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Press Contact: Lucy Pollak
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Witty, passionate ‘Three Days in the Country’
gets West Coast premiere at Antaeus
GLENDALE, Calif. (REVISED June 26, 2018) — Full of wit, folly and heart, a tale of unrequited passion unfolds over the course of three days in the sunny Russian countryside as men and women, both young and old, learn the tender and ridiculous lessons of love. Antaeus Theatre Company presents the West Coast premiere of Three Days in the Country by Patrick Marber, a fresh, breezy update of Ivan Turgenev’s classic comedy A Month in the Country. Andrew Paul directs the partner-cast ensemble for a July 12 and July 13 opening (one opening night for each cast) at the Kiki & David Gindler Performing Arts Center in Glendale, where performances continue through Aug. 26. Low-priced previews begin July 5.
Marber’s remarkable new adaptation is set in motion when a handsome new tutor arrives at a beautiful country estate, bringing reckless, romantic desire to its eccentric household.
In the Antaeus tradition known as “partner casting,” Anna Khaja and Nike Doukas share the role of Natalya, the bored wife of rich landowner Arkady (Antonio Jaramillo and Daniel Blinkoff), who is yearned after by family friend Rakitin (Corey Brill and Leo Marks). When Belyaev (Adam Haas Hunter and Peter Mendoza) arrives to tutor Natalya’s young son, Kolya (Elijah Justice and Marcello Silva), Natalya falls in love with him — but so do both her ward, Vera (Chelsea Kurtz and Jeanne Syquia), and the servant, Katya (Ellis Greer and Lila Dupree). Meanwhile, Matvey (Jay Lee and John Bobek) loves Katya, Bolshintsov (Alberto Isaac and Gregory Itzin) pines after Vera, and the local doctor, Shpigelsky (Harry Groener and Armin Shimerman), hopes to marry Lizaveta (Dawn Didawick and Lily Knight). Also in the ensemble are Lorna Raver and Reba Waters Thomas as Arkady’s mother, Anna, and Marcelo Tubert and Patrick Wenk-Wolff as Schaaf, a German tutor.
“You really get swept up in this play,” says Paul, who directed the U.S. premiere for Pittsburgh’s Kinetic Theatre Company, where he is founding artistic director, in a production that featured Doukas and Marks. “Everybody has their heart broken. The laughs and emotion are irresistible.”
According to Antaeus co-artistic directors Bill Brochtrup, Rob Nagle and Kitty Swink, Marber’s new version, as the title suggests, is faster and more irreverent than the original.
“It feels like a newly found classic,” they concur. “Funny, real and timeless it’s full of all the thwarted summer romance and unrequited passion that we love in Russian plays, yet feels extremely fresh and new.”
Antaeus Theatre Company’s award-winning creative team includes set designer Se Hyun Oh, lighting designer Jared A. Sayeg, costume designer A Jeffrey Schoenberg, sound designer Christopher Moscatiello and props designer Erin Walley. The assistant director is Emily Sulzberger and the production stage manager is Lili Koehler.
Andrew Paul is the founder and producing director of Kinetic Theatre Company in Pittsburgh, PA, where he has directed all 11 of the company’s Pittsburgh premiere productions including the U.S. premiere of Marber’s Three Days in the Country. Before that, he co-founded the acclaimed Pittsburgh Irish and Classical Theatre (PICT), serving as the company’s producing artistic director from 1996 to 2013. Under his leadership, PICT produced more than a hundred plays; festivals devoted to the plays of Samuel Beckett, John Millington Synge, Harold Pinter and Anton Chekhov; and two successful international tours. In 2008, he directed and collaborated with David Hare on the non-English language premiere of Hare’s play Stuff Happens at the Slaski Theatre in Katowice, Poland. Last year, he directed The Hound of the Baskervilles at Gulfshore Playhouse in Naples, Florida and Richard Greenberg’s Take Me Out for Nevada Conservatory Theatre. He has taught acting at Duquesne University, directed at Carnegie Mellon University, and has served as a panelist for Theatre Communications Group and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. In 2010, Andrew was a featured speaker at the World Theatre Conference in Baku, Azerbaijan.
A British playwright and director, Patrick Marber’s plays include Dealer’s Choice (Evening Standard Award for Best Comedy, Writer’s Guild Award for Best West End Play); Closer (Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Play, Evening Standard Award for Best Comedy, London Critics Circle Award for Best Play, New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award for Best Foreign Play and Tony, Outer Critics Circle and Drama Desk Award nominations); After Miss Julie, Don Juan in Soho, The Red Lion and, opening this summer at the National Theatre in London, a new version of Ionesco’s Exit the King. His extensive television work includes After Miss Julie, which he adapted and directed for the BBC2 Performance series. He has co-written and appeared in the award-winning comedy programs The Day Today, The Paul Calf Video Diary, Knowing Me, Knowing You…With Alan Partridge, and Three Fights, Two Weddings and a Funeral. As a director, he is a current Tony nominee for Roundabout Theatre’s revival of Travesties by Tom Stoppard.
Antaeus is a cooperative theater ensemble founded to empower the actor and to bring classical theater to Southern California. The company exists to create a family of artists and audiences and is dedicated to exploring stories with enduring themes. Taking their company name from the Titan who gained strength by touching the Earth, Antaeus members — many of whom are familiar to film and television audiences — regain their creative strength by returning to the wellspring of their craft: live theater. Members of the company span a wide range of age, ethnicity and experience; they have performed on Broadway, at major regional theaters across the country, in film, television and on local stages, and are the recipients of numerous accolades and awards. Audiences frequently return to see the same play in the hands of an equally excellent but very different set of actors.
The Kiki & David Gindler Performing Arts Center complements Glendale’s ongoing commitment to integrate vibrant arts space into the fabric of city life, ensuring the arts remain accessible to all. Located just a few blocks away from The Americana at Brand and the remodeled Glendale Central Library as well as the Alex Theatre, the center promises to build upon Glendale’s growing reputation as an arts and entertainment destination. The center includes an 80-seat theater, a reconfigurable 45-seat performance/classroom space, and a theater classics library.
Performances of Three Days in the Country begin on Thursday, July 12, with performances taking place thereafter on Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m. and Mondays at 8 p.m., through Aug. 26. There will be one additional Thursday evening performance on Aug. 23 at 8 p.m. Six preview performances take place July 5 through July 11. Tickets are $30 on Thursdays, Fridays and Mondays (except Thursday, July 12 and Friday, July 13, for which tickets are $34 and include a post-performance reception) and $34 on Saturdays and Sundays. Preview tickets are priced at $15. Antaeus Theatre Company has partnered with TodayTix, the free mobile ticketing platform, to offer a $5 preview lottery; a limited number of $5 tickets will be made available through the TodayTix app for previews.
The Kiki & David Gindler Performing Arts Center is located at 110 East Broadway, Glendale, CA 91205 (between N. Brand Blvd. and Maryland Ave.). The first 90 minutes of parking is free, then $2 per hour, in Glendale Marketplace garage located at 120 S. Maryland Ave (between Broadway and Harvard). The theater is air-conditioned and wheelchair accessible.
For reservations and information, call 818-506-1983 or go to www.antaeus.org.
Details for Calendar Listings
‘Three Days in the Country’
WHAT:
West Coast premiere of Three Days in the Country — In Patrick Marber’s passionate and comedic update of Turgenev’s classic A Month in the Country, a handsome new tutor brings reckless, romantic desire to an eccentric household. Over three days one summer the young and the old will learn lessons in love: first love and forbidden love, maternal love and platonic love, ridiculous love and last love; the love left unsaid and the love which must win out.
WHO:
• Written by Patrick Marber
• A version of Turgenev‘s A Month in the Country
• Directed by Andrew Paul
• Starring Daniel Blinkoff, John Bobek, Corey Brill, Dawn Didawick, Nike Doukas, Lila Dupree, Ellis Greer, Harry Groener, Adam Haas Hunter, Alberto Isaac, Gregory Itzin, Antonio Jaramillo, Elijah Justice, Anna Khaja, Lily Knight, Chelsea Kurtz, Jay Lee, Leo Marks, Peter Mendoza, Lorna Raver, Armin Shimerman, Marcello Silva, Jeanne Syquia, Reba Waters Thomas, Marcelo Tubert, Patrick Wenk-Wolff
• Presented by Antaeus Theatre Company
WHEN:
Previews: July 5 – July 11
Performances: July 12 – Aug. 26
• Tuesday at 8 p.m.: July 10 ONLY (preview)
• Wednesday at 8 p.m.: July 11 ONLY (preview)
• Thursdays at 8 p.m.: July 5 (preview), July 12 (opening), Aug. 23 ONLY
• Fridays at 8 p.m.: July 6 (preview), July 13 (opening), July 20, 27; Aug. 3, 10, 17, 24
• Saturdays at 8 p.m.: July 7 (preview), July 14, 21, 28; Aug. 4, 11, 18, 25
• Sundays at 2 p.m.: July 8 (preview), July 15, 22, 29; Aug. 5, 12, 19, 26
• Mondays at 8 p.m.: July 23, 30; Aug. 6, 13, 20
WHERE:
Kiki & David Gindler Performing Arts Center
110 East Broadway
Glendale, CA 91205
(between N. Brand Blvd. and Maryland Ave.)
PARKING:
First 90 minutes free, then $2 per hour in Glendale Marketplace garage located at 120 S. Maryland Ave (between Broadway and Harvard)
HOW:
(818) 506-1983 or www.Antaeus.org
• Join us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/AntaeusTheater
• Follow us on Twitter @AntaeusTheater
TICKET PRICES:
• Opening Night performances on July 12 and July 13: $34 (includes post-performance reception)
• Mondays, Thursdays and Fridays: $30 (except July 12 and July 13)
• Saturdays and Sundays: $34
• Previews: $15
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