Curtain Rises Feb. 22 on Kate Mulgrew as Our Leading Lady, for MTC | Playbill

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News Curtain Rises Feb. 22 on Kate Mulgrew as Our Leading Lady, for MTC Royalty of the 19th-century American stage comes to life Feb. 22 with the first performance of Charles Busch's Our Leading Lady, about actress-manager Laura Keene.
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Kate Mulgrew stars in Our Leading Lady at MTC. Photo by Henry Leutwyler

Sonorous Kate Mulgrew plays the leading lady whose successful career was stained by the fateful booking she performed at Ford's Theatre in 1865. President Abraham Lincoln was shot during her troupe's rendition of Our American Cousin.

Manhattan Theatre Club's world-premiere production reunites playwright Busch with director Lynne Meadow, MTC's artistic director, who made a hit of Busch's The Tale of the Allergist's Wife at MTC's Stage I at New York City Center. The play then moved to Broadway (where it was Best Play Tony Award-nominated), a tour and a regional life.

Our Leading Lady, according to MTC, "is a truly original play about the theatre. Laura Keene (Mulgrew), a nineteenth-century American stage luminary, prepares to perform at Ford's Theatre on the fateful night when Abraham Lincoln is in the audience."

The cast also features Reed Birney (as Gavin DeChamblay), Barbara Bryne (as Maude Bentley), Maxwell Caulfield (as Harry Hawk), Ann Duquesnay (as Madame Wu-Chan), J.R. Horne (as Major Hopwood), Kristine Nielsen (as Verbena Morris), Amy Rutberg (as Clementine Smith) and Billy Wheelan (as W.J. Ferguson).

The production will officially open March 20. The design team for the production comprises Santo Loquasto (set design), Jane Greenwood (costume design), Brian MacDevitt (lighting design) and Scott Lehrer (sound design).

Charles Busch is both a celebrated playwright and performer. The Tale of the Allergist's Wife was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Play. He wrote the book for the Broadway mounting of Taboo, and he also penned the screenplays for and starred in the films "Die, Mommie, Die" and "Psycho Beach Party."

Kate Mulgrew has appeared on Broadway in Black Comedy and in Central Park in Titus Andronicus, but she is probably better known as the strong-jawed Captain Janeway of TV's "Star Trek: Voyager." She also toured the country in a one-woman show about the life of Katharine Hepburn, Tea at Five.

Keene was born in London around 1826 and came to the United States in 1852. She acted in New York, managed a Baltimore theatre and toured to Califoria and abroad before settling back in New York to run a theatre and produce mostly contemporary plays. Her successes included productions of Jane Eyre, Camille and Our American Cousin.

Joseph Jefferson and E.A. Sothern — major American performers of the 1800s — grew in talent and popularity in her company. She left her New York theatre and toured in the economically perilous Civil War days. A booking at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. would be unforgettable — for Keene, the nation and the world.

Laura Keene died in 1873. Like so many other stage artists who worked before the era of electronic media, she has no marquee value in the popular imagination today.

New York City Center Stage II, one of MTC's two Off-Broadway homes, is located at 131 West 55th Street. Tickets, priced at $50, are available by calling (212) 581-1212. For more information visit www.ManhattanTheatreClub.com.

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At MTC's Broadway home at the Biltomore, Brian Friel's Translations opened to enthusiastic reviews and continues.

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The cast of MTC's production of Our Leading Lady Photo by Joan Marcus
 
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