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PRODUCTION
SPONSORS:
CAROL ELLIOTT, DAVID
MORDEN AND
NORMA DAVENPORT
Directed by Cynthia
Meier
January 6–23,
2011
Thursday–Saturday 7:30 P.M., Sunday
2:00 P.M.
Musical Preshow begins 15 minutes before curtain
Discussion with the cast and director follows all performances
Preview Night Thursday January 6, 7:30 P.M.
Pay-What-You-Will Nights
Thursdays January 13 & 20, 7:30 P.M.
Half-price Student Rush 15 minutes before curtain
Performance
Schedule
The Rogue Theatre at The Historic Y
300 East University Boulevard
Free Off-Street Parking
See Map and Parking Information
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In this last play authored by Shakespeare, we
find a Duke and his young daughter, unfairly banished to a mystical
island with only a misshapen monster and an inhuman spirit as
company. There the Duke studies and masters the art of magic,
and through shipwrecks and storms, he wins justice and sets the
world aright. When he retires at the end of the play, we hear
Shakespeare’s own voice at the end of a brilliant writing
career displaying his exquisite mastery of dramatic and emotional
poetry.
Featuring John Wilson (Professor Emeritus from the UA
Dance Department) as Prospero
AUDIENCE
REVIEWS OF THE TEMPEST
A thorough delight!
—Audience
member, P.M.
Thank you for the glorious performance yesterday evening.
The Rogue STILL never ceases to amaze me.
—Audience
member, J.W.
The Rogue’s production of The Tempest
was as fine a production of Shakespeare as I think I have ever seen,
and I have seen several.
All elements, from directing and acting to design and dance, developed
a beautiful ensemble.
—Audience
member, E.R.G.
You all do such beautiful work. It is a joy to see your
productions.
—Audience
member, J.V.D.
John Wilson (Prospero)
Dallas Thomas (Miranda), John Wilson (Prospero) and
Robert Anthony Peters (Ferdinand)
Photo by Tim Fuller
About the
poster
View all production photos
Make your reservations now for a spectacular meal
before the performance at
533 N. 4th Avenue
Two blocks from The Rogue Theatre
On Opening Night, Friday, January 7,
Delectables will feature a special “Rogue menu.”
Plus, Rogue Season Ticket Holders
receive 20% off their meal
before any performance of The Tempest!
To make a reservation, call 520-884-9289
For more information, visit www.delectables.com
or Delectables’ Facebook page, Delectables
On Fourth
Press
Stepping Up Shakespeare: The
Rogue Theatre adds dance elements to The Tempest
Preview of The Tempest by Margaret
Regan in the January 6 Tucson Weekly
Tempest is a force of nature,
to actor's joy
Preview of The Tempest by Kathleen
Allen in the December 31 Arizona Daily Star
Direction
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Cynthia
Meier (Director) is the Managing and
Associate Artistic Director for The Rogue Theatre for which she
has adapted and directed James Joyce’s The Dead,
directed Nāga Mandala, The Four of
Us, Othello, Animal Farm, Orlando,
Happy Days, The Good Woman of Setzuan, The
Fever and The Cherry Orchard, and performed in many
of the productions including The Goat for which she received
the Arizona Daily Star’s 2008 Mac Award for Best Actress.
Cynthia has also performed in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (Arizona
Repertory Theatre), A Streetcar Named Desire (Arizona
Theatre Company), Blithe Spirit and A Midsummer Night’s
Dream (Michigan Repertory Theatre), Romeo & Juliet
and Chicago Milagro (Borderlands Theatre), A Namib
Spring (1999 National Play Award winner), and Smirnova’s
Birthday, The Midnight Caller, and The Ballad
of the Sad Cafe (Tucson Art Theatre). Cynthia teaches Speech
at Pima Community College and holds a Ph.D. in Performance Studies
from the University of Arizona.
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Director’s Notes
Joe and I often speculate about what Shakespeare was thinking.
What went on as he worked with Lord Chamberlain’s (and later,
the King’s) Men to create his plays? We laughed when we imagined
the original “gabardine bit”(the cowering of Trinculo with
Caliban under a huge coat in Act II). Had a couple of the actors in
the company work out this routine sometime during the Henry plays and
pled with Shakespeare to put it in? (And knowing what Hamlet has to
say about clowns in his advice to the players did Shakespeare have a
choice?) So did he finally say, many years later, “All right,
you two, we’ll use the garbardine bit in The Tempest. Here.”
The Tempest echoes with many of Shakespeare’s plays.
There are moments—almost direct lines—from Much Ado, Romeo
& Juliet, Midsummer Night’s Dream, and so on. Even King Lear
is evoked with the initial lines of the Boatswain—“Blow,
til thou burst thy wind!” It’s almost as if Shakespeare
thought, “This is it. Everything goes into this play. I’ve
got some things I want to say.” Indeed, the plot in The Tempest
is thin, the resolution vague, the characters fantastical, even the
various locations are simply referred to as “another part of the
island.” Yet, with The Tempest, Shakespeare clearly had some big
things to say, and he says them principally through Prospero. And it
is from Prospero that we hear some of the most beautiful poetry known
to humankind.
There was no scenery in Shakespeare’s theater, The
Globe. Just an empty stage with a trap door and some levels. We don’t
presume to recreate that here at The Rogue, but we ask you to imagine
with us this island somewhere in the Mediterranean. A place where marmosets
scamper and spirits are trapped inside cloven pines. London audiences
in Shakespeare’s day imagined a tempest on the high seas in full
daylight in an outdoor theatre at 2:00 o’clock in the afternoon,
simply by listening to the words of the play. Today, we, too, can imagine
this fierce tempest (and the world of the play) and, if we’re
lucky, get a glimpse of what Shakespeare was thinking as his time on
this “great globe” was drawing to a close.
—Cynthia Meier, Director of The Tempest
director@theroguetheatre.org
David Morden (Stephano), Joseph McGrath (Caliban) and
Ryan DeLuca (Trinculo)
Photo by Tim Fuller
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Cast |
Prospero |
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John Wilson |
Miranda |
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Dallas Thomas |
Ariel |
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Patty Gallagher* |
Caliban |
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Joseph McGrath* |
Ferdinand |
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Robert Anthony Peters |
Gonzalo |
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Jon Benda |
Antonio |
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Brian Taraz |
Sebastian |
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Nic Adams |
Alonso |
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Phil Bennett |
Stephano |
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David Morden* |
Trinculo |
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Ryan DeLuca |
Ceres |
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Leanné Whitewolf Charlton |
Juno |
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Jenna Johnson |
Iris |
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Carrie J. Cole |
Mariner |
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James Robert Giza |
*Member
of Actors’ Equity Association,
the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United
States,
appearing under a Special Appearance Contract
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Cast Biographies
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Nic Adams
(Sebastian) is the General Manager for The Rogue Theatre for which
he has worked, both onstage and off, in productions of Ghosts,
Naga Mandala, Othello, Krapp’s Last
Tape, Not I, Act Without Words, Orlando
and Six Characters in Search of an Author. He is the
artistic director of The Now Theatre, which co-produces the “Rogue
After Curfew” series. Nic can next be seen in The Rogue’s
production of The Decameron. |
Philip
G. Bennett (Alonso) is a graduate of the American
Stanislavski Theatre, where he served as Assistant Artistic Director,
actor and instructor under the Russian émigré director,
Sonia Moore. He made his professional debut on the New York stage
in 1970 as Lopakhin in Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard,
and played such roles as: Cabot in O’Neill’s Desire
Under the Elms, Horatio in Shakespeare’s Hamlet,
Constantine in The Seagull, Bird in Peter Brook’s
Royal Shakespeare production of Convocation of the Birds,
and Mr. Pinchwife in Wycherley’s The Country Wife.
In 1976, he founded the San Francisco Theatre Academy and Company.
He is a three-time recipient of the prestigious Hollywood DramaLogue
Award for Best Direction. Philip coaches and conducts professional
actor training classes at the Historic Y in Tucson, Arizona. www.philipgbennett.com
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Jon Benda
(Gonzalo) has been around theatres most of his life and has found
himself playing everything from kings to queens to carrots to
killers and has enjoyed them all. He is also part of “Not
Burnt Out, Just Unscrewed” a local improv comedy group.
He studies acting at the Philip G. Bennett TheatreLab. He is grateful
to be at The Rogue in The Tempest, as it is a play, in
part, about theatre. |
Leanné
Whitewolf Charlton (Ceres) has previously performed
with The Rogue Theatre in Endymion, Red Noses
and The Good Woman of Setzuan. A member of the Arizona
Repertory Theatre, she was last seen as Anna Trumbell in the ART
production of What I Did Last Summer, The Widow in The
Taming of The Shrew, Edith Frank in The Diary of Anne
Frank, and Medea. Favorite Arizona credits include
Maud Moon/Albertine in Borderland’s production of Dust
Eaters, as well as Linda Waterman in Fiction for
Beowulf Alley Theatre. Leanné will graduate from the University
of Arizona with a BFA in Acting in May and is an Actors’
Equity Association membership candidate. She is ever grateful
to her husband Russ and the founding members of The Florence Players. |
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Carrie
J. Cole (Iris/Dramaturg) first collaborated with
The Rogue Theatre as fight director for last season’s Othello,
and has joined The Rogue as dramaturg for the 2010-2011 season.
Carrie has previously been seen on Tucson stages playing Rosalind
in As You Like It, Rosaline in Love’s Labour’s
Lost, and Alais in A Lion in Winter. An assistant
professor in the UA’s School of Theatre, Film, & Television,
Carrie oversees the BFA Dramaturgy Program, and serves as Resident
Dramaturg for Arizona Repertory Theatre. She is currently working
with the Network of Ensemble Theaters (NET) as a respondent to
their MicroFests in Atlanta, Los Angeles, and Philadelphia. |
Ryan
DeLuca (Trinculo) is a Tucson native and open
addict to Eegees. He has been in Invisible Theatre’s Bleacher
Bums and many of UA’s ART productions, including What
I Did Last Summer, Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,
and Leading Ladies. Ryan was nominated in Arizona’s
MAC Awards for Actor of the Year in Arizona Onstage Productions’
Falsettoland and won for Arizona Onstage Productions’
The Bible Belt. When he is not spending time outdoors
with his incredible family or training with his nun-chucks, Ryan
will be found raising money for his move to New York. He will
also be Jay in Arizona Theatre Company’s upcoming performance
of Lost in Yonkers. |
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Patty
Gallagher (Ariel) is Associate Professor of Theatre
Arts at University of California Santa Cruz where she teaches
movement, mask, Balinese dance, and clown traditions. With The
Rogue, she has performed the roles of Shen Te in The Good
Woman of Setzuan, Ranevskaya in The Cherry Orchard,
Winnie in Happy Days (most recently for The Rogue’s
tour to Bangalore, India), Sonnerie and Scarron in Red Noses,
Orlando in Orlando, the Player in Act without Words,
Emilia in Othello and Rani in Naga Mandala.
She has worked with Shakespeare Santa Cruz, The Folger Shakespeare
Theatre, California Shakespeare Theater, The New Pickle Circus,
Ripe Time Theatre, Two River Theatre, Teatro Cronopio and Grupo
Malayerba. She has performed, choreographed and directed workshops
in Asia, South America, Europe, and the U.S. In 2006 she was Fulbright
Scholar in Quito, Ecuador. She holds a doctorate in Theatre from
University of Wisconsin–Madison, and she is Director in
Residence for the Clown Conservatory, San Francisco Circus Center. |
James
Robert Giza (Mariner/Assistant Stage Manager)
studies acting locally with Philip G. Bennett at the Bennett TheatreLab.
He received his training in assistant stage management at the
Juilliard School, where he worked as a production assistant through
the school’s Professional Intern Program. The Tempest
is his first production with The Rogue. |
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Jenna
Johnson (Juno) graduated from Harid Conservatory
for Dance. She attended Indiana University before joining Atlanta
Ballet. In 1995, she left for Europe, fulfilling a desire to travel
while pursuing her career in dance. Ms. Johnson was accepted as
a soloist with the Romanian National Opera Ballet in Bucharest
where she danced from 1995 to 1997. She then joined the Oleg Danovski
Ballet Theater as a principal in 1997. During her tenure with
ODBT, she performed throughout western Europe as Carmen,
Scheherazade and Odette/Odile forming a successful
partnership with her future husband, Daniel Precup. Ms. Johnson
returned to the United States in 2003 to dance with Oakland Ballet.
She joined Ballet Tucson in 2004 and has performed principal roles
in the company’s productions of Giselle, Sleeping
Beauty, Dracula, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Swan Lake, Cinderella
and The Nutcracker. |
Joseph
McGrath (Caliban) is a graduate of the Juilliard
School of Drama and is the Artistic Director for The Rogue Theatre
for which he has performed in many of its plays. Joe was most
recently seen as Pastor Manders in Ghosts, The Man/Naga
in Naga Mandala, and Iago in Othello. In 2009,
Joe won the Arizona Daily Star Mac Award for Best Actor for his
portrayal of Tobias in A Delicate Balance. Joe also authored
and directed Immortal Longings for The Rogue and has
directed The Balcony, Endymion, The Maids
(winner of the Arizona Daily Star 2007 Mac Award for Best Play),
Red Noses and Our Town. He has toured with John
Houseman’s Acting Company, performed with the Utah Shakespearean
Festival, and he is a frequent performer with Ballet Tucson appearing
in The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Cinderella, A Midsummer
Night’s Dream, Dracula and The Nutcracker.
He has also performed with Arizona Theatre Company, Arizona Opera,
Tucson Art Theatre, and Arizona OnStage. |
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David
Morden (Stephano, Text Coach) has appeared with
The Rogue Theatre as Brabantio and Montano in Othello,
Editor Webb in Our Town, in the ensembles of Animal
Farm and Orlando, as Madame Pace in Six Characters
in Search of an Author, The Pope in Red Noses, Yephikhov
in The Cherry Orchard, The Man in the Silver Dress in
the preshow to The Maids and Glaucus in Endymion.
He has acted locally with Arizona Opera (The Pirates of Penzance,
The Threepenny Opera), Arizona Onstage Productions (Assassins),
Actors Theatre (The Bible: The Complete Word of God (Abridged))
and Green Thursday Theatre Project (Anger Box, Rain),
of which he was a co-founder. David has also directed The Rogue’s
productions of Ghosts, A Delicate Balance, The
Goat (2008 Arizona Daily Star Mac Award), Six Characters
in Search of an Author and Krapp’s Last Tape,
Not I and Act Without Words. David has also
directed productions with Green Thursday, Oasis Chamber Opera,
DreamerGirl Productions, and Arts for All. |
Robert
Anthony Peters (Ferdinand) has performed with
The Rogue Theatre as Oswald in Ghosts, Cassio in Othello,
and George Gibbs in Our Town. In 2001, he completed his
BS at the University of Arizona in Marketing and Entrepreneurship,
was subsequently a Koch Fellow in Washington, DC, and went on
to train at the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute in New York City.
A few of his films that are available to the purchasing public
are The Pursuit of Happyness, Revolution Summer,
The Village Barbershop, Wasted, and many more
that have yet to see the light of day. These days he is primarily
seen working in his father’s Pak Mail store in Northwest
Tucson. He recently was in the short film, Life After Dogma
and two web commercials for HP. He is the president of Laissez
Faire Media and a member of SAG, AFTRA, and Theatre Bay Area.
robertanthonypeters.com |
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Brian
Taraz (Antonio) has appeared with The Rogue as
Engstrand in Ghosts, Kappanna in Naga Mandala,
the Duke in Othello and as Joe Stoddard in Our Town.
Previously, Brian performed the role of Harold in Black Comedy
at Beowulf Alley Theatre Company. Most of Brian’s acting
has taken place in San Diego, performing in numerous Shakespeare
plays such as Macbeth, Twelfth Night and A
Midsummer Night’s Dream, as well as Marat/Sade,
Book of Days, The Trial and I Hate Hamlet.
Brian also has a musical side, composing original pieces using
traditional religious texts as the lyrics. Samples of his work
can be heard at www.godsminstrel.com. |
Dallas
Thomas (Miranda) last appeared at The Rogue Theatre
as Juliet in Immortal Longings. Recent Tucson credits
include Don’t Talk to the Actors, Natives
(Invisible Theatre), Wait Until Dark (Beowulf Alley Theatre),
and Prelude to a Kiss (Live Theatre Workshop). Dallas
performs with Stories that Soar! and teaches for SharMoore Children’s
Productions. This spring, Dallas will appear in Invisible Theatre’s
production of Premiere. |
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John Wilson
(Prospero), Professor Emeritus of the University of Arizona Dance
Department, started his performing life at age four as a hoofer
and tapped his way into his teens when he played his first Shakespearean
role, Snug the Joiner, in A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
In college and summer stock he honed his skills as both a comical
and classical actor in productions of Molière, Pirandello,
Ibsen, Shaw, Williams, Strindberg, Congreve, the Absurdists and
the Bard. After a tour as a Marine Corps helicopter pilot, he
completed joint PhDs in dramatic literature and dance at the University
of Wisconsin-Madison. He has choreographed 98 works for college
and professional companies during his career as a professor of
dance and has won eight teaching excellence awards. Diane, his
wife of 54 years, gave him encouragement to play the role of Prospero
for The Rogue. Retired in Tucson, John and Diane have three beautiful
children and seven gorgeous grandchildren. |
Foreground: Carrie J. Cole, Leanné Whitewolf
Charlton and Jenna Johnson (Spirits)
Background: Nic Adams (Sebastian), Jon Benda (Gonzalo), Brian Taraz
(Antonio) and Phil Bennett (Alonzo)
Photo by Tim Fuller
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Preshow
Music
Program |
Debussy’s Reflets Dans L’eau
(Reflections in the Water)
played by Dawn Sellers |
Sichler’s Un Oiseau en Mai
for flute and piano
played by Paul Amiel and Dawn Sellers |
Ravel’s Hommage a Rameau
from Tombeau de Couperin
played by Dawn Sellers |
Maid in Bedlam
sung by Leanné Whitewolf Charlton, Carrie J. Cole, Patty
Gallagher,
Jenna Johnson, Joseph McGrath, David Morden and Ryan DeLuca |
Music Director’s Notes
Working with such a delightful director as Cindy Meier
made putting music for The Tempest together a joy. I was allowed
to, much like Prospero, head to a deserted island with all my favorite
music in tow.
Debussy’s The Sunken Cathedral becomes
Prospero’s theme, snippets from Elliot Carter’s Flute
Concerto becomes Ariel’s theme, a movement from Ned Rorem’s
Second Piano Sonata underscores the goddesses gathering prior
to their dance. Choreographed by Daniel Precup, music for the first
dance is Ravel’s Menuet from Tombeau de Couperin,
the second begins with a theme from a 16th century French song arranged
by Poulenc and is blended into an original piece inspired by a theme
of Rorem’s. This medley becomes the song sung by the goddesses
and danced by Jenna Johnson.
Some music we improvise is inspired by a particular composer’s
technique. In the opening scene where ship and sailors are tossed by
the tempest, I’ve taken techniques developed by Henry Cowell for
his landmark piece The Banshee of playing inside the piano on its strings
to create the illusion of a storm. Trinculo enters to sounds inspired
by percussion techniques from Cowell’s Ostinato Pianissimo.
Some music I’ve written specifically for this production
such as Caliban’s theme played on clarinet. There are two versions.
One sad and somber for his entrances and a second variation that is
gloriously “drunk.”
In the text, Shakespeare indicates certain lines of poetry
to be “sung” but music to accompany the words is not provided.
I’ve written original music for most of the songs with one arranged
from an existing tune by Poulenc and another from a popular Celtic group.
All appear to support and underscore the action of the Play.
Throughout the performance you’ll hear Paul Amiel
playing a variety of flutes, percussion, shells and harp. I’m
playing piano, clarinet and percussion. Wish us luck! We hope you enjoy
the voyage!
—Dawn Sellers, Musical Director
Foreground: Phil Bennett (Alonzo)
Background: Nic Adams (Sebastian), John Wilson (Prospero), Patty Gallagher
(Ariel),
Jon Benda (Gonzalo) and Brian Taraz (Antonio)
Photo by Tim Fuller
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Designers |
Costume Design |
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Cynthia Meier |
Musical Director |
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Dawn Sellers |
Lighting Design |
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Clint Bryson |
Scenic Design |
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Joseph McGrath |
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Production
Staff |
Stage Manager |
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Jim Campbell |
Assistant Director |
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Bryan Falcon |
Musician |
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Paul Amiel |
Choreographer |
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Daniel Precup |
Text Coaching |
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David Morden |
Assistant Stage Manager |
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James Robert Giza |
Additional Costume Construction |
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Karen DeLay, Jenna Johnson & Jenny Wise |
Dramaturg |
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Carrie J. Cole |
House Manager |
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Susan Collinet |
Assistant House Manager |
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JoAn Forehand |
Box Office Manager |
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Thomas Wentzel |
Box Office Assistant |
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Anna Swenson |
Snack Bar Manager |
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Leigh Moyer |
Snack Bar Assistant |
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Shannon Macke |
Poster and Program |
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Thomas Wentzel |
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Paul Amiel
(Musician) is a multi-instrumentalist with a focus on the musical
traditions and instruments of ancient and non-Western cultures
. He has studied abroad with such notable teachers as Benjamin
Bagby (harp), Iida Katsutoshi (shakuhachi), Cheng Gong liang (guqin),
and Celaleddin Bicer (ney). Amiel founded and performs with the
Summer Thunder Chinese Music Ensemble, the traditional Japanese
music duo Muso, and the sufi group Seyyah. No stranger to The
Rogue, he has performed music for Othello, Krapp’s
Last Tape, Our Town, Immortal Longings, Orlando, The Good Woman
of Setzuan, Endymion and The Dead. |
Clint
Bryson (Lighting Designer) has designed lights
for nearly every Rogue Theatre production. Other lighting design
credits include As Bees in Honey Drown and Golf Game
for Borderlands, Woman in Black for Beowulf Alley, and
The Seagull for Tucson Art Theatre. Clint is currently
the Shop Foreman, Production Technical Director and Marketing
Director for Catalina Foothills Theatre Department where he designs
and coordinates the construction of all scenery. He is also a
member of Rhino Staging Services, and a regular participant in
Arizona Theatre Company’s Summer on Stage program where
he designs and builds the scenery as well as teaches production
classes. |
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James
Campbell (Stage Manager) originally trained as
a musician, but fell into stage management as an assistant at
the San Francisco Opera. Since then, he has functioned as a production/stage
manager for the Eugene Opera, the Anchorage Opera, the Wildwood
Festival for the Performing Arts in Little Rock, Arkansas; the
Fargo Opera, the Tacoma Opera and others. He was the producer
for touring productions for the Lamplighters Music Theatre, and,
in the mid-nineties, was the General Manager for the Berkeley
Opera. This is Jim’s first production with The Rogue, and
his first production without high notes. |
Bryan
Falcon (Assistant Director) is a director/designer
who has recently relocated to Tucson, Arizona and is honored to
be working with The Rogue. He received his MFA in directing from
Western Illinois University and has produced work across the Midwest
and east coast. For several years, he served as artistic director
for the Backporch Theater Company, a Shakespeare-in-the-Park traveling
troupe. Following that, he co-founded and served as Artistic Director
for New World Arts, a black box theater now in its eleventh year.
His most recent projects include directing Electra by
Jeremy Meneksoglu, Marisol by José Rivera and
playing Eddie in Fool for Love. |
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Daniel
Precup (Choreographer) is a graduate of the acclaimed
National Choreographic High School of Bucharest, Romania. He joined
the Oleg Danovski Ballet Theater at the age of 18 and moved through
the ranks to become a principal dancer in 1998. Daniel studied
stagecraft with European choreographers Oleg Danovski, Germinal
Casado and Gigi Caciuleanu. He has performed in world-wide tours,
dancing the title role of the Mandarin in The Miraculous Mandarin,
Cardinal Richelieu in The Three Musketeers, and Siegfried
in Swan Lake. Daniel came to the United States in 2003
as a principal dancer with Oakland Ballet. He joined Ballet Tucson
in 2004, where his principal roles have included the title character
in Dracula, Oberon in A Midsummer Night’s Dream,
Prince Desire in Sleeping Beauty, the Cavalier in The
Nutcracker and Frollo in The Hunchback of Notre Dame. |
Dawn
C. Sellers (Music Director, Pianist) performed
in The Rogue’s production of Our Town, was Assistant
Director for The Rogue’s production of Naga Mandala
and Assistant Director and pianist for The Rogue’s production
of Ghosts. Dawn was a pianist, composer and educator
prior to receiving an MFA in dramatic writing from Carnegie Mellon
University. She has composed music for Off-Broadway and is published
by Hal Leonard, Alfred and Kjos Music Publishers. In Tucson, her
plays have been produced by This Side Up Productions, Beowulf
Alley Theatre Company, Live Theatre Workshop, and Live Theatre
Workshop’s Etcetera series, as well as The Arizona Women’s
Theatre. She is also listed on nytheatre.com, which features emerging
women playwrights. |
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Susan
Collinet (House Manager) received her A.A. Degree
from Pima Community College in 2005, and her B.A. in Creative
Writing and English Literature from the University of Arizona
in 2008. Before returning to college as a non-traditional student,
Susan spent twenty years in amateur theater, mostly on the East
coast, as well as in the American Theater of Brussels and the
Theatre de Chenois of Waterloo, Belgium. She has worked in such
positions as volunteer bi-lingual guide in the Children’s
Museum of Brussels, Bursar of a Naturopathic Medical school in
Tempe, Arizona, and volunteer assistant Director of Development
of the Arizona Aids Project in Phoenix. Susan is currently peddling
a manuscript of poetry for publication and continually working
on collections of creative nonfiction and fiction. Her writing
has won awards from Sandscript Magazine, the John Hearst Poetry
Contest, and the Salem College for Women’s Center for Writing,
and has been published in the 2010 Norton Anthology of Student’s
Writing. In addition to being House Manager, Susan acts as Volunteer
Coordinator for The Rogue. |
Foreground: Jenna Johnson (Juno) and John Wilson (Prospero)
Background: Carrie J. Cole (Iris), Leanné Whitewolf Charlton
(Ceres) and Patty Gallagher (Ariel)
Photo by Tim Fuller
And Now, A Word from Our Sponsors…
This production of The Tempest is sponsored by three members
of The Rogue Theatre’s Board: David Morden, Carol Elliott and
Norma Davenport. Here’s what they have to say about why they sponsored
this play:
David Morden: Over the past five years, The Rogue
Theatre has grown into an integral part of the Tucson arts community.
There are few other places in this community where I can experience
great drama in such an intimate and intense setting. As both artist
and audience member, I find that The Rogue fulfills my hunger for intelligent,
thought-provoking—even disturbing—theatre of the highest
professional standards. I happily support this company with my time,
talents and resources so that it can continue to offer a place of communion
and conversation for friends (both new and old) who also value and treasure
great art.
Carol Elliott: When Joe McGrath and Cindy Meier began exploring
the possibility of producing The Tempest with the Board, I knew I wanted
to be involved in a significant way. When David Morden challenged others
to co-sponsor, I jumped at the chance. I had seen the play once before
and knew that if The Rogue Theatre decided to produce it, it would be
something special. And indeed, it is something special. Thank you for
coming and supporting The Rogue. Opportunities to keep The Rogue alive
abound. Sponsorship is just one. Ask our Board about them.
Norma Davenport: Being a sponsor is rewarding in so many ways!
As a member of The Rogue Board, I’ve come to understand that supporting
this kind of theatre gives a rare and precious opportunity to Tucson
theatre artists. The chance to act in a first class production of Shakespeare’s
The Tempest is an opportunity created by The Rogue. What a loss it would
be if all this breathtaking talent and all these powerful performances
had never seen the light of day! The sponsor helps make sure we don’t
suffer such a loss. A sponsor makes a gift to the audience as well.
Producing plays costs money; ticket income pays for only 55% of The
Rogue Theatre’s expenses, so every time you see one of our plays,
someone has given money to make that possible.
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Our Thanks |
Arizona Daily Star |
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Tim
Fuller |
Tucson Weekly |
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Peter E. Medine |
Shawn Burke |
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Jesse Greenberg |
Chuck Graham |
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Jenna Johnson |
Delectables Restaurant and Catering |
Jenna Johnson (Juno), John Wilson (Prospero), Patty
Gallagher (Ariel) and Carrie J. Cole (Iris)
Photo by Tim Fuller
Performance
Schedule for The Tempest
Location: The Rogue Theatre at The Historic Y, 300 East University
Boulevard
Free off-street parking! Click here
to see map and parking information.
Performance run time is approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes, not including
musical preshow or post-show discussion. There will be one 10-minute
intermission.
Thursday January 6, 2011, 7:30 pm PREVIEW
Friday January 7, 2011, 7:30 pm OPENING
NIGHT
Saturday January 8, 2011, 7:30 pm
Sunday January 9, 2011, 2:00 pm matinee
SOLD OUT
Thursday January 13, 2011, 7:30 pm, PAY-WHAT-YOU-WILL
SOLD OUT
Friday January 14, 2011, 7:30 pm
Saturday January 15, 2011, 7:30 pm
SOLD OUT
Sunday January 16, 2011, 2:00 pm matinee
SOLD OUT
Thursday January 20, 2011, 7:30 pm, PAY-WHAT-YOU-WILL
SOLD OUT
Friday January 21, 2011, 7:30 pm
SOLD OUT
Saturday January 22, 2011, 7:30 pm
SOLD OUT
Sunday January 23, 2011, 2:00 pm matinee
John Wilson (Prospero)
Photo by Tim Fuller
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