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Intiman Theatre Dips into Dostoevsky and Didion

Intiman Theatre runs on a different schedule than other playhouses, which is why they're announcing next season's plays right now. The two that jump out at us are Crime and Punishment (an adaptation by Marilyn Campbell and Curt Columbus) and Joan Didion's The Year of Magical Thinking (based on the only Didion book we didn't love). Sheila Daniels will restage the Dostoevsky--she did it in 2007 at CHAC, where it was a sold-out smash-hit...in an admittedly tiny space. Magical Thinking, as Slate points out, had a difficult time getting to its feet onstage. A lot will ride on the Intiman's choice of performer--luckily Seattle is rich in that regard.

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  • MvB

    Oh, Comte! So cynical. However, I think the economics of hiring a local works in our favor, versus paying a carpetbagger's hotel fee. If they're not auditioning Amy Thone right now, something's wrong with America. (I mean, something *else* is wrong. In a long list.)

  • COMTE

    What makes you think Intiman will cast a LOCAL actor for "Year of Magical Thinking"? Especially when there are so many NYC actors out there (all with at least one day-player credit on "Law & Order") who Mr. Sher will be eyeing for his next Broadway production?

  • MvB

    Hmmph, it's still not up. Someone's web master went on vacation, I bet. Here's the full text:

    SEATTLE—Intiman Theatre, under the leadership of Artistic Director Bartlett Sher and Interim Managing Director Kevin Maifeld, announces the first lineup of plays for its 2009 season. Performance dates, casting and creative team information will be announced at a later date.



    CRIME AND PUNISHMENT



    Adapted by Marilyn Campbell and Curt Columbus from the novel by Dostoyevsky



    Directed by Sheila Daniels



    Associate Director Sheila Daniels made her Intiman directing debut this season with A Streetcar Named Desire, which played to standing-room crowds throughout its run. She will launch Intiman’s 2009 season with a new production of this award-winning version of Dostoyevsky’s masterpiece, adapted for a three-person cast, which she staged to critical acclaim for Theater Under Ground at the Capitol Hill Arts Center in 2007.



    A THOUSAND CLOWNS



    By Herb Gardner



    Playwright Herb Gardner (I’m Not Rappaport, Conversations with My Father) made his Broadway debut with this warm-hearted, helium-filled comedy, which won the 1963 Tony Award for Best Play and was later adapted into an Academy Award-nominated film. A tribute to life’s eccentrics, A Thousand Clowns is also a touching love story about the relationship between a free-living, middle-aged iconoclast and his nephew, a 12-year-old genius.



    THE YEAR OF MAGICAL THINKING



    A play by Joan Didion based on her memoir



    In her one-woman play, Joan Didion both adapts and expands upon her award-winning, bestselling memoir about the year following the sudden loss of her husband, John Gregory Dunne, to tell of the death, some 18 months later, of their only child. Didion lays bare this most personal story of love and loss with warmth, clarity and luminous intimacy.



    TBA



    Directed by Bartlett Sher



    In Intiman’s tradition of bringing its audiences powerful, beautifully spoken verse and unique musical-theater storytelling, Artistic Director Bartlett Sher (winner of a 2008 Tony Award for his acclaimed production of South Pacific) will direct a Shakespeare play or a musical.



    American Cycle TBA



    Intiman will conclude its 2009 season with the launch of its second American Cycle, a new five-year series of classic American stories and free public programs. The current American Cycle, which will conclude with this season’s production of All the King’s Men, is one of the most successful artistic and financial achievements in Intiman’s history, and has received national acclaim for programs that enhance civic dialogue in our community.

  • bilco

    So typical of our theater community - as of when I type this, the press release (widely quoted) isn't even on the press page of the web site (where you link).



    We theater goers aren't all 90+ years old! We like the pipe and tubes of the internets!

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