Shaw's Gathering Goes to Cort w/ Tony-Winner Linden, April 13 | Playbill

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News Shaw's Gathering Goes to Cort w/ Tony-Winner Linden, April 13 Tony and Emmy Award-winning Hal Linden stars in The Gathering, a drama by Arje Shaw which arrives at Broadway's Cort Theatre April 13 and opens there for an open run April 24.

Tony and Emmy Award-winning Hal Linden stars in The Gathering, a drama by Arje Shaw which arrives at Broadway's Cort Theatre April 13 and opens there for an open run April 24.

Martin Markinson, Lawrence Toppall, Bruce Lazarus, Martha Gasparian, Daniel S. Wise and Steve Alpert are producing The Gathering, in association with Diaspora Productions.

The show tried out at the Wadsworth Theatre in Los Angeles Feb. 3-20, officially opening there Feb. 4. Directed by Rebecca Taylor, the play had an extended Off-Broadway run in 1999, winning strong praise from both critics and audiences.

The cast also features Sam Guncler, Deidre Lovejoy and Colman Zeiglen. Understudy Max Dworen has taken over the role of the youngster in the show from Adam Rose, who played the part in L.A.

esigning the show are Michael Anania (sets), Susan Soetaert (costumes), Scott Clyve (lighting) and T. Richard Fitzgerald (sound). Andy Stein will contribute original music to the piece, according to production spokespersons at the Keith Sherman press office. Set in 1985, The Gathering, a comedic family drama, explores the conflicts between grandfather, father and son which arise over the dinner table when they discuss President Ronald Reagan's planned visit to Bitberg, site of burial grounds for Nazi soldiers. The stakes are high in the discussion because the grandfather (Linden) is a Holocaust survivor and his son is a speechwriter for Reagan. Caught between them is the young lad, who is preparing for his bar mitvah.

Actor Linden, last Off Broadway in Visiting Mr. Green, won a 1971 Tony Award for playing patriarch Mayer Rothschild in The Rothschilds and has also appeared in the Madison Square Garden A Christmas Carol. He’s best known, however, for starring in TV’s police-station sitcom, “Barney Miller.” Regarding The Gathering, Linden said in a statement, “I am proud to return to Broadway in a vehicle so rich in ideas and emotion.”

In a "Brief Encounter" interview (not yet published), Linden told Playbill On-Line that The Gathering has been pruned and revised in its journey from L.A. To NYC. "There were certain aspects [that] were maybe a little over-explained and could use a little more mystery," Linden said. "So a lot has been taken out, and it makes the show easier to play."

The character of the grandfather was based on Shaw's father, who was the youngest of seven children and who fled Poland after the Nazi invasion of 1939. After weeks of traveling—much of it on his hands and knees—Shaw's father ended up in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, where he met Shaw's mother. The family survived the war and returned, via cattle car, through Poland in 1946, to Bergen Belsen, the former concentration camp, now turned into a displaced person's camp.

Asked his thoughts about themes in Shaw's drama, Linden told PBOL, "We are the product of our experiences. The history we bring to a situation determines how we react to it."

For tickets and information call Telecharge at (800) 233-3123.

 
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