Bosley and Learned Dip Their Toes Into Golden Pond Tour Starting Aug. 22 | Playbill

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News Bosley and Learned Dip Their Toes Into Golden Pond Tour Starting Aug. 22 Although sunset is the implicit metaphor of On Golden Pond, Ernest Thompson's beloved play about a retiree reuniting with his daughter, the sun is just rising on the new touring revival starring Tom Bosley and Michael Learned.
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From left: Michael Learned and Tom Bosley headline the tour of On Golden Pond.

The 2005 Tony Award nominated production directed by Leonard Foglia resurfaces Aug. 22 in a national tour form with a new cast (expect for one member, Craig Brockhorn as mailman Charlie) and the same picture-postcard scenic elements. The tour premieres at the Ordway Center in St. Paul, Minnesota, where it plays to Sept. 2 before traveling around the country for seven months. Jeffrey Finn Productions pilots the tour.

In addition to Tom Bosley ("Happy Days," Fiorello!) as retired professor Norman Thayer and Michael Learned ("The Waltons," Gore Vidal's The Best Man) as his wife Ethel, the cast includes Kate Levy (of The Graduate's national tour) as daughter Chelsea, Evan Pappas (Parade, My Favorite Year) as Bill Ray (Chelsea's beau), and young actor Shadoe Brandt (A Christmas Carol in Manhattan, and tours of Dr. Doolittle, The King and I, Seussical) as Billy.

Understudies include Paula Ewin, Edwin Owens, Brian Russell and Dylan Perlman.

Craig Bockhorn was mailman Charlie Martin in the 2004-05 Broadway and Kennedy Center production, also produced by Jeffrey Finn.

Foglia (Master Class) will re-create his Broadway direction. His earlier 2005 production starred James Earl Jones and Leslie Uggams, and the script was a fresh hybrid of other productions (and the film), which came before. The tour continues to March 2007.

In On Golden Pond, retired New England professor Norman Thayer (played by Tom Bosley), and his spirited wife Ethel (played by Michael Learned) spend one final summer at their family's lakeside cottage in Maine. En route to a European honeymoon, the couple's estranged daughter Chelsea arrives to leave behind her fiancé's troubled young son.

"Colliding generations soon forge common ground, but when Chelsea returns to discover Norman playing the father she never had, years of bitter memories and resentment rise to the surface," according to production notes.

Bosley and Learned are widely known for the TV roles of Howard Cunningham on "Happy Days" and Olivia Walton in "The Waltons," respectively, but have many years of stage work behind them. Bosley is a Tony Award winner for Fiorello! and Learned's recent Broadway credits include The Best Man and The Sisters Rosensweig.

On Golden Pond features the same creative and design team as the 2005 Broadway production: set design by three-time Emmy Award winner Ray Klausen (Big River, Brooklyn), costume design by 14-time Tony Award nominee Jane Greenwood (The Heiress, The Sisters Rosensweig, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?), lighting design by Tony Award nominee Brian Nason (Metamorphosis, Fortune's Fool) and sound design and original music by Dan Moses Schreier (Assassins, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee).

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This new production of On Golden Pond premiered at The Kennedy Center in fall 2004 before opening on Broadway in April 2005.

For information, visit the show's official website at www.GoldenPondonBroadway.com.

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On Golden Pond was first presented for a limited run of 36 performances at New York's Hudson Guild Theatre, starring Tom Aldredge and Frances Sternhagen, opening Sept. 13, 1978. The production next played a pre-Broadway engagement at The Kennedy Center's Eisenhower Theater in January 1979, followed by an engagement at The Playhouse in Wilmington, prior to opening on Broadway at The New Apollo Theatre on Feb. 28, 1979 for 126 performances. A return New York engagement at The Century Theatre opened Sept. 12, 1979 for an additional 424 performances.

The acclaimed 1981 film version starring Henry Fonda, Katharine Hepburn and Jane Fonda was nominated for nine 1982 Academy Awards, winning three for the elder Fonda, Hepburn and author Ernest Thompson for the screenplay he adapted from his own play. For his screenplay, Thompson also won Golden Globe and Writers Guild of America awards.

Since its original production, the play has been presented on six continents, in 38 countries and in 24 languages. There are about 100 productions produced every year.

 
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