Archive for February, 2010

My Journey with The Brother/Sister Plays

Posted by Rodrick Covington on 2/25/2010

(Rodrick plays Shango and Shua in The Brother/Sister Plays)

I remember meeting Tarell in NY three years ago, before I had ever heard of The Brother/Sister Plays. We met through one of my closest friends and hung out in NY until five in the morning. We had the best time, exchanged numbers, and committed to keeping in touch. When I got the script for In the Red and Brown Water two weeks later, I had no idea that the man I had met was the playwright. I read the script and I cried. I told my mom before the audition, “I have to do this play! It’s a part of how I was raised. It’s a part of who I am.” Both Tarell and I are from Florida; I’m from Polk County, FL, where it’s just as country and swampy as San Pére. I had no idea that the script I was so in love with was by this tall, beautiful black brother who I had hung out with two weeks prior until I stepped into the audition room. I cannot even express to you the peace and joy that came over my spirit when I saw him in the room, not to mention that auditioning for Tina Landau was a treat in and of itself. Three months later, I was in Atlanta at the Alliance Theatre with Tina and Tarell, working on In the Red and Brown Water.

(more…)

Me and Frank

Posted by Martha Lavey on 2/22/2010

I am looking forward to starting rehearsal on March 2nd for Endgame with Frank Galati directing. Frank is a hugely important influence in my life and, now, a dear friend. Some of my most singular experiences in the theater as an actor have been with Frank. When I was a graduate student in the Performance Studies department at Northwestern where Frank was a professor, he cast me in an adaptation he had created of Gertrude Stein’s novel, Ida. It was a wonderful experience. Frank has some kind of uncanny affinity for Stein’s voice and, since that production of Ida, he has adapted Stein’s work for the theater several times, to marvelous effect: She Always Said Pablo at the Goodman Theatre and Loving Repeating, first at Northwestern and then with About Face Theatre at the Museum of Contemporary Art.

(more…)

Freedom/Imprisonment

Posted by Joy Meads on 2/18/2010

(Joy is the Literary Manager at Steppenwolf)

SPOILER ALERT: this post is intended for readers who have already seen The Brothers Size and Marcus; Or the Secret of Sweet and may spoil some surprises within the show. If you are able to attend The Brothers Size and Marcus; Or the Secret of Sweet, we ask that you read this post after you’ve seen the production.

(more…)

Oya in the Air

Posted by Joy Meads on 2/18/2010

(Joy is the Literary Manager at Steppenwolf)

SPOILER ALERT: this post is intended for readers who have already seen In the Red and Brown Water and may spoil some surprises within the show. If you are able to attend In the Red and Brown Water, we ask that you read this post after you’ve seen the production.

(more…)

Our Own Tree Jumpers

Posted by Emilio Robles on 2/16/2010

(Emilio has been a Teaching Artist at Steppenwolf for the last four years)

Since reading A Separate Peace by John Knowles during my sophomore year of high school under the recommendation of a good friend (PAM REYNOLDS - are you out there and listening?), I have always been moved by the strong images and the complex dynamics of friendship in the book. I attended an all-male undergraduate Alma Mater, so that’s why I can easily latch onto the personas of Gene, Finny, Leper, Brinker, Chet, Bobby and those events at Devon School that senior year with a certain mischievous scrutiny.

But what about my students at Harlan High School, Prosser Career Academy, MAS-LVLHS, or Young Women’s Leadership Academy, who are themselves just “at this teenage period of life,” as Finny says in the play? Will they connect to this story?

(more…)