have news. I spent two years with the Unofficial New York Yale Cabaret as a board member and technical advisor. I designed lights and set for The Terrorist, directed by Howard Pflanzer 68, among other productions. Ive been doing off-Broadway work as well, including set design for David Willingers production of Jobs Passion at the Theater for the New City, lights for On The Border and Hooray For What at the Medicine Show Theatre, and miscellaneous tech work. Ive also been surviving by doing publicity for Spring Awakening, thanks to Pun Bandhu 01, one of the shows producers. But my most exciting news is performing my one-man show in October 2007, on the exact 50th anniversary of the launching of Sputnik. Sputnik: A Personal Trajectory is a monologue about being the first person in the continental U.S. to see SputnikI saw it as an unidentified strange object in the early morning sky over Vermont before it was announcedand the profound effect that that sighting had on my life and work. My hope is to develop it into a full piece for the Fringe Festival or some other venue. Id be happy to share the story with anyone whos interested. My brother died unexpectedly and left me with another Keeshond, for those of you who remember Zonker, the dog I had during my YSD years. My new dog wont get to attend YSD classes like Zonker did, but he enjoys going to the fall Mandatory Fun at Ben and Laraines. Robert (Bob) Barnett 89 shares, 2007-2008 finds me splitting time between Los Angeles and New York, pursuing projects on both coasts, artistic and otherwise. Old friends from my pre-Yale New York days have retired and now spend six weeks at a time winter and summer at various Club Meds leaving me their apartments. It may mean snow in February and humidity in July (I am a
Alex Witchel 82
It didnt take Alex Witchel long to realize she was on the wrong side of the curtain. After graduating from the Theater Management program in 1982, she went to work for her professors Bernie Jacobs and Jerry Schoenfeld as a house management apprentice at the Shubert Organization. I was not happy at all, she remembers. So she turned to The New York Times classifieds. As she sought a journalism job, a colleague advised her that shed never get an entry-level position with a Masters from Yale and three years with the Shubertso she made an alternate resume and omitted her MFA. Soon after, a gig as a glorified secretary during Elle magazines American launch led to a job assisting Elles interim editor. Witchel eventually became an Assistant Editor at Elle, and for a time was Entertainment Editor there. In 1990, Witchel became a staff writer for the The New York Times, where she met her husband Frank Rich, then the papers lead theatre critic. She now writes a monthly food column for the paper, as well as features for the The New York Times Magazine. Her first book, Girls Only, based on columns she wrote for the Times about her mother and sister, appeared in 1996, followed by a novel, Me Times Three in 2002. The Spare Wife, a satiric potboiler about upper-crust Manhattan, will be out in paperback in February 2009. In her journalism and in her books, Witchels constantly writing in a new voice, from the detached narration of a profile to the personal tone of food writing. Its important to learn new things, keep mixing it up, she says. Meanwhile, both Witchel and Rich remain active and passionate audience members, and they serve as mentors for Theatre Development Funds Open Doors program, taking high school math and science majors to the theatre. When you love the theatre, you want other Sarah Bishop-Stone 09 people to love the theatre, she says.
Photo: F.R. Conrad
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board membership with Minneapolis Walker Art Center (WAC), for which Im co-chairing a growing patrons program for contemporary performance. This year, in WACs state-of-theart Herzog & De Meuron-designed McGuire Theater, veteran curator Philip Bither is presentingand in some cases (co)commissioninggroundbreaking works by: Back to Back Theatre (Australia), Jerome Bel (France), Cloud Gate (Taiwan), Gob Squad (U.K./Germany), Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker (Belgium), Faustin Linyekula (Congo), and New Yorks Trisha Brown, Miguel Gutierrez, Marc Bamuthi Joseph, Meredith Monk/Ann Hamilton, David Neumann, and The Team. Was sorry indeed to miss last years memorial of Dick Gilman (Former Faculty); his imprint on YSD will be felt through generations to come. Recently saw Mark Lord 87, whose directing and dramaturgy in Philadelphia and teaching at Bryn Mawr continue successfully. Creatively, Ive returned to my own pre-Yale painting and drawing, which goes gradually and very well. Warm greetings from the center of the country. Email@[Link] Its boy for Christopher Noth 85! He and Tara Wilson welcomed Orion Christopher Noth in January. Mark Rafael 86 has published a new book (see Bookshelf). Mark shares, I continue to act and teach in San Francisco, having just shot the independent film, Tenderloin, and will be starting rehearsals on Jihad Jones and the Kalashnikov Babes for Golden Thread Productions. I also continue teaching at the University of San Francisco and the Academy of Art University. Michael Vaughn Hayden Rogers 98 was married to Kimberly Suzanne Ellis on October 20, 2007. They reside on Roosevelt Island in New York City. John Gould Rubin 80 was named Co-Artistic Director/Executive Director of LAByrinth Theater Company in New York City. In June, he directed their production of Penalties & Interest by Rebecca Cohen as part of the Public/LAB series at The New York Shakespeare Festival. As he reports, Ive directed five shows with LABryinth over the years and produced three along with their commercial transfers, but this is a big change in my life. Steven Saklad 81 shares, I designed a tiny little feature in 2007 called Juno, which turned into an unexpectedly big deal in 2008 with four Oscar nominations. The production design career continues to move forward. Next up is Swing Vote, starring Kevin Costner, followed
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non-profit organizations. I have also started working with the New England Center for the Performing Arts as a fundraising consultant. They are embarking on an exciting new project to build a $30 million state-of-the-art facility in Franklin, Mass., less than ten minutes from my home, and I am thrilled to be a part of their efforts! My girls are now ages 6 (Kaitlyn) and 3 1/2 (Caroline) and are both doing well. I have enjoyed reconnecting with so many YSD alums on LinkedIn this year and hope this note finds all my classmates doing well! Edward Check 90 shares, This past fall I took a leave from teaching at Smith College and returned to New York to art direct Sex and the City: The Movie. In my wildest dreams I never thought accepting a job back in 1997 would follow me for the next ten years! Many thanks to the Drama School for helping me along the way. Elizabeth Hope Clancy 91 has had a great year of work in costume design. Dance: RoS Indexical by Yvonne Rainer, Documenta Festival in Germany and Performa 07 in New York; Intimacy of Strife by Pat Catterson, Seattle Dance Project. Theatre: Passing Strange on Broadway, directed by Annie Dorsen 00; The Breach by Tarell McCraney 07, Catherine Filloux, and Joe Sutton at Seattle Rep; The
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Frances and Maximillian Blank, children of Martin Blank 94. Stephen Strawbridge 83 (Faculty) shares, I created the lighting for the incisive Yale Repertory Theatre production of David Adjmis The Evildoers, directed by Rebecca Taichman 00 with a talented group of collaborators including set designer Riccardo Hernandez 92, sound designer Bray Poor and costume designer Susan Hilferty 80. Stephens other recent projects include the Lynn Ahrens/Stephen Flaherty musical The Glorious Ones directed by Graciela Daniele for Lincoln Center Theater; Craig Lucas Prayer for My Enemy directed by Bartlett Sher for the Long Wharf and Intiman Theatres (with Julie Boyd 84); Persistence of Memory for Pilobolus Dance Theatre; A Dream Play directed by Roman Paska for Stockholms Stadsteater (on the 100th anniversary of the first production); the opera Wakondas Dream by composer Anthony Davis and poet Yusef Komunyakaa, directed by Rhoda Levine (Former Faculty); Beethoven en Camera for the Schauspielhaus, Vienna, Austria; Bernarda Alba (Lucille Lortel nomination) with set by Christopher Barreca 83 and costumes by Toni-Leslie James for Lincoln Center Theater; and Souls of Naples with John Turturro 83, with set and costumes by Donna Zakowski 83, at Theatre for a New Audience and the Mercadante, Naples, Italy. Stephens wife, Ruth Weissberger, a physician at the Hospital of Saint Raphael in New Haven, has had her novel, a medical mystery titled The Cure for Remembering, published by Melville House. Robert Wierzel 84 is proud to announce his recent and upcoming projects: A Little Night Music, directed by Mark Lamos (Yale Rep Asso ciate Artist), scenery by Riccardo Hernandez 92, CENTERSTAGE, Baltimore, 3/08; Rusalka, directed by Eric Simonson, Minnesota Opera, 4/08; La Bohme, directed by Tomer Zvulum, Opera Cleveland, 4/08; The Comedy of Errors, directed by Barbara Gaines, Chicago Shakespeare Theatre, 4/08; Pride & Prejudice, directed by Mark Cuddy, Geva Theatre Center, 5/08; Il Matrimonio Segreto, directed by Jonathan Miller, BAM Opera, 5/08; Tis a Pity Shes a Whore, directed by Carey Perloff, A.C.T. (American Conservatory Theatre), San Francisco, 6/08; Giulio Cesare, directed by Robin Guarino, Glimmerglass Opera, 7/08; Aida, directed by Robin Guarino, scenery by Michael Yeargan 73 (Faculty), Seattle Opera, 7/08; Sleeping Giant, a new work choreographed by Larry Goldhuber, Mass MOCA, 8/08; Rock & Roll, West Coast premiere, directed by Carey Perloff, A.C.T., San Francisco, 9/08; A Quarreling Pair, BTJ/AZ Dance Company, BAM Next Wave 2008 season, 9/08; Don Giovanni, directed by Robin Guarino, Canadian Opera, Toronto, 10/08; Arjunas Dilemma, a staged oratorio, directed by Robin Guarino, BAM, 12/08. Joseph Urla 85 shares, I recently finished
Dallas Adams 93 is the Regional Account Manager for a health care company in Las Vegas, Nevada, and has two children, Tristan, age 4, and Victoria, age 6. Claudia (Arenas) Rosenshield 99 shares that, since graduating, Ive since married a diplomat, and Ive had a very interesting time teaching theatre in universities overseas. Now we are in London enjoying life here, and theatre, very much. Martin Blank 94 writes, Its been a great year. On September 24, 2007, my wife Penny gave birth to our son, Maximilian. His big sister Frances is now three. In 2007, I was commissioned by the Georgetown Theatre Company to write a new play, Hamlet #44, which they produced in July of 07 in Washington, D.C. My new play A New York Miracle was produced in December of 07 by The Jewish Theatre Workshop in Baltimore. Elizabeth Bennett 97 writes, I continue to work in the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs and have really enjoyed branching out beyond theatre and working with museums, music and dance groups, and arts in education programs. I have enough time to do freelance dramaturgy projects, including some long-term projects for LA Theatre Works and reading plays for a few theatre companies. Most frequently, my freelance adventures mean helping out Preston Lane 96 at Triad Stage in Greensboro, N.C. Earlier this year, we tackled Shaws Mrs. Warrens Profession and continue to rework drafts of Prestons terrific new play, Bloody Blackbeard. When Josh Foldy 98 was in Doubt at Triad, he, Janet Allard 97, Preston and I had fun hunting down great North Carolina BBQ and other authentic Appala chian culture. Were hoping to meet Dolly Parton this fall in Los Angeles. Eleanor Holdridge 97 was in New York this
YSD goes to the South! Alumni gathered at Triad Stage in Greensboro, North Carolina. (left to right) Janet Allard 97, Josh Foldy 98, Rich Whittington 98, Elizabeth Bennett 97, Preston Lane 96, Christi Weikel 99.
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he continues to love life with his wife Elizabeth. Sarah Lambert 90 writes, As always, much on the to do list. Projects from this last season include: The Children of Vonderly (MaYi), Falsettoland (NAATCO), Sweet Songs of the Soul (Cross roads), Two Pianos, Four Hands (Penguin Rep), and Tartuffe (ESU). I will be guest teaching and designing up at Cornell in 08/09, just for the yearThe Importance of Being Earnest, Loves Labors Lost and The History Boysas well as continuing with a couple of on-going, long term, ever-evolving projectsThe Peoples Temple (next at ATC in Chicago), Fly (LCI), and Casa Cushman (Tectonic, About Face, and The Orchard Project so far!). Mahayana Landowne 98, based in New York, is directing prolifically. Her most recent productions include: Mixed by Maya Lilly in Los Angeles; I and Me and You and I by Michi Yamamura, Off-Broadway; and Turn of the Screw at Ancram Opera House, staged environmentally in upstate New York. As Resident Director for her local New York City chapter of Billionaires for Bush, she has enjoyed creating political musicals, including Summer in the Hummer and Dick Cheneys Holiday Spectacular. She is currently developing an original work, The Picasso Project, a play that uses Picassos paintings as a storyboard to explore the core of creativity. It presents the question, How do we give ourselves permission to create? As a director, Mahayana is using her skills to do creative grassroots organizing for social issues including Metropolis in Motion, which is working to overturn the Cabaret Laws ([Link] the New York City Dance Parade, which brings together over one hundred dance organizations to dance down Broadway ([Link] and many art action activities that promote urban environmental awareness. Her work can be found at [Link] She is excited about developing new collaborative projects and as always delights in finding illuminating connections to expand our human potential, to celebrate possibilities and manifest hope. She sends her love and wishes you all the best in your adventures. Laura Brown MacKinnon 93 (Faculty) continues to lecture in Yale School of Dramas stage management department and chase around her two children (ages 6 and 3). Wade McIntyre 98 writes, Hello everyone who recognizes my name and cares to read about my news. Im still living and writing in
Bill Reynolds 77 and John Huntington 90 at USITT. Photos by Mario Tooch 00.
role of Lacey and understudying in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof on Broadway with James Earl Jones, Terrence Howard, Phylicia Rashad, Anika Noni Rose, and other luminaries. So far Ive gotten to go on as Doc Baugh and expect to do Gooper and Reverend Tooker as well! Our director Debbie Allen is a hoot, and I really have enjoyed being a part of this production and getting to know these people. Im learning so muchlike how to be humble and grateful! Sam Kelley 90 is proud to have had his play, Faith, Hope, and Charity: The Mary McLeod Bethune Story, given a run at the Nuyorican Poets Caf this past spring. Raymond Kent 99 was recently awarded two USITT Peggy Ezekiel Awards for Theatre Consul ting for the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts in Bethel, N.Y. (the home of the 1969 Woodstock Festival), and the State Theater in State College, Pa. Raymond was also recently promoted to Associate at Westlake Reed Leskosky and is the new Director of Technology Design for the firm. He is currently working with Rick Martin 93 on the renovation of the Hanna Theater in Cleveland, Ohio, for the Great Lakes Festival. Stephen Klein 99 is proud to announce, In the summer of 2006, I moved to Redlands, Calif., from New York City, following my sweetie, Lillian I. Larsen. Daniel Elihu Kramer 91 directed Kitchen Hamlet, a feature film setting of Shakespeares Hamlet in a domestic setting, in summer 2008, and he has a post-production residency in the Media Lab at the Wexner Center for the Arts. His production of The Pillowman for the Contempo rary American Theatre Company was named Best Play or Best Drama by all three papers in Columbus, Ohio. He has also published a new play (see Bookshelf). Mark Kupferman 96 is now Director of Consumer Insights & Analytics for NBC Uni versal Orlando Resort in Orlando, Fla., where
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have joined AMS Planning & Research in Fair field, Conn., as Project Managers. Prior to coming to AMS in January, Josh worked for five years at Long Wharf Theatre, serving as General Manager, Associate Managing Director, and Interim Managing Director. Ted most recently worked as Associate Director of Finance at Yale School of Drama. He will be relocating to AMSs office in Petaluma, Calif., in June. AMS was founded in 1988 by Theater Management alumnus Steven Wolff 81, and it is one of the nations leading arts management consulting practices, specializing in guiding the planning and development of arts facilities and in the creation of strategic and long-range plans for arts programs and projects. Erin Chainani 05 gave birth to twins, a boy and a girl, in March. Uma Imogen was born late on March 11th and Kaveen Odin was born early March 12th (yes, they have different birthdays!). The whole family is happy and doing well, and Mommy and Daddy are learnEmily, Daniel, Alex, and Connor Weida (children of Chris Weida 95) ing how to cope on much less sleep. Amanda Leigh Cobb 05 will star as Baby in Marshall Williams 95 lives just an hour then a re-mount of Gods Ear by Jenny the forthcoming national tour of Dirty Schwartz, previously produced by New Georges from New Haven in Westerly, R.I. He writes Dancing The Classic Story on Stage. She arts features and reviews for the Westerly Sun at CSC, now being produced at the Vineyard. recently understudied for the role of Nancy in and other publications, and he has been assoEarlier this year I designed Maria Stuarda at the Broadway revival of The Country Girl. ciated with the Granite Theatre in Westerly The Baltimore Lyric Opera with Chris Van Sarita Covington 07 shares, Im doing a and the Flock Theatre in New London, CT. In Alstyne 00 and will begin working on a new short film! With Roz Coleman 90 of Red Wall April he played Mr. DePinna in You Cant Take play for A.R.T. as soon as Im back from the Productions, who also happened to have been It With You at the Barker Playhouse in honeymoon. my mentor from Yale thanks to the introducProvidence, R.I. He would love to hear from all Chris Weida 95 writes, Rosanne and I are tion of Joseph Grifasi 75. Im thankful and his friends: marshallwilliams@[Link]. still living in our hometown of Milwaukee. excited for whats to come. We welcomed Daniel Robert to our family last Keith Davis 00 finished a run in December June 5. Danny joins Alex (age 8), Connor (age 2007 at the Cherry Lane Theatre of Hoodoo 6), and Emily (age 4) in making our house very ............................ Love, which Robin Vest 02 designed. He also full (but extremely fun and rewarding). When attended Berlin International Film Festival in New York City in April, I was able to see Talent Campus as a director/actor with various Shira Beckerman 06 writes, Im happy to Rob Zoland 95, his wife Jocelyn, and their projects in February. And in April he attended let you know that in September 2007 I transicute baby boy Matthew. Tribeca All-Access with a feature-length docutioned from my role as General Manager at Christy Weikel 99 shares, I spent the last mentary film hes producing and editing The Pearl Theatre Company in the East Village two years building a Stage Management procalled Evolution of a Criminal, which is being of New York City (where I began work four gram at Ball State University. In March I days after graduation!) to the role of Managing joined David Kennedy 00, Adrian LaTourelle 99, Matt Richards 01, Junghyun Director. Ive been thrilled with the new responsibilities and am truly enjoying a chalGeorgia Lee 01, and Brian Fitz Patton 01 lenging season, full of every possible advenin a production of The Misanthrope at the Dallas Theater Center. In May I moved back to ture you could imagine! Were New Yorks only off-Broadway classical repertory company Greensboro, N.C., to be the Production Manager at Triad Stage, where Avery Preston supporting a Resident Acting Company, and were currently gearing up for our 25th Lane 96, Rich Whittington 98, and David Anniversary Season. I hope everyone can Byrd 06 are running a beautiful operation. come downtown and see one of our fantastic Not to make any of us feel old but Alex, who productions. I was happy to host Arthur was 3 when I started school, is now 15, Bailey Nacht 06 and his wife and Merle at one of our is 9 and Dylan is 7. opening nights this past winter and look forLisa Wilde 91 and husband Dr. Philip Erin Chainani 05 with her twins, Uma Imogen Vilardo welcomed a son Gabriel Peter on January ward to seeing more Yalies at The Pearl. and Kaveen Odin. Joshua Borenstein 02 and Ted DeLong 07 27, 2007.
Los Angeles with my wife Samantha and our two kids. Did I say kids? I meant cats. Thinking about having some humans, too. Theyre just as easy to take care of, right? Anyway, my recent writing projects include an hour-long drama for Fox (The Oaks), a feature-length documentary about organic food (Food Fight), and a variety of crazy game shows and specials for G4 (Ninja Warrior, Unbeatable Banzuke). Other hobbies include: writing a humor column for Script magazine, playing tennis, and going on strike. Robert Murphy 96 shares, Ive been writing! Currently taking a playwriting class with Julie McKee at HB Studio, which has been a blast. Ive finished a large chunk of the first draft of my first full-length script, which is a mess; Im hoping to spend the summer writing a more cohesive second draft. And then we enter the exciting, dynamic world of script submission . . . Allison Narver 98 is happily living in Seattle with her husband Jim Chesnutt 89 YC and their 7-year-old daughter Kate Chesnutt. After six years as Artistic Director of Seattles Empty Space Theatre, Allison is delighted to be a freelance director once again. Recent world premiere productions at The Empty Space Theatre include the following: 1984 (with Tessa Auberjonois 98 and Adrian LaTourelle 99), The Valley of The Dolls, Inflagrante Gothicto, Vera Wilde (music and lyrics by Chris Jeffries 87 YC), 25 Questions for a Jewish Mother (originally titled G-D Doesnt Pay Rent Here) and Bust by Lauren Weedman. Other projects include Leaving Queens [by Kate Moira Ryan with music by Kim Sherman (Former Faculty)] at Portland Stage Company and The Womens Project, and Texarkana Waltz in Los Angeles, Seattle, and New York. Most recent directing projects
include Bad Dates (Theresa Rebeck) and Memory House (Kathleen Tolan with lighting by Marcus Doshi 00) at The Seattle Repertory Theatre, The Clean House at ACT, and The 100 Dresses at Seattle Childrens Theater. Upcoming projects include a remount of Bust at City Theatre in Pittsburgh, Eurydice at ACT, and BlueNose at Seattle Childrens Theatre. Allison is currently developing three commissioned projects: Curveball and Maggie Cassidy (adapted from Jack Kerouacs novel) with long time collaborator Chris Jeffries, and a new piece with Lauren Weedman. Paul Niebanck 97 shares, This past autumn I participated in the Sundance Institute/Public Theatre workshop of . . . and Jesus Moonwalks the Mississippi by Marcus Gardley 04. I spent the winter in Chicago playing Iago at Chicago Shakespeare Theater, directed by Marti Maraden, and I had a blast! D.W. Phineas Perkins 90 has left Disney companies after seventeen years and joined Birket Engineering as their Senior Project Manager. Phineas primary focus over the next year-and-a-half will be managing the design, construction, and installation of technical systems for multiple theme park attractions in Singapore. Projects in Dubai and other parts of Asia are a few months in trail. While still officially living in Orlando, he seems to be sleeping as much on United as in his own bed these days. Todd Rosenthal 93 won the 2008 Tony Award for Best Set Design of a Play for August: Osage County, which he designed for Steppenwolf Theatre Company in Chicago. Todd continues to work as Chicago-based freelance designer, creating many sets for Steppenwolf, while also teaching at Northwestern University as Assistant Professor of Design.
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inspired by the work of Eugene ONeill in the ONeill Festi val at 10 at the Provincetown Playhouse in New York City. Brian worked with director May Adrales 06 in Thicker than Water at the Ensemble Studio Theater in New York City. He also played opposite Sarita Covington 07 in Shakespeare: The Remix at Capital Repertory Theater in Albany, N.Y. Stephen Conrad Moore 05 recently appeared in the off-Broadway production of Emancipation, a world premiere by OBIEwinning actor Ty Jones, directed by Christopher McElroen at the critically acclaimed Classical Theatre of Harlem. Beth Morrison 05 formed a producing company in New York City in 2005 called Beth Morrison Projects, which commissions, develops, and produces bold, contemporary music theatre works. She has gone on to produce projects at the New York Musical Theatre Festival (2005 and 2007), Brooklyn Academy of Musics Next Wave Festival, Performance Space 122, New York Public Library Live!, the Estates National Theatre of Prague, and on the streets of Orvieto, Italy. Upcoming 2008-09 productions include Soldier Songs by David T. Little at New Yorks Le Poisson Rouge, Sleeping Beauty directed by Yana Ross 06 at the Seoul Performing Arts Festival, and Binibon by Elliott Sharp and directed by Tea Alagic 07 at New Yorks iconic avant-garde music venue, The Kitchen. Additional projects include music theatre
Karyn Lyman 05 with her husband David OConnor on their wedding day in Pennsylvania. directed the occasional staged reading for Noah Wileys Blank Theatre with casts including Justin Kirk, Rachel Boston, and several members of the cast of General Hospital. Joseph Huppert 07 is happily ensconced in idyllic San Diego as the Sound Supervisor for La Jolla Playhouse and the University of California San Diego (UCSD) Department of Theater and Dance as of October 2007. Denver Latimer 00 has just finished law school in New York City and is going back to California to practice criminal defense, review plays, and re-join the board of a theatre company he founded over fifteen years ago. Suzanne Kim Lee 07 is happy to report that I have a new play going up as part of the Ma-Yi Theatre Companys Annual Labfest of staged readings; its a modern re-telling of Samson and Delilah. Itll go up in New York on May 8. Pu Lin 00 is the Design Manager at Linfair Engineering Group in Taipei, Taiwan. Karyn Lyman 05 shares, On June 3, 2007, after 7+ years of dating, I married David OConnor (YRT Master Electrician in the 2003-04 season) at the Pen Ryn Mansion in Bensalem, Pa. It was a wonderful celebrationin attendance were Anne Trites (Faculty), Beth Morrison 05, Rosey Strub 05, Elisa Spencer 05, Ari Teplitz 05, and
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Alumni Notes
Christina Geyer Phillips 00 on her wedding day with Michael Parrella 00 and his wife Kristen, Terri Ciofalo 00, and Cindy Kocher 00. commissions with YSD alumni David Nugent 05 and Marcus Gardley 04. www. [Link]. Naomi Okuyama 07 is currently Develop ment and Marketing Manager for the Da Camera Society, a site-specific chamber music presenter bringing intimate performances of classical and jazz music to architecturally significant sites throughout Los Angeles. Vincent Olivieri 01 shares, Sarah Hodges Olivieri 08 and I have moved to Southern California, where I have joined the faculty in the brand new Sound Design program at University of California-Irvine. Were loving the sun and the warmtha far cry from the grey days in New Haven! In addition to my work at the University, I am continuing my freelance career, having designed and/or scored theatre productions around the country with companies including South Coast Rep, The Public Theater, Portland Center Stage, Pittsburgh Public Theatre, Ensem ble Theatre of Cincinnati, and more. The move across the country was taxing on us (particularly since Sarah and I were living on opposite coasts this year as she finished her MFA), but were both glad to have reconnected with many former classmates who are now our neighbors, including Aga Kunska 02, Michael Field 02, Lori Monnier 01, Fred Kinney 02, and Shannon Flynn 02. Rey Pamatmat 03 writes, A lot going on for me this summer . . . Pure, originally an Ensemble Studio Theatre/Alfred P. Sloan Science and Technology Project commission, received a workshop as part of E.S.T.s 2008 First Light Festival in May. The presentation was featured in Scientific American (http:// [Link]/[Link]?id= alan-turingcomes-alive&sc=rss). A reading of the play was
The cast of Sarah Treems A Feminine Ending at South Coast Rep: (back row, left to right) Sarah Treem 05, Alan Blumenfield, Amy Aquino 86, and director Timothy Douglas 86. (front row, left to right) Peter Katona 01, Brooke Bloom, and Jedadiah Schultz 05.
Kathryn Hahn 01
The first night the cast of Boeing Boeing performed for a Broadway audience, says Kathryn Hahn 01, something threw them off. We were like, what is that? There was so much noise coming from the audience! The runaway success of Boeing Boeingtopped by a 2008 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Playcame as a welcome, if not entirely unlikely, surprise. Of course the cast is just amazing, Hahn says, and I knew it had gotten great reviews in England. But the rehearsal process was so not funnyit was very serious business. From the start of rehearsals, with doors in the rehearsal room numbered one through six, the cast buckled down, concentrating on the considerable technicalities of constructing a farce, and hoped the funny would come through on its own. Their dedication paid off. The show is like champagne, says Hahn. Were all just playing the play, and I think thats what comes through. Performing the role of a sexy stewardess six nights a week is, for Hahn, a triumphant return to New York. She moved to Los Angeles directly after graduation for a role in NBCs Crossing Jordan, which, she says, was like grad school all over againfor TV acting. Six years on that show culminated in Hahns giving birth, on and off screen. It was a dream come true, as husband Ethan Sandler played the father of her TV baby, and when her on-screen doctor needed help with her lines, she read from a script placed between Hahns legs. Lots of laughs, Hahn says. On screen it lasts like five seconds. God, I wish it was that easy. While filming Sam Mendes Revolutionary Road in Connecticut last year, Hahn had a chance to wax nostalgic about her Yale School of Drama days. I have dreams of waking up, going to get my coffee and a muffin, and knowing I didnt have a scene going up and could just watch my classmates. I learned so much about myself as a person, not just as a performerit was such an important thing to do in this ridiculous business. You can lose sight of what made you fall in love with it at the beginning. And so I think going to school, it was kind of a really beautiful, rigorous three years, where I could think of nothing but doing what I love.
Sarah Bishop-Stone 10
works from the past. The company does great work, the staff is wonderful, and it has been awesome to reconnect with all the New Yorkbased Yalies. Alec Tok 03 shares, I just completed shooting for my first feature film, Angel, in Shanghai. I wrote the screenplay last summer, raised the money in the fall, and wrapped the shoot amidst the worst snowstorms to hit China in decades. Hows that for a year well spent? Watch out for it! (And now, back to the theatre.) Sarah Treem 05 02 yc writes, Ive been writing and producing a TV show on HBO called In Treatment, and Im just beginning my first screenplay for Miramax. My play, A Feminine Ending, was produced at Playwrights Horizons, South Coast Rep, and Portland Center Stage in the 2007-2008 season. I was also chosen to participate in the 2008 Sundance Institute Theatre Lab for my play, Orphan Island. So it was a good year. But next year, who knows? Heather Violanti 02 won the Brinly-Hardy Fellowship in Playwriting at the Mary Anderson Center, an artists colony in Mount St. Francis, Indiana. Bradlee Ward 05 shares, The past year has been a busy one for me. After working for two years in Las Vegas as Lead Audio Tech for The Beatles Love by Cirque du Soleil, I have moved
to New York City, where I am working as a designer for Acoustic Dimensions. I am very excited to be living in the City and look forward to seeing many of my classmates. While working for Cirque, I maintained one of the largest sound systems in the world and had the privilege of working with George and Giles Martin, who were the musical directors for the show, which won two Grammy awards this year. While in Las Vegas, I was also the Artist in Residence at the Nevada Conservatory Theatre, where I designed Fiddler on the Roof, directed by Mindy Cooper, and Youre a Good Man, Charlie Brown, directed by Glenn Casale. I was an adjunct faculty member in University of Las Vegas graduate theatre department, where I taught Intro duction to Sound Design in the fall. Last summer for Cockroach Theatre in Las Vegas, I designed The Methuselah Tree, directed by Sarah Norris. This production also went to the Minnesota Fringe Festival. Last summer, my design for Miss Julie at the Yale Repertory Theatre was one of the designs selected to represent the U.S. at the Prague QA Scenofest. This exhibit is now on tour in the U.S. Please visit my website at [Link] [Link] for more info or for my contact info. Tan (Falkowski) Wells 05 and Nathan Wells 06 are happily married and live in Las Vegas.
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Contributors
Contributors to Yale School of Drama Annual Fund 2007/08
Class Agents highlighted in bold George Corrin, Jr. 51 John W. Cunningham 59 Jose A. Diaz 52 William F. Dowling 52 D. William Duell 52 David B. Ebbin 57 Mildred N. Ebbin 57 Philip R. Eck 59 Sonya G. Friedman 55 Joseph Gantman 53 Alfred S. Geer 59 Robert W. Goldsby 53 David Zelag Goodman 58 Barbara K. Goodwillie 51 James W. Gousseff 56 Bigelow R. Green 59 Eugene Gurlitz 57 Albert R. Gurney 58 Phyllis O. Hammel 52 Marian E. Hampton 59 Margaret E. Hand 57 David W. Hannegan 53, 50 b.a. Louise Rudd Hannegan 53 Hugh M. Hill 53 Betsy N. Holmes 55 Carol V. Hoover 59 Evelyn H. Huffman 57 Helen T. Hurwitz 51 James Earl Jewell 57 Geoffrey A. Johnson 55 Marillyn B. Johnson 50 Donald E. Jones, Jr. 56 Amnon Kabatchnik 57 Lloyd A. Kaplan 58 James D. Karr 54 Jay B. Keene 55 Arthur J. Kelley, Jr. 53 Roger L. Kenvin 59 61 dfa Bernard Kukoff 57 David Jeremy Larson 50 Margaret J. Linney 58 Romulus Linney 58 Edgar R. Loessin 54 Henry E. Lowenstein 56 Paul David Lukather 53 Elizabeth Lyman 51 Jane B. Lyman 51 Volodymyr Lysniak 58 Richard G. Mason 53 Beverly W. May 50 David Ross McNutt 59 Harvey M. Medlinsky 58 Robert J. Miller 57 Ellen L. Moore 52 George Morfogen 57 Tad Mosel 50 Marion V. Myrick 54 Franklin M. Nash 59 Paul L. Newman 54 88 hon Grace T. Noyes 54 Michael A. Onofrio, Jr. 53, 50 yc Kendric T. Packer 52 Wallace A. Peyton 55 Eilene C. Pierson 50 Virginia F. Pils 52 David Rayfiel 50 Mary B. Reynolds 55 Harry M. Ritchie 55 60 d.f.a. David A. Rosenberg 54 Philip Rosenberg 59 A. Raymond Rutan, IV 54 Raymond H. Sader 58 Stephen O. Saxe 54 Alvin Schechter 59 William T. Schneider 56 Ernest J. Schwarz 59 Forrest E. Sears 58 James A. Smith 59 Kenneth J. Stein 59 Pamela D. Strayer 52 Jack Sydow 50 Robert S. Telford 55 Edward Trach 58 Shirin Devrim Trainer 50 Fred Voelpel 53 Phyllis C. Warfel 55 William B. Warfel 57, 55 yc Betsy B. Watson 53 John Ransford Watts 53 Zelma H. Weisfeld 56 Cynthia A. Williams, Ph.D. 59 Marjorie M. Williams 55 Barbara M. Young 53 Joseph W. Young 52 Charles Dillingham 69, 65 b.a. Gene E. Diskey* 61 Robert J. Donnelly 64 John A. Duran 74 Robert H. Einenkel 69 Elisa Ronstadt Eliott 62 David H. Epstein 68 Leslie D. Epstein 67 dfa, 60 yc Jerry N. Evans 62 John D. Ezell 60 Ann Farris 63 Richard A. Feleppa 60 William H. Firestone 69 Hugh Fortmiller 61 Keith F. Fowler 69 dfa David Freeman 68 Richard D. Fuhrman 64 Bernard L. Galm 63 Anne K. Gregerson 65 John E. Guare 63 Ann T. Hanley 61 Jerome R. Hanley 60 Harold G. Harlow 62, 58 yc Richard A. Harrison 66 Patricia Helwick 65 Stephen J. Hendrickson 67 Elizabeth Holloway 66 John Robert Hood 61 Derek Hunt 62 Peter H. Hunt 63, 61 yc Laura Mae Jackson 68 John W. Jacobsen 69, 67 yc Paul Jaeger 67 Cynthia Lee Jenner 64 Lee H. Kalcheim 63 Asaad N. Kelada 64 Abby B. Kenigsberg 63 Carol Soucek King 66 Marna J. King 64 Raymond Klausen 67 Richard H. Klein 67 Donald D. Knight 65 Raymond T. Kurdt 64 Robert W. Lawler 67 Peter J. Leach 61 Stephen R. Leventhal 69 Bradford W. Lewis 69 Irene Lewis 66 Fredric A. Lindauer 66 Frank R. Lopez 61 Janell M. MacArthur 61 David Madden 61 Marcia Madeira 68 Cynthia J. Maguire 66 Richard E. Maltby, Jr. 62, 59 yc Sandra Manley 68 Patricia D. McAdams 61 Margaret T. McCaw 66 Robert A. McDonald, Jr. 68 Bruce W. McMullan 61 Banylou Mearin 62 Donald Michaelis 69 Jeffrey R. Milet 69 H. Thomas Moore 68 Donald W. Moreland 60 Robert B. Murray 61 Gayther L. Myers, Jr. 65 David A. Nancarrow 63 S. Joseph Nassif 63 Ruth Hunt Newman 62 Dwight R. Odle 66 Janet Oetinger 69 Richard A. Olson 69 Sara Ormond 66 Joan D. Pape 68 Kenneth L. Parker 61 Thomas J. Peterson 68 Howard Pflanzer 68 Louis R. Plante 69 Michael B. Posnick 69 Brett Prentiss 68 Barbara Reid 62 Barbara E. Richter* 60 Mary Dupuy Roane 61 Carolyn L. Ross 67 Clarence Salzer, Jr. 60, 55 yc Peter Edward Sargent 63 Lucia C. Scala 61 Isaac H. Schambelan 67 dfa Georg Schreiber 64 Talia Shire Schwartzman 69 Winifred J. Sensiba 63 Carol M. Sica 66 Roger H. Simon 67 E. Gray Smith, Jr. 65 Helena L. Sokoloff 60 Mary C. Stark 61 Louise Stein 66 John Wright Stevens 66 G. Erwin Steward 60 David F. Toser 64 Batya Tova 69 Russell L. Treyz 65 Richard B. Trousdell 67 74 dfa Thomas S. Turgeon 68 dfa Joan Van Ark 64 Charles H. Vicinus 65 Ruth L. Wallman 68 Steven I. Waxler 68 Gil Wechsler 67 J. Newton White 62 Peter White 62 Robin Benensohn-Rosefsky Wood 69 Porter Stevens Woods 65 dfa Albert J. Zuckerman 61 62 dfa William R. Conner 79 David M. Conte 72 Jonathan S. Coppelman 70 Marycharlotte C. Cummings 73 Charles Andrew Davis 76 Julia L. Devlin 74 Ian W. Dickson 77 Thomas Di Mauro 78 Dennis L. Dorn 72 Nancy Reeder El Bouhali 70 Eric S. Elice 79 Peter Entin 71 Dirk Epperson 74 Femi Euba 73 Douglass M. Everhart 70 Abigail J. Franklin 78 Reynold F. Frutkin 72 73 d.f.a. Robert Gainer 73 Jess Goldstein 78 Suzanne L. Gooch 77, 79 m.b.a. Wray Steven Graham 77 Joseph G. Grifasi 75 Michael E. Gross 73 William B. Halber 70 Charlene Harrington 74 Barbara B. Hauptman 73 William T. Hauptman 73 Jane C. Head 79 Jennifer Hershey-Benen 77 Nicholas A. Hormann 73 Cynthia P. Kaback 70 Barnet K. Kellman 72 Alan L. Kibbe 73 Dr. Dragan M. Klaic 76 , 77 dfa Fredrica A. Klemm 76 Andrew J. Kufta 77 Frances E. Kumin 77 Mitchell L. Kurtz 75 Thomas E. Lanter 75 Michael John Lassell 76 Stephen R. Lawson 76 Charles E. Letts III 76 Francis N. Levy 73 Alan N. Lichtenstein 76 Martha C. Lidji 77 George N. Lindsay, Jr. 74 Jennifer K. Lindstrom 72 Robert Hamilton Long II 76 Santo R. Loquasto 72 Donald B. Lowy 76 William Ludel 73 Patrick F. Lynch 71 Thomas P. Lynch 79, 75 yc Elizabeth M. MacKay 78 Lizbeth P. Mackay 75 Alan Mokler MacVey 77 Brian R. Mann 79 Christopher J. Markle 79 Jonathan E. Marks 68 b.a. 72 84 dfa Peggy Ann Marks 71 b.a. 75 Craig T. Martin 71 Deborah Mayo 73 John A. McAndrew 72 Brian R. McEleney 77 Kate McGregor-Stewart 74 Patricia M. McMahon 72 ph.d. Lynne Meadow 71 Stephen W. Mendillo 71 Jonathan Seth Miller 75 Lawrence S. Mirkin 72, 69 yc Thomas Reed Mohan 75 James Naughton 70 Patricia C. Norcia 78 Elizabeth L. Norment 79 Robert J. Orchard 72 Richard Ostreicher 79 Jay P. Parikh 78 Jeffrey Pavek 71 William M. Peters 79 Stephen B. Pollock 76 Daniel H. Proctor 70 William Purves 71 Arthur I. Rank III 79 Pamela Ann Rank 78 Ronald P. Recasner 74 Ralph R. Redpath 75 William J. Reynolds 77 Steven I. Robman 73 Howard J. Rogut 71 Alan D. Rosenberg 74 John M. Rothman 75 Bronislaw J. Sammler 74 Robert Sandberg 77 Suzanne M. Sato 79 Joel R. Schechter 72, 73 dfa John Victor Shea III 73 Michael D. Sheehan 76 Richard R. Silvestro 76 Benjamin Slotznick 73, 70 yc Jeremy T. Smith 76 Maura Beth Smolover 76 Marshall S. Spiller 71 Charles N. Steckler 71 Roy Bennett Steinberg 78 Jaroslaw Strzemien 75 Edith R. Tarbescu 76 Russell Vandenbroucke 77, 78 dfa Carol M. Waaser 70 David J. Ward 75 Eugene D. Warner 71 Lynda Lee Welch 72 Carolyn Seely Wiener 72 John H. Wolf 79 81 Stephen R. Woody 76 Stephen E. Zuckerman 74 Claudia M. Brown 85 William J. Buck 84 Richard W. Butler 88 Benjamin Cameron 81 Jon E. Carlson 88 Anna T. Cascio 83 Joan Channick 89 Nan Cibula-Jenkins 83 Patti Clarkson 85 Christian D. Clemenson 84 Dana S. Croll 87 Jane Ann Crum 85 Donato Joseph DAlbis 88 Richard Sutton Davis 83,03 dfa Kathleen K. Dimmick 85 Merle Gordon Dowling 81 Michael D. Fain 82 Jon Robert Farley 83 Terry Kevin Fitzpatrick 83 Anthony M. Forman 83 Raymond P. Forton 85 Walter M. Frankenberger III 88 Brackley S. Frayer 80 Randy R. Fullerton 82 Judy Gailen 89 Steven J. Gefroh 85 Mary Louise Geiger 85 Michael J. Giannitti 87 Jeffrey M. Ginsberg 81 Charles F. Grammer 86 Rob Greenberg 89 John E. Harnagel 83 Donald Patrick Harvey 85 Allan Havis 80 James W. Hazen 83 Mary Dwight Hazzard 82 Heather A. Henderson 87 88 dfa Roderick Lyons Hickey, III 89 Donald S. Holder 86 Catherine MacNeil Hollinger 86 Charles R. Hughes 83 Thomas K. Isbell 84 Kirk Roberts Jackson 88 Chris P. Jaehnig 85 Walker Jones 89 Jane Kaczmarek 82 Jonathan F. Kalb 85, 87 dfa Carol M. Kaplan 89 Nancy Lee Kathan 86 Elina Katsioula-Beall 86 Bruce Abram Katzman 88 Edward A. Kaye 86 Richard Kaye 80 Patrick Kerr 87 Colette Ann Kilroy 88 David K. Kriebs 82 William Kux 83 Wing Lee 83 Sasha Emerson Levin 84 Kenneth J. Lewis 86 Jerry J. Limoncelli, Jr. 84 Gail A. London 87 Mark D. London 89 Quincy Long 86 Mark E. Lord 87 Andi Lyons 80 Peter Andrew Marshall 89, 83 yc
1930s
Jane M. Alexander 36 Paul Baker 39 True C. Giffen 37 Clinton P. King, Jr. 39 Bertram N. Linder 39 Louise H. Saurel* 38
1940s
Lawrence D. Amick 49 Olive A. Chypre 48 Edith Dallas Ernst 48 Sarah C. Ferry 41 Patricia F. Gilchrist 44 Alfred S. Golding 49 David Gorton 48 Elinor Randolph Graper 43 Nancy K. Holland 43 Agnes B. Hood 44 Albert Hurwitz 49 Joan Kron 48 Mildred C. Kuner 47 George E. Nichols III* 41, 38 yc Emma Lou K. Nielson 43 Louis R. Ormont 49 John W. Paul 48 Pamela Stiles Roberts 46 Dorothy B. Rostov 43 Julia Meade Rudd 47 Eugene F. Shewmaker 49 Miriam S. Tulin 40 Anne C. Washburn 45 Max Wilk 41 Yun C. Wu 49
1960s
David E. Ackroyd 68 Richard Ambacher 65 dfa Leif E. Ancker 62 Barbara B. Anderson 60 Rita Aron 69 Mary Ellen OBrien Atkins 65 Thomas R. Atkins 64 Robert A. Auletta 69 Jan Van Etten Austell 65 James Robert Bakkom 64 Philip J. Barrons 65 Warren F. Bass 67 John Beck 63 Jody Locker Berger 66 Edward Bierhaus, Jr. 69 dfa Jeffrey A. Bleckner 68 Arthur W. Bloom 66 Carol Bretz Murray-Negron 64 Arvin B. Brown 67 James Burrows 65 Donald I. Cairns 63 Dennis Carnine 65 Raymond E. Carver 61 Mary-Jane Cassidy 69 Suellen G. Childs 69 Sarah E. Clark 67 Katherine D. Cline 60 Patricia S. Cochrane 62 Robert S. Cohen 64 dfa John M. Conklin 66, 59 yc Kenneth T. Costigan 60 Peggy Cowles 65 Stephen C. Coy 63, 69 dfa Laila S. Dahl 65 F. Mitchell Dana 67 Mary Lucille DeBerry 66 Ramon L. Delgado 67 George R. DiCenzo 65
1950s
William H. Allison 52 Patricia Harris Backlar 55 Robert A. Baldwin 55 Cornelia H. Barr 58 Robert M. Barr 52 Gloria B. Beckerman 53 Jack W. Belt 53 Albert S. Bennett 51 Ezekial H. Berlin 53 Melvin Bernhardt 55 Richard E. Bianchi 57 Phillip H. Bruns 56 Robert Brustein 51 66 m.a.h. Rene Buch 52 Ian W. Cadenhead 58 William F. Carden 50 Sami Joan Casler 59 Cosmo A. Catalano, Sr. 53 Joseph Chomyn 53 Margaretta M. Clulow 56 Miss Patricia J. Collins 58 Alfred B. Connable 58 Kathleen R. Conneely 57 Sue Ann Gilfillan Converse 55
1970s
Sarah Jean Albertson 71 75 art Annette R. Ames 76 Michael L. Annand 75 Ursula Belden 76 Sandra K. Boynton 79, 74 yc Thomas R. Bruce 79, 75 yc Martin E. Caan 72 Michael William Cadden 76 79 dfa, 71yc Ian Calderon 73 Victor P. Capecce 75 Lisa Carling 70 Cosmo A. Catalano, Jr. 79 James A. Chesnutt III 71 Lani L. Click 73
1980s
Michael G. Albano 82 Amy L. Aquino 86 Clayton Mayo Austin 86 Dylan Baker 85 Robert James Barnett 89 Christopher H. Barreca 83 Robert P. Barron 83 Spencer P. Beglarian 86 James B. Bender 85 Todd William Berling 89 William J. Beer Bletzinger 83 Anders P. Bolang 87 Katherine R. Borowitz 81, 75 yc Sara Hedgepeth 87 Mark Brokaw 86
Peter Richard Mason 86 Joan M. McMurtrey 84 Katherine Mendeloff 80 Cheryl G. Mintz 87 Grafton V. Mouen 82, 75 yc Brennan Murphy 88 Mary Elizabeth Myers 89 Tina C. Navarro 86 Regina L. Neville 88 Thomas J. Neville 86 Christopher D. Noth 85 Arthur E. Oliner 86 Erik Alexander Onate 89 Carol Susan Ostrow 80 Pamela Marie Peterson 86 Robert J. Provenza 86 Carol Anne Prugh 89 Michael D. Quinn 84 Ross Sumner Richards 88 Joumana Rizk 87 Joan E. Robbins 86 91 dfa Laila V. Robins 84 Lori Robishaw 88 Constance Elisabeth Romero 88 Russ Lori Rosensweig 83 Andrew I. Rubenoff 83 Kevin J. Rupnik 81 Ellen J. Russell 84 Steven A. Saklad 81 Kenneth Schlesinger 84 Larry Schwartz 83 Kimberly A. Scott 87 Alexander Scribner 80 Anthony M. Shalhoub 80 Charlotte Ann Sheffield 87 William P. Skipper 83 Steven A. Skybell 88, 84 yc Teresa L. Snider-Stein 88 Neal Ann Stephens 80 Marsha Beach Stewart 85 Forrest M. Stone 85 Mark L. Sullivan 83 Thomas Phillip Sullivan 88 Bernard J. Sundstedt 81 John M. Turturro 83 Courtney Vance 86 Rosa Vega Weissman 80 Adam N. Versenyi 86, 90 dfa, 80 yc Craig F. Volk 88 Deneda Lynn Wafer 89 Jaylene Graham Wallace 86 Clifford L. Warner 87 Sharon Washington 88 Darryl S. Waskow 86 Geoffrey J. Webb 88 Susan West 87 Dana B. Westberg 81 Matthew Marc Wiener 88 Robert M. Wierzel 84 Robert M. Wildman 83 Catherine M. Wilson 84 Alexandra R. Witchel 82 Steven A. Wolff 81 Evan D. Yionoulis 85, 82 yc Catherine J. Zuber 84
1990s
Narda Elaine Alcorn 95 Nephelie M. Andonyadis 90 Angelina Avallone 94 Margaret A. Bauer 91 Mark C. Bauer 92 Emily Jean Beck 95 Elizabeth Jeanne Bennett 97 Sarah Eckert Bernstein 95 Debra Booth 91 John Cummings Boyd 92 Tom Joseph Broecker 92 Margaret Anne Brogan 98 Shawn Hamilton Brown 90 Laura M. Brown MacKinnon 93 James Bundy 95 Kathryn A. Calnan 99 Vincent James Cardinal 90 Adrienne Lisa Carter 99, 96 yc Esther K. Chae 99 Max Chalawsky 96 Edward M. Check 90 Myung Hee Arlene Cho 95 Enrico L. Colantoni 93 Aaron M. Copp 98 Robert C. Cotnoir 94 Susan Mary Cremin 95 Sean James Cullen 90 Scott T. Cummings 85, 94 dfa Sheldon Deckelbaum 92 Leslie Shaw Dickert III 97 Alexander Timothy Dodge 99 Henry S. Dunn 94 Frances Louise Egler 95 Tiffany Anne Ellis 96 Cornelia Anne Evans 93 Glen Richard Fasman 92 Rodrick D. Fox 99 David William Gainey 93 Shawn Marie Garrett 96, 06 dfa Neil F. Gluckman 92 Stephen L. Godchaux 93 Michael Gabriel Goodfriend 96 Greer Goodman 95 Naomi S. Grabel 91 Constance Marie Grappo 95 Elisa R. Griego 98 Regina Guggenheim 93 Susan Hamburger 97 Alexander Taverner Hammond 96 Scott Christopher Hansen 04 Douglas Rodgers Harvey 95 James T. Hatcher 94 Kevin Scott Henderson 96 Christopher B. Higgins 90 John C. Huntington 90 Raymond P. Inkel 95 Laura J. Janik Cronin 96 Kristin Johnsen-Neshati 92, 02 d.f.a. Debra Jane Justice 92 Elizabeth A. Kaiden 96 Samuel L. Kelley 90 Ashley York Kennedy 90 L. Azan Kung 91 Michelle N. Lee 98
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*deceased
Contributors
Chih-Lung Liu 94 Sarah Long 92, 85 yc Suzanne R. Cryer Luke 95, 88 yc Craig P. Mathers 93 Michael William McCarty 90 B. Christine McDowell 98 Robert A. Melrose 96 Marjorie Craig Mitchell 97 Richard R. Mone 91 Daniel Evan Mufson 95, 99 dfa Kaye I. Neale 91 Martha Josephine New 92 Jane E. Padelford 99 Dw Phineas Perkins 90 Lisa Jeanne Porter 95 Amy Joyce Povich 92 James W. Quinn 94 Sarah Gray Rafferty 96 Lance S. Reddick 94 Joe Reynolds 97 Martin E. Rimes 95 Douglas Ray Rogers 96 Reginald Hunt Rogers 93 Melina W. Root 90, 83 yc Mary Margaret Sasso 99 Robert W. Schneider 94, 97 dfa Jennifer C. Schwartz 97 Paul Francis Selfa 92 Thomas W. Sellar 97, 03 dfa Jeremy M. Shapira 97 Jane M. Shaw 98 Rachel Sheinkin 95 Graham A.W. Shiels 99 Vladimir Shpitalnik 92 Michael Vaughn Sims 92 Paul Spadone III 99, 93 yc Douglas Spitz 91 Kris E. Stone 98 Erich William Stratmann 94, 93 yc Christopher Paul Swanson 97, 01 dfa David Loy Sword 90 Patti W. Thorp 91 Paul Charles Tigue III 99 Deborah L. Trout 94 Michael R. Van Dyke 92 Erik William Walstad 95 Anthony C. Ward 94 Christopher Robert Weida 95 Lisa A. Wilde 91, 95 dfa Marshall Butler Williams 95 Robert Michael Zoland 95 Jonathan Stewart Busky 02, 94 yc David Bryant Byrd 06 Claudia W. Case 01 07 dfa Hillary Joyce Charnas 05 Wilson W. Chin 03 Kristen Nora Connolly 07 Gregory W. Copeland 04 Edgar M. Cullman III 02, 97 b.a. 97 yc Katherine Mary Cusack 06 Michael Francis DAlessandro 06 Malcolm Kishner Darrell 07 Emily Ryan Dorsch 07 Janann B. Eldredge 06 Jenifer E. Endicott 00 Miriam Rose Epstein 02 Rachel Lynn Fink 00 Alexandra Jane Fischer 00 Mike David Floyd 06 Shannon Colleen Flynn 02 Sarah McColl Fornia 04 Stephen Ernest Fried 05 Marion R. Friedman 05 Marcus Dean Fuller 04 Robyn D. Ganeles 03 Jackson Grace Gay 03 Sandra Goldmark 04 Alan Anthony Grudzinski 04 John J. Hanlon 04 Judith Ann Hansen 04 Amy Carol Herzog 07, 00 yc Amy S. Holzapfel 01, 06 dfa James Guerry Hood 05 Allison Ann Horsley 01 David Carr Howson 04 Melissa Huber 01 Brendan Patrick Hughes 04 Matthew Joel Humphrey 03 Rolin Jones 04 Fred Thomas Kinney 02 Wade Laboissonniere 03 Nico M. Lang 05 Emily W. Leue 03 Jennifer Chen Hua Lim 04 Derek Francis Lucci 03 Michael James Mavazakis 04 Peter Andrew Malbuisson 05 Sabrina McGuigan 04 Ann M.K. McLaughlin 03 Jennifer Yejin Moeller 06 Lorraine M. Monnier 01 Elizabeth Deanne Morrison 05 Arthur F. Nacht 06 Andrew M. Nagel 06 Christianna I. Nelson 05 Katherine Ann Nowlin 01 Adam N. OByrne 04, 01 yc Nicholas Stephen Pepper 01 Andrew Charles Plumer 02 Clara J. Rice 02 Kevin Michael Rich 04 Brian Wayne Robinson 00 Thomas Russell 07 Christopher Carter Sanderson 05 Charles William Schultz 01 Shawn B. Senavinin 06 Alena Marion Smith 06 Katharine E. Spencer Doak 00 Mikiko Suzuki 02 Ari M. Teplitz 05 Katherine Gloria Tharp 07 Melissa L. F. Turner 05 Carrie E. Van Hallgren 06 Elliot Carmelo Villar 07 Elaine M. Wackerly 03 Bradlee M. Ward 05 Jennifer Lena Mannis Wishcamper 02, 96 yc Bess Wohl 98, 02 ArtP Tamilla C. Woodard 02
Graduation 2008
Photos by Debbie Ellinghaus, Heidi Janssen 08, Stephanie Ybarra 08, and Melissa Trn 08.
Friends
John Beinecke Deborah and Bruce Berman Catherine Black Sterling and Clare Brinkley Mary L. Bundy CEC Artslink Tony Converse Philip A. Corfman Edgar Cullman, Jr. Scott Delman Mary Elder The John Golden Fund Sharon Goodman Joan F. Gourley Donald Granger Jerome L Greene Foundation F. Lane Heard III Ruth and Stephen Hendel Christine K. Jahnke David Johnson Merrill Kramer Lois S. Kramer Nathan Lipofsky* Deborah McGraw David Milch Edward John Noble Foundation Walter F. Parkes Michael and Carol Poster Belinda Robinson Linda Frank Rodman The Shubert Foundation Matthew Suttor Christopher Suttor Jadwyn Suttor John C.M. Suttor Eileen M. Suttor Kathrine J. Suttor Richard Guy Suttor Jennifer Tipton Esme Usdan
I hope you will consider making a gift to the Annual Fund today. If you have questions about the Annual Fund, or other ways you can support YSD, please contact me at [Link]@ [Link] or (203) 432-4133.
Debbie Ellinghaus
2000s
Roberto F. Aguirre-Sacasa 03 Liz Susana Alsina 06 Remy-Luc J.M. Auberjonois 01 Alexander G. Bagnall 00 Samantha Joanne Baker 07 Sarah K. Bartlo 04 James C Bellavance 00 Sarah Elaine Bierenbaum 05, 99 yc Ashley E. Bishop 02 Cynthia T. Brizzell-Bates 00,07 dfa Erin Colleen Buckley06
In-kind
Sasha Emerson Levin 84 Fred Iseman 74 Jane Kaczmarek 82 Michael Sheehan 76 Contributions received from July 1, 2007 through June 30, 2008 Class Agents highlighted in bold.
*deceased
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