Lynn Redgrave and Austin Pendleton Booked for Orson's Shadow Talkback | Playbill

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News Lynn Redgrave and Austin Pendleton Booked for Orson's Shadow Talkback Actress Lynn Redgrave and playwright Austin Pendleton will appear at the talkback following the Sept. 7 performance of Off-Broadway's Orson's Shadow at the Barrow Street Theatre.

Redgrave — a founding member of The National Theatre under the direction of Laurence Olivier — recently starred in Broadway's The Constant Wife and her own Nightingale as part of the 2005 "Women Center Stage" festival. She was Tony Award-nominated for her one-woman show, Shakespeare for My Father. Other credits included Talking Heads, The Exonerated, The Mandrake Root, Black Comedy, Aren't We All, Moon Over Buffalo and another Tony nominated turn in Mrs. Warren's Profession. She has already lined up her next gig in The Importance of Being Earnest at Los Angeles's Ahmanson Theatre.

Pendleton is best known for his decades of acting. He began his stage career in Arthur Kopit's Oh Dad, Poor Dad... and went on to create roles in Fiddler on the Roof, The Sorrows of Frederick, Doubles and The Last Sweet Days of Isaac. Also a director, he helmed the premieres of Say Goodnight Gracie, Spoils of War, The Runner Stumbles and Shelter, as well as the famous revival of The Little Foxes starring Elizabeth Taylor (for which he received a Tony nomination). On film, he's best remembered through roles in "What's Up, Doc?," "The Front Page," "The Muppet Movie," "My Cousin Vinny," "Mr. and Mrs. Bridge" and "Finding Nemo."

Previous speakers include Buck Henry, Dick Cavett and Robert Osborne.

Orson's Shadow began its New York premiere on March 1 and opened on March 13 to good reviews. Currently in the cast are John Ahlin, Susan Bennett, Patrick Edgar, Ken Marks, Scott Parkinson and Lee Roy Rogers.

Orson's Shadow concerns the 1960 London premiere of Ionesco's Rhinoceros, which starred Laurence Olivier and was directed by Orson Welles. At the time, Olivier was going through a nasty divorce from his second wife, actress Vivien Leigh, who named actress (and, from 1961, Olivier's third wife) Joan Plowright as co-respondent in her divorce filing. Kenneth Tynan was London's leading dramatic critic and all-around enfant terrible, a friend of both Welles and Olivier (he would co-found the Royal National Theatre with Oliver in 1963), and a frequent sparring partner of Ionesco's. All five famous figures are featured in the drama. The play had its premiere in 2000 at the Steppenwolf Theatre Company, where it was a critical success and extended its run. A mounting at the Williamstown Theatre Festival followed that summer, leading to a production at the Westport Country Playhouse. The latter was less successful critically, though the cast and director where the same as in Chicago. A 2001 Los Angeles production fared better, extending its run and picking of a L.A. Critics Circle Award for Best Production.

David Cromer directs. Set design is by Takeshi Kata, costume design by Theresa Squire, lighting design by Tyler Micoleau and sound by Jonah Lawrence.

Producing are Planetearth Partners, Inc. and Scott Morfee, the team behind the hit Off Broadway production of Bug.

Pendleton actually worked with Orson Welles in the film "Catch 22," in which he played the wimpy son of Welles' tyrannical general.

Orson's Shadow plays the Barrow Street Theatre, 27 Barrow at Seventh Avenue South. Tickets for the production are priced $55 and are available by calling (212) 239 6200. For more information visit www.OrsonThePlay.com.

 
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