The theme of gender parity continues this semester at the Robsham Theater Arts Center through the array of productions selected this academic year by the Theatre Department, including a production of 2016-17 Monan Professor in Theater Arts Sheri Wilner鈥檚 鈥淜ingdom City.鈥
The appointment of the award-winning playwright and arts educator as Monan Professor prompted deliberate consideration of gender representation, according to Theatre Department Chair and Associate Professor Crystal Tiala, as evidenced in the female playwrights, directors and roles showcased this season. A recent study by the New York City-based Dramatist Guild, where Wilner directs the Fellows Program, showed a pattern of gender disparity in the national theater scene.
鈥淭here is a real serious bias in the United States that women don鈥檛 produce comparable work to men,鈥 said Tiala.
Keeping with the season鈥檚 theme, Wilner developed and is teaching the course Contemporary Female Playwrights, which exposes students to diverse female-written work and includes guest lectures from Boston theater professionals 鈥搃ncluding playwrights, dramaturgs and literary managers 鈥 on the roots, manifestations and consequences of gender disparity on stage.聽
Following last month鈥檚 staging of 鈥淲hat Every Girl Should Know,鈥 the spring production schedule continues Feb. 16-19 with Sarah Ruhl鈥檚 鈥淓urydice,鈥 which will be directed by Grace Fucci 鈥17 and performed in the Bonn Studio Theater. It provides a new look at the classic, male-centric Greek myth Orpheus, with a focus on the heroine鈥檚 agency independent from the men in her life. 聽聽
According to Fucci, this marks the first time in her experience that Robsham has featured two female-written student workshops directed by women with female leads (Cassie Chapados 鈥17 directed 鈥淲hat Every Girl Should Know鈥).
Wilner鈥檚 鈥淜ingdom City,鈥 which features a boundary-pushing female lead, will be presented March 22-26 in the Bonn Studio Theater, directed by Associate Professor of Theatre John Houchin. The play, inspired by a real event in Fulton, Mo., follows a female theater director鈥檚 struggle to produce a provocative play in a conservative Midwest town.
The celebrated Andrew Lloyd Webber musical 鈥淓vita,鈥 the story of controversial Argentinian leader Eva Peron, will be staged April 26-30 on the Mainstage under the direction of Paul Daigneault 鈥87, founder and producing artistic director of Boston鈥檚 SpeakEasy Stage Company and 2011-12 Monan Professor. With a score that fuses haunting chorales with exuberant Latin, pop and jazz influences, 鈥淓vita鈥 creates an arresting theatrical portrait and adds historical and political layers to the Robsham season鈥檚 broader gender discussion, according to organizers.
Concluding the season on April 29, during the annual Arts Festival, is 鈥淣ow & Then,鈥 a collection of new, short plays by alumni playwrights, directed by Professor of Theatre Scott T. Cummings. The original works, which will be showcased in the Bonn Studio Theater, include 鈥淭wenty-Three鈥 by Emily Dendinger 鈥05; 鈥淭iny Chairs for Plastic Dolls鈥 by Emma Stanton 鈥06; 鈥淎n Appeal鈥 by Patricia Noonan 鈥07; 鈥淎 Single Night of a Lifetime鈥 by Jeff Augustin 鈥08, and 鈥淪cratch Until鈥 by Patrick 鈥08 and Daniel Lazour 鈥13. 鈥淣ow & Then鈥 will be presented at 2 p.m. and 5 p.m.; admission is free, no ticket required.
Theatre Department productions run at 7:30 p.m. on weekdays and Saturdays, and at 2 p.m. on Sundays. Ticket prices (including service fee) are $17 for adults; $12 for students with valid ID; $12 for seniors, and $12 for 精东影业 faculty/staff (one ticket per 精东影业ID.) Click here for tickets.
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