Third Annual Provincetown Tennessee
Williams Theater Festival Spotlights the Healing Power of Love in Williams'
Works
PROVINCETOWN, MA:
Plays… dance… music… film… it’s the third annual Provincetown Tennessee Williams
Theater Festival, a four-day celebration of the work, life and legacy of
America’s great playwright, Tennessee Williams. From Thursday, September 25
through Sunday, September 28, the unique theatrical event will delight audiences
with performances from across the country and around the world, all amid the
picturesque backdrop of Provincetown, MA. A talented and diverse group of
artists will express the power of love in works written and inspired by Williams
through several performance outlets. Highlights of the Festival include Academy
Award-winning actress Olympia Dukakis ("Moonstruck”) in a special program during
which she will reveal the depth of her relationship with Williams' words;
performances of the NY hit production of “The Eccentricities of a Nightingale”
and from Oporto, Portugal, Teatro do Bolhão’s “The Night of the Iguana;” and the
world premiere of Williams’ “Green Eyes.”
As summer winds down and fall begins, the multi-faceted destination theater
festival takes place annually during the last full week of September at various
indoor and outdoor venues in the famous fishing village at the tip of Cape Cod.
Known as the longest-running American artist colony, Provincetown is the setting
where Williams found love and sanctuary, and wrote some of his most famous
masterpieces. Each year Festival events advance a theme related to Williams,
this year focusing on the playwright's healing vision of love.
Curated by David Kaplan, the 2008 Festival will feature a dozen events,
including live performances, tours and conversations with the actors. Beloved
star of stage and screen Olympia Dukakis will discuss her experiences performing
Williams’ works over six decades. The Actors Company Theatre (TACT) of New York
will bring the love scenes from their critically acclaimed production of
Williams' “The Eccentricities of a Nightingale,” a rarely staged 1951
re-thinking of the story of Alma Winemiller from “Summer and Smoke.” The New
York Times’ Charles Isherwood noted that Mary Bacon's performance as Winemiller
"rivals anything I saw this season for complexity, delicacy and lucid truth."
The New Yorker wrote that the cast “might as well be teaching a master class on
Williams." A unique opportunity to experience two versions of one work in one
weekend, the Festival brings together scenes from the hit show from New York
with a performance from Boston. The New England Conservatory of Music will
present “Love Songs from Summer and Smoke,” a concert version of the opera
“Summer and Smoke,” based on Williams’ play, directed by Marc Astafan, with
music by Lee Hoiby and libretto by Lanford Wilson.
From Oporto, Portugal the Teatro do Bolhão brings to the Festival its production
of Williams' “The Night of the Iguana.” Directed by João Paulo Costa and
performed in Portuguese with English translation, the play focuses on a priest
who has lost his faith, concluding with one of Williams’ most powerful
affirmations of faith and the possibilities of love.
The world premiere of Williams’ erotic “Green Eyes,” in which a young couple in
a hotel in New Orleans’ French Quarter wakes up from their honeymoon, starring
Los Angeles actress Jaimi Page (“Diagnosis X”). It will be paired with Williams’
early "Adam and Eve on a Ferry," a play about a young woman who visits D.H.
Lawrence for advice, also featuring Page and Los Angeles actor Robertson Dean
(“Forgiving the Franklins”). Both are directed by Festival Director Jef Hall-Flavin.
“The Dog Enchanted by the Divine View,” Williams’ first version of “The Rose
Tattoo,” directed by David Kaplan, will feature noted Elliot Norton
Award-winning Boston area actor Larry Coen and the original “Tina” from “Tony N’
Tina’s Wedding,” Nancy Cassaro, and will be paired with the triple Academy
Award-winning 1955 film of “The Rose Tattoo.”
The street theater company Brooklyn on Foot will return to the Festival with
“Camino Real,” recently performed at the New Orleans Tennessee Williams
Festival, and directed by Sarah V. Michelson. Surrounding a swimming pool, the
troupe of five actors, aided by a musician and a garbage can, will embody such
legendary personalities as Jacques Casanova, Lord Byron, Camille and Don
Quixote, as well as over forty other roles walking the tightrope between fate
and free will.
Former Los Angeles Times journalist Gregg Barrios has written a new play about
Williams and his Mexican partner, Pancho Rodriguez, entitled “Rancho Pancho,”
which will be brought to the Festival by the Classic Theatre of San Antonio.
DanceLoop Chicago will premiere “Lorita!,” a dance adaptation of Williams’ short
story "Happy August 10th. The annual short plays collection written by local
playwrights on a theme from Williams is entitled “Young Love,” and features
10-minute works from the New Provincetown Players. The “TW Tour of the Town”
will be conducted throughout the weekend, visiting important sites related to
Williams and his plays. Additional performances and events will be announced in
the near future.
The Provincetown Tennessee Williams Theater Festival takes place Thursday,
September 25 through Sunday, September 28, 2008 at various venues in
Provincetown, Massachusetts. Additional details on the schedule of performances
and events will be announced shortly. Festival passes, including access to all
12 shows, are available online at www.twptown.org or through 1-866-789-TENN
(8366). Audience members can also become patrons by purchasing a Williams Pass,
which includes tickets to all performances as well as access to exclusive
parties and events, and more. Single tickets will go on sale in August.
For more information, including new details on Festival performances and events
as they become available, visit www.twptown.org.