Report: Hank Williams May Strum at the Little Shubert | Playbill

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News Report: Hank Williams May Strum at the Little Shubert Hank Williams: Lost Highway, Manhattan Ensemble Theater's biggest hit to date, is in negotiations to transfer to the Little Shubert Theatre, Variety reported. The show, which began performances Dec. 9 and opened Jan. 19, prolonged its run to Feb. 23 in the wake of solid reviews.

David Fishelson, the artistic director of the MET had no comment on the Variety report.

Hank is the latest work from Randal Myler, the man behind It Ain't Nothin' but the Blues and Love, Janis.

Like Love, Janis, which charted the career of rocker Janis Joplin, Lost Highway follows the career of a music legend: bedeviled country singer songwriter Hank Williams. The show follows Williams from his beginnings in Alabama honky tonks to his glory days commanding the charts and the stage of the Grand Ole Opry to his rapid decline into erratic behavior and alcoholism. He died of a heart attack in the back seat of a Cadillac on Jan. 1, 1953. He was 29.

The show is interwoven with 25 Williams songs like "Your Cheatin' Heart," "Jambalaya (On the Bayou)" and "Hey, Good Lookin'" which are now part of the American musical fabric. Among Williams' other well known tunes are "Move It on Over," "Lovesick Blues," "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" and "Settin' the Woods on Fire."

Myler co-wrote the show with Mark Harelik and will direct. Nashville native Jason Petty will play lonesome, star-crossed Hank, as he did at the Cleveland Playhouse, where Lost Highway played to Oct. 20. Versions of the show have also been seen at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles and the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville. After the hyper-literary season of 2000-01, a Hank Williams show would seem a departure for MET. However, artistic director David Fishelson told Playbill On-Line, MET's mission was never limited to adaptations of famous novels like Death in Venice, but "to produce new works of theatre derived from such diverse narrative sources as fiction, journalism, film and memoir."

"Last year," said Fishelson, "we most certainly created the impression that we were devoted solely to page-to-stage adaptations of literary classics.  My one regret was that I wasn't able to include Franz Kafka's The Castle and Hank Williams: Lost Highway in the same season. The juxtaposition of those two works would've more accurately demonstrated the range of possibilities allowed by the company's mission."

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The second slot of the MET season is filled by another New York premiere, William Gibson's Golda's Balcony, the one woman Golda Meir play which had a production at Shakespeare & Co. in the Berkshires last summer. The play, by the author of Two for the Seesaw and The Miracle Worker, looks at the life of the famous Israeli Prime Minister.Tovah Feldshuh will star.

The final selection of the season is Providence by Lorenzo DeStefano. The world premiere play is drawn from Alain Resnais' 1970s film of the same name. Scott Schwartz (Bat Boy), who directed last season's The Castle, returns to MET to direct Providence. Dates and cast are to be announced.

The MET space is at 55 Mercer Street in Manhattan. For information call (212) 925-1900.

 
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