Theatreworks USA
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Theatreworks USA is a professional, not-for-profit theatre for young and family audiences founded in 1961. The company is based out of New York City, but has touring productions that run through forty-nine states as well as parts of Canada. Plays and musicals produced by Theatreworks, which are staffed exclusively by actors and stage managers who are members of the Actors' Equity Association, have reached over 78 million people since the company's foundation. According to their mission statement, Theatreworks has four main programs: class trips, touring, free summer theatre, and the family series.
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[edit] Productions
While Theatreworks is known largely for their touring shows, their seasonal roster also includes several Off-Broadway productions and free theatre for families without the means to see live, professional theatre. The material the company performs ranges from the classical work of William Shakespeare to musical revues appropriate for young children. Theatreworks has been reviewed positively by The New York Times, The New York Post, Newsday, and The Village Voice among others.
[edit] Free summer theatre
Since 1989 Theatreworks USA's Free Summer Theatre has provided young people and families with original, professional theatre free of charge. Each summer, tickets are distributed to children in over 200 social service and youth programs throughout the five boroughs. To date, over 200,000 children have attended free productions of some of the company's most popular shows, including Junie B. Jones, Romeo and Juliet, and Sarah, Plain and Tall. According to their own literature Theatreworks believes "all children should experience the excitement of going to the theatre, regardless of their financial circumstances." Roma Torre, a NY1 reporter, has said the following of the program:
TWUSA has done it again. Not only is the company’s latest production yet another extremely delightful book adaptation for children—it’s free. It’s one splendid hour of music, laughter, life lessons and the art of putting on a show. |
The program has grown wildly, playing to packed houses nearly every day. Waiting lists are common place, and ticket demand continually outnumbers the supply.
[edit] Touring productions
During the fall and winter season, TheatreworksUSA tours its musicals and plays nationwide. The repertoire includes productions that fall into three general categories - history & biography, literary adaptations, and original issue shows, such as discrimination, peer-pressure, literacy, and substance abuse, among many others. These shows will usually perform over one hundred times each. The groups are usually made up of anywhere between four to twelve actors and one or two stage managers. Typically, each season consists of twelve musicals and four plays.
[edit] Current repertoire
The current repertoire for the 2007-2008 season is as follows:
- A Christmas Carol
- Anne of Green Gables
- Charlotte's Web
- Dr. Dolittle
- Freedom Train
- Great Expectations
- Junie B. Jones
- Ramona Quimby
- The Color of Justice
- Seussical
- The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
- The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere
[edit] Alumni artists
Theatreworks has a history of giving young actors, writers, directors, and designers their first professional break. Amongst the alumni are four-time Tony Award winning director Jerry Zaks, Robert Jess Roth (Beauty and the Beast), Michael Mayer (Thoroughly Modern Millie), Gabriel Barre; writers Marta Kauffman and David Crane (TV's "Friends"), Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty (Ragtime, Once On This Island), Jason Robert Brown (Parade), Larry O'Keefe (Bat Boy: The Musical), Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx (Avenue Q); and Tony-winning actors Roger Bart, Chuck Cooper, and John Glover. Esteemed performers F. Murray Abraham, Henry Winkler, and Judy Kuhn also got their start with Theatreworks.
[edit] Awards
Theatreworks has won many awards in its long history. Some of these honors include:
- 2001 Jonathan Larson Performing Arts Foundation Award for "artistic vision and commitment to the support and development of theatre artists."
- 1996 Drama Desk Award given by New York theatre critics for Theatreworks' "35 years of providing quality entertainment to children and their parents.
- 1996 Lucille Lortel Award given by Off Broadway theatres and producers, for "Outstanding Special Achievement."
- 1996 Staw Hat Award for Best Play awarded to The Color of Justice.
- 1984 AUDELCO Award at the Twelfth Annual Black Theatre Awards for Play to Win, a musical about Jackie Robinson breaking the color barrier in major league baseball. The award was for "best writing of a new show by black authors for the non-commercial theatre."