Announcing the Griffin’s Theatre’s 28th Season!

Griffin Theatre Announces Two Midwest Premieres and Chicago Premiere for 2015-16 Season

CHICAGO (August 5, 2015) – Griffin Theatre Company is pleased to announce its 28th Season, kicking off this fall with the Midwest premiere of Samuel D. Hunter’s heartbreaking comedy POCATELLO, directed by ensemble member Jonathan Berry (Punk Rock, Balm in Gilead). Next winter, Griffin presents the Midwest premiere of British playwright John Van Druten’s romantic drama LONDON WALL, directed by recent Jeff Award-winner and ensemble member Robin Witt (Men Should Weep, Flare Path). The season concludes next summer with the Chicago debut of the off-Broadway hit BAT BOY: THE MUSICAL with book by Keythe Farley and Brian Flemming, music and lyrics by Laurence O’Keefe, direction by Scott Weinstein, who helmed Griffin’s hit musical Titanic, and music direction by Ethan Deppe.

Griffin Theatre’s 2015-16 Season will be presented by at Signal Ensemble Theatre (1802 W. Berenice Ave., Chicago) and The Den Theatre (1333 N. Milwaukee Ave., Chicago). Season subscriptions go on sale Saturday, August 15, 2015 at www.griffintheatre.com. Single tickets for all production will go on sale at a later date.

During the spring of 2016, Griffin Theatre will workshop a world premiere musical based on the so-called “Big Bang Moment in Country Music,” entitled THE BRISTOL SESSIONS with a book by Griffin Artistic Director Bill Massolia. Between July 25 and August 5, 1927, record producer Ralph Peer held a series of recording sessions at the Taylor-Christian Hat and Glove Company in Bristol, Tennessee. THE BRISTOL SESSIONS marked the commercial debuts of Jimmie Rodgers and the Carter Family and the birth of country music. The workshop will include a public reading (date to be announced).

Griffin Theatre will also continue to nationally tour its productions of LETTERS HOME, FRINDLE and GHOSTS OF WAR. The Griffin’s national touring productions will reach 100,000 young people and adults during the 2015-16 theater season. LETTERS HOME will tour for a ninth straight season beginning in October with a ten-city tour of the U.S.

The Griffin Theatre 2015-16 Mainstage Season:

POCATELLO – Midwest Premiere!
By Samuel D. Hunter
Directed by ensemble member Jonathan Berry
November 7 – December 13, 2015
at Signal Ensemble Theatre, 1802 W. Berenice Ave., Chicago
Press opening: Sunday, November 15, 2015 at 7 pm

Home doesn’t feel like home anymore for Eddie, an Italian chain restaurant manager who is losing connections with his co-workers and his family. Set in the harsh backdrop of Pocatello, Idaho – a small, unexceptional American city – Samuel D. Hunter’s heartbreaking comedy is a cry and the struggle we face to create an authentic experience – to forge true community – in a place that is being transformed into the endless artificiality of Walmarts, Applebees and strip malls.

POCATELLO had its world premiere in 2014 at Playwrights Horizons in New York. It was the recipient of an Edgerton Foundation New American Plays award and playwright Samuel D. Hunter is a recipient of a MacArthur Genius Award. Hunter’s plays include The Whale, The Few, A Bright New Boise, A Permanent Image and Jack’s Precious Moment.

LONDON WALL – Midwest Premiere!
By John Van Druten
Directed by ensemble member Robin Witt
January 9 – February 14, 2016
at The Den Theatre, 1333 N. Milwaukee Ave., Chicago
Press opening: Sunday, January 17, 2016 at 7 pm

This “lost” and rarely produced work by the author of I Am a Camera and Bell, Book and Candle explores the lives and love affairs of the women employed as shorthand typists in a busy solicitor’s office in 1930’s London. The play had its premiere in May of 1931 at the Duke of York’s Theatre in London and was acclaimed for its hyper-realistic depiction of office life, as well as its soulful probing of the dreams and desires of its female characters.

LONDON WALL recently received an acclaimed revival at London’s Finborough Theater: “It hasn’t been revived until now, yet comes up fresh as paint,” hailed Charles Spencer of The Telegraph, calling the play “A piece that proves both dramatically engaging and a fascinating theatrical time-capsule.” Time Out London called it “A smart indictment of the meager circumference of a woman’s life as part of the urban workforce of the ’30s, wrapped around a heartfelt romantic drama.”

BAT BOY: THE MUSICAL – Chicago Premiere!
Book by Keythe Farley and Brian Flemming
Music and Lyrics by Laurence O’Keefe
Directed by Scott Weinstein
Music direction by Ethan Deppe

June 4 – July 24, 2016
at The Den Theatre, 1333 N. Milwaukee Ave., Chicago
Press opening: Sunday, June 12, 2016 at 7 pm

Based on a story in The Weekly World News, BAT BOY: THE MUSICAL is a musical comedy/horror show about a half boy/half bat creature who is discovered in a cave near Hope Falls, West Virginia. The local sheriff brings Bat Boy to the home of the town veterinarian, Dr. Parker, where he is eventually accepted as a member of the family and taught to act like a “normal” boy by the veterinarian’s wife and teenage daughter.

BAT BOY: THE MUSICAL had its world premiere at the Actors Gang Theatre in 1997 and has been produced around the world, but never before in Chicago. It is the recipient of the 2001 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Musical, a Richard Rodgers Development Award, the Richard Rodgers Production Award and the Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Off-Broadway Musical.

About the Directors

Jonathan Berry has been working with The Griffin since 1998. As a director, productions include: Lanford Wilson’s Balm in Gilead, Clifford Odets’ Golden Boy, Miller/Tysen’s The Burnt Part Boys, Sheik/Sater’s Spring Awakening, the North American premieres of Simon Stephens Punk Rock (Jeff award–Director, Lead Actor and Ensemble) Port, and On the Shore of the Wide World, Stephen Sondheim’s Company, William Inge’s Picnic, JB Priestely’s Time and the Conways (Jeff nomination– director/ensemble), Sidney Kingsley’s Dead End, Brendan Behan’s The Hostage and R.C. Sheriff’s Journey’s End. He is an Artistic Associate at Steep, where his productions include: Nick Payne’s If There is I Haven’t Found it Yet, John Donnelly’s The Knowledge, David Eldridge’s Festen, Deirdre Kinahan’s Moment, Howard Korder’s The Hollow Lands and Brecht’s The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui. Steppenwolf productions include the SYA production of A Separate Peace, and the world premiere of Melinda Lopez’s Gary, as well as the staged reading of Suicide, Incorporated. Goodman Theatre: The World of Extreme Happiness, and The Solid Sand Below. Roundabout (NY) Suicide, Incorporated. Other work includes: Gift Theatre: Shakespeare’s Othello, the world premiers of both Andrew Hinderaker’s Dirty and Suicide, Incorporated, Chicago Dramatists: I am Going to Change the World, Remy Bumppo: The Marriage of Figaro, Theatre Mir: Bond’s The Sea and Brecht’s Caucasian Chalk Circle, Redtwist Theatre: John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger and Leslye Headland’s Reberb, Lifeline Theater: The Piano Tuner (After Dark Award–Best Production). Jonathan pursued his MFA in directing from Northwestern University. He has taught acting, directing,and viewpoints at University of Michigan, Northwestern University, University of Chicago, Act One Studios, Columbia College and The School at Steppenwolf.

Robin Witt has directed Ferber and Kaufman’s Stage Door, Terrence Rattigan’s Flare Path and the critically acclaimed 2014 Midwest premiere of Men Should Weep for Griffin Theatre Company, which recently won Jeff Awards for Best Production, Direction and Leading Actress. Her work in Chicago has earned numerous Jeff Award nominations and her productions have been cited as “Best of the Year” by the Chicago Tribune, Time Out Chicago and Chicago Reader. She has worked at a variety of Chicago area theatres including Northlight Theatre, Steep Theatre, A Red Orchid and The Artistic Home. In addition, Robin directed Juliet: A Dialogue About Love for sacred playground theatre at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. She is a graduate of NYU Tisch School of the Arts (BFA) and Northwestern University (MFA). Robin is an Assistant Professor at UNC Charlotte.

Scott Weinstein is a Jeff Award nominated director currently based in Chicago. Favorite directing credits include Titanic (Jeff Nominated – Best Director, Best Musical) and The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee (Griffin Theatre); She Kills Monsters (Steppenwolf Theatre); Seussical (Chicago Shakespeare Theater); Princess & The Pea (Marriott Lincolnshire Theatre); The Little Mermaid (Drury Lane Theatre); the world premieres of Baristas (New York International Fringe Festival) and Ampersand (Bloomington Playwrights Project); as well as the first full productions of Murder For Two (Adirondack Theatre Festival, Hangar Theatre, 42nd Street Moon). Scott is the recipient of a Berkshire Theatre Festival Directing Fellowship and a Stage Directors and Choreographers Observership. He is currently the Associate director for the National Tour, Las Vegas, Chicago and Norwegian Cruise Line productions of Million Dollar Quartet and directed the first regional production currently running at the Lawrence Welk Theatre. He has assistant or associate directed at The Goodman Theatre, Pasadena Playhouse, Cleveland Playhouse and many more. Scott is a proud graduate of Northwestern University. www.ScottGWeinstein.com

The Griffin Theatre’s 2015-16 season is sponsored by Jeff Graves Realtor @properties, Northside Federal Savings & K’s Dugout.

About Griffin Theatre Company
Established in 1988 and celebrating its 26th season, the mission of the Griffin Theatre Company is to create extraordinary and meaningful theatrical experiences for both children and adults by building bridges of understanding between generations that instill in its audience an appreciation of the performing arts. Through artistic collaboration the Griffin Theatre Company produces literary adaptations, original work and classic plays that challenge and inspire, with wit, style and compassion for the audience.

The Griffin Theatre is partially supported by a CityArts Grant from the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs & Special Events; and the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency.

For additional information, visit www.griffintheatre.com.

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