Fringe Hit Revival of Stage Door Returns OOB at HERE, Jan. 27-Feb.17 | Playbill

Related Articles
News Fringe Hit Revival of Stage Door Returns OOB at HERE, Jan. 27-Feb.17 Stage Door, the colorful Edna Ferber-George S. Kaufman comedy about women showfolk yearning for success in the theatre, was one of the odder selections — odd because of its conventionality — of last summer's New York International Fringe Festival. Apparently, however, the production captured the imagination of enough people to merit an encore run. The Salt Theater production plays Downtown's HERE Jan. 25-Feb. 17, 2001 (opening Jan. 27).
//assets.playbill.com/editorial/e4fba8c62d7c085db5cfd0315d01f9f6-ne_100846.gif
(L-R) Christina Kirk and Tonya Canada in Stage Door Photo by Photo by Whitney Pastorek

Stage Door, the colorful Edna Ferber-George S. Kaufman comedy about women showfolk yearning for success in the theatre, was one of the odder selections — odd because of its conventionality — of last summer's New York International Fringe Festival. Apparently, however, the production captured the imagination of enough people to merit an encore run. The Salt Theater production plays Downtown's HERE Jan. 25-Feb. 17, 2001 (opening Jan. 27).

The large-cast play, set in a theatrical boarding house, is better known as a 1937 movie starring Katharine Hepburn, Eve Arden, Ginger Rogers, Lucille Ball, Ann Miller and Andrea Leeds, who snipe and compete, but ultimately care deeply about each other and their work.

Emma Griffin directs a cast that includes Tonya Canada, Billie James, Yuri Skujins, Maria Striar, Linda Donald, Christina Kirk and 20 others. The Fringe cast featured Canada, James, Skujins, Striar, as well as Renee Allen, Judith Annozine, Eleni Beja, Maggie Bofill, Aundre Chin, Bill Coelius, Jenny Penny Curry, Danielle Delgado, Laura Flanagan, Cindy Fulcino, Nicole Halmos, Lily Koster, Sheila Mitchell, Megan Morrison, Whitney Pastorek, Julia Prudhomme, Ryan Shogren, Darius Stone, Rob Sutton, Suzi Takahashi, Emily Vail and Mercedes Vasquez.

Griffin has piloted a wide variety of productions Off-Off-Broadway, including Rinne Groff's Inky and the Kirk Wood Bromley verse plays The Death of Griffin Hunter and The American Revolution. Her mounting of Stage Door promises to bear a " below-Fourteenth Street appreciation of what it's like to live for theatre."

Tickets are $12. HERE is located at 145 Sixth Avenue. Call (212) 647-0202 for information. *

Stage Door will be the fourth NYC Fringe 2000 production to enjoy a life beyond the festival, following Tiny Ninja Theatre Presents Macbeth, the Angela Goethals As You Like It, and the Neo Futurists' The Complete Lost Works of Samuel Beckett. Plans for an Off-Broadway commercial run of 1999 hit Urinetown! were announced a few weeks ago.

— By Robert Simonson
and Kenneth Jones

 
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!