Eugene O'Neill's Early Plays, Re-Envisioned By Wooster Group and New York City Players, Opens Feb. 22 | Playbill

Related Articles
News Eugene O'Neill's Early Plays, Re-Envisioned By Wooster Group and New York City Players, Opens Feb. 22 The world premiere of Early Plays, a collaboration between the Wooster Group and the New York City Players, officially opens Feb. 22 at St. Ann's Warehouse. The fresh look at Eugene O'Nell's plays anchored in the world of sailors and the sea began previews Feb. 15.

Richard Maxwell, the founding artistic director of the New York City Players, adapted and directs the three-play work, which includes Bound East for Cardiff (1914), The Long Voyage Home (1917) and The Moon of the Caribbees (1918).

Early Plays will play an extended run through March 11. Early Plays also features original music and lyrics by Maxwell.

The cast includes a mix of Wooster Group members and associates, including Enver Chakartash, Ari Fliakos, Teresa Hartmann, Bozkurt Karasu, Bobby McElver, Kaneza Schaal, Andrew Schneider and Kate Valk, as well as New York City Players Lakpa Bhutia, Keith Connolly, Alex Delinois, Nicholas Elliott, Jim Fletcher and Brian Mendes.

According to St. Ann's, "In these plays, O’Neill draws on his own experience as a merchant seaman and captures the vernacular of sailors from disparate nations, all shipmates on the British tramp steamer Glencairn. Maxwell and the cast are exploring this language from the viewpoint of both its starkness and potential for musicality. The production reveals O’Neill’s beautifully romantic text in a sparse, modern, yet still mythic place. Dark episodes showing the underside of turn-of-the-century maritime life—brawls, dances and carousing—are staged with a quotidian grace allowing these simple stories to resonate emotionally."

St. Ann's previously hosted the Wooster Group productions of La Didone (2008), Hamlet (2007), The Emperor Jones (2006), House/Lights (2005), Brace Up! (2003) and To You, The Birdie! (Phèdre) (2002), as well as Maxwell’s Good Samaritans (2004). For tickets phone (718) 254-8779 or visit artsatstanns.org.

St. Ann's Warehouse is located at 38 Water Street (between Main and Dock St.) in Brooklyn, New York.

 
RELATED:
Today’s Most Popular News:
 X

Blocking belongs
on the stage,
not on websites.

Our website is made possible by
displaying online advertisements to our visitors.

Please consider supporting us by
whitelisting playbill.com with your ad blocker.
Thank you!