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September 11 - October 2, 2011 l Marroney Theatre Feb. 9 - Mar. 2, 2014 l Tornabene Theatre ARIZONA REPERTORY THEATRE Production Sponsor Lyn Tornabene

Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

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Page 1: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

September 11 - October 2, 2011 l Marroney Theatre Feb. 9 - Mar. 2, 2014 l Tornabene Theatre

A R I Z O N A R E P E R T O R Y T H E A T R E

Production Sponsor

Lyn Tornabene

Page 2: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

2013/14 SEASON

ARIZONATHEATRE.ORG520-622-2823

XANADUbook by Douglass Carter Beane,

music & lyrics by Jeff Lynne

NOV 30 – DEC 21, 2013

THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNESTby Oscar Wilde

SEP 14 – OCT 5, 2013

THE MOUNTAINTOPby Katori Hall

OCT 19 – NOV 9, 2013

OTHER DESERT CITIESby Jon Robin Baitz

JAN 18 – FEB 8, 2014

VENUS IN FURby David Ives

APR 5 – APR 26, 2014

AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DAYSwritten by Mark Brown,

based on the novel by Jules Verne

MAR 1 – MAR 22, 2014

Page 3: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

The University of Arizona • College of Fine Arts School of Theatre, Film & Television

proudly presents an Arizona Repertory Theatre production

DramaturgKevin Reagan

Stage ManagerSydney Luttschwager

DirectorBrent Gibbsf*þ

Costume DesignerKat Polak†

Arizona Repertory Theatre is the professional theatre training company of the School of Theatre, Film & Television.

Lighting DesignerEve Bandi

Voice & Dialect CoachDianne J. Winslowf §

Technical DirectorAnna Atkinson†

Sound DesignerJohn Millerd

THE GLASS MENAGERIEis presented by arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, Inc.on behalf of The University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee.

Unless otherwise noted, all designers, performers and technicians areSchool of Theatre, Film & Television students.

fSchool of Theatre, Film & Television Faculty Member

*Member of Actors' Equity Association * * Member of United Scenic Artists, Local 829

§Member of Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists

þSociety of American Fight Directors ±Member of American Guild of Musical Artists

©Member of The Stage Directors and Choreographers Society

†BFA Senior Capstone ProjectSee Production Staff page for details.

Scenic DesignerKayla D. Nault

Page 4: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

Amanda Wingfield ......................................................... Maedell Dixon*

Tom Wingfield ....................................................Paul Michael Thomson‡

Laura Wingfield ...........................................................Kathleen Cannon‡

Jim O'Connor ..................................................................... Joey Rudman‡

* Member of Actors’ Equity Association‡ Actors’ Equity Membership Candidate

Guest Artist

ThE CAST

UNDERSTUDIES: Understudies never substitute for listed players unless a specific announcement for the appearance is made at the time of the performance. Lauren Bardon, for Amanda Wingfield - Sterling Boyns, for Tom Wingfield - Kierna Conner, for Laura Wingfield - Zackry Colston, for Jim O'Connor.

Page 5: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program
Page 6: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

SCENE BREAKDOWN

ACT I

Scene 1.......................................An evening in the Wingfield apartment

Scene 2........................................................An afternoon in early winter

Scene 3.............................................................An evening in late winter

Scene 4................................................................ The following morning

Scene 5...........................................................An evening in early spring

~ 15-Minute Intermission ~

ACT II

Scene 6................................................................. The following evening

Scene 7.........................................................................Half an hour later

Time: 1944

Place: An apartment in St. Louis

Page 7: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

PRODUCTION STAFFDirection, Dramaturgy and Management

Assistant Director S. Lewis JeanChoreographer Lindsey MonyFrench Language Consultant Dr. Harold DixonAssistant Dramaturg Kalan BenbowProduction Manager Jenny Langf

Deck Manager Courtney StevensAssistant Stage Manager Rachel Miller

Scenery & Props Master Carpenter Steven DavisCarpenters Joshua K. Barnhill, Hanna Lockhart, Angela McMahon, Adam Michard, Gabe Torres, Stefan Nikolich-Zugich, Mitch Van Dyke, TAR 111Assistant Scenic Designer Sarah TalabaCharge Artist Sarah TalabaScenic Artist Alyssa LeBlancProps Master Samantha VisbalAssistant Props Master Brianna CatlinProps Artisans Cortni Elkins, M ErdmanDeck Crew Moriah Baker, Tabitha Hayes, Amy LeGore, Rossteen Mansouri-Rad

Lighting Assistant Lighting Designer Ryan MooreMaster Electrician Gregory James HoustonAssistant Master Electrician Carlos SanchezLight Board Operator Kristian RarigProgrammer Kristian RarigElectricians Don Fox, Erica Harris, D. Joshua Hemmo, Raulie A. Martinez, Patrick Charles W. McClanahan, Scott Murdock, Tyler Nienhouse, Heather Phillips, Chelsea Resh, Sam Schwartz, Mitch Van Dyke, Shannon Wallace, TAR 220 Lab

CostumesCostume Director Maryann Trombinof

Assistant Costume Designer Ivy Zipporah WahomeDrapers Jessica Hensley, Maryann Trombinof, Richard Tuckettf Wardrobe Crew Heads Jessica Hensley, Ivy Zipporah WahomeWardrobe Crew Raul Gonzalez, Dorann Matson, Cera Naccarato, Mary Outcalt, Myani Watson, Mitch Van Dyke

Sound Associate Sound Designer Daniel ColecchiaAssistant Sound Designer Garrett SeatonSound Board Operator Garrett SeatonAudio Crew Daniel Colecchia, John Millerd, Scott Murdock, Mylan P. Myers, Garrett Seaton, Jonathan Thompson

† Kat Polak - BFA Senior Capstone Project in Costume Design, Patrick Holt, Faculty Supervisor

† Anna Atkinson - BFA Senior Capstone Project in Technical Direction, Ted Kraus, Faculty Supervisor

Page 8: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

Rodgers and Hammerstein'smusical celebrates America's

vigorous pioneering spirit circa 1906 with athletic dance numbers

and boot-stomping energy as Curly, a handsome cowboy, and Laurey, a winsome farm girl, play

out their love story.

Mar. 9 - Apr. 6, 2014UA’s Marroney Theatre

Production Co-Sponsors

A R I Z O N A   R E P E R T O R Y   T H E A T R E

Fine Arts Box Office • 520.621.1162 • theatre.arizona.edu

Proud sponsor of

The University of ArizonaSchool of Theatre, Film & Television

Situated at the main gate of The University of Arizona, the Tucson Marriott University Park is the ideal hotel if you're staying in Tucson for business or pleasure. Just steps from the front door is Tucson's most vibrant social and cultural neighborhood: over 30 restaurants, shopping, touring Broadway shows, and 4 museums.

880 East 2nd Street

Tucson, AZ 85719

(520) 792-4100 or visit us on the web at www.marriott.com

Jane Kivel- and -

Page 9: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

DRAMATURG’S NOTES

“On Earth a candle is extinguished, the city wakes with a song upon her mouth having death in her eyes…and it is dawn the world goes forth to

murder dreams.” – E.E. Cummings

Tennessee Williams once described the period of 1932-1935 as the most miserable years of his life. The young writer has a number of grievances plaguing him during this time: he drops out of college, his father forces him to work at the International Shoe Co., and he’s continuously experiencing nervous fits that he nicknames ‘blue-devils’. Williams will blame these frustrations not on himself, but rather on the metropolis that surrounds him: St. Louis.

As a romantic poet, Williams always saw the ugliness in rapid industrialization. He spent his whole life wishing to rediscover an open oasis that mirrored the quaint hillside valleys of his birthplace, Clarksville, Mississippi. The cold concrete and screechy trolley wheels of St. Louis turned Williams into a hermit, where he’d only find escape through his typewriter.

The segregated social environment of the city added to Williams’ distaste. As The Great Depression ravished through urban centers like St. Louis, shanty towns called “Hoovervilles” sprouted on the outskirts of these big cities to house the dispossessed victims of a floundering economy. The more prestigious West End district of St. Louis was completely detached from these unsightly horrors. Here, the middle class was safe to take comfort in their country clubs and private schools. It is in this world of snobbery that the Williams family members find themselves constantly trying to find acceptance.

These hostilities toward St. Louis explain why Williams writes the city as a faceless menace in The Glass Menagerie. The crammed, pathetic apartment of the Wingfield family is described as functioning “as one interfused mass of automatism” in the first set of stage directions. The landscape of the play is meant to be suffocating, as it forces the characters to clutch tighter onto their individualism. Amanda, Tom, and Laura may appear to be freakish, but that’s only because their identities clash with the monotonous background of big buildings and dark alleyways.

The tragedy of the play mostly stems from Laura’s inability to blend in with the hustle-and-bustle of modernity. Williams purposefully associates the character with the images of blue-roses, unicorns, and candles because they are items that are either unnaturally unique or anachronistic; like Laura, they don’t belong in 1930s St. Louis. This type of symbolism creates a powerful contrast between nature and urbanity, a conflict Williams subtly exploits throughout the play with his frequent references to the elements of nature. He uses Mother Nature to accentuate the suppressed emotions and desires of the Wingfield family, since the rest of society has fallen under the spell of the city’s materialism.

Dramaturg's Notes continue on next page...

Page 10: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

Congratulations tothe cast & crew of

Lyn TornabeneThe Glass Menagerie production sponsor

DRAMATURG’S NOTES CONTINUED

“Outside a storm is coming on abruptly…the curtains billow inward and there is a sorrowful murmur from the deep blue dusk.”

– Scene 7, The Glass Menagerie

The Glass Menagerie not only marks the commercial success of Tennessee Williams, but it is the first and last of Williams’ works to take place in St. Louis. Perhaps writing this painfully autobiographical play finally liberated him from a city that had been an incubator of troubling memories, and freed him to explore the full realm of his imagination.

- Kevin Reagan, Dramaturg

Learn more through exciting discussions! Pre-Show Discussion: Sunday, Feb. 9th at 12:45 pm

Our dramaturgs will lead an exciting dialogue that includesbehind-the-scenes information about the production.

Post-Show Discussion: Sunday, Feb. 16th, immediately after the performance in the Marroney Theatre. Meet the actors and production team during a Q&A segment.

All discussions are free and open to the public.

Page 11: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

820 E. University Blvd.

520.882.8013Pasco Kitchen & Lounge

is proud to supportUA Arizona Repertory Theatre

Happy Hour from 3pm-6pm Dailypascokitchen.com

Great for dinner before the show & within walking distance to UA theatres

Better ingredients from local farms

Page 12: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

Brent Gibbs (Director) – Brent is a member of the Acting/Musical Theatre Division at UA where he teaches Acting and Stage Combat. He is a member of Actors’ Equity Association and the Screen Actors Guild. A certified teacher and Fight Director with the Society of American Fight Directors, he has worked on fight sequences for theatres from Thailand to New York, winning the Arizona State Theatre Award for Excellence in Choreography for his fights in the Southwest Shakespeare Company’s production of Henry V. He has taught master classes in Stage Combat around the U.S. and at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. This past year, he had fights in shows at the San Jose Repertory Theatre, Arizona Theatre Company, and Arizona Repertory Theatre. For four summers, Brent taught stage combat workshops at The International Theatre School Festival held in Amsterdam. For nine years, he served as Director and Fight Choreographer for one of the nation’s leading outdoor dramas, Tecumseh! He is the Artistic Director for ART, where he has directed Execution of Justice; The Crucible; Macbeth; On the Razzle; Much Ado About Nothing; Les Liaisons Dangereuses; King Lear; Absurd Person Singular; Hamlet; The Rivals; Pericles; Rain. Some Fish. No Elephants.; Brighton Beach Memoirs; Henry IV, Part I; Scenes from an Execution; Biloxi Blues; Romeo & Juliet; Broadway Bound; Bus Stop; Titus Andronicus; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof; Love’s Labour’s Lost; Medea; Rum & Coke; The Taming of the Shrew; The Tamer Tamed; Dracula; As You Like It; The Voice of the Prairie; Julius Caesar; How I Learned to Drive; Cymbeline; and Boeing Boeing.

Kat Polak (Costume Designer) – Kat is a senior BFA Costume Design student and is thrilled to be designing her Capstone with ART. Previous costume design credits include ART’s Avenue Q, and In Your Eyes and Legally Blonde: The Musical with Arizona Theatre Company’s Summer on Stage. Other credits include The Fantasticks, Boeing Boeing, Nine, and Inspecting Carol with ART, and The Importance of Being Earnest and Emma with Arizona Theatre Company. She would like to thank her friends and family for all of their love and support!

Kayla D. Nault (Scenic Designer) – Kayla is currently a senior in the BFA Design and Technology Program. Her most recent credits at ART include Assistant Scenic Designer, as well as Projections Artist, for the production of Nine. She also worked as the Paint Charge for Boeing Boeing, as well as Scenic Artist for almost all of ART’s productions over the last two years. She will be graduating this May and plans to move to a bigger city to begin her career.

Eve Bandi (Lighting Designer) – Eve is a first-year MFA student in the lighting department designing her first production for The University

of Arizona. She comes from Pittsburgh, PA where she has freelanced for a few years since graduating from the University of Pittsburgh in 2011. She has worked with No Name Players multiple times with productions that include Oedipus and the Foul Mess in Thebes and ¡Viva Los Bastarditos!, as well assisting with the Pittsburgh Opera.

John Millerd (Sound Designer) – John is excited and honored to be designing his first production at Arizona Repertory Theatre. A BFA candidate in Sound Design and Technology, past UA credits include Assistant Sound Designer for The Man Who Came to Dinner and Nine, Audio Engineer for Encore! 2013: Celebration!, and Audio Assistant for Avenue Q. He would like to thank his family for their support, as well as Dan and Garrett for being awesome during this production process.

Anna Atkinson (Technical Director) – Anna is a senior in the Design/Tech BFA program with an emphasis in Technical Direction. Her previous credits at The University of Arizona include Assistant Technical Director of both Cymbeline and Avenue Q. This is her Senior Capstone Project. She would like to thank the amazing production team, her supportive roommate Christy, and her many friends and mentors.Sydney Luttschwager (Stage Manager) – Sydney is a junior BFA candidate in the Design/Tech program with an emphasis in Stage Management. This is her first show here at ART as a Stage Manager. Some other shows she has worked on as an Assistant Stage Manager are The Fantasticks and Nine. She is very excited to be working on this production and would like to thank her friends and family for all of their love and support.

Dianne J. Winslow (Voice & Dialect Coach) – Ms. Winslow teaches Voice and Movement and Period Styles with an emphasis in Shakespeare in our professional actor training programs. She coaches vocal production, textual analysis,

PROFILES

The UA School of Theatre, Film & Televisionʼs

Advisory Board choosesBrowneʼs Travelwhen sponsoring its annual

theatre benefit trips!

8622 E. Olinga Ct. l Tucson, AZ 85747520.664.2075 or 877.664.2075

fax 520.664.2310brownestravel.net

Browneʼs Travelsince 1965

Page 13: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

and dialects for ART productions. Coaching assignments have included The Man Who Came to Dinner, Cymbeline, Inspecting Carol, Avenue Q, Julius Caesar, The Secret Garden, As You Like It, Dracula, What I Did Last Summer, The Diary of Anne Frank, Rum & Coke, Medea, Love’s Labour’s Lost, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Titus Andronicus, and The Miracle Worker. Over twenty-five production credits with Arizona Theatre Company include dialect coaching for The Sunshine Boys, Sherlock Holmes and the Adventures of the Suicide Club, Lost In Yonkers, The Lady with All the Answers, To Kill a Mockingbird, I Am My Own Wife, Pride and Prejudice, Oh, Coward!, A Streetcar Named Desire, Talley’s Folly, Over the Moon, A Moon for the Misbegotten, Proof, Valley Song, Candida, Fires in the Mirror, Dancing at Lughnasa, Noises Off!, Dracula, Fully Committed, and Sea Marks. At The Invisible Theatre, she was Voice and Movement Coach for the internationally acclaimed production of A Conversation with Edith Head, which played in London’s West End and continues to tour nationally. In Phoenix, she coached styles and dialects for Southwest Shakespeare’s London Assurance. A member of the Screen Actors Guild/AFTRA, Ms. Winslow also works as a professional vocal coach for actors and private clients in the film and television industries.

Kevin Reagan (Dramaturg) – Kevin is a junior in the BFA Dramaturgy program and will be graduating in the fall of 2014. He finds it incredibly befitting for The Glass Menagerie to be the production that ends his work at ART, as it is one of the shows that first made him fully appreciate theatre. He would like to thank his parents, professors, and most importantly, Tennessee Williams himself, for sharing his poetic prose with the rest of the world.

~ ACTOR PROFILES ~

Kathleen Cannon (Laura Wingfield) – Laura is a dream role for Kathleen and the perfect ending for her time at ART. She graduates this May and plans on moving to Los Angeles. Past ART credits include Mrs. Stanley in The Man Who Came to Dinner, Teenage Greek Chorus in How I Learned to Drive, Julius Caesar, and As You Like It. Favorite roles include Marc Antony in Julius Caesar (Powerhouse Apprentice production) and Cordelia in King Lear. She is part of the Equity Membership Candidacy Program. "Thank you to this stellar, trusting, and supportive cast. You make it easy to reach those crushing moments of heartbreak each night. Maedell, it has been a privilege to watch and learn from you. Paul, you are a wonderful Tom and caring stage brother. Joey, you bring such light and joy into the play, and you make that emotional roller coaster of a scene such a fun ride. To the BFA Class of 2014: Watch out real world, here we come!"

Maedell Dixon (Amanda Wingfield) – New York: Intimate Letters (92nd St Y); Intimate Letters on tour at Stanford University and University of Mississippi; Arizona Repertory Theatre: Mourning Becomes Electra, Hay Fever, Light Up the Sky, Noises Off, The Belle of Amherst, others; ATC: Sherlock Holmes and the Adventure of The Suicide Club, The Lady with All the Answers (u/s), To Kill a Mockingbird, Blithe Spirit, Amadeus, others; Phoenix Theatre: And They Dance Real Slow in Jackson, Beyond Reasonable Doubt; Canyon Moon Theatre, Sedona: Southern Comforts; Actors Repertory Theatre of Sedona: Sailing To Byzantium; Invisible Theatre: First Kisses, 2-Across, Southern Comforts, Kindertransport, Collected Stories, My Old Lady, Later Life, Grace & Glorie, others. Films: Half Laughing, Speed Zone. Television: The Truth About Jane, Little Arliss. Proud member of Actors Equity since 1973.haroldandmaedell.blogspot.com

Joey Rudman (Jim O'Connor) – Joey is a senior BFA Acting student from Highland Park, IL. He began his career at Second City in Chicago. Since then, he has performed in The Man Who Came to Dinner (Mr. Stanley), Cymbeline (Cloten), Julius Caesar, As You Like It, Take Me Out (Shane Mungitt), On Stars Not Falling (Jake), and Inspecting Carol (Bart). He thanks his family and friends for their love and support.

Paul Michael Thomson (Tom Wingfield) – Paul is so very grateful for the opportunity to play his dream role and learn from this incredible group of artists. A junior here at The UA, Paul is pursuing a dual-degree in BFA Acting and Africana Studies, with minors in Spanish and Art History. Past roles include: Richard in The Man Who Came to Dinner (ART), Guiderius in Cymbeline (ART), Luther in Inspecting Carol (ART), and Lucius in Julius Caesar (ART). As the Vice President of Theta Alpha Phi, the co-ed theatre fraternity, Paul could not be prouder to be a member of Arizona Repertory Theatre and would like to thank all those who help shape him: faculty, friends, family, and God.

PROFILES

Special Acknowledgement

Arizona Repertory Theatrewould like to thank

Arizona Theatre Company's Costume Shop

for its generous contributionsto this production.

Page 14: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

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520.323.7035www.handmaker.org

Handmaker presents Adventure BusWeekly cultural experiences for adults with early stages of diminished memory capacity.

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We are proud to support Arizona Repertory Theatre!

Page 15: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

Sunday May 18, 2014 @ 3:00 pm The Fox Tucson Theatre

17 W. Congress StreetDoors open at 2:00 pm

Free For more info visit our website: tftv.arizona.edu

BFA Thesis Films from the UA School of Theatre, Film and Television

Page 16: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

by Anton Chekhov, translated by Paul SchmidtFeaturing The Bear, The Proposal & The Dangers of Tobacco

$7 All Seats | tickets.arizona.edu | 520.621.1162

8pm February 27, 28 & March 1, 2014 | 2pm March 2, 2014Harold Dixon Directing Studio | UA Drama Building, Room #116

directed by Matt Walley

THE STUDIO SERIES

presents

BEHINDWant to arrange something

fun & different for your group or club? How about a FREE,

behind-the-scenes tour of our behind-the-scenes tour of our theatres? Tours typically last one hour & include Q&A. Contact the Marketing & Development office

at 520.626.2686 or [email protected] for

more information.

TOURSt h e s c e n e s

Page 17: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

Enjoy the Show?For more than 75 years, our reviews and awards have supported what our audiences already know–Arizona Repertory Theatre produces professional-quality productions. We continue to push artistic boundaries and strive for excellence on all levels, in the classroom and on the stage. Arizona Repertory Theatre has built its subscriber base by presenting productions of the highest caliber and maintaining a superior level of customer service.

Please consider a donation to help keep our ticket prices as low as possible and to support our productions, which remain a vital part of our academic mission. Donations of $35 or more are acknowledged in our production programs and 100% of your contribution is tax-deductible.

Your contribution will be designated to the School of Theatre, Film & Television’s Theatre Fund for Excellence and will be used for the Theatre Program’s operating costs.

Give Online!Did you know that no credit card fee will be assessed if you give your gift online?

www.uafoundation.org/give/fund/theatre

Gift Amount: $ ____________________________________________

Name(s): _________________________________________________

Address: _________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________

Phone: (________)_________________________________________

E-mail: __________________________________________________

p Check payable to UAF/Theatre

p Visa p Mastercard p American Express

CC No.: __________________________________ Exp.: __________

Signature: ________________________________________________

Name as it appears on CC: __________________________________

How you would like your name(s) to appear in our

programs (if different from above) or if you wish to remain anonymous:

_________________________________________________________

Mail to: Marketing Office, UA School of Theatre, Film & Television P.O. Box 210003, Tucson, AZ 85721

For more information contact the Theatre Program Marketing Office at (520) 626-2686 or [email protected].

Page 18: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program
Page 19: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

Production Sponsors A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Production Sponsor The Man Who Came to Dinner

Production Sponsor The Fantasticks

MARRONEY CIRCLE OF FRIENDS

The Marroney Circle of Friends, formed in 2002, is a special group of donors who have shown a significant financial commitment to the Theatre program of the School of Theatre, Film & Television. In return, the School offers the "Marroneys" opportunities to share in the process of its academic and creative work. For more information or to become a Marroney Circle of Friends supporter, please contact (520) 626-2686 or [email protected].

Special thanks to this important group of donors:

Norma Arnow • Cindy Ashton • Patricia S. Ballard • Ann Blackmarr • Ellen Bussing • Doris & Len Coris • Genie & Paul Gengler • Paulette & Joe Gootter • Ruth Zales & Kenneth Greenfield • Jo & Jules Harris • Linda Hecht • Marcia & Jay Iole • Jane Kivel • Gloria Knopf • Greg Knopf • Coty Meloy • Frances Moore • Dr. William T. Neumann • Judy Ranzer • Rica & Harvey Spivack • Petricia & Edward Steinhoff • Adolph & Lorraine Stern • Shirley & Ted Taubeneck • Victoria Terzano

Production Co-Sponsors Boeing Boeing

Production Co-Sponsors Oklahoma!

SPECIAL ThANKS TO OUR SUPPORTERS

Gootter &Associates

Gootter &Associates

Jane Kivel-and-

Pat Engels & Richard Medland

Production Sponsor The Glass Menagerie

LynTornabene

Page 20: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program
Page 21: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

THANK YOU TO OUR DONORS

Over the years, the Theatre Program has enjoyed a rich tradition of philanthropy. Donations help attract talented students and faculty and support our mission to provide professional training and education to students through an outstanding production program.

Transformational Gifts to the Theatre Program With deep gratitude we acknowledge those whose significant and ongoing gifts have

transformed the lives of students and faculty.

Patricia S. Ballard • Tami & Thomas Barrow • Linda D. & Elias Barzilai • Joanne & Bill Bennett • Ann & Neal* Blackmarr • Laura & Arch Brown • Richard & Elizabeth Murphy Burns • Donna & Dr. James M. Byers III • Campbell, Yost, Clare & Norell, P.C. • Esther N. Capin* • Chapman Automotive • David D. Cone Foundation • Doris & Len Coris • Carol Cowan • Sally & Ralph Duchin • Pat Engels & Richard Medland • Paulette & Joe Gootter • Peggy Haines* • Susan Jackson* • Linda & Joseph Jenckes • Jim Click Automotive Team • Jane & Lee* Kivel • Susan W. & Bernard R.* Kornhaber • Patricia Kraisman • Mrs. Peter Marroney* • Barbara Molotsky • Drs. James & Shirley O’Brien • Susan & Charles Ott • Mary & David Parnell • damon Patton* • Cindy Ashton Rounds & G. Starr Rounds • SaddleBrooke Performing Arts Group • Patricia Carr Morgan & Peter Salomon • Rica & Harvey Spivack • Petricia & Edward Steinhoff • Candace & Lester* Stephens • Shirley & Ted Taubeneck• Lyn Tornabene • Sharon & Albert Tucci • JoAnn & John Vosskuhler • Harvey M. Young*

We are pleased to acknowledge the following donors who made contributions between January 1, 2013, and December 31, 2013.

$10,000+Laura & Arch Brown • Richard & Elizabeth Murphy Burns • Chapman Automotive • Sally & Ralph Duchin • Paulette & Joe Gootter • Jim Click Automotive Team • Lyn Tornabene

$5,000-$9,999Pat Engels & Richard Medland • Yvonne & Richard J. Morris • Drs. James & Shirley O’Brien

$1,000-$4,999Patricia S. Ballard • Joanne & Bill Bennett • Linda & Bob Berzok • Ann F. Blackmarr • Donna & Dr. James M. Byers III • Meg & Paul Cajero • Campbell, Yost, Clare & Norell, P.C. • Susan & David Cone • Stephanie & Tom Eiff • Beatrice & Samuel Ellis • Tracy Gee • Josephine & Jules Harris • Keller Williams Southern Arizona Luxury Homes • Jane & Lee* Kivel • Garvin G. Larson • Gloria Linden • Sylvia & Andrew Norell • NOVA Home Loans Presidential Team • Mary & David Parnell • Cindy Ashton Rounds & G. Starr Rounds • Petricia & Edward Steinhoff • Candace & Lester* Stephens

$500-$999Jeannette & Robert Barnes • Barbara & William Bickel • Ellen Bussing • Joan Caruso • Scott & Tiara Claxton • Arlene & Edward Cohen • Julie Cohn • Doris & Len Coris • Carol & James Elliott • Genie & Paul Gengler • Edythe & Bruce Gissing • Gretchen Goswick • Janet* & Richard Hardy • Patricia & David Harlow • Sandra & Elliott Heiman • Gail Burd & John Hildebrand• Alice* & William Horne • Joan & Jim Horwitz • Marcia & Jay Iole • Madeleine Irell • Marcelle & Leonard Joffe • Kleinhans, Lashbrook, Butler and Davis, P.L.L.C. • Maria & George Knecht • Greg Knopf • Susan W. Kornhaber • Margit & Jerry Lacker • Linda & Steven Laden • Lauren & Marvin Maslin • Timothy M. McGuire • Janet Moore • Dr. William T. Neumann • Caren & Thomas Newman • Judy Ranzer • Todd Roehrman • Vivi & Adib Sabbagh • Joanne & William Sibley • Rica & Harvey Spivack • Lorraine & Adolph Stern • Shirley & Ted Taubeneck • Victoria Terzano • Bobbie & Don VandeGriff • Margy & Scott Vaughan

Page 22: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

$250-$499Norma Arnow • Herbert Barkan • Patricia Coyne-Johnson & John A. Johnson • Ronald Frantz • Ruth Zales & Kenneth Greenfield • Linda Hecht • Margaret & William Horst • Karen & Chuck Jonaitis • Gloria Knopf • Diane & Jerry McAllister • Lois McKelvey • Coty Meloy • Lynda & Larry Menis • Frances & Robert* Moore • Constance Myren • Nanette & Lester Packer • Lucy & Leland Pederson • Linda Ratcliffe • James Schultz • Capt. & Mrs. J.P. Sciabarra • Rita & Anthony Vickers

$100-$249Donna & Robert Altschul • George & Velta Anast • Carol A. Aronoff • Reginald F. Bain • Kati & Roger Ball • Kathryn Ball-Belasco • Jim & Kathie Barrett • Margaret & Thomas Baxter • Anna Don & Michael Belton • Bill’s Home Service Company, Inc. • Jane Brown • Kathleen & William Burnett • Karen & Bill Call • Karen & Kelly Callan • Mary & John Carhuff • Loomis & Bill Carleton • Nancy & John Carouso • Helen & Donald Carson • Jane Curatola • Larry Deutsch & William Parker • Bruce Dusenberry & Lynne Wood Dusenberry • Eve Dolan • Ann & Mal Eisenberg • Frances & Roy Emrick • Gary Fielding • Bridget Flanagan • Lela Freiman • Sandra & Eugene Gerner • Julie Gibson • Joan Sweeney & James Godbout • Kathy & Michael Hard • Sally McGreevy-Gorman & Stanley Gorman • Kathy & Michael Hard • Ellen & Michael Harris • Donald Hausrath • Maureen Herr • Theresa Hersh • Harriet H. & Robert S. Hirsch • Marsha & Sidney Hirsh • Linda Hoffman • Kelly Holt • JoAnne & Robert Hungate • Josette & Mark Hurwitz • June & William Hussey • Cosette & Keith Hutton • Norma Inkster • Natalie & Merle Ireland • Marsha & David Irwin • Ann & Peter Johnson • Jay B. Keene • Ruth & Ron Kolker • Patricia Wallace & Jan Konstanty • John M. Lance • Bert G. Landau • Carolyn & Gary Lerch • Leo Litowich • Alison & Michael Maricic • Frances Martin • Joann & Jesse Martinez • Susan & Timothy McGinnis • Dennis P. McLaughlin & Sally E. Carson • Robyn Meyer • Diane & Jon Michaels • Wendy Million • Diane & Don Misener • James Nation • Thomas Nolan • Pilar Oppenheimer • Adrienne & Howard Polster • Kenneth Prchal • Lynn & Clay Pruitt • Sally Quinby • Patricia Rafferty • Patricia & Charles Rastatter • Doris & Steven Ratoff • Darleen Raulerson • Rudolph Ricciardi • Judy & Ken Riskind • Carol A. Ross • Carol & John Ross • Drs. Helen & John Schaefer • Sharmin Pool-Bak Interior Design, LLC • Hazel & Jim Shuttleworth • Irene Sivek • Jane & Hugh Smith • Linda & Glenn Smith • Sharon Smith • Mary Anne & William Springer • Susan & Thomas Strasburg • Sally & Tony Torrance • Judith M. Treistman • Molly & Doug Webster • Tamara & Todd Weiner • Joyce & Barry Weiss • Walter Wentzel • Diana & David Wolsk • Jo Ann Zirkle

$35-$99Jackie & Dale Alger • David Amante • Nancy Atherton • Kent Barrabee • Maureen & John Bike • • Sarah Boroson • Karen & John Brady • Millicent L. Bright • Leslie & Andrew Brodkey • Karen Brown • Georgiann & John Carroll • CBRE Tucson Management Services, LLC • Nikki Chayet • Danni Coalter • Marsha & Ernest* Cohen • Carole & David Coney • Jean Dalton • Augusta Davis • Jo B. De Chatelet • Barbara & John Churchill • Isabel & Raul Delgado • Beth & William Dell• Margot Denny • Remo DiCenso • Mary K. Diffley • Terry & Peter Downey • Terry A. Dubay • Leonard Eaton • Helen Edmond • Seymour Einstein • Rose & James Ewen • Wendy Feldman • Jane Toussaint & James Fenn • Jeffrey Fishman • Judy & Cary Fishman • Mary Fladness • Barbara Fortino • Soralé & Marvin Fortman • Bridget Gagnon • Hildreth Garb • Gail & William Garrison • Sue & John Gigax • Jane & William Grinonneau • Louisa & Jim Guise • Sally Gunderman • Trudy A. Haggard • Onita & Robert Ham • Joyce & William Havens • Regine & Munro Haynes • Robert S. Howard • Barbara Hussey-Koussa • Margaret Ingraham • Alexandra G. Kaplin • Marion & Mark Kartchner • Barbara B. Katz • Raymond R. Kisch • Carol Levi • Carol Levine • Anne & John Lubliner • Jackie Manning • Honey & Murray Manson • Gail Martin • M.A.S. Devlopment, Inc. • Philip McArthur • Robert McConeghy • Gail McDonald • Patricia & John Meurant • Brigitte & Ulrich Michael • M. E. Mishkind • Leone Mohney • Rose Molin • George E. Moredock • Shirley & Dorwin Newman • Terry & David Olson • Ellyn Ostrow • William Papanikolas • Joan Peet & Mark Gettings • Martha & Terry Perl • Herbert Ploch • Michael Ponce • Judith Rees • Richard Rehse • Marilyn Ronstadt • Louise Greenfield & Simon Rosenblatt • Madelon C. Muller-Rubens & Alan B. Rubens • Marleen & Howard Rubin • Ruth & Stephen Russell • John B. Samuelson • James Schnitzer • Trisa & Andrew Schorr • David Shack • V. & Keith Siebers • Emery Silvester • Aimee & Casey Smythe • Rosalyn Stein • James Stewart • Nancy & Michael Stilb • Sandra Stone • Dvora Tager • Barbara & Stephen Terry • Sharon Thomas • Nancy Tomlinson • Joyce Unger • Kathryn & David Unger • Edward & Deyanne Valencia • Linda Van Pelt • Berchman Vaz • Irby Webb • Rebecca & Russ Werner • David L. Windsor • Barbara Witkiewicz • Sandra & Thomas Witthoft • Richard Wolff

These gifts reflect our records from January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013. Contributions received after this time period will be included in the fall 2014 performance progams. Please notify us of any changes or corrections. We greatly appreciate the support of all of our donors. To make a tax-deductible contribution to the Theatre Program of the School of Theatre, Film & Television, please contact the Marketing & Development Office at (520) 626-2686 or [email protected], or mail your donation to University of Arizona, P. O. Box 210003, Tucson, AZ 85721.

*In Memoriam

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Page 24: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

House Policies: Please turn off watch alarms, mobile phones, pagers, and all other electronic devices. Food, beverages and smoking are not permitted in the theatre. The use of cameras or recording devices of any kind is strictly prohibited. Children five and under and strollers are not permitted in the theatre.

Seating Policy: Productions begin on time. Generally, each theatre will open for seating 30 minutes before curtain. There is no late seating.

Refunds: Tickets are non-refundable. All ticket sales are final.

Emergency Messages: Physicians and other patrons expecting emergency calls during a performance are asked to leave their paging devices with the House Manager.

Lost and Found: Lost and found items will be reported to the Fine Arts Box Office at (520) 621-1162.

ThEATRE POLICIES

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Page 25: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program
Page 26: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

FACULTYMr. Bruce Brockman, Director of SchoolMr. Peter Beudert, Univ. Distinguished ProfessorMr. Kevin Black, Assoc. Professor of PracticeMr. Matt Bowdren, Adjunct InstructorDr. Harold Dixon, Professor EmeritusMs. Deanna Fitzgerald, Assistant Professor Mr. Brent Gibbs, Associate ProfessorMr. Danny Gurwin, Assistant ProfessorMr. Richard T. Hanson, Associate Professor EmeritusMr. Patrick Holt, Associate ProfessorMr. Ted Kraus, InstructorDr. Frank LaBan, Professor EmeritusMs. Jenny Lang, InstructorDr. Jessica Maerz, Assistant ProfessorMr. Matthew Marcus, InstructorDr. Laura McCammon, ProfessorDr. Bobbi McKean, Associate ProfessorMr. David Morden, Assistant ProfessorMr. Monte Ralstin, Professor of PracticeMs. Clare P. Rowe, Associate ProfessorDr. Melissa C. Thompson, Assistant ProfessorMs. Erin Treat, Adjunct InstructorMr. Albert Tucci, Director & Professor EmeritusMr. Richard Tuckett, Associate ProfessorDr. Patricia VanMetre, Associate Professor EmeritaMr. Matthew Walley, Adjunct InstructorMr. Jeffrey L. Warburton, Associate ProfessorMs. Dianne J. Winslow, ProfessorMr. David Yarnelle, Adjunct Instructor

ThEATRE PROGRAM ADVISORY BOARDJoe Gootter (President), Bill Neumann (Vice President), Taffie Eiff (Secretary), Bill Bennett,Julie Cohn, Carol Elliott, Tracy Gee, Don Haskell,Joan Horwitz, Leonard Joffe, Jane Kivel, Jerry Lacker, Linda Laden, Gloria Linden, Caren Newman, Gale Petrie, Victoria Terzano, Don VandeGriff, Jen Willis

Life MembersPat Ballard, Walter Kutscher, Mary Parnell, George Rosenberg, Lillian Rosenzweig

Associate MembersCindy Ashton (Past President), David Cone,Doris Coris, Ken Greenfield, Jo Harris,Alice Horne*, Schuyler Lininger,Lois McKelvey, Sharmin Pool-Bak,Judy Ranzer, Vivi Sabbagh, Ted Taubeneck,Tony Torrance, Jo Ann Zirkle

*In Memoriam

ADMINISTRATIONSchool Director & Producer Bruce BrockmanAssociate Director Bobbi McKeanArtistic Director Brent GibbsAssociate Artistic Director Dianne J. Winslow Advising Services Christina Swanson,

Jeffrey L. WarburtonAsst. to the Director for Admin. Justine CollinsBusiness Manager Stacy BablerOffice Specialist Kim Rubly

GRADUATE STUDENTSEve Bandi, M Erdman, Don Fox,

Alyssa LeBlanc, Sandahl Masson, Angela McMahon, Adam Michard, Elly Mikula, Shahnoor Shafqat,

Sarah Talaba

PRODUCTIONProduction Manager Jenny LangTechnical Director Ted KrausAssistant Technical Director Tony CordaroLighting Supervisor Deanna FitzgeraldCostume Director Richard TuckettCostume Shop Manager Maryann TrombinoCostume Design Advisor Patrick HoltPaint & Properties Supervisor Clare P. RoweSound Supervisor Matt MarcusDramaturgy Supervisor Erin Treat

MARKETING & AUDIENCE SERVICESMarketing & Development Dir. Lisa PierceMarketing Specialist, Associate Lindsey BurlingameOutreach Coordinator Bobbi McKeanFine Arts Box Office Manager Charles CannonAssistant Box Office Manager Megan GerrishBox Office Staff Thomas Alcaraz, Ben Atwell,

Callie Bailey, Daniel Bitter, Miles Fujimoto, Tim Giblin,Esther Gotlieb, Julia Kaser,Amanda Koenig, Q Martin,

Beth McClendon, Josh Miller,Brianna Ragels, Matt Soden

House Managers Callie Bailey, Daniel Bitter,Miles Fujimoto, Esther Gotlieb,

Q Martin, Beth McClendonSeason Graphic Designers Whitespace Design &

Ed Flores Photography

ThEATRE PROGRAM FACULTY & STAFF

Page 27: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

Take Your Seatin the Marroney Theatre!

Claim a seat in your name. Honor someone you love. Remember someone you miss.And establish a legacy for our students.

Your gift of $500 will be honored with a brass plate on a seat in the Marroney Theatre, as well as a silver star in the lobby.

It’s a visible way to show Tucson theatre lovers your support for our students, or honor a loved one in support of our students.

The goal of our Take Your Seat! campaign is to raise funds for the Showcase of Talent Endowment. The annual Showcase of Talent provides an opportunity for senior Acting and Musical Theatre majors to audition for, and interview with, industry professionals for theatre, film and television across the country. These potential employers also interview and review portfolios of junior and senior Design/Technology and Dramaturgy majors, as well as present valuable workshops to help students transition into the professional world.

Some of our students secure employment as a result of the Showcase of Talent, and all receive the priceless experience of interacting with working professionals.

So, Please...Take Your Seat!

For more information about the Take Your Seat! campaign, or to explore other opportunities to support the School of Theatre, Film & Television, please

contact the Marketing & Development Office at ( 5 2 0 ) 6 2 6 - 2 6 8 6 o r m a r k e t i n g @ c f a . a r i z o n a . e d u .

Page 28: Arizona Repertory Theatre's THE GLASS MENAGERIE Program

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