Primary Stages
Primary Stages was founded in 1984 by Casey Childs as a New York State non-profit theater company with the mission of producing new plays and fostering the artistic development of emerging and established playwrights. In 2004, Primary Stages moved from its 99-seat home of 17 years on West 45th Street to the 199-seat theater at 59E59 Theaters. In 2014, The Duke on 42nd Street became the home for all Primary Stages productions.
History
For over 30 years, Primary Stages has given life to more than 100 new plays, many of them world premieres, by writers such as Horton Foote, A.R. Gurney, Willy Holtzman, Julia Jordan, Romulus Linney, Donald Margulies, Christopher Durang, Terrence McNally, John Henry Redwood, John Patrick Shanley, Mac Wellman, Lee Blessing, and David Ives.
Primary Stages' 9th season included the world premiere of All in the Timing by David Ives, the most produced play in the United States during the 1995/96 season.[1]
In 2008, Primary Stages was honored with the Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Body of Work, which encompasses much more than the plays produced for the stage. Primary Stages supports playwrights and develops new works through commissions, workshops, readings and two flagship programs: The Dorothy Strelsin New American Writers Group, and The Marvin and Anne Einhorn School of Performing Arts (ESPA). Through these programs, Primary Stages advocates for artists, helping them make important – and often transformative – connections within the theater community.
Current season 2014/15
- Poor Behavior by Theresa Rebeck
- While I Yet Live by Billy Porter
- Lives of The Saints by David Ives
Education
Dorothy Strelsin New American Writers Group[2]
Primary Stages is host to the Dorothy Strelsin New American Writers Group, which brings together six to eight emerging playwrights each season to create new plays for the American theater. Under the direction of Primary Stages Associate Artistic Director Michelle Bossy, these playwrights attend weekly meetings in the fall and spring, where they bring new pages to each session and receive feedback on their works in progress. At the end of the season, Primary Stages presents the first public reading of these plays in The Dorothy Strelsin Fresh Ink Readings Series.
Since its inception, over 45 full-length plays have been written in the group, many of which have been produced by prominent local and national theaters including Long Wharf Theatre, Blue Light, South Coast Repertory, The New Group, New York Stage and Film, Cherry Lane Theatre, and Primary Stages.
Current members:
- Sofia Alvarez
- Courtney Baron
- Josh Levine
- Cheri Magid
- Rogelio Martínez
- Molly Smith Metzler
- Janine Nabers
- Matthew Paul Olmos
- Mat Smart
Past members:
- David Lindsay Abaire
- Tanya Barfield
- Courtney Baron
- Neena Beber
- Alex Beech
- Brooke Berman
- Darren Canady
- Andrew Case
- Cusi Cram
- Janis Astor del Valle
- Bruce Faulk
- Josh Fox
- Jessica Goldberg
- Daniel Goldfarb
- Rinne Groff
- Stephen Adly Guirgis
- Katori Hall
- Jerome Hairston
- Rolin Jones
- Julia Jordan
- Dan O’Brien
- Edwin Sanchez
- Julian Sheppard
- Lucy Thurber
- Sheri Wilner
Primary Stages Einhorn School of Performing Arts (ESPA)[3]
The Primary Stages Marvin and Anne Einhorn School of Performing Arts (ESPA), formerly the Primary Stages School of Theater, is an interdisciplinary institution where students may hone their skills and develop their careers in a nurturing and collaborative environment. Having housed over 2,000 students, the school provides extensive opportunities for emerging artists, professionals, and lifelong learners to collaborate with working professional artists while building strong relationships within the New York theater community.
ESPA offers a series of intensive classes in acting, playwriting, and directing taught by industry professionals that include PS staff members Casey Childs (Founder and Executive Producer of Primary Stages), Andrew Leynse (Artistic Director), Michelle Bossy (Associate Artistic Director), Elliot Fox (Managing Director), along with David Laundra and Linda Laundra, Judy Gold, Tanya Barfield, Cusi Cram, Stephanie Klapper, Blair Singer, Rogelio Martínez, Edwin Sanchez, Lucy Thurber and Morgan Jenness. Previous faculty members include Julia Jordan, Brooke Berman, Sarah Ruhl, Constance Congdon, BH Barry, and Kim Wield. The school is run by Tessa LaNeve.
Acting students work closely with playwriting students to help create and foster new American plays. Learning how to work on a play in development is a key component to becoming a successful actor. A balance of studying pieces by emerging writers and collaborating on works-in-progress allows actors to hone their skills while keeping them on their toes. Acting classes have included: Television Acting, Advanced Scene Study, Auditioning Techniques, Acting the Song, On-Camera Auditioning and Solo Performance.
Core playwriting classes provide students with the tools necessary to complete a first draft through writing exercises, workshopped readings and insight from working playwrights. Small classes of 6-8 offer an intimate setting and the opportunity to have new work read aloud each week. Classes are for all skill levels, from first time writers to those who have hit a road block with their current piece. Playwriting classes have included: Face the Blank Page and Write, The Rewrite, Comedy Writing, Adaptation, Experimental Theater, the Web Series and Television Writing. There are also several online writing classes offered.
With classes designed for directors and non-directors alike, the directing department offers a series of programs throughout the year to build your confidence behind the table and expand your way of thinking about performance. Classes include Collaborations, Workshops, Circuit Training, as well as concentrations in Film and Stage directing. ESPA is open to all artists, in all stages of their careers.
Awards
Over the years, the company has received considerable critical acclaim and numerous theater and literary awards and nominations, including Obie, AUDELCO, Outer Critics Circle, Lucille Lortel, Drama League and Drama Desk Awards. The Fourth Wall, All in the Timing, The Old Settler, Missing/Kissing, The Model Apartment, Scotland Road, You Should Be So Lucky, The Stendhal Syndrome, Sabina, Dividing the Estate and In The Continuum are among the many plays brought to national attention by Primary Stages.
In 2009, Primary Stages received its first Tony Nomination for Dividing the Estate by Horton Foote.
Notable actors who have appeared on stage with Primary Stages
- Jane Alexander
- Amy Aquino
- Elizabeth Ashley
- Mark Blum
- Kerry Butler
- L. Scott Caldwell
- Nell Campbell
- Lynn Cohen
- Michael Cristofer
- Brian Cox
- Daniel Davis
- Sandy Duncan
- Gregg Edelman
- Vera Farmiga
- Calista Flockhart
- Hallie Foote
- Arthur French
- Penny Fuller
- Jack Gilpin
- Joanna Gleason
- John Glover
- Randy Graff
- David Greenspan
- Charles Grodin
- Mamie Gummer
- Jayne Houdyshell
- Julie Halston
- Amy Irving
- Allison Janney
- Charles Kimbrough
- T.R. Knight
- Christine Lahti
- Nathan Lane
- Adriane Lenox
- David Margulies
- Carolyn McCormick
- Ellen McLaughlin
- John McMartin
- Gerald McRaney
- Estelle Parsons
- Pamela Payton-Wright
- Larry Pine
- Isabella Rossellini
- Kyra Sedgwick
- Marian Seldes
- John Wesley Shipp
- Susan Sullivan
- Will Swenson
- Richard Thomas
- Leslie Uggams
- George Wendt
Production history
- A Lifetime Burning (Cusi Cram)
- The Nightwatcher (Charlayne Woodard)
- Happy Now? (Lucinda Cox)
- Buffalo Gal (A.R. Gurney)
- A Body of Water (Lee Blessing)
- Love Child (Daniel Jenkins and Robert Stanton)
- Shipwrecked! An Entertainment (Donald Margulies)
- Chasing Manet (Tina Howe)
- Opus (Michael Hollinger)
- Dividing the Estate (Horton Foote)
- Hunting and Gathering (Brooke Berman)
- Something You Did (Willy Holtzman)
- Indian Blood (A.R. Gurney)
- Southern Comforts (Kathleen Clark)
- Adrift in Macao (Christopher Durang)
- Exits and Entrances (Athol Fugard)
- Dedication or The Stuff of Dreams (Terrence McNally)
- In The Continuum (Danai Gurira and Nikkole Salter)
- The Right Kind of People (Charles Grodin)
- A Safe Harbor for Elizabeth Bishop (Marta Goes)
- The Day Emily Married (Horton Foote)
- String of Pearls (Michele Lowe)
- Sabina (Willy Holtzman)
- Going To St. Ives (Lee Blessing)
- Strictly Academic (A. R. Gurney)
- The Stendhal Syndrome (Terrence McNally)
- Boy (Julia Jordan)
- Call The Children Home (Thomas Babe)
- The Fourth Wall (A.R. Gurney)
- One Million Butterflies (Stephen Belber)
- Romola & Nijinsky (Lynne Alvarez)
- An Immaculate Misconception (Carl Djerassi)
- One Shot, One Kill (Richard Vetere)
- Straight As a Line (Luis Alfaro)
- Krisit (Y York)
- No Niggers, No Jews, No Dogs (John Henry Redwood)
- Byrd's Boy (Bruce J. Robinson)
- Barefoot Boy with Shoes On (Edwin Sanchez)
- Elsa Edgar (Bob Kingdom with Neil Bartlett)
- An Empty Plate in the Café du Grand Bouef (Michael Hollinger)
- When They Speak of Rita (Daisy B. Foote)
- The Old Settler (John Henry Redwood)
- High Life (Lee MacDougall)
- The Turn of the Screw (Jeffrey Hatcher from the story by Henry James)
- Lips (Constance Congdon)
- This Lime Tree Bower (Conor McPherson)
- Brutality of Fact (Keith Reddin)
- Scotland Road (Jeffrey Hatcher)
- St. Nicholas (Conor McPherson)
- Nasty Little Secrets (Lanie Robertson)
- Missing/Kissing (John Patrick Shanley)
- Second-Hand Smoke (Mac Wellman)
- Not Waving (Gen LeRoy)
- Hate Mail (Bill Corbett and Kira Obolensky)
- Mere Mortals (David Ives)
- The Model Apartment (Donald Margulies)
- The Preservation Society (William S. Leavengood)
- Virgins & Other Myths (Colin Martin)
- Sabina (Willy Holtzman)
- Ancient History and English Made Simple (David Ives)
- Laughing Matters (Nick Ullett)
- You Should Be So Lucky (Charles Busch)
- I Sent a Letter to My Love (Melissa Manchester, Jeffrey Sweet)
- Don Juan in Chicago (David Ives)
- "2" Goering at Nuremberg (Romulus Linney)
- Breaking Up (Michael Cristofer)
- All in the Timing (David Ives)
- Crackdancing (Joseph Hindy)
- The Hyacinth Macaw (Mac Wellman)
- The Dolphin Position (Percy Granger)
- Bargains (Jack Heifner)
- Washington Square Moves (Matthew Witten)
- How She Played the Game (Cynthia L. Cooper)
- Olivia's Opus (Nora Cole)
- Joy Solution (Stuart Duckworth)
- Making Book (Janet Reed)
- A Murder of Crows (Mac Wellman)
- Lusting After Pepino's Wife (Sam Henry Kass)
- Better Days (Richard Dresser)
- Hollywood Scheherazade (Charlie Peters)
- Black Market (Joe Sutton)
- Bovver Boys (Willy Holtzman)
- Swim Visit (Wesley Moore)
- Sketchbook Series - Late Night Shows: Babel Stories; Matthew Maguire, The Traveling Squirrel (Robert Lord), The Secret Sits in the Middle (Lisa Maria Radano)
- At the Still Point (Jordan Roberts)
- Nasty Little Secrets (Lanie Robertson)
- Algerian Romance (Kres Mersky)
- Cellophane (Mac Wellman)
- China Wars (Robert Lord)
- Ancient History (David Ives)
- Sketchbook Series - Late Night Political Comedy Sketches: The Thrill of Victory, The Agony of Debate (Joe DiPietro, Stephen Fife, Kathy Giamo and Mark Michaels)
- Stopping the Desert (Glen Merzer)
- The Wedding of the Siamese Twins (Burton Cohen)
- Angel Face (Laura Harrington)
- An Evening of Four One Acts:
- The Time I Died (Ron Carlson)
- Madame Zelena Finally Comes Clean (Ron Carlson)
- Lone Deer (Donald Wollner)
- Splitsville (Richard Dresser)
- Beyond Bloomingdale's (Diane Heles and Janet Reed)
- Florida Girls (Nancy Fitz-Hasty)
- Heavy Breathing (Scott Carter)
- Free Fall (Laura Harrington)
- Hidden Parts (Lynne Alvarez)
- Late One Afternoon in Okabena (Marjorie Mahle)
- In September Woods (David Hill)
- Bertrano or Hats Don't Lie (Charlie Peters)[4][5]
References
- ↑ "Theatre Communications Group - Top Ten Plays in American Theatre". Tcg.org. July 22, 2002. Retrieved December 22, 2011.
- ↑
- ↑ "Marvin and Anne Einhorn School of Performing Arts". Primary Stages. Retrieved December 22, 2011.
- ↑ "Previous Seasons". Primary Stages. Retrieved December 22, 2011.
- ↑ "Primary Stages Theatre Credits". Broadway World. Retrieved December 22, 2011.