Kathleen Chalfant Brings Tragic Wit To OB's Union Square, Jan. 7 | Playbill

Related Articles
News Kathleen Chalfant Brings Tragic Wit To OB's Union Square, Jan. 7 Perhaps the most acclaimed play of the NY season, Wit, officially reopens at the Union Square Theatre, Jan. 7 1999. Manhattan Class Company's (MCC) acclaimed staging, directed by Derek Anson Jones, transferred to the Union Square Theatre Dec. 18, for an open run with the same cast.

Perhaps the most acclaimed play of the NY season, Wit, officially reopens at the Union Square Theatre, Jan. 7 1999. Manhattan Class Company's (MCC) acclaimed staging, directed by Derek Anson Jones, transferred to the Union Square Theatre Dec. 18, for an open run with the same cast.

The drama finished its run at MCC Dec. 13 after opening there Sept. 17. The show, initially supposed to run to Oct. 4, was first extended at the MCC to Oct. 24, then Nov. 22, and finally Jan. 3 -- later pulled back to Dec. 13 when the move was confirmed (by the office of Patrick Harold, director Jones' agent). According to the Boneau/Bryan Brown press office, Wit has become MCC's biggest success.

Producers were initially eyeing a Broadway run, specifically at the Helen Hayes Theatre, but those chances fell through in November 1998, reportedly because the Hayes' owner thought a play about a cancer patient would have limited commercial appeal. Margaret Edson's tragic but verbally nimble drama is about an icy but verbally nimble poetry professor stricken with fourth-stage ovarian cancer.

Kathleen Chalfant, best known for her Tony-nominated performance as Hannah Pitt in the Broadway production of Angels in America, stars as Vivian. Also in the Long Wharf cast are Walter Charles, Aleta Mitchell, Raul Perez, Alec Phoenix, Paula Pizzi, Daniel Sarnelli, Alli Steinberg and Helen Stenborg.

Wit is Edson's first play, based in part on her experiences working at the AIDS Inpatient Unit of the National Institutes of Health. Today Edson teaches first grade in Washington, DC. -- By Robert Simonson and David Lefkowitz

 
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!