| Cast
Heidi Holland ... Liz Steele
Susan Johnston ... Sandy Squillo
Chris Boxer, Mark, Waiter, Ray... Tim
Feeney
Peter Petrone ... Joe Petrolis
Scoop Rosenbaum ... Rob Nardini
Jill, Debbie, Lisa ... Stephanie
Bullwinkel
Fran, Molly, Betsy, April, Sandra ...
Cassandra Johnson Locke
Becky, Clara, Denise ... Jennifer
Schmidt
Ensemble roles played by CTWS Students Colleen
Fogarty, Joe Gallagher,Ty Hendrickson, Durk
Schutt, Marybeth Stork, Elise Woulfe
Director’s
Corner
By Molly Burns
When Arthur Miller died, there was a big
hoopla in the media as to who the greatest
American living playwright was—a fruitless
discussion to my point of view because how
do you compare apples and oranges—Albees
and Simons? Then, sadly, in one year, we
lost two of the American theatre’s
brightest, ground breaking playwrights—August
Wilson and Wendy Wasserstein. I cried. I
wish they could have written more. So we
are left to cherish the work they did leave
us, and to carry on by keeping their characters
and themes alive.
In our play, Heidi champions the artwork
and recognition of many women visual artists
throughout history who have been dropped
by the textbooks. 1960’s feminist
theory and studies has helped restore some
of them to us, but how much have we lost
in forgetting our women’s accomplishments?
There was a poet in Victorian England who
sold more poems than Alfred, Lord Tennyson.
Yet this famous ‘poetess’, Felicia
Hemans, is not mentioned in a 1930’s
Scott Foresman anthology called Poetry of
the Victorian Period, which devotes less
than forty of its 942 pages to poems by
women.
This history of inclusion or exclusion
of women is still being created, and Wendy
Wasserstein realized this. Her play The
Sisters Rosensweig (produced by TWS in 1997)
had the largest advance in Broadway history
for a play, and she commented, “My
work is often thought of as lightweight
commercial comedy, and I have always thought,
‘No you don’t understand: this
is in fact a political act. Nobody is (now)
going to turn down a play on Broadway because
a woman wrote it or because it’s about
women.’” (Paris Review, 1997).
With her bold pen, she struck out her own
course and contributed to our contemporary
theatre. She and her characters deserve
the place they have carved out, so as not
to be relegated to the dust bin as was Aphra
Behn, a prominent playwright of Restoration
drama.
Dramaturg’s
Diary
By Liz Egan
Wendy Wasserstein was born in Brooklyn,
the youngest of five siblings. Her father
was a textile manufacturer, her mother an
amateur dancer. The family moved to Manhattan
when Ms. Wasserstein was 12. She earned
her undergraduate degree from Mount Holyoke
College in 1971, studied creative writing
at City College, and, after receiving a
Masters in Fine Arts from Yale in 1976,
returned to Manhattan for the rest of her
working life. She was the quintessential
New Yorker. "My parents only let me
go to drama school because it was Yale,"
she said in an interview for the magazine
Bomb. "They thought I'd marry a lawyer."
I could find no evidence that Wendy Wasserstein
and Judy Chicago ever actually met, but
when Peter sings, “Judy Chicago in
the morning, Judy Chicago in the evening,
Judy Chicago at dinnertime,” he is
referring to Ms. Chicago’s most famous
work, “The Dinner Party: Right Out
of History.”
In the early 80’s “The Dinner
Party” was mounted in a warehouse
on South Dearborn Street because all the
Chicago art museums demurred exhibiting
it due to ‘lack of room.’ This
monumental sculpture is a triangular dinner
table, each side measuring forty-eight feet,
each place setting honoring a famous woman,
legendary or historical. A few years later,
after going from ridicule to veneration,
after traveling to many cities, after evolving
through the contributions of many artists,
it is now being readied for permanent installation
in the Brooklyn Museum of Art. Judy became
much in demand as a speaker and I met her
at a lecture and reception at the Art Institute
of Chicago in the mid-80’s. I was
struck by her easy going manner, her sense
of humor, her essential femininity.
These were qualities Wendy and Judy had
in common. Neither was a bra-burning feminist;
neither spoke with a strident voice. Both
expressed their support for the Feminist
Movement in their work, both founded schools
for women, both engaged an evolving creative
process.
In the parlance of playwriting, that process
is ‘workshopping’. A playwriting
workshop can begin with nothing more than
a premise, or a fully fleshed work that
simply needs polishing. For Ms. Wasserstein,
the Seattle Repertory Theater was her incubator.
She sent Daniel Sullivan, who was to become
her favorite director, an early draft of
The Heidi Chronicles. He gave it a workshop
production in 1988. Four years later, The
Sisters Rosensweig took shape as a Rep workshop
production. In 1996, An American Daughter
received a Rep developmental production.
|
Production Credits
Director, Molly Burns
Technical Director, Thad Hallstein
Stage Manager, Patti Roeder
Asst. Stage Managers, Charlie Egan,
Kelli Kopp
Costume Designer, Martha Niles
Costume Crew: Stephanie
Abramowitz, Linda and Mark Cunningham, Lori
D’Asta, Bill FitzGerald, Tom Frohnapfel,
Jim Hannigan, Ann Marie Hultgren, Patricia
Huth, Julie Knoch, Kathy Kusper, Mary Pavia,
Debby Phillips, Lori Proksa
Dramaturg, Liz Egan
Hospitality Chair, Carol Clarke
Hospitality Crew: Dorothy
Attermeyer, Rosemary Beale, Nancy Belda,
Jan Benedict, Carole Borg, Cheryl and Sophia
Brand, Susan Cardamone, Roger Clarke, Tory
Crnovich, Danna Durkin, Bonnie Hilton, Karen
Holbert, Andrea Imes, Dick and Peggy Jacoby,
Donna, Eleanor and Rich Kanak, Jason McCargo,
Debbie McHenry, Debby and Jon Mills, Diane
Oppenheim, Janel Palm, Pat Rafferty, Adam
and Margo Rickert, Donna Sauers, Nancy Schifo,
Carol Suda, Catey Sullivan, Sarah Vanikiotis,
Tom Viskosil, Susan Waldschmidt, Jackie
Weiher, Gini Welch, Mark and Sue Wisthuff
Lighting Designer, Cal Turner
Lighting Crew: Linda Bugielski,
Karla Hudson, Katie Pecis, Paul Roach, Rick
Snyder, Betsy Stiles
Makeup Designer, Mary Ellen Druyan
Makeup Crew: Stephanie
Abramowitz, Linda Bugielski, Brian Centers,
Eileen Crow, Holly Cejka, Stacy Mazzula,
Mary Pavia, Amanda Ragan, Sue Wisthuff
Properties Designer, Darla Goudeau
Properties Crew:
Tom Gess, Larry Horn, Dennis Hudson, Mike
Huth
Set Dresser, Jim Kopp
Set Construction Chair, Mark Hewitt
Set Construction Crew:
Grace Abrahamson, Anne Cahill, George Dempsey,
Robert Erck, Bill Hurley, Mike Huth, Jon
Mills, Nancy Obern, John Otto, Rich Patacek,
Paul Roach, Fred Sauers
Set Designer: Thad Hallstein
Set Painting Chair: Mary Pavia
Set Painting Crew: Karen
Arnold, Linda Auer, Donna Kanak, John Mueller,
Mike Pavia, Lori Proksa, Amanda Ragan, Rick
Snyder, Rob Snyder, Sandy and Tom Squillo
Sound Designer, Peggy Solick
Sound Crew: Bob Erck, Nicole
LaFrancis, Janette Quinn
Visuals Designer, Bill Hammack
Projections operators: Judy
DiVita, Bob Erck, Mary Maureen Gentile,
Bill Hammack
Box Office Chair, Mary Ellen Schutt
Box Office Crew: Ed Barrow,
Cindy Blaszak, Kelli Kopp, Lori Proksa,
Sue Wisthuff
House Manager Chair, Bill Wilson
House Managers: Jack Calvert,
Susan Cardamone, Brian Centers, Rob Cramer,
Harry Hultgren, Roland Imes, Terry Locke,
John Mills, Arlene Page, Denny Wise
Front Row Center Flyer, Joe Petrolis
Group Sales Chair, Betsy Stiles
Poster Distribution, Kathleen Kusper
Production Coordinator: Jon Mills
Program Advertising, Peggy Carlson
Publicity Chair, Bonnie Hilton
Program Editor: Ed Barrow
Program Production: Stephanie
Williams
Actives Website, Judy DiVita
Actives Website photos,
Judy DiVita & Peter Bosy
Dramaturg’s Diary
(continued)
Andre Bishop, Artist Director of the Lincoln
Center Theater and the producer of The Heidi
Chronicles and all of Ms. Wasserstein’s
subsequent plays, said that her life, her
work, and her writing were all intimately
connected. This makes poignant the end of
Heidi’s rambling alumnae speech in
1986 where she muses about the state of
the Feminist Movement. “We’re
all concerned, intelligent, good women.
It’s just that I feel stranded. And
I thought that the whole point was that
we wouldn’t feel stranded. I thought
that the point was that we were all in this
together.”
The Feminist Movement, as with Ms. Wasserstein’s
premature death, has left us not so much
a sense of what was accomplished as what
might have been.


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